Fear when ... resurrected in grave

History recorded many people were buried when not really died. Poor victims died unjustly because they were buried alive.

When they woke up under the grave, it was too late. The end result of such a series of mistakes, often brings disaster.

Merciful evidence

Buried victims to death, a form that reminds people of brutal medieval or savage, cold-blooded murderers. But you may be surprised to know that, even in everyday life, people have had to witness many similar cases just because . mistaken. Due to the misperception, many victims were buried without actually dying. Later accidental discoveries helped the living people realize their deadly mistakes, and envisioned the "true" death of their loved ones.

The French girl Mary Norah Best , who follows her mother to India and suffers from cholera is raging here. After a few short days of fighting the disease, this 17-year-old girl was told by doctors to be unable to catch her pulse. Just a few hours later, Mary was quickly buried in the cemetery for the French in the city of Calcutta (India). Her family had a crypt here and her coffin was placed in it, not buried in the ground in the usual way. It was 1871, and cholera was massacring thousands of Indians every day. The victims were buried very quickly after being identified as dead, to prevent the spread of germs.

But ten years later, when the crypt was opened to receive the coffin of Mary's recently deceased uncle, those present had to witness a horrifying scene: Mary's coffin lid, which had been crucified sure, now it was overturned and lying on the grave floor. The skeleton of the girl was half in posture and in the vest, half was outside. The skull touches the ground, and the right side of the skull has a large crack. The bones of the fingers were bent as if clinging to something, and the clothes were not torn.

Mary was not dead when her relatives put them in the coffin and brought them to the crypt. Victims of cholera often fall into a coma and so does Mary. The doctor and family mistakenly thought that she was dead. This poor girl has been "buried alive". A few hours or days later, the girl awoke and was horrified to realize she was in a closed coffin. From the deep crypt, her screams didn't reach anyone's ears. While panicking and suffocating, she tore off her clothes and tried to save herself by trying to push the coffin lid. When the plank broke out, Mary leaned out, but now she was completely exhausted. Her head was hit hard on the ground. Perhaps this poor girl died immediately after that serious injury, or even a little more ecstatic before officially leaving her life. What happened under the crypt was envisioned as that. A dreadful death filled with pain and terror.

The tragedy that happened to Mary, unfortunately, was not the only one. Until the 20th century, the method of determining a credible death was to apply a hot bread to the soles of the feet to check the reaction of the dying. If they do not have any action then they are considered dead and the living people will start preparing for a funeral. In a book published in 1905, two British doctors synthesized such cases of "buried alive" around the world, based on the press of many countries.

In 1887, in France, a young man was taken to burial. Immediately after lowering the grave, the graves suddenly heard a knock from under the lid of the coffin. Fear of this will create a panic of mourners, the workers still carry out the burial routine, because they think it's just an illusion. But when the victim's relatives began to release the first soil lumps onto the lid of the coffin, this sound was repeated so clearly that all those present heard. But instead of immediately opening the robe, the crowd was waiting for a government official to check, because the invasion of the coffin of the dead was a felony. When the government representative was present and ordered to open the vest, it was too late: this man died of suffocation just before. The victim's entire body crumpled, fingernails and toenails were torn due to scratching the wood, and the horrors still existed on his face.

Picture 1 of Fear when ... resurrected in grave
No one wants me to wake up in a cold coffin buried deep underground.(Illustration).

Business through 'fear'

Previously, when such incidents occurred, it was often assumed that grave robbers opened the coffin and caused the mess of the victim's body. But when forensic techniques developed, it was not difficult to find the cause of the actual death for these victims. They died, simply because they were buried when they were still alive. Determining whether the death has come to the victim or not is based only on very rudimentary methods, such as checking the heartbeat or breathing is still the cause of many people from 'fake death' to die. .

Although the most recent cases of "live burial" have been recorded for centuries, but the obsession with such a horrifying death still makes modern people worry about the last moments of their lives. me Some of them were too frightened by this concern, leaving behind wills . too hard for their children: to cut off the throat, or pierce their hearts before burying them, even if they were not dead, they would will . die completely. No one wants me to wake up in a cold coffin buried deep underground.

Understanding this mentality, a Belgian carpenter named Michel de Karnicé-Karnicki flashed the opportunity to get rich when he invented the alarm device from the coffin . It looks like a glass ball, placed on the chest of the corpse. If the body of the corpse is heaving - a sign that the person is still breathing, not yet dead - the ball will roll, activating a bell inside it to sound an alarm.

A burial organization also introduced a 'high-tech' coffin model that allowed people inside to press the emergency alert if they woke up. Cell phone waves are used to transmit signals to the ground. Interactive devices installed above the grave will activate dozens of other rescue devices such as calling the victim's phone number, police number . to report, and pulse flags. The grave will stand up around the grave, and the loudspeaker system will emit a built-in cry for help . All to attract those present in the cemetery area, to provide the opportunity to be saved as soon as possible for the person being buried living.

Currently, in Germany there is already an organization lobbying for the movement "to be burnt slowly". According to the propaganda of this organization, relatives of those who were supposed to die should not bury their relatives 48 hours after the last sign of their life was recorded. This will help avoid catastrophe buried alive by relatives due to confusion about death caused.

Lucky victims

The only lucky live burial case known is Sarah Ann Dobbins in Hereford County (England).

In 1879, Sarah was determined to have died after 3 weeks of coma. She was shrouded and placed in the vest, but the funeral would be performed the next day. After a night, relatives found signs of her body being moved. Upon closer inspection, they were shocked to see that her body was warm again with a weak breathing. The doctor was immediately present and after timely emergency measures, this young girl was fortunate to live again.

Sarah's expected funeral turned into a jubilant celebration of her return from the dead. But the dreadful memory of this death has constantly haunted Sarah, and she eventually jumped into the river suicide after 14 years of extreme mental stress.