The Museum of Hoaxes
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The Archive of Hoaxes Before 1700 1700-1799 1800-1868 1869-1913 1914-1949 1950-1976 1977-1989 1990-1999 21st Century
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The Hoax Archive
A collection of the most notorious deceptions throughout history
Phony 9/11 Deaths (The months following Sept. 11, 2001)
Taken as a whole, medieval monks and clerics were probably the most prolific forgers of all time.

Donation of Constantine

Pope Joan (853-855 ad)
One of the most scandalous rumors of the Middle Ages was that there was once a female pope who gave birth en route to the Lateran.

Pope Joan

Throughout the Middle Ages, Europe hosted a thriving trade in holy relics. Many of the relics, if not almost all of them, were fake.
  • The Holy Foreskin (First appeared circa 800 ad)
    Of all the relics that circulated throughout medieval Europe, the Holy Foreskin was the most sought after, since it was an actual body part of Christ. But there were many Holy Foreskins to choose between.
  • The Shroud of Turin (circa 1355)
    If the Shroud of Turin isn't a divine miracle, then it's very likely to be the work of a medieval forger.

Shroud of Turin

Medieval knowledge of world geography was a strange mixture of fact and fantasy.
  • In the mid-twelfth century, at a time when European rulers felt threatened by the growing power of Muslim nations on their borders, a letter suddenly appeared from Prester John, who described himself as a Christian king of great wealth and power living in the far east.
  • Marco Polo is famous for his travels to China, but some modern scholars have questioned whether he ever actually went there.
  • The Travels of Sir John Mandeville was a fourteenth-century book that documented the travels of an English knight through Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Persia, and Turkey. The tales of this knight, though supposedly true, were bizarre by any measure.
  • The Lost Island of Hi-Brazil (Late medieval period)
    A number of maps from the late-medieval period show an island called Hi-Brazil in the Atlantic. However, no one has ever been able to find this island.

Mandeville's Travels

In medieval culture, prophecy was considered to be a legitimate science. But some prophecies were more far-fetched than others.

Nostradamus

Mother Shipton
Men of the renaissance prided themselves on their collections of books and classical artifacts. This helped to create a lucrative market for fake books and fake artifacts.

Michelangelo's Cupid

  • Medical doctors argued over how a Silesian boy managed to grow a golden tooth.
  • A pamphlet published in Paris described an unusual medical case in which a woman claimed she became pregnant after dreaming of her husband, who had been away for four years.
  • Medieval naturalists believed that Nature was an active, sentient force that enjoyed playing jokes (or hoaxes) on man.

Lusus Naturae

Martin Guerre (1556-1560)

Athanasius Kircher


Drummer of Tedworth

In the early eighteenth-century a white-skinned, blond-haired man showed up in northern Europe claiming to be from the island of Formosa (Taiwan). Luckily for him, no one in Europe knew what a Taiwanese person should look like.

The Native of Formosa


Mary Toft and the Rabbit Babies

Benjamin Franklin was one of the most admired and famous men of the eighteenth century. He was also an incorrigible hoaxer.

Benjamin Franklin

The Dutch Mail (circa 1792)
The Berners Street Hoax (November 26, 1810)
New York Sawed in Half (Supposedly occurred in 1824)
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)
Joice Heth (1835)
The Feejee Mermaid (July 1842)
The Free Grand Buffalo Hunt (August 31, 1843)
The Great Balloon Hoax (April 13, 1844)
The Roorback Hoax (August 1844)
The Paulding County Hyena (February 6, 1858)
The Petrified Man (October 1862)
The Hopkins Hoax (March 1862)
The Miscegenation Hoax (December 1863)
Tom Thumb’s Baby (circa 1865)
The Calaveras Skull (February 1866)
Dan De Quille (1829-1898)
Vrain Lucas (1851-1870)
Lord Gordon-Gordon (1871-1872)
Solar Armor (July 2, 1874)
The Central Park Zoo Escape (November 9, 1874)
The Chicago Theater Fire (February 13, 1875)
Leonainie (August 1877)
Joseph Mulhattan (1853-1914)
The Diaphote Hoax (February 1880)
Dr. Egerton Yorrick Davis (Active in the late nineteenth century)
Jacko (July 4, 1884)
All text Copyright © 2011 by Alex Boese, except where otherwise indicated. All rights reserved.