1 00:00:03,760 --> 00:00:07,840 Speaker 1: Our world is full of the unexplainable, and if history 2 00:00:08,039 --> 00:00:11,200 Speaker 1: is an open book, all of these amazing tales are 3 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:14,680 Speaker 1: right there on display, just waiting for us to explore. 4 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:28,760 Speaker 1: Welcome to the cabinet of curiosities must be seen. Two 5 00:00:28,800 --> 00:00:34,440 Speaker 1: believed patronized by royalty, nobility, and clergy, the smallest performers 6 00:00:34,440 --> 00:00:37,760 Speaker 1: in the world, interesting alike to old and young, rich 7 00:00:37,840 --> 00:00:43,640 Speaker 1: and poor. These kinds of proclamations grace the enchanting advertisements 8 00:00:43,680 --> 00:00:46,920 Speaker 1: of one of the oldest and most lucrative side show exhibits, 9 00:00:47,560 --> 00:00:52,440 Speaker 1: the flea circus, depicting cartoon insects fencing one another or 10 00:00:52,520 --> 00:00:56,520 Speaker 1: balancing on a tight rope. These inventive ads promised entertainment 11 00:00:56,600 --> 00:00:59,200 Speaker 1: the likes of which had never been seen, or at 12 00:00:59,280 --> 00:01:02,720 Speaker 1: least couldn't be seen without the help of a magnifying glass. 13 00:01:03,840 --> 00:01:06,160 Speaker 1: If the idea of a flea circus sounds too good 14 00:01:06,160 --> 00:01:09,600 Speaker 1: to be true, that's because it is the concept of 15 00:01:09,720 --> 00:01:13,920 Speaker 1: miniscule bugs swinging on the trappees or launching themselves from 16 00:01:13,959 --> 00:01:18,600 Speaker 1: a tiny cannon forces the spectator to suspend disbelief to 17 00:01:18,680 --> 00:01:21,720 Speaker 1: consider that the humble fleet, once the harbinger of the 18 00:01:21,760 --> 00:01:24,800 Speaker 1: black death that killed half of Europe in the hundreds, 19 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:28,160 Speaker 1: could also be trained to perform daring feats in a 20 00:01:28,240 --> 00:01:32,800 Speaker 1: venue no larger than a monopoly board. The truth is 21 00:01:32,959 --> 00:01:36,640 Speaker 1: much darker. Please only live for a few months, so 22 00:01:36,720 --> 00:01:40,440 Speaker 1: they can't be trained. Instead, most ring leaders thread gold 23 00:01:40,440 --> 00:01:43,600 Speaker 1: wires around their necks, which are then tied to various 24 00:01:43,640 --> 00:01:47,640 Speaker 1: props for them to interact with. Please like ants can 25 00:01:47,800 --> 00:01:51,520 Speaker 1: lift objects much larger than themselves, so they appear to 26 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:55,080 Speaker 1: be kicking or carrying things, when in reality they're just 27 00:01:55,160 --> 00:01:59,160 Speaker 1: trying to find a way out. However, most Flee circus 28 00:01:59,160 --> 00:02:01,440 Speaker 1: owners didn't go of that much trouble to make their 29 00:02:01,440 --> 00:02:05,960 Speaker 1: circuses seem authentic. Many simply wired up their dollhouse sized 30 00:02:05,960 --> 00:02:10,160 Speaker 1: diving boards and carousels with electric mechanisms so that it 31 00:02:10,240 --> 00:02:13,040 Speaker 1: only looked like they had trained fleas to perform, when 32 00:02:13,160 --> 00:02:17,600 Speaker 1: in fact no fleas were present at all. The earliest 33 00:02:17,639 --> 00:02:20,120 Speaker 1: known Flee circus was said to have debuted in London 34 00:02:20,160 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 1: in the eighteen twenties, and since then they've become novelties, 35 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:28,080 Speaker 1: nothing more than wholesome entertainment for nostalgic audiences. But the 36 00:02:28,200 --> 00:02:31,560 Speaker 1: use of tiny insects to demonstrate their ingenuity goes back 37 00:02:31,639 --> 00:02:34,960 Speaker 1: much further than the eighteen twenties. In fact, it dates 38 00:02:35,000 --> 00:02:37,920 Speaker 1: all the way back to fifteen seventy eight and a 39 00:02:38,000 --> 00:02:42,440 Speaker 1: man named Mark Scaliot. Mark was a blacksmith, and a 40 00:02:42,480 --> 00:02:45,160 Speaker 1: darned good one at that. His work was renowned for 41 00:02:45,200 --> 00:02:49,480 Speaker 1: its intricate detail and impeccable quality, but Mark really wanted 42 00:02:49,480 --> 00:02:51,959 Speaker 1: to show the world what he could do. Swords and 43 00:02:52,080 --> 00:02:54,840 Speaker 1: armor and the occasional piece of jewelry were fine, but 44 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:58,120 Speaker 1: Mark was capable of so much more. So he enlisted 45 00:02:58,120 --> 00:03:00,560 Speaker 1: the help of the side show hosts Favor Britt Creepy 46 00:03:00,560 --> 00:03:05,080 Speaker 1: Crawley a Fleet. Mark work day and night crafting something 47 00:03:05,120 --> 00:03:07,760 Speaker 1: no one else had seen, and if he did his 48 00:03:07,880 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: job right, no one else would see. He constructed a 49 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:14,399 Speaker 1: miniature lock and to go with it, a key, all 50 00:03:14,440 --> 00:03:17,720 Speaker 1: of which were constructed using only eleven pieces of iron, 51 00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:21,480 Speaker 1: steel and brass strong on a chain made up of 52 00:03:21,520 --> 00:03:24,080 Speaker 1: forty three links. All of it weighed no more than 53 00:03:24,120 --> 00:03:27,160 Speaker 1: a grain of gold. And these weren't just sculptures to 54 00:03:27,200 --> 00:03:29,799 Speaker 1: demonstrate how small his work could get. The key he 55 00:03:29,880 --> 00:03:33,560 Speaker 1: had constructed actually did function inside the lock, and he 56 00:03:33,639 --> 00:03:36,920 Speaker 1: hung it all around the neck of a fleet. Yeah, 57 00:03:37,040 --> 00:03:40,960 Speaker 1: a flee which had no problem moving around while wearing 58 00:03:40,960 --> 00:03:44,640 Speaker 1: the necklace. Scolliot's work is said to have given birth 59 00:03:44,680 --> 00:03:47,440 Speaker 1: to the modern flee circus, although it took a while. 60 00:03:47,960 --> 00:03:50,920 Speaker 1: Stories of his accomplishment, however, made the rounds for over 61 00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:54,640 Speaker 1: a hundred years after he debuted his teeny tiny necklace 62 00:03:54,920 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 1: and paved the way for people like Oswaldis nor Hingerists, 63 00:03:58,240 --> 00:04:01,400 Speaker 1: who made six hundred fleece size dishes out of ivory. 64 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:04,000 Speaker 1: Pope Paul the fifth was said to have counted them 65 00:04:04,000 --> 00:04:07,200 Speaker 1: all himself by hand using a special pair of glasses. 66 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:11,440 Speaker 1: Or there was Johannes Ferarius, who built wooden cannons and 67 00:04:11,520 --> 00:04:15,480 Speaker 1: carriages no bigger than a peppercorn, or Claudius Callus, who 68 00:04:15,480 --> 00:04:18,240 Speaker 1: carved miniature birds designed to sit on the tops of 69 00:04:18,279 --> 00:04:21,840 Speaker 1: trees and tweet as they reacted with the water flowing 70 00:04:21,880 --> 00:04:26,239 Speaker 1: through the trunks. This was truly inventive and skilled work, 71 00:04:26,560 --> 00:04:29,200 Speaker 1: done without the use of laser cut blades or the 72 00:04:29,240 --> 00:04:32,840 Speaker 1: technology we take for granted today. It became the basis 73 00:04:32,880 --> 00:04:37,920 Speaker 1: for entire movements of miniature artwork, dioramas, and even Hollywood 74 00:04:37,960 --> 00:04:42,120 Speaker 1: special effects, and all of it down to the molecule 75 00:04:42,760 --> 00:04:46,960 Speaker 1: hung on the shoulders of one tiny flea. Some might 76 00:04:46,960 --> 00:05:05,080 Speaker 1: call that curious. We put a lot of stock in numbers. 77 00:05:05,680 --> 00:05:08,160 Speaker 1: I don't mean the ones that run our daily lives, 78 00:05:08,200 --> 00:05:10,640 Speaker 1: like our four oh one case or the stock market. 79 00:05:11,040 --> 00:05:13,440 Speaker 1: I'm talking about the numbers we hold close to us, 80 00:05:13,839 --> 00:05:16,960 Speaker 1: the lucky lottery numbers we play every week, and the 81 00:05:17,080 --> 00:05:22,000 Speaker 1: not so lucky numbers we avoid because of superstition, triscade, decophobia. 82 00:05:22,200 --> 00:05:25,640 Speaker 1: The fear of the number thirteen, for example, stems from 83 00:05:25,720 --> 00:05:29,920 Speaker 1: jesus last supper with his twelve apostles just before the crucifixion. 84 00:05:30,400 --> 00:05:34,920 Speaker 1: Thus it's cultural designation as an unlucky number, though many 85 00:05:35,000 --> 00:05:37,520 Speaker 1: other cultures seem to see the number as a source 86 00:05:37,560 --> 00:05:41,240 Speaker 1: of good luck and fortune. But do you know any 87 00:05:41,279 --> 00:05:44,160 Speaker 1: a phobia. You might not as its prominence. Is it 88 00:05:44,279 --> 00:05:46,839 Speaker 1: nearly as widespread as the fear of the number thirteen. 89 00:05:47,480 --> 00:05:49,839 Speaker 1: Any a phobia is the fear of the number nine, 90 00:05:50,240 --> 00:05:53,800 Speaker 1: And for many classical composers throughout history, they had a 91 00:05:53,800 --> 00:05:58,080 Speaker 1: good reason to worry. Over the course of his career, 92 00:05:58,279 --> 00:06:03,680 Speaker 1: Ludwig von Beethoven com posed five piano concertos, one violin concerto, 93 00:06:04,120 --> 00:06:09,640 Speaker 1: thirty two piano sonatas, sixteen string quartets, one mass, one opera, 94 00:06:10,200 --> 00:06:14,440 Speaker 1: and nine symphonies. He started composing his ninth Symphony in 95 00:06:14,480 --> 00:06:18,120 Speaker 1: the fall of eighteen two, working tirelessly for the next 96 00:06:18,120 --> 00:06:21,040 Speaker 1: two years in order to complete it for the Philharmonic 97 00:06:21,120 --> 00:06:24,800 Speaker 1: Society of London. The ninth was his last symphony he 98 00:06:24,839 --> 00:06:31,880 Speaker 1: created before his death in eighteen Anton Dvorak, born fourteen 99 00:06:31,960 --> 00:06:35,360 Speaker 1: years after Beethoven's death, wrote a number of operas and 100 00:06:35,440 --> 00:06:38,400 Speaker 1: chamber music pieces before his death in nineteen o four. 101 00:06:38,920 --> 00:06:45,680 Speaker 1: Among all those compositions nine symphonies. Franz Schubert, Jean Sibelius, 102 00:06:46,000 --> 00:06:50,279 Speaker 1: Alexander Glazanov, Kurt Adderberg, and a whole host of others 103 00:06:50,480 --> 00:06:53,599 Speaker 1: met similar fates. It didn't matter how many operas or 104 00:06:53,800 --> 00:06:57,960 Speaker 1: choral pieces or canadas they wrote. Once they each reached 105 00:06:58,000 --> 00:07:01,280 Speaker 1: their ninth symphony, the curtain fell for the last time. 106 00:07:02,640 --> 00:07:05,560 Speaker 1: The phenomenon had become so prominent in the nineteenth century, 107 00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:09,800 Speaker 1: audiences and critics grew superstitious that anyone who dared to 108 00:07:09,840 --> 00:07:12,760 Speaker 1: complete a ninth symphony would meet their death soon after. 109 00:07:13,440 --> 00:07:17,240 Speaker 1: German composer Gustav Mahler, however, thought that he could beat 110 00:07:17,280 --> 00:07:21,880 Speaker 1: the curse in an inventive way. Maller was born almost 111 00:07:21,920 --> 00:07:25,440 Speaker 1: thirty years after Beethoven's death and composed dozens of works, 112 00:07:25,640 --> 00:07:29,800 Speaker 1: including chamber music, piano suites, and yes symphonies. He was 113 00:07:29,840 --> 00:07:32,800 Speaker 1: well aware of the curse and its influence. In fact, 114 00:07:33,160 --> 00:07:35,480 Speaker 1: death had weighed heavily on his mind and the years 115 00:07:35,560 --> 00:07:37,840 Speaker 1: leading up to the composition of what would widely be 116 00:07:37,920 --> 00:07:42,760 Speaker 1: considered his greatest work, The Song of the Earth, he 117 00:07:42,840 --> 00:07:45,920 Speaker 1: had just resigned as director of the Vienna Court Opera House, 118 00:07:46,200 --> 00:07:49,280 Speaker 1: his oldest daughter had passed away, and Maller himself had 119 00:07:49,280 --> 00:07:52,600 Speaker 1: been diagnosed with severe heart defects. He had gone through 120 00:07:52,760 --> 00:07:56,040 Speaker 1: the worst times of his life, and those experiences fueled 121 00:07:56,120 --> 00:07:59,080 Speaker 1: him in the creation of a new work, his most 122 00:07:59,120 --> 00:08:04,760 Speaker 1: beautiful and inspiring to date. Maller began composing The Song 123 00:08:04,840 --> 00:08:09,160 Speaker 1: of the Earth, his ninth symphony. Comprised of six songs, 124 00:08:09,240 --> 00:08:11,560 Speaker 1: The piece was to be sung by two singers, with 125 00:08:11,720 --> 00:08:14,840 Speaker 1: each person taking turns singing each of the many movements. 126 00:08:17,080 --> 00:08:19,480 Speaker 1: He finished it one year later, but the Curse of 127 00:08:19,480 --> 00:08:22,240 Speaker 1: the Ninth still hung over him like a fog. He 128 00:08:22,320 --> 00:08:25,640 Speaker 1: worried constantly. Then, because of his worry, he changed the 129 00:08:25,680 --> 00:08:29,040 Speaker 1: title of his latest work, rather than numbering it the 130 00:08:29,040 --> 00:08:32,840 Speaker 1: way he'd done for his eight previous symphonies, Maller subtitled 131 00:08:32,840 --> 00:08:37,640 Speaker 1: it a Symphony for tenor alto and large orchestra without 132 00:08:37,720 --> 00:08:41,600 Speaker 1: a number attached. He still technically remained a composer of 133 00:08:41,720 --> 00:08:47,360 Speaker 1: only eight complete symphonies, quite the musical loophole. This left 134 00:08:47,400 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 1: him free to focus on what would become his true 135 00:08:49,800 --> 00:08:53,240 Speaker 1: ninth symphony, which he started composing around the same time 136 00:08:53,280 --> 00:08:56,000 Speaker 1: he was working on The Song of the Earth. After 137 00:08:56,040 --> 00:08:59,640 Speaker 1: beginning work on his ninth symphony, the real official one, 138 00:08:59,720 --> 00:09:03,080 Speaker 1: that is, he told his wife the danger is past. 139 00:09:03,920 --> 00:09:09,640 Speaker 1: He'd successfully begun ten symphonies, counting the Song of the Earth. Unfortunately, 140 00:09:09,800 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 1: he was too quick to celebrate. Fate had seen through 141 00:09:13,160 --> 00:09:17,480 Speaker 1: his ruse. Only two movements into his new work, Maler's 142 00:09:17,559 --> 00:09:20,880 Speaker 1: diagnosis caught up with him, and he died of heart failure. 143 00:09:22,320 --> 00:09:25,600 Speaker 1: As the composer Arnold Schoenberg once wrote in an essay 144 00:09:25,679 --> 00:09:29,760 Speaker 1: shortly after Mahler's death, it seems that the ninth is 145 00:09:29,920 --> 00:09:33,840 Speaker 1: a limit. He who wants to go beyond it must 146 00:09:33,880 --> 00:09:40,320 Speaker 1: pass away. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of 147 00:09:40,320 --> 00:09:44,319 Speaker 1: the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, 148 00:09:44,400 --> 00:09:47,920 Speaker 1: or learn more about the show by Visiting Curiosities podcast 149 00:09:48,160 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 1: dot com. The show was created by me Aaron Manky 150 00:09:52,240 --> 00:09:55,680 Speaker 1: in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make another award 151 00:09:55,760 --> 00:09:59,280 Speaker 1: winning show called Lore which is a podcast, book series 152 00:09:59,360 --> 00:10:01,839 Speaker 1: and tele Asian show and you can learn all about 153 00:10:01,840 --> 00:10:05,200 Speaker 1: it over at the World of Lore dot com. And 154 00:10:05,280 --> 00:10:10,160 Speaker 1: until next time, stay curious. H