1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:08,000 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,480 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales right 3 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:16,640 Speaker 1: there on display, just waiting for us to explore. Welcome 4 00:00:17,760 --> 00:00:28,639 Speaker 1: to the Cabinet of Curiosities. There are parts of the 5 00:00:28,680 --> 00:00:32,600 Speaker 1: world known for their cuisine. Travel to Austria and enjoy 6 00:00:32,680 --> 00:00:35,680 Speaker 1: a savory Wiener Schnitzel, or take a trip to Canada 7 00:00:35,760 --> 00:00:39,240 Speaker 1: for some delicious poutine. On a more local level, Philly 8 00:00:39,400 --> 00:00:41,720 Speaker 1: is where to go for cheese steaks, and you can't 9 00:00:41,720 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 1: beat Chicago for deep dish pizza. Then there's Denby Dale 10 00:00:46,440 --> 00:00:50,040 Speaker 1: in West Yorkshire, England. Since the early nineteenth century, Denby 11 00:00:50,120 --> 00:00:52,720 Speaker 1: Dale has been known for its meat pies. There are 12 00:00:52,760 --> 00:00:55,720 Speaker 1: three things one must know about the pies, though. First 13 00:00:55,880 --> 00:00:58,640 Speaker 1: is that they are only ever baked for special occasions. 14 00:00:59,560 --> 00:01:02,360 Speaker 1: The first celebratory pie was made in seventeen eighty eight 15 00:01:02,480 --> 00:01:05,039 Speaker 1: after King George the Third had recovered from about with 16 00:01:05,120 --> 00:01:08,759 Speaker 1: mental illness. Another was made in eighteen forty six after 17 00:01:08,800 --> 00:01:11,400 Speaker 1: a set of tariffs known as the Corn Laws were lifted, 18 00:01:11,640 --> 00:01:14,920 Speaker 1: allowing imported corn and other grain to enter the country 19 00:01:14,959 --> 00:01:19,800 Speaker 1: without heavy taxes placed on the buyers. In eighteen seventies seven, 20 00:01:19,920 --> 00:01:22,840 Speaker 1: two pies were baked roughly a week apart. The first 21 00:01:22,840 --> 00:01:25,760 Speaker 1: had been made as part of Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, 22 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:29,600 Speaker 1: a grand banquet celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of her assuming 23 00:01:29,640 --> 00:01:32,480 Speaker 1: the throne. It was cooked with all kinds of meat inside, 24 00:01:32,640 --> 00:01:37,399 Speaker 1: including chicken, rabbit, veal and pork. It was also disgusting 25 00:01:38,160 --> 00:01:40,679 Speaker 1: due to errors in timing. The pie had sat in 26 00:01:40,720 --> 00:01:43,240 Speaker 1: the sun for too long and stunk too high heaven. 27 00:01:43,600 --> 00:01:45,440 Speaker 1: No one could stomach more than a whiff of it, 28 00:01:45,520 --> 00:01:47,520 Speaker 1: which was why it was quickly taken out in the 29 00:01:47,520 --> 00:01:50,840 Speaker 1: middle of a field and buried in quicklime. One week 30 00:01:50,920 --> 00:01:53,760 Speaker 1: later they attempted the pie again, this one called the 31 00:01:53,800 --> 00:01:58,760 Speaker 1: Resurrection Pie, and it was good. Denby Dale also baked 32 00:01:58,760 --> 00:02:00,840 Speaker 1: a pie for the turn of the New Millennium in 33 00:02:00,880 --> 00:02:03,480 Speaker 1: two thousand, as well as one to celebrate the Queen 34 00:02:03,520 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 1: Mother's one birthday that same year, which brings us to 35 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:10,160 Speaker 1: the second important fact about the pies. Only ten have 36 00:02:10,240 --> 00:02:13,959 Speaker 1: been made over the past two hundred years. The village 37 00:02:13,960 --> 00:02:17,880 Speaker 1: of denbie Dale population sixteen thousand, three hundred sixty five 38 00:02:17,919 --> 00:02:20,680 Speaker 1: at the time I'm recording this, beasts on a single 39 00:02:20,760 --> 00:02:24,080 Speaker 1: pie roughly once per generation. They don't cut it into 40 00:02:24,080 --> 00:02:27,600 Speaker 1: paper thin slices. Though their process is the third reason 41 00:02:27,639 --> 00:02:32,720 Speaker 1: why denbie Dale pies are so coveted. They're enormous. For example, 42 00:02:33,040 --> 00:02:35,800 Speaker 1: the Millennium pie required two and a half tons of 43 00:02:35,840 --> 00:02:39,000 Speaker 1: beef and potatoes, three and a half tons of pastry 44 00:02:39,040 --> 00:02:41,560 Speaker 1: for the crust, and roughly eight to ten hours to 45 00:02:41,639 --> 00:02:44,760 Speaker 1: cook on a forty ft wide metal pie dish, and 46 00:02:44,919 --> 00:02:48,400 Speaker 1: sometimes the pies would serve double duty. During World War Two, 47 00:02:48,520 --> 00:02:50,960 Speaker 1: when scrap metal was in high demand to make things 48 00:02:50,960 --> 00:02:54,679 Speaker 1: like tanks and airplanes, denbie Dale's pie dish was donated 49 00:02:54,720 --> 00:02:57,679 Speaker 1: to the war efforts and melted down. The villagers held 50 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:00,440 Speaker 1: a goodbye party for it as well, marchie it down 51 00:03:00,440 --> 00:03:02,720 Speaker 1: the street for all to see, before holding a cricket 52 00:03:02,720 --> 00:03:05,960 Speaker 1: match in its honor. In nineteen sixty four, a pie 53 00:03:06,000 --> 00:03:08,480 Speaker 1: was baked to honor four royal births that had occurred 54 00:03:08,520 --> 00:03:10,760 Speaker 1: that year, and the dish that was used was launched 55 00:03:10,760 --> 00:03:13,919 Speaker 1: down a canal as a publicity stunt, and it worked. 56 00:03:14,240 --> 00:03:18,480 Speaker 1: The event was written up in one major newspaper. However, 57 00:03:18,680 --> 00:03:22,480 Speaker 1: not every pie went smoothly, aside from the inedible pie 58 00:03:22,520 --> 00:03:25,400 Speaker 1: of eight seven, the one that was baked after the 59 00:03:25,440 --> 00:03:27,919 Speaker 1: repeal of the corn laws claimed the life of one 60 00:03:27,960 --> 00:03:31,200 Speaker 1: baker who had gotten trapped inside the crust after cutting 61 00:03:31,240 --> 00:03:33,920 Speaker 1: into it. It also crushed the stage on which it 62 00:03:33,960 --> 00:03:37,520 Speaker 1: was displayed, and the fifteen thousand villagers and attendants ended 63 00:03:37,600 --> 00:03:40,480 Speaker 1: up eating pieces of it right off the ground. And 64 00:03:40,600 --> 00:03:44,320 Speaker 1: in nine a pie baked for a fundraiser on behalf 65 00:03:44,320 --> 00:03:47,520 Speaker 1: of the hudders Field Royal Infirmary got stuck in the oven. 66 00:03:47,800 --> 00:03:50,400 Speaker 1: At least twenty men armed with crowbars worked at it 67 00:03:50,440 --> 00:03:54,520 Speaker 1: for two hours to jimmy at loose. The next pie 68 00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:57,360 Speaker 1: hasn't been announced yet, but if you'd like to taste 69 00:03:57,400 --> 00:04:01,000 Speaker 1: one for yourself, individual Denbie Dale Highs are sold in 70 00:04:01,040 --> 00:04:04,840 Speaker 1: grocery stores all over England. Don't worry, though, the only 71 00:04:04,960 --> 00:04:08,960 Speaker 1: qualities these pie share with their giant predecessors is their name. 72 00:04:09,720 --> 00:04:25,159 Speaker 1: They should fit just fine inside your car. In the 73 00:04:25,200 --> 00:04:29,080 Speaker 1: city of Naples is a palace known as the Palazzo 74 00:04:29,200 --> 00:04:32,640 Speaker 1: di Sangro. The brick building is surrounded by homes and shops. 75 00:04:33,040 --> 00:04:36,240 Speaker 1: It faces the Church of San Domenico Majorre, and in 76 00:04:36,279 --> 00:04:39,400 Speaker 1: a way it looks out of place, but this enormous 77 00:04:39,400 --> 00:04:42,640 Speaker 1: mansion has been part of the city since the sixteenth century. 78 00:04:43,040 --> 00:04:45,560 Speaker 1: And is home to some of the most beautiful and 79 00:04:45,680 --> 00:04:49,719 Speaker 1: bizarre works of art. The palace was commissioned by the 80 00:04:49,760 --> 00:04:53,279 Speaker 1: Duke of Torre Major. During construction, it became home to 81 00:04:53,279 --> 00:04:56,880 Speaker 1: the Duke's family, as well as the composer Carlo Gesualde, 82 00:04:57,000 --> 00:04:59,560 Speaker 1: who ended up murdering his wife there. One of the 83 00:04:59,600 --> 00:05:03,120 Speaker 1: Duke's relatives, The first Prince of San Severo, felt the 84 00:05:03,120 --> 00:05:06,719 Speaker 1: palace and its inhabitants needed a private place to pray. 85 00:05:07,120 --> 00:05:09,760 Speaker 1: In fifteen ninety he had a family chapel built in 86 00:05:09,800 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 1: the gardens on the property. The structure changed hands and 87 00:05:14,080 --> 00:05:17,080 Speaker 1: forms over the years. It was converted from a regular 88 00:05:17,160 --> 00:05:21,039 Speaker 1: chapel into a family burial chapel in sixteen There was 89 00:05:21,080 --> 00:05:23,599 Speaker 1: also a tunnel between the main house and the chapel 90 00:05:23,839 --> 00:05:28,080 Speaker 1: until the late nineteenth century. However, in the mid seventeen hundreds, 91 00:05:28,160 --> 00:05:30,960 Speaker 1: this Palace of Death gained new life as a kind 92 00:05:31,040 --> 00:05:35,920 Speaker 1: of museum. Sculptures by Antonio Cordini and Giuseppe San Martino 93 00:05:36,040 --> 00:05:39,440 Speaker 1: were dedicated to the deceased family members intoured in the tombs. 94 00:05:39,839 --> 00:05:43,960 Speaker 1: They depicted life size women draped in translucent cloth with soft, 95 00:05:44,040 --> 00:05:48,720 Speaker 1: lifelike features, but were carved from solid stone. But it 96 00:05:48,800 --> 00:05:52,400 Speaker 1: was the seventh Prince of San Severo, Roimando de Sangro, 97 00:05:52,640 --> 00:05:56,200 Speaker 1: who helped guide the chapel's art collection. Raimondo was a 98 00:05:56,240 --> 00:05:59,960 Speaker 1: man of many disciplines, including science, spiritualism, and of course, 99 00:06:00,440 --> 00:06:04,040 Speaker 1: the fine arts, but he was also an inventor. During 100 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:06,840 Speaker 1: his life, he mixed chemicals together to concoct his own 101 00:06:06,960 --> 00:06:10,160 Speaker 1: version of an eternal flame, and allegedly created a horse 102 00:06:10,240 --> 00:06:13,400 Speaker 1: drawn carriage that used wooden horses instead of live ones. 103 00:06:13,839 --> 00:06:16,240 Speaker 1: Oh and it could ride on water as well as 104 00:06:16,240 --> 00:06:21,200 Speaker 1: on land. The prince's proclivities didn't exactly endear him to 105 00:06:21,200 --> 00:06:24,640 Speaker 1: the townspeople, though he became quite the topic of conversation. 106 00:06:25,000 --> 00:06:28,200 Speaker 1: In fact, they're developed a kind of dark lore about him. 107 00:06:28,240 --> 00:06:31,720 Speaker 1: The locals believed he killed people for his experiments and 108 00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:35,800 Speaker 1: could conjure blood from nothing. Of course, two of his 109 00:06:35,880 --> 00:06:39,159 Speaker 1: most famous creations didn't help matters for him. They're known 110 00:06:39,200 --> 00:06:42,279 Speaker 1: as the Anatomical Machines, and they are comprised of the 111 00:06:42,320 --> 00:06:45,560 Speaker 1: skeletons of a man and a pregnant woman pinned against 112 00:06:45,640 --> 00:06:48,960 Speaker 1: the wall. Over their bones are red and blue vessels 113 00:06:49,160 --> 00:06:52,880 Speaker 1: intricately weaved into complex formations, just as they would have 114 00:06:52,920 --> 00:06:56,719 Speaker 1: been when the subjects were alive. Rumor had it that 115 00:06:56,760 --> 00:06:59,120 Speaker 1: the Prince killed two of his servants in order to 116 00:06:59,200 --> 00:07:01,760 Speaker 1: create them. Not only that, but there had also been 117 00:07:01,800 --> 00:07:07,240 Speaker 1: a third machine, a child, complete with its preserved placenta. Unfortunately, 118 00:07:07,320 --> 00:07:09,960 Speaker 1: it was stolen from the museum in the nineteen nineties 119 00:07:10,080 --> 00:07:15,240 Speaker 1: and it was never recovered. Over the years, stories circulated 120 00:07:15,280 --> 00:07:18,320 Speaker 1: about their creation that the Prince had been experimenting with 121 00:07:18,360 --> 00:07:21,320 Speaker 1: alchemy and had turned the servants blood into metal by 122 00:07:21,400 --> 00:07:24,760 Speaker 1: injecting them with a special chemical. The good news is 123 00:07:24,800 --> 00:07:27,360 Speaker 1: that the prince had almost nothing to do with the bodies. 124 00:07:27,680 --> 00:07:31,080 Speaker 1: He didn't kill anyone himself, nor did he have anyone killed. 125 00:07:31,400 --> 00:07:35,080 Speaker 1: He purchased the skeletons, presumably from a funeral home or 126 00:07:35,160 --> 00:07:39,320 Speaker 1: a medical university, and then had anatomus Giuseppe Salerno turned 127 00:07:39,320 --> 00:07:43,200 Speaker 1: them into works of art in seventeen sixty three. Using 128 00:07:43,200 --> 00:07:46,480 Speaker 1: the two human forms supplied by the Prince, Salerno went 129 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:51,160 Speaker 1: about reconstructing their circulatory systems for display in the Chapel Museum, 130 00:07:51,200 --> 00:07:53,960 Speaker 1: But the vessels were not original to the body. They 131 00:07:53,960 --> 00:07:57,160 Speaker 1: were made of wire and beeswax. The only organic part 132 00:07:57,200 --> 00:08:02,280 Speaker 1: of the anatomical machines were the bones them else Today, 133 00:08:02,320 --> 00:08:05,840 Speaker 1: the skeletons are on display behind glass. Visitors can see 134 00:08:05,880 --> 00:08:09,480 Speaker 1: how the skulls were cut apart and reassembled using metal hinges, 135 00:08:09,800 --> 00:08:13,520 Speaker 1: conveying their purpose as either objects of medical study or 136 00:08:13,760 --> 00:08:18,720 Speaker 1: more likely, sideshow curiosities. Prince de Sangro helped build his 137 00:08:18,800 --> 00:08:22,840 Speaker 1: family's legacy by filling his home with unique sculptures, some 138 00:08:22,960 --> 00:08:26,080 Speaker 1: of them beautiful and some of them strange. Beyond words. 139 00:08:27,040 --> 00:08:30,280 Speaker 1: One thing for sure, though he certainly had an eye 140 00:08:30,280 --> 00:08:37,240 Speaker 1: for art. No bones about it. I hope you've enjoyed 141 00:08:37,280 --> 00:08:41,000 Speaker 1: today's guided tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for 142 00:08:41,080 --> 00:08:43,800 Speaker 1: free on Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show 143 00:08:43,920 --> 00:08:48,920 Speaker 1: by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created 144 00:08:48,960 --> 00:08:52,280 Speaker 1: by me Aaron Manky in partnership with how Stuff Works. 145 00:08:52,679 --> 00:08:55,840 Speaker 1: I make another award winning show called Lore, which is 146 00:08:55,920 --> 00:08:59,319 Speaker 1: a podcast, book series, and television show, and you can 147 00:08:59,400 --> 00:09:01,760 Speaker 1: learn all about it over at the World of Lore 148 00:09:02,000 --> 00:09:09,079 Speaker 1: dot com. And until next time, stay curious. Yeah h