What happens when centuries-old vampire panic collides with Icelandic corpse magic? In this episode of The Box of Oddities, Kat and Jethro descend into two of history’s strangest belief systems — where terrified villagers dug up the dead to “kill” them all over again, and magical trousers made from human skin were believed to generate endless wealth.

First, we travel to 17th-century Poland, where archaeologists uncovered the grave of a young woman buried with a sickle across her throat and a padlock attached to her toe — anti-vampire precautions meant to stop her from rising from the grave. The discovery of “Zosia” reveals the horrifying reality behind Europe’s vampire panics, where disease, superstition, and fear transformed ordinary people into suspected monsters. But when forensic artists reconstructed her face centuries later, the world came face-to-face not with a vampire… but with a tragic young woman caught in one of history’s darkest mass delusions.

Then, Kat takes us to remote Iceland and the legendary necropants — magical trousers made from the skin of a dead man. According to Icelandic folklore, these corpse britches could fill their wearer’s scrotum with endless coins… provided you followed an unbelievably complicated and horrifying ritual involving grave robbing, magic staves, and cursed inheritance. Welcome to the bizarre world of Icelandic witchcraft, where men — not women — were most often accused of sorcery.

Also in this episode:


  
The terrifying origins of vampire folklore



  
Why tuberculosis helped fuel undead hysteria



  
The grisly ways suspected vampires were “executed” after death



  
Iceland’s infamous Museum of Sorcery and Witchcraft



  
Corpse pants, cursed rituals, and dead-man denim



  
A special crossover “Thing in the Middle” featuring Lindsay Schnebly and reasons you should absolutely listen to The Shallow End




If you love dark history, bizarre folklore, weird archaeology, cursed objects, and comedy hiding inside humanity’s strangest beliefs, this episode is for you.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Box of Oddities

Kat & Jethro Gilligan Toth

The Girl They Tried to Kill Twice

MAY 20, 202632 MIN
The Box of Oddities

The Girl They Tried to Kill Twice

MAY 20, 202632 MIN

Description

What happens when centuries-old vampire panic collides with Icelandic corpse magic? In this episode of The Box of Oddities, Kat and Jethro descend into two of history’s strangest belief systems — where terrified villagers dug up the dead to “kill” them all over again, and magical trousers made from human skin were believed to generate endless wealth. First, we travel to 17th-century Poland, where archaeologists uncovered the grave of a young woman buried with a sickle across her throat and a padlock attached to her toe — anti-vampire precautions meant to stop her from rising from the grave. The discovery of “Zosia” reveals the horrifying reality behind Europe’s vampire panics, where disease, superstition, and fear transformed ordinary people into suspected monsters. But when forensic artists reconstructed her face centuries later, the world came face-to-face not with a vampire… but with a tragic young woman caught in one of history’s darkest mass delusions. Then, Kat takes us to remote Iceland and the legendary necropants — magical trousers made from the skin of a dead man. According to Icelandic folklore, these corpse britches could fill their wearer’s scrotum with endless coins… provided you followed an unbelievably complicated and horrifying ritual involving grave robbing, magic staves, and cursed inheritance. Welcome to the bizarre world of Icelandic witchcraft, where men — not women — were most often accused of sorcery. Also in this episode: The terrifying origins of vampire folklore Why tuberculosis helped fuel undead hysteria The grisly ways suspected vampires were “executed” after death Iceland’s infamous Museum of Sorcery and Witchcraft Corpse pants, cursed rituals, and dead-man denim A special crossover “Thing in the Middle” featuring Lindsay Schnebly and reasons you should absolutely listen to The Shallow End If you love dark history, bizarre folklore, weird archaeology, cursed objects, and comedy hiding inside humanity’s strangest beliefs, this episode is for you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices