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Bizarre True Facts
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The
Secret Life of Leonardo da Vinci |
A prankster
and genius, Leonardo da Vinci is widely believed to have hidden
secret messages within much of his artwork. Most scholars
agree that even Da Vinci's most famous pieces,works like
The Mona
Lisa, The Last Supper, and Madonna of the Rocks contain
startling anomalies that all seem to be whispering the same
cryptic message¡Ša
message that hints at a shocking historical secret which
allegedly has been guarded since 1099 by a European secret
society known
as the Priory of Sion. In 1975,
Paris's Bibliotheque Nationale discovered parchments known
as Les Dossiers Secrets, identifying
numerous members of the Priory of Sion, including Sir
Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo, Botticelli, and Leonardo da Vinci.
French
President, Francois Mitterrand, is rumored to have been a
member,
although there exists no proof of this.
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An Unbroken
Code |
There exists
a chapel in Great Britain that contains a ceiling from which
hundreds of stone blocks protrude, jutting down to form a bizarre
multi-faceted surface. Each block
is carved with a symbol, seemingly at random, creating a
cipher of unfathomable proportion.
Modern
cryptographers have never been able to break this code, and
a generous reward is offered to anyone who can
decipher
the baffling message. In recent
years, geological ultrasounds have revealed the startling
presence of an enormous subterranean
vault hidden beneath the chapel. This vault appears
to have no entrance and no exit. To this
day, the curators of the chapel
have permitted no excavation.
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243 Lexington
Avenue, New York |
The Vatican
prelature known as Opus Dei is a deeply devout Catholic sect
that has become controversial recently due to allegations
of brainwashing, coercion, and a dangerous practice known
as "corporal
mortification." Opus Dei
has recently completed construction of a $47 million, 133,000-square-foot
American Headquarters
at 243 Lexington Avenue in New York City.
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Someone
is watching you...or are they? |
The Louvre
Museum in Paris is one of the longest buildings on earth. Walking
around the entire perimeter of this horseshoe-shaped edifice
is a three-mile journey. Even so,
the Louvre's collection of art is so vast that only a fraction
of its works can be displayed
on the walls. Inside
the galleries, a multitude of security cameras watch over
visitors. The number of cameras is so
great that a staff of several hundred wardens would be
required to
monitor all of them. In fact,
most of the cameras are fake.
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Da Vinci's
slap on the wrist. |
Da Vinci's
original commission for his famous Madonna of the Rocks came
from an organization known as the Confraternity of the Immaculate
Conception, which needed a painting for the centerpiece of
an altar triptych in their church of San Francesco Grand
in Milan. The nuns
gave Leonardo specific dimensions and a desired
theme:the Virgin Mary, baby John The Baptist, Uriel, and
Baby Jesus sheltering in a cave. Although
Da Vinci did as they requested,
when he delivered the work, the group reacted with horror.
The painting contained several disturbing "un-Christian" anomalies,
which seemed to convey a hidden message and alternative
meaning. Da Vinci
eventually mollified the confraternity by painting
them a second version of Madonna of the Rocks, which
now hangs in London's National Gallery under the name Virgin
of the Rocks.
Da Vinci's original hangs at the Louvre in Paris.
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