History's Mysteries
History's Mysteries was an American documentary television series on the History Channel.
Type: tv
Season: 14
Episode: N/A
Duration: 60 minutes
Release: 1998-01-04
Rating: 6.3
Season 1 - History's Mysteries
1998-01-04
Season 2 - History's Mysteries
1999-12-01
Season 3 - History's Mysteries
The Search for Noah's Ark in the "Mountains of Ararat" by various researchers is recounted in this episode. Of particular interest is the featured discussion of the boat-shaped impression at the Durupinar Site, just South of the Iranian border in Turkey where various artifacts have been found pertaining to the Biblical flood story, as well as the surrounding features alluded to in ancient Babylonian flood accounts. Ark hunters looking for the Ark of Noah are also interviewed about their lack of evidence for the Ark having landed on the Ararat volcano.
Season 4 - History's Mysteries
2011-11-10
Exploring the Salem Witch Trials, which took place in 17th-century Massachusetts. The hour looks at recorded accounts of accusation, imprisonment, trial and execution.
The rumors have persisted for over fifty years. They have all the trappings of fiction, yet there are those who persist on believing that the U.S. Navy actually rendered a warship invisible and teleported it to and from the Philadelphia Naval Yards in a top-secret project. The True Story of the Philadelphia Experiment chronicles the origins and spread of this tallest of all sailor’s tall tales, revealing how research into anti-submarine technology likely provided the catalyst for the accounts and documenting stages in the story’s development in the pages of pulp fiction.
Season 5 - History's Mysteries
Season 6 - History's Mysteries
2001-11-20
Bodies preserved by their natural environment are examined. Included: the Lemon Grove mummies in Mexico and Tollund Man in Denmark.
Season 7 - History's Mysteries
Season 8 - History's Mysteries
Season 9 - History's Mysteries
1997-08-10
Join leading scholars for a fascinating examination of the massive timber castles which were the pre-eminent fortification of their day, yet are now largely forgotten. It is virtually impossible to think of the Middle Ages without conjuring up images of grand stone castles. Yet throughout much of English history, they were the exception to the rule, while lords and ladies built massive castles of wood to protect their vast holdings. Journey through the English countryside to see reminders of the countless timber castles that have all but disappeared, leaving behind only the earthen mounds of their foundations. Historians reveal why these wooden fortifications were nearly equal to the much more expensive stone castles, and explain what life was like within their walls. See stunning reconstructions that show what these mighty fortifications looked like and how they were built. And explore fascinating new archaeological evidence that which casts new light on our knowledge and understanding of a time when England was dominated by these long-vanished timber castles.
Season 10 - History's Mysteries
For 60 years, a newspaper photo of a prehistoric creature served as evidence of a 'monster' lurking in Scotland's Loch Ness. Yet even after the photo was revealed to be a hoax, the legend of 'Nessie' would not go away, so strong is the worldwide faith in its existence! This captivating program introduces the fascinating characters who have contributed to the lore of the Loch Ness Monster: men like British naval officer Russell Flint, who collided with a huge animal in the middle of the loch, and Tim Dinsdale, whose 16mm film of the monster spurred three decades of investigation. Examine the findings of several underwater explorations of the loch, and contemplate the possible explanations of how a massive animal might escape detection by scientific means, yet still be seen by hundreds of eyewitnesses.
Season 11 - History's Mysteries
Season 12 - History's Mysteries
Season 13 - History's Mysteries
1999-11-10
This program is part of the popular series from the History Channel that investigates some of civilization's unsolved mysteries and controversies. This episode investigates the black chapter in world religious history known as the Inquisition. In search of truth, it told lies; preaching redemption, it brought torture and death. Recently opened archives of the Catholic Church are used to present new evidence about the church hierarchy's abuse of power. The documentary introduces the viewer to some of the Inquisition's most notorious characters, including Grand InquisitorTomas Torquemad, who was responsible for the death of thousands of people branded as heretics and witches. Galileo and the Knights Templar were among their number. Art work, journals, reenactments, and scholarly commentary tell the true story of the Inquisition.
Immortalized by Sir Walter Scott, the romantic figure of Rob Roy MacGregor looms large in Scottish history. but who was the real Rob Roy? Regarded by many as a hero, others say he was little more than a cattle rustler, blackmailer and coward! The third son of a clan chieftain, he embarked on a outlaw's life after the Duke of Montrose seized his lands in 1712. We examine his daring escapes, belief in his clan's code of honor, and questions surrounding the true loyalties of Scotland's most famous rogue.
2000-06-13
Trace prominent paranormal events in America from the 1800s to the present day, from Nancy Reagan's dependence on astrology, to Thomas Edison's experiments to prove there is an afterlife, from psychic CIA warfare experiments, to ESP tests conducted by an Apollo astronaut.
Season 14 - History's Mysteries
Lizzie Andrew Borden took an ax, and gave her mother 40 whacks; when she saw what she had done, she gave her father 41. Most of us know the grisly rhyme, but not the whole story.
A trip through the bizarre world of midgets, giants, tattooed ladies, and other human curiosities as we trace the colorful history of a distinctly American form of entertainment-the circus sideshow.
History's Mysteries looks the the life of the mysterious monk Grigori Rasputin who is widely regarded as one of Russian history's most enigmatic figures.
2011-01-07
In 1944 in Brussels, the Gestapo loaded 1,500 prisoners on a train bound for Germany and almost certain death.
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE