Black shadow suspects the Egyptian priest's soul in the British museum

Two ghost hunters confirmed the moment the ancient Egyptian priest's soul returned to the coffin in the British museum.

Two British ghost hunters Sean Reynolds and Rebecca Palmer said they had caught a dark shadow gliding in front of the camera while recording with special equipment at Leeds City Museum in March this year, according to Express. They believed it was the spirit of the Egyptian priest Nesyamun who died more than 3,000 years ago.


Black ball in British museum.(Video: YouTube).

Sean and Rebecca were using the REM pod column and a shadow detector to shoot the night scene in the museum when the electronic devices suddenly made a continuous beep.

When they got home and edited the filmed images, they discovered the suspicious shadow at that moment. "The head of the shadow is shaped like a hood and it glides towards the grave to the right. It's the grave of a monk named Nesyamun. I think that could be his soul , " Reynolds said.

The Nesyamun mummy was transferred to Leeds City Museum in 1823 and is recognized as one of the most notable mummies in the UK."Nesyamun is always among the showcases that attract the most attention because the body is in a good state of preservation , " the museum spokesman said.

Before the question of whether the shadow might be the shadow of the video recorder, Reynolds insisted that there were no lights behind them and no one else passed by when they were filming."It can be said that when something really happened, you could feel it , " Reynolds said.

Picture 1 of Black shadow suspects the Egyptian priest's soul in the British museum
The shadow is said to be an ancient Egyptian monk.

However, scientists argue that there has not been any genuine authority about the presence of souls or demons. A study published in March last year by Chinese neuroscientists pointed out that local problems in brain activity are the biggest cause of ghost sighting.

With the assumption that most cases of ghosts are visual illusions instead of actually seeing dead people, the research team is headed by Professor Wang Wei of the Shanghai Institute of Biology that finds most cases occurring when the brain misunderstand the signals coming from the eye, according to SCMP.