Victorian Urban Legends: A Sexual Misunderstanding June 11, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has long searched for erotic or sexually-charged Victorian urban legends in vain. It is not, of course, that the Victorians didn’t tell them. The problem is that the Victorians seem to have been averse to putting them into print. Only the wrong bed sometimes emerges. But what about this: ‘the kiss-me misunderstanding’? As the […]
Urban Legends: Saved by Thieves May 13, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernAnother in our Victorian Urban Legends series. This looks like the ancestor (or more likely one of the many ancestors) of the modern Mafia Neighbours, story. You know the one, young married couple move into the neighbourhood, all their new furniture is stolen while they are on their honeymoon, but when they tell an elderly […]
Immortal Meals #27: The Honey Baby March 16, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : AncientIt is a story still told in hushed voices by archaeologists and classicists. Here is a recent version by Ken Albala from his (very good) lecture series on the history of food. So there is this revealing story of this group of Egyptologists and they find this perfectly sealed jar of honey and they open […]
An Urban Legend: The Vanishing Car March 8, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is a very exciting ghost story, because it seems to be an early version of the most famous (and at least to this blogger) the most satisfying modern urban legend: the vanishing hitchhiker: hitchiker picked up who it later transpires was a ghost. Admittedly the story is turned on its head: the driver and […]
Dreaming Death: Early Registration of Death March 5, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis appeared in the newspaper as ‘an extraordinary hallucination’: Beach had very tentatively put it in his list of Victorian urban legends until he verified the existence of Sheriff Balfour. It could alternatively be sure bloody chance; or a murder case (if you close your eyes and squint at it from an unusual angle): any views […]
Urban Legend: the Clock Trick February 24, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernOne newspaper report includes this precious Victorian story, which Beach has been unable to track down elsewhere. It is satisfying so there must be other versions out there. There is an old story of a thief who, engaging the landlord of a country tavern a bet that he could not sit in front of clock […]
Victorian Urban Legends: Coffin Games January 18, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : Modern***Dedicated to Chris W*** Beach in his tiny hours of research ran across two accounts that feel like Victorian urban legends: a favourite theme of this blog. Note the lack of concrete references. These look as if they were included in a joke column and then recycled as news with some salacious details thrown in… A Sheffield […]
The Naked Dancing Thief: Con or Urban Legend? January 8, 2016
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe following is a report from Reuters from Turkey from June 1937. Pretending to be a ghost, a beautiful young woman in Istanbul, who appeared naked at night in the house of a priest, and danced before him, has made big haul money and other valuables. When he first saw what he described as a […]
Victorian Urban Legend: Eating Fido December 6, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernYou all know the story. Young couple go out on their first date and decide to drive out to the twilight lake with a Kentucky Fried Chicken. They arrive and in the dark start chewing on the delicious white meat only for the girl to say that hers tastes strange. She takes a number of […]
Historians Predict the Past: An Academic Urban Legend? October 25, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, ContemporaryHere is a nice passage from Tony Judt’s Postwar (2005), a wonderful book if you’ve not yet had a chance. Unlike memory, which confirms and reinforces itself, history contributes to the disenchantment of the world. Most of what it has to offer is discomforting, even disruptive – which is why it is not always politically […]
Execution by Swimming Pool: A Saudi Legend? October 16, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ContemporaryWhile looking into the case of the execution of princess Misha’al in Saudi Arabia in 1977 Beach ran across this passage. Eight months after the airing of Death of a Princess [April 1980], another prince approached King Khalid asking approval to have his adulterous daughter executed [so early 1981?]. The King, fearing a repeat publicity […]
Victorian Urban Legend: the Clever Pickpocket September 18, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has recently been searching for nineteenth-century urban legends, a real challenge because the category did not exist as an idea, though of course incredible ‘true’ stories circulated. Perhaps this is one of them. The pickpocket who is so clever that he or she puts the wallet back once everything is stolen. Folkestone is filling […]
Victorian Urban Legends: The Wrong Bed August 16, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThe Wrong Bed urban legend is self explanatory: a man or a woman get in the wrong bed in the wrong room in the wrong house, inevitably with someone of the opposite sex. That this story did the rounds in Victorian times there should be no surprise. What is incredible is that the story was […]
Victorian Urban Legend: The Coffin Trick August 11, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernThis is an absolutely brilliant story, but probably not a very good scam. That suggests that we are dealing here with a nineteenth-century urban legend. According to the New York Herald, a charitable gentleman his lately been imposed upon in the most shameful manner in Boston. Meeting a woman in one of the streets in […]
Victorian Urban Legend: the Pickpocket’s Diamond Ring August 7, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : ModernBeach has offered a series of Victorian and Edwardian urban legends in the last weeks, some of which he has his doubts about. This one though is a slam dunk of the best kind. First, it is the clear ancestor of the stories where an honest person accidentally steals something from a stranger: though in Beach’s […]