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Post by hi224 on Feb 15, 2019 3:27:10 GMT
anyone think of any?.
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Post by Winter_King on Feb 15, 2019 11:28:29 GMT
John Paul I -There was no official autopsy and he was killed 33 days after his election.
Napoleon officially died of stomach cancer but some have suggested arsenic poisoning.
JFK - Although am I inclined to believe the official story, much has been said about circumstances of his assassination
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Post by koskiewicz on Feb 16, 2019 19:00:55 GMT
Hitler
Lenin
Czar Nicholas and his family
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Post by politicidal on Feb 16, 2019 20:50:36 GMT
John Paul I -There was no official autopsy and he was killed 33 days after his election. Napoleon officially died of stomach cancer but some have suggested arsenic poisoning. JFK - Although am I inclined to believe the official story, much has been said about circumstances of his assassination I like how you use 'killed' instead of simply 'died'. Never sat right with me either.
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Post by hi224 on Feb 17, 2019 1:46:41 GMT
John Paul I -There was no official autopsy and he was killed 33 days after his election. Napoleon officially died of stomach cancer but some have suggested arsenic poisoning. JFK - Although am I inclined to believe the official story, much has been said about circumstances of his assassination interestiung.
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Post by theravenking on Feb 27, 2019 23:13:04 GMT
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Post by mecano04 on Mar 2, 2019 0:44:47 GMT
I'll finish a book on one and come back with my answer.
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needysboy
Sophomore
@needysboy
Posts: 347
Likes: 129
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Post by needysboy on Mar 2, 2019 1:00:08 GMT
Allende comes to mind.
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Post by TheGoodMan19 on Mar 3, 2019 20:55:33 GMT
Rumors were that Roman Emperor Claudius was given poisoned mushrooms. He tried to throw up the shrooms, a physician crammed a feather down his throat to induce vomiting and he chocked on said feather.
King Charles II of Navarre liked scarves soaked in brandy to soothe his perpetually sore throat. An attendant noticed a loose thread and instead of cutting the thread, he tried to burn it off with a candle. Brandy and an open flame, predictable results.
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Post by hi224 on Mar 4, 2019 3:02:36 GMT
Rumors were that Roman Emperor Claudius was given poisoned mushrooms. He tried to throw up the shrooms, a physician crammed a feather down his throat to induce vomiting and he chocked on said feather. King Charles II of Navarre liked scarves soaked in brandy to soothe his perpetually sore throat. An attendant noticed a loose thread and instead of cutting the thread, he tried to burn it off with a candle. Brandy and an open flame, predictable results. wow at poor charles as well.
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Post by Nalkarj on Mar 5, 2019 0:37:58 GMT
The Edward II story has been debunked, but it’s too, er, bizarre to let go. Here’s Wikipedia:
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Post by Nalkarj on Mar 5, 2019 0:50:06 GMT
Rumors were that Roman Emperor Claudius was given poisoned mushrooms. He tried to throw up the shrooms, a physician crammed a feather down his throat to induce vomiting and he chocked on said feather. King Charles II of Navarre liked scarves soaked in brandy to soothe his perpetually sore throat. An attendant noticed a loose thread and instead of cutting the thread, he tried to burn it off with a candle. Brandy and an open flame, predictable results. Mystery author James Yaffe wrote a neat little tale about Claudius—“The Problem of the Emperor’s Mushrooms,” I think. Recommended. I’d never heard the Charles II story—wow!
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Post by Pangolin on Mar 5, 2019 21:53:20 GMT
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Post by The Herald Erjen on Mar 8, 2019 12:31:25 GMT
Alexander the Great
William Henry Harrison
Wladyslaw Sikorski
Pope John Paul I
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Post by maya55555 on May 10, 2019 19:28:50 GMT
Salzmank
Horribly so, Henry VIII used that same form of torture to push his agenda.
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Post by maya55555 on May 10, 2019 19:34:07 GMT
Pangolin
Really? Did he not stop riding and amend the situation. Wine and honey plus herbs would have made a decent, superficial germicide.
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Post by maya55555 on May 10, 2019 19:37:57 GMT
Winter King
Remember that Freemasonry had infiltrated into the College of Cardinals for quite a time and 33 is an important number to them. Their MO from my studies, is to use their hidden language to communicate and make their points known.
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Post by politicidal on May 10, 2019 19:41:31 GMT
The Edward II story has been debunked, but it’s too, er, bizarre to let go. Here’s Wikipedia: Spite?
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Post by Pangolin on May 10, 2019 21:14:41 GMT
Sir Arthur Aston was the appointed governor of Drogheda, which occupied an important strategic position at the mouth of the River Boyne between Dublin and Ulster. Cromwell himself attacked Drogheda in September 1649. Aston refused the summons to surrender and was killed during the storming of the town — bludgeoned to death with his own wooden leg, which the Parliamentarian soldiers believed to be filled with gold coins. bcw-project.org/biography/sir-arthur-aston
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