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From an unidentified western language, presumably from some language in the Islamosphere. Compare Persianمومیایی(mômiyâyi, mumiyâyi, “mummy; shilajit”) and مومنایی(mumenâyi, “shilajit”). A Western traveller (Engelbert Kaempfer) also encountered the latter in Persia in the 1680s.[1] Earliest attestation was in Ming Dynasty, see the following quote:
There were men 70 to 80 years of age in Arabia (?) willing to give their bodies to save others. They never ate or drink, only bathed and partook of honey. After a month, their excrement (urine and faeces) consisted of honey only. After they died, their fellow men would place them in stone coffins full of honey in which they macerated. The year and month of deaths were engraved on the coffins and the coffins were buried. After a hundred years the coffins were reopened - a confection of honey had formed. Colloquially people called these "mellified men", in their native tongue "munaiyi".
See also "Mellified men" on Wikipedia. Other transliterations include:
木蜜納亦/木蜜纳亦 (mùmìnàyì, “mummy”), attested in Huihui Yaofang (Islamic Formularies, ca. 14th century);
木蜜亞依/木蜜亚依 (mùmìyàyī), attested in Mingjing Cidian (明淨詞典);