Travel is one of the most popular pastimes during holiday seasons but why not spice up your next trip by having a theme: a spooky travel theme. This list looks at ten of the scariest places on the face of the earth (many of which are unlikely to be known to the average person). Be sure to name any others you think worthy of inclusion in the comments.
The Hill of Crosses, Kryzių Kalnas, located 12 kilometers north of the small industrial city of Siauliai (pronounced shoo-lay) is the Lithuanian national pilgrimage center. Standing upon a small hill are many hundreds of thousands of crosses that represent Christian devotion and a memorial to Lithuanian national identity. The origin of the first crosses is unknown, but despite repeated attempts by the occupying communists in the 20th century to destroy the hill and remove the crosses, they still come back in their thousands. You can view a panoramic image of the hill here. While the subject is not scary in itself, the concept of a hill with mysterious crosses appearing is a little disturbing.
It would be wrong to write a list like this without the inclusion of at least one cemetery. Saint Louis Cemetery is the name of three Roman Catholic cemeteries in New Orleans, Louisiana. All of these graves are above ground vaults; most were constructed in the 18th century and 19th century. The above-ground tombs, which some say are required here because the ground water levels make burial impractical in New Orleans, are strongly reminiscent of the tombs of Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris. St. Louis Cemetery #1 is the oldest and most famous. It has been in continuous use since its foundation. Due to crime risks, it is inadvisable for individual tourists to visit the cemetery on their own, but it can be safely visited with tour groups. The renown Voodoo priestess Marie Laveau is believed to be interred in the Glapion family crypt. Other notable New Orleanians here include Bernard de Marigny – the French-Creole playboy who brought the game of craps to the United States, Barthelemy Lafon – the architect and surveyor who allegedly became one of Jean Lafitte’s pirates, and Paul Morphy, one of the earliest world champions of chess. Delphine LaLaurie, the murderous socialite is also rumored to lay in rest here.
For years the hidden underground closes of Mary King’s Close, in the Old Town area of Edinburgh, Scotland, have been shrouded in myths and mysteries. Tales of ghosts and murders, and myths of plague victims being walled up and left to die abounded. in 1645 life of the close was shattered forever. The plague struck this little community and there is a tale that the local council decided to contain the plague by incarcerating the victims, bricking up the close for several years and leaving them to die inside to die. It is likely that this is why the close was nicknamed ‘street of sorrows’. It certainly has a reputation of being haunted, one ghost of a little girl ‘Annie’ has become something of a local celebrity. Sad because she had lost her favorite doll, there is now a room full of gifts left by visitors for her. Pictured above is the plague suit of Dr George Rae who worked in the area.
Leap Castle is an Irish castle in County Offaly, about four miles north of the town of Roscrea. It was built in 1250 and in 1659, the castle passed by marriage into the ownership of the Darby family. Many people were imprisoned and executed in the castle, and it is supposedly haunted by several spectres, the most terrifying of these beings is a small hunched creature whose apparition is said to be accompanied by a rotting stench of a decomposing corpse and the smell of sulphur. Not far from there, workers discovered an oubliette (pictured above), which is a dungeon where people are locked away and forgotten about. There are spikes at the bottom of this shaft, and when workers were cleaning it out, it took them three cartloads to carry out all the human bones at the bottom. A report indicates that these workmen also found a pocket-watch dated to the 1840s amongst the bones. There are no indications of whether or not the oubliette was still in use in that period. Restoration work is being undertaken so this is an ideal future travel destination.
The Château de Machecoul was home to Gilles de Rais (1404 – 1440), a Breton knight, the companion-in-arms of Joan of Arc, and a Marshal of France, but best known as a prolific serial killer of children. In 1434–35, he retired from military life, dabbled in the occult, and depleted his wealth by staging an extravagant theatrical spectacle of his own composition. Sometime between spring 1432 and spring 1433, the first child-murder occurred and was followed by similar crimes. The victims may have numbered in the hundreds. After raping the boys he kidnapped, he would slash their throats and masturbate in their blood and innards. The court transcripts from his trial state:
“when the said children were dead, he kissed them and those who had the most handsome limbs and heads he held up to admire them, and had their bodies cruelly cut open and took delight at the sight of their inner organs; and very often when the children were dying he sat on their stomachs and took pleasure in seeing them die and laughed…”
He was executed by hanging at Nantes on 26 October 1440. Gilles de Rais was the inspiration behind the tale of Bluebeard. All of his crimes took place in the Castle of Machecoul which remains to this day (though in ruins). The victims bodies were stuffed in the walls, dropped down chimneys, and buried around the site.
Do not be fooled by those who tell you to visit Bran Castle in Romania to see the home of the evil Vlad the Impaler (inspiration for Dracula). Bran castle is a tourist attraction and there is no known evidence that Vlad Tepes ever stayed there. However, not so far away is the ruin of Poenari Castle – Vlad’s real home in Wallachia. It was erected around the beginning of the 13th century by the first Romanian rulers in the South region of Romania. Around the 14th century, Poenari was the main citadel of the Basarab rulers. In the next few decades, the name and the residents changed a few times but eventually the castle was abandoned and left in ruins. However, in the 15th century, realizing the potential for a castle perched high on a steep precipice of rock, Vlad III the Impaler repaired and consolidated the structure, making it one of his main fortresses. After Vlad’s death the castle fell to ruin but it is still standing in part and is available for tourists. To reach the castle, visitors need to climb 1,500 steps. The castle is considered to be one of the most haunted places in the world. [Image source]
First of all, these should be not confused with the many bone-houses in Europe (item 1). The Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo are burial catacombs in Palermo, Sicily, southern Italy. Today they provide a somewhat macabre tourist attraction as well as an extraordinary historical record. In 1599 the monks at the monastery mummified recently-dead brother Silvestro of Gubbio, and placed him into the catacombs. The bodies were dehydrated on the racks of ceramic pipes in the catacombs and sometimes later washed with vinegar. Some of the bodies were embalmed and others enclosed in sealed glass cabinets. Monks were preserved with their everyday clothing and sometimes with ropes they had worn as a penance. Originally the catacombs were intended only for the dead friars. However, in the following centuries it became a status symbol to be entombed into the capuchin catacombs. In their wills, local luminaries would ask to be preserved in certain clothes, or even to have their clothes changed at regular intervals. The catacombs were officially closed in 1880 but tourists continued to visit. The last burials are from the 1920s. One of the very last to be interred was Rosalia Lombardo, then two years old, whose body is still remarkably intact, preserved with a procedure that was lost for decades, but was recently rediscovered.
Poveglia is a small island in Venice which was home to Venice’s plague victims during the three major outbreaks during the middle ages. It was also used by the Romans for the same reason. This is an island with an almost exclusive history of death. In addition to housing dying plague victims and serving as a giant plague pit, it was used as a leper colony for many years. Just when you think it couldn’t get worse, in 1922 a mental hospital was built on the island. One of the doctors working at the hospital was attacked by the insane patients who threw him off the top of the hospital tower. The ruins of the hospital remain to this day. Through its history, over 160,000 people died on the small island. It is said that part of the island’s core consists of a layer of human remains and that fishermen avoid the area because they may pull up body parts. If you want to visit the island you will need to become friendly with some of the locals who keep vineyards there – because public access is absolutely forbidden. Read more about Poveglia here. [Image Source]
Aokigahara (also known as the Sea of Trees), is a forest that lies at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan. The caverns found in this forest are rocky and ice-covered annually. It has been claimed by local residents and visitors that the woods are host to a great amount of paranormal phenomena. The forest floor consists primarily of volcanic rock and is difficult to penetrate with hand tools such as picks or shovels. There are also a variety of unofficial trails that are used semi-regularly for the annual “body hunt” done by local volunteers. On some occasions human remains can be found in the distant reaches of the forest, which are usually several years old and consist of scattered bones and incomplete skeletons. Aokigahara is reportedly the world’s second most popular suicide location after San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. Since the 1950s, more than 500 people have lost their lives in the forest, mostly suicides, with approximately 30 counted yearly. In 2002, 78 bodies were found within the forest, replacing the previous record of 73 in 1998. The high rate of suicide has led officials to place signs in the forest, urging those who have gone there to commit suicide to seek help and not kill themselves. For a variety of extremely horrific images of some of the “finds” of the body hunters, you can go here (NSFW). The image above is a makeshift noose found in the forrest. You can read more about Aokigahara here.
An ossuary is a chest, building, well, or site made to serve as the final resting place of human skeletal remains. They are frequently used where burial space is scarce. All over Europe ossuaries can be found and – fortunately for those of us with a love of the macabre – visited. Perhaps the most famous is the Catacombs of Paris which are a vast network of skeleton lined caverns beneath the streets of Paris. The photograph above comes from Santa Maria della Concezione dei Cappuccini, a church in Rome, Italy, commissioned by Pope Urban VIII in 1626. The remains of over 4,000 friars can be viewed there. Some of the skeletons are intact and draped with Franciscan habits (as above), but for the most part, individual bones are used to create elaborate ornamental designs. This is but one of the many amazing (and spooky) ossuaries you can visit. You can view a large photo gallery and read more about ossuaries here. Be sure to check out the enormous human skeleton chandelier.
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I have been to the cemetary in New Orleans and now I must visit all of these other places. Thanks for some terrific travel ideas.
I wonder if the cemeteries are still in good condition in New Orleans since the hurricane.
Great list! Will definitely have to visit these places someday.
Reading about Gilles de Rais whilst eating breakfast wasn’t the best idea…
I was expecting to see an ossuary mentioned on this list. Fascinating list! It was interesting to read of the other places like the Aokigahara in Japan.
Cool list. Very spooky.
Um… what about the catacombs in Paris?
i’ve never heard of #’s 2, 3, and 10 before, but the other 7 have been on my list of places to see for a while.
great list!
Glasgow city centre on a friday night lol.
Well, I clicked on the link for Aokigahara.
…yup, that was horrific.
oh and iwas eating noodles when i read #6…
and turned pale white…
in malta they have a site wherein it is a large “hole”, just off the coast there is an island the exact same size and shape, the thing about this hole (sorry cannot remember name) is that it is very active with the occult and such things, creepy thing about it is on the island is the only place you will find poisonous vipers on the in malta
huh? WTF are you talking bout? there are NO poisonous vipers here…and occult?! I'd love to know who gave you this informaton…
oh and yeah the pictures when i clicked the link was truly horrible
glasgow city center is terrifying anytime not just friday night, try hastings in vancouver as well
Hey there! I’m from Romania
Great list and very good sites (both listverse and cogitz)
Wow, Aokigahara seems like the perfect place to have a barbecue! Great weather..and hey..the meat is free!
@frabjousflamingo (10): Can’t say I didn’t tell you
I was eating a sandwich when I came upon that link. Needless to say half of it ended up in the bin!
@SkollHati (17): That is so wrong that I think you should consider a career writing for listverse!
Off topic for a second – would anyone be interested in a “top 10 faces of death” list which dealt exclusively with extreme images of death – ie, fresh corpses being cleaned, sky burial close ups, etc.? Would that be beyond the pale or is it a list worth considering? Over the last couple of weeks I have come across sufficient sites to fill a list.
YNC YEA lol
@jfrater (19): Hahaha..5:30 in the morning, gotta entertain somebody I guess.
Oh and jfrater, how did those body-hunters die or hanged? and what just happened to my comments? and yeah me too. I was eating noodles while reading no. 6 and that link to Cogitz.
@fraudbullet23 (22): Your comments are deleted if they are not contributing to the conversation. You seem hell-bent on promoting the Philippines – which is fine if it relates to the list, but mostly it doesn’t. People aren’t interested in ranting comments – they want coherent contributions. When you make those you will come off moderation and we will trust your comments to go straight to the site. Until then, every comment you post is checked before it is approved. Your silliness last week has caused that to happen. You have added a great deal of extra administration work to my daily jobs so I hope you think it is worth it – because it reduces the amount of time I have to work on new articles. Incidentally – posting under a new username this week hasn’t helped your cause. We see much more behind the scenes than you realise.
aokigahara freaks me out! they are lost souls in the forest and people take photographs of them? As a Asian I feel that this is will upset the lost souls.
@jfrater (20): I would definitely be interested in that list, and I’d look forward to it! If you do put it together, I would highly suggest throwing in a few…warnings about what’s in store. =P
@dbrownl (15): I spent a short amount of time in shettleston and was a little terrified. My family comes from there.
Yeah jfrater @20. please post that. I love gore. and people being eaten alive.
@SkollHati (21): Oh well – at least if no one else, I am interested
@SkollHati (23): Oh I have quickly learnt the importance of adding warnings
Too many complaints otherwise.
This reminds me of going to the cemetery for my sister’s birthday because the festival fell on her birthday! Haha… so we’d spend her birthday in the cemetery… Happy times with the old (dead) folks.
@jfrater (26): xD Good call. Well, do me a favor. Since I entertained you with my little immature jokes, make the sweet new list! =D
@midori (22): As a westerner I feel sick seeing them but only because we do everything in our power to shield ourselves from death. Fortunately listverse is working on reversing that trend
I’m Irish and I’d never heard of the Leap Castle Oubliette. I must keep my eyes and ears open for when it’s open to the public.
I also click on the Aokigahara link…. Wow. Horrific.
@SkollHati (28): Okay – but I need to get more than one opinion! I would hate to become the next rotten.com and alienate 3/4 of the readers! Personally – I don’t mind the dead – what I don’t like is gory photos of accidents. Suicides, rotting bodies, and post-mortem activities don’t bother me. The list would include those only. No bodies under trains!
I would be interested in a list like that, but then I am super interested in forensics and the like.
@Zenayda (30): yeah – I was tempted not to include the link – but I coped so I figured you all would too. But don’t look if you are eating breakfast!
@archangel (27): That is weird – and yet so cool.
@rhm (16): Thanks
I was quite pleased to be able to include something relating to Vlad Tepes that was still standing. He was a fascinating character.
@jfrater (31): Sounds good man, I completely understand. It is your site, and I would hate to see it get changed! I’m looking forward to whatever lists you make, even if you don’t make this slightly disturbing one! =)
@dbrownl (13): Can you find the name of the place for me? It sounds fascinating and might be a suitable entry for a future list. I am also very fascinated by Malta since making friends with someone from there on the net. I hope to be able to include it on a future list in one way or another.
i recommend the one from Romania. it’s truly wonderful.
@SkollHati (35): I am hoping that everyone else will say yes. If not, I can slip it into cogitz with a big bold warning as there are no ads there at present so no one can stop my freedom of speech (as they did with the suicide list here on listverse)
@McFearless (4): I have a book about Gilles de Rais which includes the entire court transcripts – it was a gift from the lady that played Judith to my Bluebeard in Duke Bluebeard’s Castle (the opera by Bartok). It is gruesome reading I assure you. I gave just the barest hint of the horror in this list.
Ok jfrater, thanks for the advise. won’t be promoting philippines again. ok wont talk nonsense. Thanks! `_` um, (how do i post a smiley)?
You post a smiley by doing a colon : followed by a closed bracket (or parenthesis depending on whether you learnt English British style or American style). In other words – do this : ) but without the space.
Creepy! Cool list
perhaps one of the spookiest things about any of them is that number 3 is off-limits…
One of my teachers last year did a lot of traveling, and he showed us pictures of a human ossuary — the one with the huge chandelier. Really scary looking but neat in a dark way.
I think I’ll try and visit at least one of these places next year.
why aren’t there any chinese tourist spots…
i’ve heard that china has some spooky tourist spots =P
No.1 Skeletal Art ftw
hi, JFrater. I would love to see a list of 10 faces of death. If you provide a warning and people read it, then they have no grounds to complain. Not that a warning would stop them from complaining…
Regarding that faces of death list I would love to see that made. After clicking on that link on Aokigahara I wanted to find out why the forest was so alluring and on Wikipedia it said it was partly due to a novel called Kuroi Jukai, “which ends with the lovers of the novel committing suicide in the forest”.
Am for the top 10 faces of death… with a huge, I mean really HUGE warning that can been seen from Pluto.
Why not post some Gilles de Rais stories on cogitz? if you do or have done already… let us know. Good list, as usual.
Love this list! I have another place to travel to when I visit Japan. Also the Leap Castle Oubliette reminded me of the movie Labrynth.
I found number 6 to be most disturbing and would never visit it. It would feel wrong to visit such a place.
@jfrater (20): Although it would be disturbing, I would like to see a list like that. Just make sure to put in a very large warning sign on it.
I’d love to see the hill of crosses. Here in America white crosses spring up beside roads to commemorate where people have died in accidents (usually from drunk drivers). It’s very sad to be driving along happily, then see two or three of them.
The New Orleans cemetery has been used to great effect in a number of movies, like Double Jeapordy (sp?). Creepy even during daylight.
The Oubliette is shuddersome. First ran across that word in the movie Labyrinth. Of course since we were dealing with Muppets and David Bowie it wasn’t quite as threatening, but that picture and your description… brrr.
I’ve been highly interested in historic murder cases since my youth, so I knew about Giles. You’re right–you only hinted at his evil. I think he deserved burning alive.
And I’m writing a book with Vlad as a main character, so I’ve researched him. He was the inspiration for me as a child to look up the terms ‘impale’, ‘disembowel’, and ‘exsanguinate’.(sp?)
While the ossuaries are mega creepy, I would have chosen the Japanese suicide forest as No. 1. The catacombs are places of death, but only death after death, if you know what I mean. They strike me as passive. The forest, though… The idea that hundreds of people for years go there to actively seek death… THAT’S horrific. There’s a Japanese occult movie about that place, can’t remember the name. I think it’s on a free asian horror movie site I visit, and I’ve passed it by before. Now I need to see it.
Count me in as an ‘aye’ for the faces of death list, since you’re going to avoid tragic accident aftermaths. I once watched a video tape that consisted of old black-and-white crime scene photos, and some of them were almost artistic, in a macabre way. Gave me a few nightmares, though, and they were oh, so sad.
Anyway, great list, great work. Of to see the update on the new site.
Well,I can debunk at least one of those. A buddy and I spent about 3 hours (at night)in one of those very old cemeteries in New Orleans back in 1966–I didn’t see anything unusual-Of course we were drinking (and drunk)-LOL-(True story)
Excellent list Jamie. The Japanese forest is weird; some of those folks’ feet are touching the ground. They must have been very determined to die. Sad.
And go ahead. Do the faces of death list. Those folks are already dead; nothing to fear from them. We do as a society make far too big a deal about death – it’s what makes life so precious eh? Also because they’re already dead and you’re not going to give any tips on how to join them – you should be safe enough from blackmail.
@jfrater (20): how about this? maybe have 2 lists, the one on the main page, which contains a prominent link to another list. have, let’s say, a sans-pictures link with the accompanying stories only (assuming stories or text would even be included), because i myself enjoy reading but tend not to want to see the pictures (although i linked to that japanese forest; freaky). this would be the one published on the front page, but have a twin list with pictures, and in the description post something along the lines of “this list is the buffer list for those who don’t wish to view the pictures; for the full list with pictures click here” and that way those who are unawares of what this faces of death thing may be wont be caught off guard. unless you are only planning on pictures, then i’m not sure. but this way, along with the standard bold text and NSFW warnings will repel those who wish to be repelled and compel those who wish to be compelled. and this way, if a queasy stomach such my own finds its way to these pictures, they would have nobody to blame but themselves.
also, great list, my interests are traveling and the macabre as well, so this was exciting. if ever you feel like visiting the good old united states, pick up weird US, its a travel guide on the weird and wonderful here.
-ian
I saw the St Louis cemetery in New Orleans, but I never realized it was ‘spooky’! We just drove past it by bus. I actually kind of liked it. Everything is built above the ground, which is really unusual where I come from. I liked it =)
@jfrater (20): Do it! The next day, just make a top 10 unicorns and rainbows list. And maybe do it on a weekend so I can read it right away? Otherwise I’ll be wating all day long.
Anyway, THIS list was cool. I love old cemetaries. They never seem that creepy to me, and I like reading older headstones. My sister and I used to do rubbings of the ones we liked when we were little. Not sure where those ended up.
i clicked the link for the one in japan. i first thought it was just bone remains and other ordinary stuff left behind. but then when i first saw a body…sh*t
#2 Aokigahara kind of has me wondering if some of these people aren’t going there to commit suicide, but once they are in the forest they are “drawn” to commit it. That place is just creepy! And yes J I would love to see one of those “top 10 faces of death” lists!
living in new orleans, the cemetaries are a must see…. #6 made me cringe a bit, that dude was truely a sicko!
also, in #8, this is where people got the expression that doctors are quacks right??
I would love to see a faces of death list. Count me in!
*amazed*