Nazi Gold - Alternative View

Table of contents:

Nazi Gold - Alternative View
Nazi Gold - Alternative View

Video: Nazi Gold - Alternative View

Video: Nazi Gold - Alternative View
Video: Watch: TODAY All Day - July 10 2024, October
Anonim

According to pensioner-enthusiast Raoul Geville, the most important discoveries of Hitler's scientists were not hidden in banks, which the Nazis did not trust, but in secluded corners of the planet - like pirate treasures.

But unlike the treasures of Kidd and Morgan, access to these treasures is blocked by reliable guards …

THE MYSTERY OF SELF-COMBUSTION

A former school teacher, now a French pensioner, Raoul Geuville has been looking for Hitler's treasures for 19 years. He does not dig up layers of earth, but rummages through piles of archival papers. Interestingly, he advanced in this direction further than many fortune hunters who broke the ground up and down.

In February 1946, 3 treasure hunters died on Mount Ra-uhfang in Austria, and one of them was found with a cut out stomach. In August 1949, six more of their colleagues disappeared in a cave near the town of Landeck. In 1950, two treasure hunters were found beaten and blinded near Mount Grosweather. All this took place in the Alps, where, according to many, the Nazis could just bury their secrets.

In 1952, treasure hunter Jean de Suz was killed in the Shtriy Alps, and then the bodies of former SS special forces officers for underwater operations and three officers of the US Navy were found on the shores of Lake Top-persons. It is possible that the latter could have killed a friend of a friend in a fight between treasure seekers and his defenders, if he is at the bottom of this high-mountainous lake.

The case in the Canary Islands in the summer of 1962 is difficult to explain. Then eleven Americans arrived on the island of Hierro. Their belonging to the special services denies the fact that on the very first evening they got stoned and began to tell local fishermen that they had come to look for "fascist gold". Accustomed to such tourists, they gave up on them, but after several days the treasure hunters stopped coming to them for provisions.

Promotional video:

When the people arrived at the American camp, they were presented with a terrible picture: they were all lying dead, except for one who was blind and numb. He later died in hospital. However, he managed to write two words - "burning gold".

Mystical and terrible events took place around the treasure of Hauptsturmführer Kurmis. Kurmis himself was a member of one of the eastern SS expeditions, which was intercepted by Soviet NKVD officers on the way back. Escaping the pursuit, Kurmis buried several containers with archaeological finds in the sands of southern Iran, which the Nazis discovered at the site of the ruins of the most ancient cities in Asia.

In 1975, an expedition of researchers who found the diaries of Kurmis set out for the treasure. Immediately upon arrival, the conductor disappeared without a trace, then the radio broke. Photographer Abraham Pete had a terrible headache and had nightmares.

Then a member of the group, psychic Benjamin Ricroc went mad. He began to run around the camp, shouting and in the end … spontaneously ignited! After that, the members of the expedition returned to Britain. At home, Abraham Peet developed his films and found something there that made him go gray at once. After that, he burned all the materials and fled in an unknown direction.

MAGIC CYLINDER

There is a legend that when one of the numerous secretaries of the former Nazi Ministry of Culture, Walter Straub, after the surrender of Germany, was asked what he knew about the treasures hidden by the Germans, he suddenly answered mysteriously: "Look at the bottom of the sea." Unable to get a more intelligible answer from this official, the American investigator decided to postpone the interrogation to the next day in order to prepare for it more thoroughly. But until the next day, the spoken German did not live: someone had mixed poison in his bowl with dinner.

Straub's words prompted the allies to take some immediate actions related to the search for treasures at the bottom of the sea, and here they encountered certain difficulties. It was necessary to look not for the treasures themselves, but for the people who hid them.

And so, in 1997, information appeared that after the war on the coast of the North Sea in the area of the German city of Feidhaven, the British found an abandoned secret plant for the production of separate parts for the latest fascist submarines. In addition to these very parts, the British discovered some more things that were very distantly related to the production of submarines. These were thin and very strong steel ropes with a length of one thousand meters to two, and even three thousand, as well as ten two sealed cylinders with an internal volume of several cubic meters each. Inside, they were hollow, that is, empty.

Scientists have suggested that these cylinders were intended for use at very great depths. Then, in the basements of the plant, they discovered multi-ton cast iron blocks equipped with the same locks as the cylinders and ropes.

It became clear that the cylinders were to be attached to these blocks by "sinkers" holding the steel cylinder with the air bubble enclosed in it at a depth, and the rope was attached to the cylinder cover and went up to the surface of the sea.

And then such a story happened. Rowen Gilbert, a wealthy gentleman from Brighton, told this. About 20 years ago, when he was about forty years old, he moved to work in the north of the country.

He arrived at a construction site and settled with his family in a small house rented with money received as an advance payment. Two months later, walking with his dog along the coast of the North Sea, his attention was attracted by an object, nailed by the waves of the tide to the rocks that filled the wild beach. Going down to the water itself, Gilbert examined the object - it was a large metal cylinder, reaching two meters in length and almost one and a half in diameter. The object did not look like a mine. Gilbert tried to open this cylinder. He tried a bunch of ways, but it was all in vain. Strong metal was not taken by any saw. Intrigued, stubborn Englishman dragged his find into the back of a car and drove it home.

At home, he cut the cylinder in two. What he found inside the cut cylinder plunged him not even into amazement, but into a real, indescribable horror! Gilbert has never seen so many jewels even in the movies. After some deliberation, he divided all the treasures into many parts and hid them in the most secluded corners of the area.

He waited until the construction of the plant was completed in order to receive a legal settlement, and, without arousing any suspicion, left Scotland.

He selected diamonds worth about £ 50,000, moved to Wales and faked a discovery on the beach in the sand of an old jewelry box. Then he handed over the "treasure" to the state and, according to the law, received a considerable part of it.

Then, through simple machinations, he cashes out part of his "diamond reserves" and transfers more and more funds to the manager of his company in Newarket. The firm becomes a thriving automotive corporation, and the manager becomes the head of the board of directors.

Some of Gilbert donated to charity, some secretly placed in bank safes, but the main wealth remained untouched.

At the same time, Rowen Gilbert still does not know where this magic cylinder came from.