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Fritz Haarmann: The Vampire of Hanover | The Dark Histories Podcast 

Dark Histories
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Following the first world war, Germany, having never found its feet economically throughout the conflict, now found itself crumbling under the further weight of heavy reparations. Many of those that had survived the fighting found themselves in a desperate state, carrying out all sorts of underground, legally dubious, or just straight up illegal activities, in order to get by. There were some that thrived in the lawless environment, profiteering from others misfortune, and then there were others, a very select few, who not only thrived, but positively excelled at breaking the law, and amongst those, there were one or two who did so in some very dark ways. Friedrich Haarmann was one such individual. Trading used clothing by day, he carried out a series of brutal murders that would earn him the monikers of “The Butcher of Hanover,” “The Wolf Man,” and “The Vampire of Hanover.” Perhaps even more frightening than his nicknames, was the attitude of the man himself, who once told a shocked audience, “Oh believe me, I’m not ill, it’s only that I occasionally have funny turns.”
SOURCES
Theodor, Lessing (1925) Monsters of Weimar. Haarmann - The Story of a Werewolf. Nemesis Books, London, UK.
Daily News (1924) Behead Me! Vampire Slayer Cries, Raving, Tossing In Cell. Daily News, Sun 13 July 1924, p36. NY, USA
The Muncie Morning Star (1925) Germany To Behead Both Murderers. The Muncie Morning Star, Fri 6 Feb 1925, p1. IN, USA.
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The Dark Histories Butterfly was drawn by Courtney, who you can find on Instagram @bewildereye
Music was recorded by me © Ben Cutmore 2017
Other Outro music was Paul Whiteman & his orchestra with Mildred Bailey - All of me (1931). It's out of copyright now, but if you're interested, that was that.

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5 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 8   
@Red13teen
@Red13teen 3 месяца назад
Welcome back
@craigoliver8712
@craigoliver8712 3 месяца назад
Have you ever done 1 on The Hinterflacken farm incident that happened in 1920s Germany?Bavaria i think,a most interesting,strange+spooky tale,please do it if not(going to have to check now) Edit; Just checked+yes you did the Hinterkaiflak murders in Season 1(going to give it a listen again now) well done sir,you truly have your "finger on the pulse"
@garrethgoodworth2494
@garrethgoodworth2494 3 месяца назад
I have to wonder if he was paid to 'dispose' of older children/undesirables (perhaps by the gentry - villagers used euphemism in a hush). TY, Ben! Cheers!!!
@briantologist7629
@briantologist7629 3 месяца назад
I agree with you about the skulls. Those were probably just the victims of more " normal " crime ; people with gambling debts , those who knew too much , etc... And I'll bet you could dam up and search any river in any city and find skulls. If you searched the Anacostia river , which is near where I live , you'd find enough skulls to rival the Paris catacombs .
@sonnydebart7305
@sonnydebart7305 3 месяца назад
D.C or DMV in the house?
@thundercron77
@thundercron77 3 месяца назад
Weird to complain about the cops beating a confession out of him while at the same time agreeing he's 100% guilty. The alternative would be that without the confession, he may have gone free. Most of us have a moral blindspot, where we don't mind if a guilty person is wronged in the pursuit of justice. Those who don't believe his guilt would be the only ones to criticize the coercion.
@tlcetc4506
@tlcetc4506 Месяц назад
No, when it comes to LE committing it that is more than a moral blind spot as you suggested. LE should always be professional and held to a higher standard, we don't want possible false confessions and/or risk of cases thrown, unnecessary doubt for jurors, etc. They have too much influence on cases and power to bring or not bring a case to trial to ever allow any of that sort of thing on any person which would suggest it may be done with any suspect who is supposed to be innocent until proven guilty.
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