'Ancient London House Basement' Found With Mysterious Winged Tiny 'Human Skeletons' - AIC5

‘Ancient London House Basement’ Found With Mysterious Winged Tiny ‘Human Skeletons’

According to legend, skeletal winged bodies of fairies, werewolves, and aliens were discovered in the basement of an old London home.

The macabre collection includes what appear to be various mythical creatures posed horrifyingly in cases and jars.

Along with the decayed, nailed-to exhibit boards fairies, there are also alien bodies with terrifying contortions and hairy humanoid remains.

The crowd additionally highlighted portrayals of Jack the Ripper casualties Catherine Eddowes and Elizabeth Step alongside supposed human hearts and different organs protected in containers.

The frightful shows were said to have been the assortment of Thomas Theodore Merrylin, who was depicted as “a rich blue-blood and scholar during the 1800s”.

A blog entry about the alleged sees as guaranteed: ” In 1960 in London at the hour of getting the site for development free from another private area, the old long-deserted manor had a place with Thomas Theodore Merrylin was set for destruction.

“In the cellar of the home, developers have found a few thousand little wooden boxes тιԍнтly fixed.

“Envision their shock when they started to find inside the collections of unusual legendary animals, which appeared to have been living just in fantasies.”

Artist Alex CF stated Merrylin’s diaries mention “all kinds of advanced ideas that didn’t exist at the time, such as quantum physics and the multiverse theory,” which led to the discovery of the startling objects.

Additionally, according to his diaries, a lot of the collection’s mythical-appearing items have scientific justifications.

 

The collection can be seen online, and Alex CF claims to be its curator.

 

But in reality, the artist has stitched together a carefully produced narrative.

One online user, James Campbell, commented on the pieces and said: “Did this man loot the props department of Hammer films, I mean come on guys.

The British Museum would have devoted an entire wing to it if specimens like this had truly been discovered.

Another, going by the name of Trey Wait, continued, “Obviously false, but still really, really cool! I would adore having this material.

 

Related Posts