Monday, September 16, 2019

In the year 1665, many assumed they saw the UFO Battle and then felt sick afterwards


On 1665 of April 8, about 2 p.m., the fishermen fastened near the Barhöfft (then Sweden, but now in Germany) recorded seeing vessels in the sky fighting each other. After this battle, the dark object floated in the atmosphere.

“After some time out of the atmosphere approach the round, flat form, like the plate, staring the large hat of the man. The color was like on the dim moon and it drift right above the Church of the St. Nicolai. It remained stationary there until the night. The fishermen, anxious to death, did not want to stare further at the display and masked their façade in their hands. During the succeeding days, they felt sick with shaky all around and pain in the limbs and the head. Numerous scholarly people considered a lot of things about that,” wrote by Erasmus Francisci in the “Der wunders-reiche Ueberzug unsereer Nider-Welts/Oder Erd-umgebende” during 1689. Francisci had collected news records from 1665 connected to this ancient history documentary. These “scholarly people” who believed the illness and the event could not detect the causes.

During 2015 of the June edition of the Edge Science magazine, Martin Shough and Chris Aubeck detailed their exploration of the event. Chris Aubeck is the originator of the historical investigative team Magonia Exchange, the global archival plan, and the prolific author on the topic of the UFOs as a cultural history. Shough has been the research associate for the National Aviation Report Center on the Anomalous Phenomena or NARCAP.

Shough and Aubeck looked at the different possible details for the phenomenon. These two ruled out specific celestial phenomena. An angle of a sun can described in the records would preclude the ice halo is just an example.

Could it just be a group of birds?

The “fight” seemed to have begun with the emergence of the team of birds. Shough and Aubeck summarize the records: “The large gathering of birds emerged in the heavens. Right after moving in the unison for a moment they created a shape ‘like the long passage in the house.’ This becomes the warship that appeared to come from the north, chased by countless other ships. Then one more team of big ships arrived from the south, routing northeast. The fire and the smoke ensued being the two major ships sent cannonballs dashing with each other, scaring the fishermen down there. The ship coming from the north has then retreated goes back, and lead south. Two of the other fleets emerged from the east and the west, with smaller ships. The moment the smoke cleared, those fishermen can make out the shattered masts of southern fleet, and the man dressed in his brown clothes, with a hat beneath his one arm and by his side his left hand, watching the crew running and working.”


The unusually bigger flock of starlings will have been such a scene, Shough and Aubeck said. Flocks at times merge together at the startlingly well-defined loads that move in outline before settling down. Possibly during the 1665 spring more starlings than the usual were pressed by the uncommon weather in moving west of the Baltic to the summer breeding grounds?

The gathering could still not record for the dark stuff that stayed within the atmosphere until the evening. Is it probably two odd phenomena take place at once, one making the scene of this battle and the other making the mysterious, floating stuff in the sky?

Shough and Aubeck say it is “one remarkable instance and—either true or not—it is ought to be thought among the primary alleged ‘flying saucer’ unearthing in history.”

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