Monday 14 September 2020

Strange News -Holsworthy -UFO -Cryptozoology -Yowie

Ufo


 
Keep up with the news by installing RT’s extension for Chrome. Never miss a story with this clean and simple app that delivers the latest headlines to you.

Pilot who witnessed infamous declassified UFO says object committed ‘act of war’ during encounter

One of the former fighter pilots who encountered a mysterious flying object off the coast of California in 2004 says the unidentified phenomena committed an “act of war” in the unexplained encounter.
Commander David Fravor witnessed the Tic Tac-shaped object perform extraordinary aerial maneuvers that no known human technology is capable of in November 2004. The former US Navy pilot said the UFO was unlike anything else he ever encountered.
Commander Fravor was dispatched to investigate the area after radar anomalies were detected. He was followed by other pilots who successfully recorded footage of the strange phenomena. The video was leaked in 2017 before being declassified by the Pentagon earlier this year.
ALSO ON RT.COM‘That’s a hell of a video!’ Trump’s reaction to Pentagon’s declassified UFO footage leaves ET hunters puzzled
Fravor recounted the perplexing encounter in a podcast interview with Massachusetts Institute of Technology scientist Lex Fridman. “This is not like, ‘we saw it and it was gone’, or ‘I saw lights in the sky and it's gone’ – we watched this thing on a crystal clear day with four trained observers,” Fravor recalled. 
The ex-pilot said that any time he tried to get close to the object it rapidly accelerated and was gone in less than a second. “I remember telling the guy in my back seat, ‘Dude, I dunno about you but I'm pretty weirded out.’”
After landing, Fravor mentioned the UFO to a colleague, Chad Underwood, who successfully located the unidentified phenomena only for it to jam his radar. “He's telling the radar, ‘Stare down the line of sight, whatever is there I want you to grab it and build a trace file on it,’ which will tell you where it is, how fast it is and the direction that it's going,” Fravor explained to Fridman.
“The radar is smart enough that when the signal comes back if it's been messed with, it will tell you - it will give you indications that it's being jammed .... It's being jammed into about every mode you can see ... You can tell it's being jammed,” he added.
When you actively jam another platform, that's technically an act of war.
When discussing where he believes the craft came from, the former fighter pilot said it could do things that no known human technology is capable of. “I don't like to get into little green men but I don't think we've developed it ... I think you can hide things for a while. This is a giant leap in technology.”
ALSO ON RT.COMSenate committee seeks to force US government & military to DECLASSIFY all data collected on UFOs
Like this story? Share it with a friend!
Podcasts
Witch's









Medieval royal witches: from Elizabeth Woodville to Queen Joan of Navarre

From fertility potions and love charms to evil spells designed to kill kings of England, certain types of magic became associated with royal women during the Middle Ages. Author and medievalist Gemma Hollman investigates…
Elizabeth Woodville with her husband, Edward IV. According to one medieval document, their marriage only came about “by Sorcerie and Wichecrafte, committed by the said Elizabeth, and her Moder Jaquett Duchess of Bedford”. (Photo by Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)



On 23 January 1484, the English parliament issued Titulus Regius, explaining why the newly crowned Richard III was the legitimate heir to the throne instead of the children of his brother, King Edward IV, and Elizabeth Woodville. Among the reasons listed was the fact that Edward and Elizabeth’s marriage only came about “by Sorcerie and Wichecrafte, committed by the said Elizabeth, and her Moder Jaquett Duchess of Bedford”. More than a century before the mass witch-hunts that so characterise our knowledge of early modern Europe and Colonial America, this seems like a shocking piece of information. But witchcraft has a long history, and although it is not an issue we commonly associate with the Middle Ages, belief in magic was indeed prevalent during this period.
England was actually behind the continent in terms of developing distinct ideas of witchcraft – and using it for political ends. But while people may have been sceptical in individual cases as to whether or not a person had engaged in witchcraft, it was universally agreed in the medieval period that there were people who could harness magic and use it for good or for ill. Moreover, lines between science and witchcraft were blurred in the Middle Ages and not as clear-cut as we might imagine today.
17th century: A young woman stands accused of witchcraft. (Photo by MPI/Getty Images)



A 17th century witch trial. “It was universally agreed in the medieval period that there were people who could harness magic and use it for good or for ill,” writes Gemma Hollman. (Photo by MPI/Getty Images)
Magic was present at all levels of society across the medieval period – from telling the future to destroying crops; from killing people to making them fall in love; there were many different avenues of medieval magic. It is crucial to remember that these were not ideas taken lightly: kings would pay the church to say prayers in their protection when plots of sorcery were in the air, for example. They would have objects imbued with charms to protect them from poison, or to protect their wives during childbirth.
There was not yet a complete atmosphere of hysteria against witches, but it was certainly believed in the medieval period there were people capable of casting spells. And it is important to remember that people really did perform rituals using herbs and charms to try to bring about an act of magic, whether for good or for bad. 

Medieval astrology

By the 14th century, most of the major courts on the continent employed astrologers who would be used by monarchs or courtiers to advance their causes. Astrologers could advise a king when the stars were best aligned to bring about success in a battle, for example, or they could draw up charts for an ambitious noble to predict whether they would have a rise to favour.
Many doctors in various countries were also required to know astrology in order to best treat their patients: it was thought treatment would be more successful if performed in conjunction with the patient’s astral alignment. One example from a 1395 version of the Centiloquium explained that different body parts were connected to different astrological signs. It instructed that doctors should not bleed a limb when the moon is in the sign relating to the limb that was being bled, as it would be dangerous. It was thought that the moon encouraged the ‘humours’, essentially bodily fluids, to flow, and so bleeding when the moon was connected to that limb could encourage infections or spasms and be treacherous for the patient.

Opinion was divided as to the accuracy of astrology as a science, however, and some religious men argued that it was heretical against the control of God in people’s lives. But astrology was in most aspects considered a very strict science. In the 1350s, Charles, Dauphin of France, began to amass a huge library of astrological texts. Two decades later, when he was king, he endowed a college of astrology and medicine at the University of Paris. Even the papal court had a gathering of certain types of astrologers.
The danger of astrology, however, was that it increasingly found alignment with users of malign magic. Charts which could be used by doctors to track the stars and decide upon the best course of treatment for their patient could also be used by sorcerers to ensure the planets were in the right positions to perform an evil spell, for example. And it could later be difficult to argue that said charts were designed be used for good and not for evil if accusations were thrown.

Necromancy

Increasingly, astrology became associated with educated men who had the access to texts and knowledge to practice it. Meanwhile, the practice of necromancy – a type of magic where, it was believed, someone could conjure spirits of the dead who would then be able to imbue wisdom of events to come – began to become more widespread. It was thought these spirits of the dead could answer questions of the living and tell them their future.
The idea of necromancy had been around for centuries, with Isidore of Seville writing about it back in the 7th century, but by the 15th century it was established in England that necromancy was the reserve of very educated men. Necromancy was not any old craft that a peasant could learn, but a very elite form of magic. Only men who could read and write; who had been to university; and who had access to a wealth of books could learn the skills required to perform it. This became of vital importance to accusations against royal women in the 15th century. A woman, even of such high status as to be part of the English royal family, would not be believed by the masses to have the knowledge to perform necromancy themselves.

Witchcraft and ‘women’s magic’

So what type of magic could women access in the medieval period? Popular were fertility potions and charms for women who were struggling to conceive a child with their husband, and even for those who were wanting to make a potential partner fall in love with them.
Across much of the medieval period, magic was not necessarily gendered. By the 15th century, however, a split was opening up between high-level magic performed by educated men, and witchcraft more likely to be performed by women. In 1487, the Malleus Maleficarum, also known as the Hammer of Witches, was published. At the time it was only one of many theories that abounded as to what exactly a witch was and how to identify one.
The writer, Henry Institoris, very clearly associated witchcraft with women. Witches were considered to have been given their powers by the devil, and as women were said to be weaker than men, they were supposedly more susceptible to the devil’s grasp. Institoris also claimed that women were highly emotional and would usually engage in witchcraft in order to gain lovers or to punish past courtesans who had scorned them. As such, ‘immoral’ women in the community who were known to have engaged in adultery or extra-marital sex were to be considered with suspicion. Although the Malleus was not immediately taken up as a so-called manual to find witches, within the next 50 years or so the ideas proposed by Institoris became part of the most widely agreed upon definitions of witches.
Ideas of witchcraft had been circulating for centuries prior to this point, and as such there had been many high-profile cases of witchcraft accusations. Fourteenth-century France saw a crisis of monarchy with the death of several kings in quick succession (Louis X, reigned 1314–16; John I 1316; Philip V 1316–22; Charles IV 1322–28), and the mental illness of Charles VI (born in 1368). Since his mid-twenties Charles would often forget who he was and that he was king, and not remember who his wife was. Most famously, he had times where he believed he was made of glass. To the French people, who were struggling to understand the crisis, evil witchcraft became an obvious answer to why things were going so wrong. One suspect was Charles’ sister-in-law, believed to be a sorceress as his insanity often calmed in her presence.

Royal witches and ‘love magic’

It is in 15th-century England where the development of ideas of witchcraft can truly be seen to have been both informed by high-profile accusations, and to also influence the accusations themselves. Early in the century, Dowager Queen Joan of Navarre (c1370–1437), second wife of King Henry IV of England, was accused of using evil magic to try to kill her stepson, Henry V, alongside a small handful of accomplices. The ideas were not overly developed, however, and the methods supposed to have been used are not entirely clear. It was merely said she tried to kill him in the most “evil and terrible manner”. She was imprisoned in Leeds Castle for several years, until Henry V released her upon his deathbed.
However, a few decades later Joan’s step-daughter-in-law, Eleanor Cobham (c1400–52), who was Duchess of Gloucester, was also accused of using evil magic to kill the king, this time Henry’s son, King Henry VI of England. Here, however, the developing idea of gender roles in magic becomes clear.
Eleanor allegedly had several highly educated members of the clergy use necromancy and other means of sorcery to cause Henry VI’s death. This was crucial because, as seen earlier, it would not have been credible for Eleanor as a woman, especially of lower birth (she being the daughter of a knight), to have performed necromancy herself. A lower-class woman who was known to have performed witchcraft in the past was also accused, and Eleanor used gendered magic to her defence. Instead of admitting to trying to kill the king through magic, Eleanor claimed instead she had used the female witch for love potions to conceive a child with her husband. Eleanor, a woman who had previously been a mistress, fit the mould of a ‘loose’, emotional woman who would resort to love magic far more readily. As punishment she was divorced from her husband and imprisoned for life, dying alone in the remote Welsh castle of Beaumaris.
By the end of the 15th century, Eleanor’s case and other developments in the ideas of witchcraft had clearly linked women with love magic in England. This is what made it so easy for Richard III and his parliament to claim that Elizabeth Woodville and her mother, Jacquetta, had used witchcraft to make Edward IV fall in love with Elizabeth and have her children. It was readily accepted that women who were viewed in some quarters as social upstarts would use emotional magic to get power.
Elizabeth Woodville, the widow of Edward IV, and Jane Shore are accused of witchcraft by Richard, Duke of Gloucester. (Photo by Print Collector/Getty Images)



Elizabeth Woodville, the widow of Edward IV, and Jane Shore are accused of witchcraft by Richard, Duke of Gloucester. (Photo by Print Collector/Getty Images)
For anyone at the English court in the 15th century, life was dangerous. With civil wars, usurpations, and favourites vying for power, you could never be too sure how long your influence would last. The women at court, however, had to be especially careful: in a time where loyalty could not be guaranteed, and enemies were looking for any way possible to bring down a rival, women were far more easy to target than men. They could not command the same power and they did not hold official positions in government.
Some royal women managed to survive long enough to outlive the accusations against them, while others suffered horribly. In all events, the successful accusation of witchcraft against English royal women in the 15th century cemented theories of witchcraft in the public psyche to become even more dangerous in centuries to come.
Gemma Hollman is the author of Royal Witches: From Joan of Navarre to Elizabeth Woodville (The History Press, October 2019). She works full-time in the heritage industry and also writes and curates the Just History Posts blog.







Cryptozoology







All  









Ancient Aboriginal drawings of mythical quinkins/yowies. Laura, Australia.

The Australian Yowie: Mysterious Legends of a Tribe of Hairy People

PRINT
In 1804, the book Modern Geography  a Description of the Empires, Kingdoms, States and Colonies: with the Oceans, Seas and Isles: In all Parts of the World was published by John Pinkerton.  In it there is a comment regarding a population of Aborigines that shared Sydney Harbor with another tribe.  They were described as flat-nosed with wide nostrils; thick eyebrows and sunken eyes.  Their mouths were of ‘prodigious width’ with thick lips and prominent jaws.  The Aborigines regarded them as another people entirely: the Yahoos or Yowies meaning “hairy people”.

The Two Yowie Groups of Australia

The Kuku Yalanji Tribe of Tropical North Queensland, Australia believes in the existence of this creature. They claim to have coexisted with the Yowie for centuries and have a long and detailed history of attacks from them in their legends.  The Yowie is their equivalent to what Native American tribes in Northwest America call Sasquatch.
Historical accounts refer to two types of Yowie in Australia with the most prominent species being Gigantopithecus.  This is the larger species said to grow between 6 and 10 feet tall, weighing up to 1,000 lbs.  It is described as a cryptic and said to resemble a huge hair covered ape-like man with talons for fingers. Compared to the North American Sasquatch, it is believed to have more of a primate look to the face and head and walk upright.  Its temperament has also been described as more aggressive and dangerous towards humans.  The other species of Yowie is described as being smaller, between 4-5 feet tall.  While most people are skeptical of the accounts, some believe it is an ancient species of hominid that has avoided extinction.  These hominids have been depicted in local cave art as tall, hairy figures beside smaller Aboriginal figures.
Statue of a Yowie, Kilcoy, Queensland, Australia
Statue of a Yowie, Kilcoy, Queensland, Australia ( Wikimedia Commons )

Contact with the Yowie: Sightings Across the Years

European contact with the Yowie is said to have begun with the arrival of the First Fleet in Sydney Cove in 1788.  During the early colonial era, Aborigines often warned British settlers to beware of an ape-like creatures lurking in the rugged mountains and deep forests of the continent.  One particular account, which reached London in a letter in 1820, told of an encounter in 1789 by convicts and a party of marines while on a hunting trip. The men killed a bunch of wallabies and were returning to the settlement when, atop a nearby hill, they saw an animal observing them among the trees which they later claimed was twice the height of an ordinary man.
Sydney Cove, First Fleet, 1788, Australia
Sydney Cove, First Fleet, 1788, Australia (NewStars)
The first southern sighting in Australia was reported on Philip Island, Victoria in 1849.  During this encounter, several people observed a creature, said to be between 6-7 ft tall, resembling a cross between a baboon and a man.  At the time, the creature was said to be sitting on the edge of a lake when it was shot at.
Arguably one of the stranger and more controversial sightings, comes in the form of a photograph from 1936.  It is one of a series of images taken by Rich Jones while working at an isolated loggers camp in Batlow, located in the Snowy Mountains of New South Wales, 450km  (279.6 miles) south-west of Sydney. The image appears to show a large creature sitting with his hands in his lap, behind two men on a wooden log.  Further analysis of the photo purportedly shows the head area resting near its chest looking down. This is due to “tree line matrixing”.
The mysterious photograph taken by Rich Jones in Batlow, New South Wales that some say was a Yowie (1932)
The mysterious photograph taken by Rich Jones in Batlow, New South Wales that some say was a Yowie (1932) ( Youtube)
Another well known incident occurred in December 1979 when a local couple, Leo and Patricia George, ventured into the forest and came across the carcass of a mutilated kangaroo.  They later claimed that the perpetrator was only forty feet away and described a creature ten feet tall, covered with hair, that stopped to stare back at them before disappearing back into the brush.

Controversial Australian Specimens Found to Be Fact

The Yowie isn’t the only creature in Australian history to have been met with skepticism over its existence.  When European settlers sent a specimen of the Platypus back to London, scientists were baffled at the egg-laying, duck-billed, beaver-tailed, otter-footed mammal and concluded it was some kind of fake.  Only when more specimens arrived did the scientific community accept that it was real.
Painting of a platypus, John Lewin, New South Wales, Australia (1808)
Painting of a platypus, John Lewin, New South Wales, Australia (1808) ( Wikipedia Commons )

Modern Yowie Sightings

Today, sightings of the Yowie are said to take place in the south and central Coastal regions of New South Wales and Queensland's Gold Coast (The Blue Mountain area just outside Sydney is a hot spot). 
One expert on the topic, Rex Gilroy, claims to have investigated over 3,000 cases and believes the Yowie is related to the North American Bigfoot.  By comparison, in North America there have been thousands of Bigfoot sighting in modern history (3,313 in 92 years according to one website). Gilroy’s research for various newspaper and magazines in the 1970s introduced the topic to the public. Despite the numerous sightings and eye-witness accounts, some researchers have come to the conclusion that evidence for the Yowie is so rare that the mythical being is probably some kind of hoax. 
In 2006, a book was published with everything there is to know on the subject entitled, The Yowie: In Search of Australia's Bigfoot by authors Tony Healy and Paul Cropper.  Healy and Cropper admit there is little evidence to support the existence of such a creature. No bones have been found, tracks are rare, very little film or photos exist, just like the Sasquatch phenomenon in North America.
Map of Reported Bigfoot Sightings in North America (2008)
Map of Reported Bigfoot Sightings in North America (2008) ( Wikimedia Commons )
Yowie sightings continue. Here are three recent examples: A seven foot Yowie was allegedly spotted in 2016 by a bushwalker in the Darling Downs' mountain ranges near Toowoomba. That Yowie seemed disinterested in the woman, and is said to have “sat down in the long grass and ignored her.” Then the Ipswich Yowie may have made an appearance in a 2017 You Tube video filmed by a man who had only intended to capture footage of a large flock of cockatoos. Finally, just a couple of weeks ago , a Yowie sighting was made 15-20km north of Roma, in which an approximately 152 cm (five foot) tall “auburn haired creature” was seen standing beside a dead kangaroo on the Carnarvon Highway.

Some of the Many Versions of Bigfoot/Yowies

Tales of large, hairy hominids are universal, timeless and found in the myths and folklores of cultures across the world.  Called the “Yeti" in the Himalayas, the "Chi- Chi” in China, the “Almas” in Mongolia, “Kapre” in the Philippines, “Forestmen" in Vietnam, the list of countries with stories of hairy man-apes inhabiting remote parts of the globe is endless. Australia is just one of the lesser known areas where reported encounters with the legendary Bigfoot-like creatures have taken place.
Featured Image: Ancient Aboriginal drawings of mythical quinkins/yowies. Laura, Australia. Public Domain )




Bryan Hill's picture

BRYAN HILL

Bryan graduated with a Bachelor of Art in History from Suffolk University and has a background in museum volunteering and as well as working with children’s groups at the Museum of Science and the National Park Service.  He has traveled... Read More




PinterestRedditFacebookTwitterGoogle+Email

4 FREE eBooks




No comments:

Post a Comment