Victorian Lady with Ostrich Feathers on her hat |
Welcome back to spooky, 19th Century England.
‘Twas in the Victorian age that all
manner of ghastly and ghostly things were happened upon by the innocent and the
curious.
The Industrial Revolution in England (1790
to 1870) brought many economic and social upheavals to society. Where people
lived and worked changed as a large migration took place from rural areas to the
London factories for better wages and ?less working hours.
This era was also the age of Victorian
Occultism.
Numerous Supernatural themes were
explored, such as;
Magic
was rediscovered.
The
era saw the rise of secret societies and their secret rituals.
Spiritualist
movements came into being.
People
participated in mediumship and séances. Spirits made their presence felt by table
rapping.
The
mysticism of Egypt came to England.
Post-mortem photography was popular--the deceased were photographed in life-like poses.
Post-mortem photography was popular--the deceased were photographed in life-like poses.
Smog from coal fires,
shadows in the
alleyways,
and swirling mists over the streets of London
…hid the terror of Jack
the Ripper.
Superstitions were rife and people could
literally die from fear.
English Author and Academic, Richard Sugg
has written a book about supernatural stories from this era of history. The
stories come from various newspapers sources and Richard provides commentary
about the events.
If you’re interested in Poltergeists,
Ghosts, Vampires, Fairies, Witches, Unnatural Animals, Magic, Corpse Magic,
Apparitions, The Evil Eye, Religion, The Unexplained and the Uncategorisable,
this book might have appeal.
Here’s the blurb
from Amazon.com…
“Dare
you enter the Labyrinth of Fear?
A man cutting his own mother as a witch; parents murdering
their children as fairy changelings; villagers staking the living as vampires…
Ghosts in towns, on farms, on ships; poltergeists that baffle all
investigators; spectral cats, owls, dogs and sheep; a man shot dead as a ghost;
an apparition which the witness falls right through; magical candles made from
human fat and human hands…
Not that long ago, the world was haunted: by superstitions,
imaginary terrors, and even seemingly crude hoaxes which might cause their
victims to quite literally die of fear. Strange as all this is, one thing is
even stranger. Some of it was probably true. Given in the original voices of
nineteenth century newspaper accounts, this Century of Supernatural Stories
offers us a shadowy labyrinth of terrors real and imagined. Drawing on years of
research into the supernatural, Richard Sugg offers to guide readers through
this Labyrinth of Fear. But be warned: those who make it through may find that
the world never looks quite the same again.
Amazon book link
Is the truth from the 19th Century stories scarier than fiction?
Ashlyn
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