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Overview of unusual museums of the world (part II)

Overview of unusual museums of the world (part II)

Overview of unusual museums of the world (part I)

In the capital of Italy - Rome, near the sacristy of the neo-Gothic Church of the Sacred Heart, there is a Museum of the Soul in Purgatory. Each exhibit in this museum is a kind of confirmation of the presence on earth of the souls of dead people. Here you can see fingerprints in the form of figures, a cross or shapeless spots that the souls from Purgatory left behind on fabric, book pages, bed linen, clothes, and other items. For example, visitors can see fingerprints on a nightcap, which, according to legend, was pulled from the head of a sleeping spouse by the deceased Louise le Senechel as punishment for not observing mourning. It is noteworthy that the photographs taken in this museum could not be developed by any visitor.



In Kyuritz (Germany) there is an unusual Lie Museum. As a rule, any museum tries to make interesting expositions from originals of value. In the Museum of Lies, everything is exactly the opposite, that is, the exhibits here are fake, and visitors are being misled from the very doorstep. First, the visitor will be offered a piece of plastic cake and a magic potion in the form of ordinary tea, and then he will have to see the exposition with objects allegedly belonging to Baron Munchausen himself.



People with weak nerves are strongly advised not to visit the Museum of Death in Los Angeles. Here is an impressive collection of works of art created by serial killers. In addition, terrible photos with crimes and autopsies inspire fear even in daredevils, and the accidents captured in the pictures can forever discourage driving your car. The Museum of Death has a suicide room and rooms where funeral paraphernalia and murder weapons are exhibited. Those who wish can watch a video about the death of real people with all the shocking details.



In Mexico, in the city of Guanajuato, there is a very memorable Museum of Mummies. As the name of the museum suggests, the main exhibits here are the mummies of 111 people who died during the cholera epidemic (1833). When the relatives of those who died due to poverty stopped paying money for a place in the cemetery, the bodies began to be removed from the graves and mummified. It turned out that some people were buried alive, as evidenced by the open mouths of some of the mummies. In this unusual museum, you can see the mummies of naked and dressed men, women, children, and even a small fetus that was in the womb of a dead pregnant woman.


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