WEBVTT - Operation Fraud

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<v Speaker 1>Welcome to Aaron Manke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of

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<v Speaker 1>iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild. Our world is full of

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<v Speaker 1>the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all

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<v Speaker 1>of these amazing tales are right there on display, just

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<v Speaker 1>waiting for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities.

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<v Speaker 1>On a cold afternoon in February of eighteen seventy two,

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<v Speaker 1>a middle aged woman walked into a photographer's studio in Boston.

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<v Speaker 1>She was wearing the traditional morning clothes of a widow,

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<v Speaker 1>a black dress and bonnet and a black veil over

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<v Speaker 1>her face. Even though it had been almost seven years

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<v Speaker 1>since her husband passed away, the woman had experienced a

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<v Speaker 1>shocking amount of grief in the past couple decades. Along

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<v Speaker 1>with her husband, she had lost three sons and three

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<v Speaker 1>of her brothers. But in her darkest days, she found

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<v Speaker 1>comfort in the belief that the dead aren't really gone,

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<v Speaker 1>They're just in a different place, and that was why

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<v Speaker 1>she had traveled all the way to Boston to visit

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<v Speaker 1>this particular photo studio. The shop's owner, William Mumler, had

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<v Speaker 1>made a name for himself as a spirit photographer, someone

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<v Speaker 1>who could capture apparitions of the dead with his camera.

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<v Speaker 1>He had discovered his talent a decade prior when he

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<v Speaker 1>took a self portrait and once it had developed, saw

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<v Speaker 1>the ghostly figure of his late cousin in the back

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<v Speaker 1>of the frame, standing right behind him. Mumler had opened

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<v Speaker 1>a photography business to share his spiritual gift with other

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<v Speaker 1>grieving families, or to take advantage of them, depending on

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<v Speaker 1>who you asked. Plenty of people at the time were

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<v Speaker 1>convinced that Mumler was a fraud and the supposed ghosts

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<v Speaker 1>in the photos were fake. The woman who walked into

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<v Speaker 1>his shop that afternoon was a true believer. She'd been

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<v Speaker 1>going to seances for years, and she was convinced that

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<v Speaker 1>she'd spoken to the dead, so why couldn't she see

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<v Speaker 1>them as well. The woman shook Mumler's hand and introduced

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<v Speaker 1>herself as Missus Tyndall. She sat down in the chair

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<v Speaker 1>in front of the camera and waited while he set

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<v Speaker 1>up his equipment. When the camera was ready, Missus Tyndall

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<v Speaker 1>lifted her veil and sat perfectly still. When Mummler snapped

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<v Speaker 1>the shutter, nothing unusual seemed to happen. She didn't feel

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<v Speaker 1>any sort of supernatural presence or see any flashes of

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<v Speaker 1>lights in the corner of her eye. As she left

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<v Speaker 1>the studio, she couldn't be sure that it had worked

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<v Speaker 1>at all, but a few days later she came back

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<v Speaker 1>to pick up the photoprint, hoping for the best. Bumbler

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<v Speaker 1>sorted through a pile of envelopes until he found the

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<v Speaker 1>one that had her name on it, and when she

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<v Speaker 1>opened it and pulled out the photo inside, she gasped.

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<v Speaker 1>In the photo, there was a pale figure standing behind

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<v Speaker 1>Missus Tyndall, hands on her shoulders. It was faint, but

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<v Speaker 1>if she looked closely, she could make out the angular

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<v Speaker 1>nose and close cropped beard of her husband. Another customer

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<v Speaker 1>who was in the shop at the time, leaned over

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<v Speaker 1>Missus Tyndall's shoulder to take a peek at the photo.

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<v Speaker 1>She remarked that the figure standing behind her looked just

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<v Speaker 1>like Abraham Lincoln. Missus Tyndall replied that it did because

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<v Speaker 1>it was Abraham Lincoln. The truth was, the woman's name

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<v Speaker 1>wasn't actually Missus Tyndall. She was Mary Todd Lincoln, the

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<v Speaker 1>former first Lady of the United States. She had given

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<v Speaker 1>the photographer a fake name to protect her privacy, and

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<v Speaker 1>even though Mumbler hadn't figured out her real identity, the

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<v Speaker 1>apparition in the photo came out looking exactly like her

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<v Speaker 1>famous husband, who had been assassinated at Ford's Theater seven

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<v Speaker 1>years earlier. To some, including Missus Lincoln, this was proof

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<v Speaker 1>that Mummler was no fraud and his photos really did

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<v Speaker 1>capture the spirits of the dead. Of course, many skeptics

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<v Speaker 1>still agree, but more than one one hundred and fifty

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<v Speaker 1>years later, while experts believe that his photos were manipulated,

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<v Speaker 1>there is still no consensus on how he created them

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<v Speaker 1>in the first place, and unless Mummler's ghost reappears to

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<v Speaker 1>explain his bag of tricks, will likely never know the truth.

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<v Speaker 1>The Crusades have undergone a bit of a pr crisis

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<v Speaker 1>in recent years. Whereas they used to be looked upon

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<v Speaker 1>as a series of heroic quests undertaken by brave knights,

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<v Speaker 1>in the modern day, they are seen as violent wars

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<v Speaker 1>over a religion that preaches peace. There were eight Crusades

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<v Speaker 1>in total, and most of them were less than successful,

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<v Speaker 1>But of all of them, the Fourth Crusade was by

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<v Speaker 1>far the biggest disaster. It began in the year eleven

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<v Speaker 1>ninety eight, when Pope Innocent the Third called for a

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<v Speaker 1>new crusade on Jerusalem. The previous crusade, which was the

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<v Speaker 1>most famous one with Richard the Lionheart, had ended with

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<v Speaker 1>many Christian territorial conquests, including Cyprus and much of the

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<v Speaker 1>Israeli coast, but the Muslims still controlled the all important

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<v Speaker 1>city of Jerusalem, where Christians believe Jesus died and was

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<v Speaker 1>resurrected enter Enrico Dandolo, the ruler of Venice. Paintings of

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<v Speaker 1>Enrico show him with an angry expression on his face,

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<v Speaker 1>a sharp beak like nose, and a strange, pointed red hat.

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<v Speaker 1>The guy looked just like a villain, and he was

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<v Speaker 1>prepared to act like one as well. As crusaders gathered

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<v Speaker 1>and prepared for the journey to the Holy Land, he

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<v Speaker 1>offered to finance their journey with a fleet of warships,

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<v Speaker 1>but they had to do something for him first. He

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<v Speaker 1>wanted them to sail across the Adriatic Sea to the

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<v Speaker 1>city of Zara, which was directly east from Venice in

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<v Speaker 1>modern day Croatia. The city had recently allied itself with

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<v Speaker 1>Hungary and Enrico wanted the Crusaders to conquer it and

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<v Speaker 1>bring it under Veneti rule. Pope Innocent was completely against this,

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<v Speaker 1>as this was a Christian city. He threatened to excommunicate

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<v Speaker 1>Venice and the Crusaders if they went through with this plan.

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<v Speaker 1>Some of the Crusaders abandoned their mission, but enough, we're

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<v Speaker 1>willing to go through with the attack. Enrico's money and

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<v Speaker 1>ships were just too tempting to pass up. When they arrived,

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<v Speaker 1>they sacked the city and Venice was excommunicated, but the

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<v Speaker 1>Pope eventually forgave the Crusaders because you know, he needed

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<v Speaker 1>to keep them crusading. They traveled around Greece headed for Jerusalem,

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<v Speaker 1>but once again Enrico proved to have ulterior motives. Years before,

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<v Speaker 1>he had been ousted from an advisory position in the

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<v Speaker 1>Byzantine courts at Constantinople. This was a massive, well fortified

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<v Speaker 1>city that today we call Istanbul. It's strategically important too,

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<v Speaker 1>as it serves as a gateway between the Black Sea

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<v Speaker 1>and the Mediterranean. Enrico wanted the Crusaders to attack Constantinople

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<v Speaker 1>and place a new emperor on its throne, giving him

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<v Speaker 1>control of the Byzantine Empire. The empire spanned all of

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<v Speaker 1>Greece and Turkey, and this time he claimed that it

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<v Speaker 1>was for religious reasons, maybe with giant air quotes there.

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<v Speaker 1>The Byzantines had split from the Catholic Church years prior,

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<v Speaker 1>forming their own Eastern Orthodox Church in an event known

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<v Speaker 1>as the Great Schism, and Rico's argument was that they

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<v Speaker 1>could bring the Byzantines back into the Catholic fold and

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<v Speaker 1>save them from heresy, and a plan started out okay

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<v Speaker 1>for him. When the Crusaders first surrounded the city, they

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<v Speaker 1>were able to force the surrender of the current emperor

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<v Speaker 1>and put in Rico's puppet on the throne. But as

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<v Speaker 1>you can imagine, this didn't go over very well with

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<v Speaker 1>the locals. In their mind, an army from a foreign

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<v Speaker 1>land two peninsulas over had arrived and forced a new

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<v Speaker 1>leader and a new church on them, and they were

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<v Speaker 1>not having it. And so the people rebelled under the

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<v Speaker 1>leadership and quickly executed in Rico's puppet emperor. But the

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<v Speaker 1>Crusaders simply couldn't admit their mistakes and head for Jurierusalem.

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<v Speaker 1>One of the major issues with any crusade was that

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<v Speaker 1>it was difficult to keep such a large army well

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<v Speaker 1>supplied in a foreign land. The Crusaders were now almost

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<v Speaker 1>out of food, and their ships needed repairs before sailing again,

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<v Speaker 1>and so they made the most Unchristian decision possible. They

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<v Speaker 1>decided to attack. On the morning of April ninth, in

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<v Speaker 1>the year twelve oh four, tens of thousands of Crusaders

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<v Speaker 1>climbed over the walls and battered down the gates of Constantinople.

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<v Speaker 1>Once inside, they murdered and assaulted the citizens they stole

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<v Speaker 1>from businesses and churches alike. It was a crusade that

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<v Speaker 1>had led to Christians killing Christians. But of course Enrico

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<v Speaker 1>now had what he wanted. Venice controlled trade from Italy

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<v Speaker 1>to Turkey, and a new emperor was installed on the throne,

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<v Speaker 1>and the Crusaders split up the lands amongst themselves. However,

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<v Speaker 1>the fractured nature of this arrangement meant that the Byzantines

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<v Speaker 1>were still able to regroup and retake Constantinople a few

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<v Speaker 1>decades later, in twelve sixty one. Not that's en Rico

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<v Speaker 1>live to see it, mind you, he died just a

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<v Speaker 1>year after the crusade in twelve oh five. It's a

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<v Speaker 1>tale as old as time. A rich guy with a

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<v Speaker 1>bit of power, one who only cares about himself, mind you,

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<v Speaker 1>puts on the costume of religion as a tool to

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<v Speaker 1>fool the masses and then steals whatever he wants, and ultimately,

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<v Speaker 1>like so many other dictators throughout history, all of Enrico's

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<v Speaker 1>works were eventually undone. I hope you've enjoyed today's guided

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<v Speaker 1>tour of the Cabinet of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on

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<v Speaker 1>Apple Podcasts, or learn more about the show by visiting

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<v Speaker 1>Curiosities podcast dot com. The show was created by me

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<v Speaker 1>Aaron Mankey in partnership with how Stuff Works. I make

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<v Speaker 1>another award winning show called Lore, which is a podcast,

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<v Speaker 1>book series, and television show, and you can learn all

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<v Speaker 1>about it over at the Worldolore dot com. And until

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<v Speaker 1>next time, stay curious. Two