Peculiar Britain: Odd Crimes & Bizarre Mysteries

Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files

41 min · 20 mei 2026
aflevering Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files artwork

Beschrijving

Where Victorian graves meet modern madness, and something ancient refuses to stay buried. In 1970, hundreds of stake-wielding Londoners stormed Highgate Cemetery on Friday the 13th, hunting a vampire. This is that story. Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files uncovers one of Britain's most extraordinary urban legends. We explore the crumbling Victorian necropolis that sparked mass hysteria, the bitter rivalry between two eccentric occultists, and the tabloid press that gleefully fanned the flames. Was the Highgate Vampire real, or something far more fascinating? Perfect for fans of British history, folk horror, and the stranger side of London life. 🔔 Subscribe and join us as we dig up the peculiar, the forgotten, and the genuinely terrifying.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Peculiar Britain: Odd Crimes & Bizarre Mysteries community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

10 afleveringen

aflevering Britain's Funniest Signs artwork

Britain's Funniest Signs

WHERE THE ORDNANCE SURVEY MEETS THE SCHOOL PLAYGROUND. Every country has strange corners on its map, but Britain has a particular gift for place names that sound like a dare. In this episode of Peculiar Britain, we take a tour of the nation's rudest, silliest and most unfortunate signposts, from a Dorset hamlet named after an open sewer to a Cornish lane that warns you about your own neck. Along the way we dig into medieval prostitution, Old Norse farming terms, Victorian squeamishness, and the local communities who've had quite enough of tourists nicking their village signs. Grounded in genuine etymology and historical record, but told with a wink, this is the story of how Britain got so rude by accident. New episodes and full write-ups at peculiarbritain.wordpress.com.

10 jul 202646 min
aflevering When Folk Horror Walked the Lanes of Yatton artwork

When Folk Horror Walked the Lanes of Yatton

A masked figure in the mud, a county gripped by fear, and the case that blurred the line between urban legend and criminal reality. For five years, something crawled through the villages of North Somerset. Reports came in from Yatton, Claverham, Cleeve and Bleadon: a figure in a skin-tight black suit and a crossed-eye mask, writhing on the ground, stepping in front of cars, terrifying lone drivers on quiet lanes. The press called him the Somerset Gimp. The truth turned out to be far more troubling than the tabloid nickname suggested. In this episode of Peculiar Britain, we trace the timeline from the first sightings around 2018 to the 2023 conviction of Joshua Hunt, examine the psychology of rumour and rural fear, and ask what this very modern case of "gimp panic" tells us about the old folklore of the woods made flesh. Full write-up and sources at peculiarbritain.wordpress.com.

10 jul 20265 min
aflevering Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files artwork

Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files

Where Victorian graves meet modern madness, and something ancient refuses to stay buried. In 1970, hundreds of stake-wielding Londoners stormed Highgate Cemetery on Friday the 13th, hunting a vampire. This is that story. Dead London: The Highgate Vampire Files uncovers one of Britain's most extraordinary urban legends. We explore the crumbling Victorian necropolis that sparked mass hysteria, the bitter rivalry between two eccentric occultists, and the tabloid press that gleefully fanned the flames. Was the Highgate Vampire real, or something far more fascinating? Perfect for fans of British history, folk horror, and the stranger side of London life. 🔔 Subscribe and join us as we dig up the peculiar, the forgotten, and the genuinely terrifying.

20 mei 202641 min
aflevering The Pretty Dragoon artwork

The Pretty Dragoon

In 1693, a Dublin publican cut her hair, borrowed a name, and walked into the British Army to find her missing husband. What followed was thirteen years of infantry combat, cavalry charges, a skull fracture at Ramillies, and a husband she eventually found flirting with a Dutch woman after Blenheim. Christian Davies fought at Landen, Schellenberg, Blenheim, and Ramillies. She killed a sergeant in a duel. She paid child support to a prostitute rather than prove the claim impossible. She buried her husband under two hundred bodies on the field at Malplaquet. She was so convincing as a man that her regiment called her the pretty dragoon. She was eventually admitted to the Royal Hospital Chelsea as a pensioner. Daniel Defoe wrote her story. Queen Anne gave her fifty pounds and a shilling a day. Nobody gave her a category to fit into. She didn't seem to need one.

18 mei 202634 min