Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. History's Greatest Hoaxes: With Tom Ward, Guy Walters, Linda Papadopoulos, Alex Boese. History's Greatest Hoaxes looks at some of the most spectacular hoaxes that show that you can fool some of the people some of the time, but not all of the people all of the time.

    • (57)
    • 2016
    • Documentary
    • Tom Ward, Guy Walters, Linda Papadopoulos
    • Overview
    • The letter of doom
    • Snapshots of the afterlife
    • The Renaissance forgery
    • Sacred foreskins
    • The Napoleonic scam
    • Real artifacts, fake finds

    Long before April 1 became a day of harmless pranks, these frauds famously rocked economies, prompted mass panic, and fooled millions.

    While April 1 is now associated with harmless pranks, major hoaxes linked to ghosts, emperors, catastrophes, and holy private parts have jolted the world in centuries past. Dating back some 800 years, these frauds were so convincing they altered economies, bolstered religious faith, or prompted mass panic. Not surprisingly, most were aimed at financial gain.

    Tourists tread streets once associated with doom in Spain’s UNESCO-listed historic city of Toledo. In 1184, a letter that foretold the apocalypse traversed Europe. Supposedly written by astrologers from Toledo, it warned that 1186 would see the world end in a maelstrom of earthquakes, storms, and pestilence.

    Panic ensued. “People in many regions of the then known world [began] fasting, praying, and undertaking religious processions in order to avert disaster,” says Jonathan Green, author of Printing and Prophecy.

    A bearded man stares at the camera as a ghostly, veiled lady looms over his shoulder. This is one of the dozens of eerie images by American photographer William H. Mumler collected by the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles, California, and the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, New York.

    Left: This albumen silver print, circa 1862-1875, by William H. Mumler, shows a seated Mrs. Conant, with a ghostly figure of a man behind her. Mumler manipulated images like these ​to fool people into believing he could capture the spirits of departed loved ones.

    Right: In this albumen silver print, also circa 1862-1875, Mumler photographed a bearded man with a female “spirit” in the background.

    Photographs by William Mumler, Sepia Times/Universal Images Group/Getty Images

    In the mid-1800s, Mumler became renowned on America’s East Coast for his apparent ability to capture spirits lurking alongside humans in images. Clients paid handsomely for these photos, believing they depicted late loved ones. To fool them, Mumler used stock photos that resembled their deceased relatives, says Louis Kaplan, professor of photography history at the University of Toronto.

    “Mumler practiced his double-dealing craft in the 1860s, during the heyday of spiritualism, which held that communication with the dead was possible,” Kaplan says. “Those [clients] in mourning and grieving the losses of loved ones engaged in a type of wishful thinking when they encountered Mumler’s photographs, which offered them solace and a way to reconnect with their dearly departed.”

    Inside the Vatican’s Pio Clementino Museum, visitors can see sea snakes attack a petrified priest and two boys. This horrifying artwork, named “Laocoön and His Sons,” was sculpted in marble. By whom, exactly, isn’t clear. The museum’s website states it was found in Rome in 1506 and identified as the Laocoön statue described by first-century Roman author Pliny the Elder as a “masterpiece of the sculptors of Rhodes.”

    But it may not be a 2,000-year-old Greek masterpiece. Rather, it could be a Renaissance forgery by revered Italian artist Michelangelo, says Lynn Catterson, art history lecturer at Columbia University. Since she first made this assertion in 2004, several art scholars have questioned her theory, but none have disproven it, Catterson says.

    (These Greek ‘masterpieces’ are actually clever, legal copies.)

    She points to strong similarities between Laocoön and a sketch by Michelangelo made five years before the sculpture was unearthed. Catterson believes he may have secretly sculpted this piece and intended for it to be discovered.

    The small French city of Chartres lures tourists with its commanding, 12th-century Gothic cathedral. Yet for many years, visitors flocked not to admire its intricate stonework and stained-glass windows, but to see Jesus’ foreskin.

    It was one of more than 20 churches in medieval Europe that claimed to possess a sliver from Jesus’ circumcision, says James White, assistant lecturer in history at the University of Alberta. These relics “couldn’t all have possibly been real, regardless of one’s faith,” White says. “However, after the relic had been acquired by a particular church, subsequent generations of bishops, nuns, monks, and believers thought that it possessed power. Churches and the towns they were in could also get wealthy based on their relics. They were sort of the tourist stops of their day.”

    Now, no version of the holy foreskin exists, White says. Many were destroyed during the French Revolution. The final relic disappeared in 1983 from Calcata, near Rome, where it had been exhibited during the Feast of the Circumcision, held every January 1.

    (Behind the mystery of Saint Valentine’s bones.)

    Bartholomew Lane, in London’s financial district, is where travelers can visit the Bank of England Museum. But the short thoroughfare was once home to the London Stock Exchange—the scene of an 1814 hoax as audacious as it was profitable. In February of that year, British Lord Thomas Cochrane and accomplice Captain de Berenger sparked bedlam on England’s financial markets.

    Their scam began when de Berenger donned a military costume and told people in Dover, England, he’d arrived from Paris. He said Emperor Napoleon had just been killed, and France was about to be defeated by the Allies, a group of European nations including Great Britain.

    The good news spread swiftly. When London’s stock exchange opened the next day, trading boomed. In anticipation of this, Cochrane had stockpiled government bonds, which he immediately sold at a great margin.

    Soon, however, Napoleon was proven to be alive, and the financial fraud was exposed. Cochrane was tried, and he attempted, unsuccessfully, to shift blame to de Berenger. He was found guilty and then fled England, leaving a brazen stain on Bartholomew Lane.

    Many travelers who enjoy the verdant forests, dramatic waterfalls, and serene Shinto shrines of Japan’s Miyagi prefecture may not know it was the epicenter of a recent, bold scientific hoax. Beginning in the 1970s, amateur archaeologist Shinichi Fujimura planted genuine ancient artifacts across Miyagi at what he claimed were almost 200 Paleolithic sites up to 500,000 years old.

    (Follow in the footsteps of samurai on this ancient trail.)

    This rewrote the history of Japan, which until then was believed to be inhabited for only 30,000 years. In fact, many of the artifacts were actually from Japan’s Jomon era (13,000-300 B.C).

    Shinichi’s amazing “finds” were widely celebrated. They even earned him the nickname “God’s hands.” But this faux deity crashed to earth in 2000 when Japanese media caught him burying stoneware, collected from a different location, at a Miyagi excavation site.

    Shinichi’s scam went undetected for so long because having sites in Japan this ancient was plausible, says archaeologist Mark Hudson of Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Geoanthropology.

    “[There was a] lack of a specific archaeological reason why such finds were improbable,” says Hudson, who authored a study on this fraud. “Perhaps the best hoaxes are like that? If it's something too unusual, then people are suspicious. If they start with the premise that, ‘Well, this might be true,’ then acceptance is easier.”

  2. 26. März 2024 · Here are history’s greatest hoaxes, each one proof that with effort and a little luck, you can fool a lot of the people, all of the time. 1. How April Fools’ Day Didn’t Get Its Name

    • Adam Raymond
  3. 29. März 2022 · From a woman said to give birth to rabbits to a forged photograph of glittering fairies, here are 7 of history’s most compelling hoaxes. 1. TheDonation of Constantine’ The Donation of Constantine was a significant hoax during the Middle Ages.

  4. History's Greatest Hoaxes looks at the Piltdown Man. In 1912 the discovery of an unusual skull and jawbone in Sussex, England, led many to believe that a 'missing link' had finally been found. The revelation of a hoax, however, had wide reaching impact on anthropology and science.

  5. History's Greatest Hoaxes looks at the case of the Hitler Diaries which purported to be sixty-two volumes of Adolph Hitler's personal journals. Convinced of their reality, Rupert Murdoch paid over a half a million dollars to publish them.

  6. History's Greatest Hoaxes. Season 1. The world loves a good hoax, and for years, certain men, women and sometimes entire organisations have gone out of their way to trick people into believing things weren't quite the way they seemed. A number of them were very successful. 2 2017 6 episodes.