Cursed items

Having possessions is good but there are many things that bring the body to the owner. Here are the scariest cursed objects in the world

Cold with scary cursed objects in the world

1. Kimono set

A kimono is considered by many to bring bad luck when its three owners, three Japanese girls, all died in turn before having a chance to wear it. A monk found it too " dead " to decide to take it to burn in February 1657.

When the kimono was on fire, a big wind appeared, blowing the flame out of everyone's control. As a result, the fire from this kimono burned three-quarters of Tokyo city, leveled 300 temples, 500 palaces, 9,000 shops, 61 bridges and burned 100,000 dead.

Picture 1 of Cursed items

2. The watch

A clock owned by King Louis XIV (France) stopped running exactly at the same time this king died: 7h45, on September 1, 1715 and since then it never ran again.

3. The shirt

In the January 25, 1787 attack on the federal arsenal in Springfield during General Shay's rebellion, Jabez Spicer , in Leyden, Massachusetts (USA), was killed with two bullets of the enemy. But the special point was that at that time, Jabez Spicer was wearing the jacket of his brother Daniel. Daniel was shot dead by two bullets on March 5, 1784. Two bullets killed Jabez Spicer exactly on the holes in the jacket due to the previous hit (created by Daniel's brother). Exactly one by one even though Daniel's brother was shot three years earlier.

4. Wind

Camille Flammarion , a famous French astronomer of the 19th century, is a researcher of myths, especially ghostly stories related to life after death. In The Unknown , published in 1900, he recounts a story that is also quite thrilling. When he wrote a chapter on " wind " in L'Atmosphère (the atmosphere), a wind blew his window and lifted the pages he had just finished writing and took them away.

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Camille Flammarion, the famous French astronomer in the 19th century (photo: astrosurf)

A few days later, he was surprised when he received the proofs from the publisher (the manuscript pages were swept away by the wind). It turned out that the wind took these manuscripts out of the way that a publisher of the publisher went to, who often took Flammarion's manuscript to the publisher. This person just picked up the pages and brought them to the publisher as usual.

5. Bullet

In 1883, Henry Zieglan of Honey Grove, Texas (USA) betrayed his lover so much that she had to commit suicide. The girl's brother decided to take revenge by shooting Ziegland with a gun, but the bullet just brushed Ziegland's face and slammed into a nearby tree.

The brother and sister thought that he had retaliated against me, so he committed suicide. In 1913, Ziegland decided to cut down the tree with bullets in it. Because of the difficulty of chopping down trees, Ziegland decides to use explosives and the explosion sends the bullet into Ziegland's head to kill him immediately.