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The stink of urine here is a reminder that the place
is used by visitors not on the ghost tour. “Here, you will
encounter the ghost of the old tanner,” says Jelínková.
Even the street name Kozna, which means “skins,” recalls
the tanner’s presence.
“He
distinguishes himself by his awful smell—now as in his earthly
life,” our guide explains. “It was said that he sneezed
and broke wind at the same time.”
The
tanner lived in the early fourteenth century. He rented
an apartment here in the same building that served as a
jail for the city’s convicted criminals. The prisoners had
befriended a stray dog that was valued as a good catcher
of rats and mice. But the dog’s barking and howling kept
the tanner up all night.
Finally,
the tanner could take it no more, and he killed the dog
with poisoned scraps of meat. Afterward, however, the rats
multiplied as never before. “It is said that the tanner
is responsible for bringing the plague to the city,” Jelínková
concludes.
A
city’s phantoms
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Impersonating
the troubled Turk of Ungelt.
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The
ghost tour is a relatively new service, I learn. It was
first organized by Jitka Simkova, a Prague entrepreneur,
in 1995. That same year Jan Vanis published A Guide to
Mysterious Prague, which claims to be the first guide
to the city’s supernatural beings. Vanis says that nowhere
in Europe will one find as many people telling of ghosts,
apparitions, and phantoms as in Prague.
It
is enough for the tourist to enter the twilit little streets
of ancient Prague in the evening, and the same mood will
breathe on him as has been felt for centuries by those who
tell of the ghosts in Prague houses . . . .It will not seem
impossible to him, as he walks the winding alleys, that
some of the strange inhabitants with which fantasy has peopled
Prague should emerge from the flickering shadows.
According
to Vanis, the Prague ghost stories tend to convey the timeless
moral that crime does not pay, and they fall into three
categories. First, there are stories of persons wronged.
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