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 --> 00:00:11,200 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 --> 00:00:28,800 Speaker 1: Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. Why is a raving 5 00:00:28,960 --> 00:00:31,840 Speaker 1: like a writing desk? It's a question asked by the 6 00:00:31,840 --> 00:00:36,280 Speaker 1: Mad Hatter in Lewis Carroll's famous title Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, 7 00:00:36,680 --> 00:00:38,640 Speaker 1: and though many have tried to answer it, the truth 8 00:00:38,760 --> 00:00:42,400 Speaker 1: is the question has no answer, much like another question, 9 00:00:42,800 --> 00:00:47,040 Speaker 1: how is Lewis Carroll linked to the Knights Templar? Like 10 00:00:47,200 --> 00:00:50,919 Speaker 1: Carroll's original question, there's no clear answer, at least not 11 00:00:50,960 --> 00:00:53,720 Speaker 1: that anyone is aware of. However, his story of a 12 00:00:53,760 --> 00:00:56,600 Speaker 1: girl who discovers a magical world down a rabbit hole 13 00:00:57,000 --> 00:01:01,440 Speaker 1: is not the only one. Several years ago, a farmer 14 00:01:01,480 --> 00:01:04,240 Speaker 1: in Shropshire, England, had walked through a wooded area on 15 00:01:04,319 --> 00:01:07,199 Speaker 1: his property when he noticed several large holes in the ground. 16 00:01:07,640 --> 00:01:10,600 Speaker 1: He assumed they were rabbit holes leading to a massive 17 00:01:10,680 --> 00:01:14,840 Speaker 1: underground warren. Upon closer inspection, though, he discovered the holes 18 00:01:14,920 --> 00:01:20,280 Speaker 1: led to something else. Somewhere else Beneath the forest was 19 00:01:20,319 --> 00:01:23,840 Speaker 1: a network of caves and man made rooms, carved entirely 20 00:01:23,920 --> 00:01:28,160 Speaker 1: from sandstone. Enormous stone pillars held up arched ceilings only 21 00:01:28,240 --> 00:01:31,240 Speaker 1: a meter below the farmer's feet, and some areas were 22 00:01:31,240 --> 00:01:34,120 Speaker 1: so small their entrances so narrow they could only be 23 00:01:34,240 --> 00:01:38,200 Speaker 1: accessible by crawling on one's hands and knees. Known as 24 00:01:38,319 --> 00:01:42,240 Speaker 1: Kington Temple, the chambers bore a striking resemblance to those 25 00:01:42,319 --> 00:01:46,360 Speaker 1: of a place of worship. Many thought the site had 26 00:01:46,400 --> 00:01:49,720 Speaker 1: been the venue for countless ceremonies, ranging to black magic 27 00:01:49,800 --> 00:01:53,559 Speaker 1: rituals to Christian gatherings. In fact, the caves possessed several 28 00:01:53,600 --> 00:01:56,840 Speaker 1: features that lent credence to that belief, including a font 29 00:01:57,120 --> 00:02:01,080 Speaker 1: and drawings of crosses on the walls. The crosses helped 30 00:02:01,120 --> 00:02:04,360 Speaker 1: fuel speculation as to the cave's true purpose, as they 31 00:02:04,440 --> 00:02:07,160 Speaker 1: looked much like the crosses worn by the Knights Templar, 32 00:02:07,320 --> 00:02:10,960 Speaker 1: the military order that fought in the Crusades and allegedly 33 00:02:11,040 --> 00:02:13,760 Speaker 1: protected the Holy Grail. For a long time, it was 34 00:02:13,800 --> 00:02:16,600 Speaker 1: believed that the underground refuge was the resting area for 35 00:02:16,680 --> 00:02:20,519 Speaker 1: the Knights. Later, after the order was dissolved, it became 36 00:02:20,520 --> 00:02:23,960 Speaker 1: a place of worship for their followers. In addition to 37 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:27,720 Speaker 1: the crosses, the temple's nave, or central gathering area, was 38 00:02:27,880 --> 00:02:30,680 Speaker 1: round in shape, carved in the image of the Church 39 00:02:30,800 --> 00:02:34,160 Speaker 1: of the Holy Sepulture, which according to tradition, sits on 40 00:02:34,200 --> 00:02:37,400 Speaker 1: the site of both the Crucifixion and the burial of Jesus. 41 00:02:38,720 --> 00:02:41,880 Speaker 1: Rumors of the cave's religious origins brought more than historians 42 00:02:41,919 --> 00:02:45,680 Speaker 1: to its hidden corridors. Since the nineteen eighties, tourists, vandals, 43 00:02:45,720 --> 00:02:49,440 Speaker 1: and practitioners of the occult have flocked to the sandstone hideaway, 44 00:02:49,720 --> 00:02:54,000 Speaker 1: carving things into the walls and leaving garbage behind. As 45 00:02:54,000 --> 00:02:56,600 Speaker 1: a result, the area was closed off to the public 46 00:02:56,639 --> 00:02:59,680 Speaker 1: by the property owner in two thousand twelve. In that time, 47 00:02:59,800 --> 00:03:03,760 Speaker 1: more information about the caves has um surfaced. For one, 48 00:03:04,120 --> 00:03:06,079 Speaker 1: it has never been a place of worship for the 49 00:03:06,160 --> 00:03:09,799 Speaker 1: Knights Templar or their followers. It hadn't even been built yet. 50 00:03:11,080 --> 00:03:14,280 Speaker 1: Kanton Temple was most likely a product of the Victorian era, 51 00:03:14,520 --> 00:03:17,799 Speaker 1: carved hundreds of years after the Knights Templar had been dissolved. 52 00:03:18,280 --> 00:03:21,919 Speaker 1: During that time, elaborate ornamental structures such as this were 53 00:03:21,960 --> 00:03:25,519 Speaker 1: common among wealthy members of the British elite. They provided 54 00:03:25,560 --> 00:03:29,600 Speaker 1: only decoration, even though they're very architecture betrays a sense 55 00:03:29,600 --> 00:03:33,320 Speaker 1: of purpose. However, instead of a replica Roman temple or 56 00:03:33,400 --> 00:03:36,520 Speaker 1: an Egyptian pyramid in someone's garden, the owner at the 57 00:03:36,520 --> 00:03:38,920 Speaker 1: time had decided to carve an entire temple out of 58 00:03:38,920 --> 00:03:43,120 Speaker 1: sandstone beneath an English forest. England is full of ancient 59 00:03:43,160 --> 00:03:47,160 Speaker 1: caves and underground structures. Kara Dot Cave and all Stretton 60 00:03:47,400 --> 00:03:50,680 Speaker 1: is a large opening in volcanic rock and is believed 61 00:03:50,680 --> 00:03:54,400 Speaker 1: to be where British chieftain Caracticus hid out while resisting 62 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:57,800 Speaker 1: the Roman army during first century a d And another 63 00:03:57,840 --> 00:04:01,760 Speaker 1: folly similar to Kington Temple, the Hawkstone Grotto, was carved 64 00:04:01,760 --> 00:04:04,120 Speaker 1: out of an old copper mine adjacent to a large 65 00:04:04,160 --> 00:04:07,520 Speaker 1: manor house. There are many of these edifices and man 66 00:04:07,600 --> 00:04:10,880 Speaker 1: made caverns we know about, and chances are some have 67 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:15,240 Speaker 1: yet to be rediscovered. England, of course, is a vast 68 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:18,680 Speaker 1: country with thousands of years of history behind it, but 69 00:04:18,839 --> 00:04:22,960 Speaker 1: we still don't know everything. To achieve that, we might 70 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:26,440 Speaker 1: just need to dive a little deeper down the rabbit hole. 71 00:04:39,200 --> 00:04:42,080 Speaker 1: It's the thought that counts, right At least, that's what 72 00:04:42,160 --> 00:04:44,200 Speaker 1: we tell ourselves when we get a gift that doesn't 73 00:04:44,240 --> 00:04:47,039 Speaker 1: seem quite the right fit for us. We should just 74 00:04:47,080 --> 00:04:49,800 Speaker 1: be thankful someone thought of us at all, Except that 75 00:04:49,920 --> 00:04:53,320 Speaker 1: isn't always the case. Sometimes no gift is the best 76 00:04:53,360 --> 00:04:58,080 Speaker 1: gift of all. A woman from Edinburgh must have felt 77 00:04:58,080 --> 00:04:59,840 Speaker 1: that way when her friend returned from a trip to 78 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:03,880 Speaker 1: i row In In the friend's luggage was a modest 79 00:05:03,920 --> 00:05:07,440 Speaker 1: necklace made from glass beads, a thoughtful token from a 80 00:05:07,480 --> 00:05:10,640 Speaker 1: far away land, though the woman might not have accepted 81 00:05:10,640 --> 00:05:13,400 Speaker 1: it had she known where exactly in Cairo, her friend 82 00:05:13,480 --> 00:05:18,159 Speaker 1: had obtained it an ancient tomb. Even though the necklace 83 00:05:18,200 --> 00:05:20,760 Speaker 1: had been a gift from someone close, the woman didn't 84 00:05:20,800 --> 00:05:24,240 Speaker 1: think much of it and set it aside. For seven years. 85 00:05:24,279 --> 00:05:27,520 Speaker 1: It lived among her jewelry, getting pushed deeper and deeper 86 00:05:27,560 --> 00:05:31,640 Speaker 1: out of the way, until nineteen twenty, when she rediscovered it. 87 00:05:31,640 --> 00:05:34,480 Speaker 1: It still didn't suit her taste, and enough time had 88 00:05:34,480 --> 00:05:37,000 Speaker 1: passed where she didn't feel guilty getting rid of it, 89 00:05:37,320 --> 00:05:39,839 Speaker 1: so she tossed it in the small waste basket beside 90 00:05:39,880 --> 00:05:43,440 Speaker 1: her bed. She awoke the following night and reached for 91 00:05:43,560 --> 00:05:46,240 Speaker 1: her pair of slippers that she kept nearby when something 92 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:49,680 Speaker 1: grabbed her wrist. At least she thought something had grabbed her, 93 00:05:49,720 --> 00:05:52,920 Speaker 1: but when she looked down she didn't see anything. There 94 00:05:52,920 --> 00:05:55,960 Speaker 1: were strange sounds coming from the waste basket, too, like 95 00:05:56,080 --> 00:05:59,480 Speaker 1: something was crawling around inside it. She looked down, but 96 00:05:59,600 --> 00:06:03,760 Speaker 1: there was some paper and a string of beads. She 97 00:06:03,800 --> 00:06:06,520 Speaker 1: snatched the necklace in a panic and threw it outside 98 00:06:06,520 --> 00:06:09,560 Speaker 1: her door. The woman told her brother about the incident 99 00:06:09,600 --> 00:06:12,560 Speaker 1: the following day. He was a doctor and someone who 100 00:06:12,560 --> 00:06:15,239 Speaker 1: would scoff at stories of strange sounds in the middle 101 00:06:15,279 --> 00:06:17,800 Speaker 1: of the night, but his sister was not one to 102 00:06:17,880 --> 00:06:21,120 Speaker 1: make up such outlandish things, so he took the necklace 103 00:06:21,160 --> 00:06:24,960 Speaker 1: home with him to see it for himself. That night, 104 00:06:25,000 --> 00:06:27,120 Speaker 1: he placed it under his pillow and went to sleep. 105 00:06:27,640 --> 00:06:29,920 Speaker 1: At four o'clock the next morning, he was awoken by 106 00:06:29,960 --> 00:06:32,839 Speaker 1: loud banging on the walls. He also felt a hand 107 00:06:32,920 --> 00:06:35,760 Speaker 1: moving under his pillow, as though it was trying to 108 00:06:35,800 --> 00:06:38,680 Speaker 1: take the necklace from him. His neighbors asked him the 109 00:06:38,720 --> 00:06:41,279 Speaker 1: following day why he'd been hanging pictures in the middle 110 00:06:41,279 --> 00:06:43,240 Speaker 1: of the night when he should have been getting sleep. 111 00:06:43,640 --> 00:06:47,960 Speaker 1: He had woken everyone up, They said, one nightly experiment 112 00:06:48,200 --> 00:06:50,880 Speaker 1: wasn't enough to render a sound judgment, though, so the 113 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:54,120 Speaker 1: man spent another night with the ancient bobble beneath his head. 114 00:06:54,680 --> 00:06:57,479 Speaker 1: That evening, his bed started to shake, and for a 115 00:06:57,480 --> 00:07:01,320 Speaker 1: whole week he experienced bizarre visits from an unnamed entity 116 00:07:01,440 --> 00:07:05,560 Speaker 1: that haunted his bedroom. His part of the experiment was over, 117 00:07:05,839 --> 00:07:08,280 Speaker 1: but he needed a wider sample size, so he gave 118 00:07:08,320 --> 00:07:11,080 Speaker 1: the necklace to a friend who had a similar experience 119 00:07:11,160 --> 00:07:14,240 Speaker 1: involving an invisible hand reaching for them during the night. 120 00:07:14,840 --> 00:07:17,520 Speaker 1: That person passed it on to someone else, who gave 121 00:07:17,560 --> 00:07:20,760 Speaker 1: it to another person, all who reported the same stories 122 00:07:21,160 --> 00:07:26,840 Speaker 1: the necklace had invited something into their homes. Even more strange, 123 00:07:26,960 --> 00:07:29,480 Speaker 1: each person who possessed the necklace woke up in a 124 00:07:29,560 --> 00:07:32,560 Speaker 1: cold sweat, their hearts beating out in their chest, as 125 00:07:32,600 --> 00:07:35,840 Speaker 1: though they'd come face to face with a ghost. Eventually, 126 00:07:36,040 --> 00:07:38,880 Speaker 1: stories about the necklace made their way to a local newspaper. 127 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:42,840 Speaker 1: The reporter J. W. Harry's printed an article about the 128 00:07:42,880 --> 00:07:46,280 Speaker 1: cursed object, including quotes from each person who had slept 129 00:07:46,320 --> 00:07:49,480 Speaker 1: with it under their pillows. As you might imagine, the 130 00:07:49,600 --> 00:07:52,920 Speaker 1: article spread like wildfire, but Harris wanted to learn more 131 00:07:52,960 --> 00:07:56,240 Speaker 1: about the necklace. He borrowed it and had it examined 132 00:07:56,280 --> 00:07:59,160 Speaker 1: by the Royal Scottish Museum, which told him the blue 133 00:07:59,200 --> 00:08:03,400 Speaker 1: beads were rough three thousand years old. Though an interesting piece, 134 00:08:03,680 --> 00:08:06,840 Speaker 1: there was nothing particularly special about it. It didn't look 135 00:08:06,880 --> 00:08:10,080 Speaker 1: like something used in a religious ceremony or a ritual 136 00:08:10,160 --> 00:08:14,280 Speaker 1: of any kind. Harry's took the piece home, and after 137 00:08:14,360 --> 00:08:16,520 Speaker 1: his family had retired for the night, he placed it 138 00:08:16,560 --> 00:08:19,120 Speaker 1: on the mantel and took a seat in his living room, 139 00:08:19,280 --> 00:08:21,960 Speaker 1: book in his lap. It wasn't long before he started 140 00:08:22,000 --> 00:08:26,640 Speaker 1: hearing sounds rustling in the sideboard, someone knocking here and there, 141 00:08:27,200 --> 00:08:30,200 Speaker 1: what steps in the hall. He ran around the house, 142 00:08:30,320 --> 00:08:32,840 Speaker 1: chasing each of the sounds, but when he looked for 143 00:08:32,880 --> 00:08:37,560 Speaker 1: a source, he found nothing. Harry's even included his wife, 144 00:08:37,600 --> 00:08:40,160 Speaker 1: who didn't know that her husband had brought the necklace 145 00:08:40,200 --> 00:08:43,559 Speaker 1: home in these experiments. He took it into the bedroom 146 00:08:43,559 --> 00:08:46,240 Speaker 1: where his wife was sitting up, still awake, and hid 147 00:08:46,280 --> 00:08:49,959 Speaker 1: the necklace out of sight. The lights dimmed, then returned 148 00:08:49,960 --> 00:08:53,400 Speaker 1: to normal. They did so consistently for minutes at a time. 149 00:08:53,840 --> 00:08:57,680 Speaker 1: Eventually Harry's turned off the lights and then the rustling 150 00:08:57,760 --> 00:09:02,520 Speaker 1: sounds began again. After a week, Harry's decided to unload 151 00:09:02,559 --> 00:09:06,800 Speaker 1: the necklace on another unsuspecting soul, an architect named James Dunn, 152 00:09:07,440 --> 00:09:10,840 Speaker 1: while the others dealt with rustling and mild tapping. Donne 153 00:09:10,880 --> 00:09:13,920 Speaker 1: experienced crashing sounds in the middle of his bedroom, so 154 00:09:14,040 --> 00:09:18,439 Speaker 1: loud that they scared his dog. Harry's also told someone 155 00:09:18,480 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 1: else about the necklace, someone familiar with the supernatural, Sir 156 00:09:22,520 --> 00:09:26,320 Speaker 1: Arthur Conan Doyle. He told Harry's how ancient Egyptians would 157 00:09:26,360 --> 00:09:29,800 Speaker 1: enchant their tombs with spirit entities to guard them after 158 00:09:29,840 --> 00:09:32,720 Speaker 1: their death. It was possible that the necklace had been 159 00:09:32,720 --> 00:09:36,640 Speaker 1: taken from one of those tombs without permission, disturbing the entity, 160 00:09:37,960 --> 00:09:40,960 Speaker 1: and so Harry's gave the jewelry back to its original owner, 161 00:09:41,160 --> 00:09:44,120 Speaker 1: the woman from Edinburgh, who wanted nothing to do with it. 162 00:09:44,520 --> 00:09:46,760 Speaker 1: She told her brother, the doctor, to take it away 163 00:09:46,760 --> 00:09:49,640 Speaker 1: from her, which he did on a trip to Loch Levin. 164 00:09:49,920 --> 00:09:53,080 Speaker 1: He reached into his pocket, pulled the necklace out, and 165 00:09:53,160 --> 00:09:56,640 Speaker 1: threw it into the water, where it's been ever since. 166 00:09:58,160 --> 00:10:01,920 Speaker 1: But that wasn't the end for the Gyptian relic. Soon after, 167 00:10:02,040 --> 00:10:04,880 Speaker 1: a young woman in Edinburgh was reported to be writing 168 00:10:05,000 --> 00:10:08,640 Speaker 1: strange letters that didn't seem to make any sense. Of course, 169 00:10:08,840 --> 00:10:11,480 Speaker 1: kids make up silly words all the time, but what 170 00:10:11,600 --> 00:10:14,560 Speaker 1: made this incident noteworthy was that her writing hand was 171 00:10:14,600 --> 00:10:17,880 Speaker 1: doing it automatically independence of the rest of her body. 172 00:10:19,120 --> 00:10:21,640 Speaker 1: It turns out that what everyone thought was gibberish was 173 00:10:21,679 --> 00:10:25,400 Speaker 1: in fact a message scribbled backwards, supposedly taken from the 174 00:10:25,440 --> 00:10:28,679 Speaker 1: deity protecting the Egyptian tomb from which the necklace had 175 00:10:28,679 --> 00:10:32,120 Speaker 1: been taken, and this deity was revealing the location of 176 00:10:32,160 --> 00:10:35,040 Speaker 1: the necklace and that it was probably best for it 177 00:10:35,120 --> 00:10:40,560 Speaker 1: to stay there. Jewelry is a lovely gift in most situations. 178 00:10:40,600 --> 00:10:45,120 Speaker 1: Better than that, though, is something much more comforting relief 179 00:10:46,000 --> 00:10:51,560 Speaker 1: from an Egyptian curse. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided 180 00:10:51,600 --> 00:10:55,040 Speaker 1: tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on 181 00:10:55,080 --> 00:10:58,079 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting 182 00:10:58,200 --> 00:11:02,800 Speaker 1: Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me 183 00:11:03,000 --> 00:11:06,640 Speaker 1: Aaron Manky in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make 184 00:11:06,679 --> 00:11:10,240 Speaker 1: another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast, 185 00:11:10,360 --> 00:11:13,280 Speaker 1: book series, and television show, and you can learn all 186 00:11:13,320 --> 00:11:16,880 Speaker 1: about it over at the World of Lore dot com. 187 00:11:16,880 --> 00:11:20,360 Speaker 1: And until next time, stay curious. Yeah,