want to go. God take me.’
Dwight D. Eisenhower
The Curse of Tecumseh
William Henry Harrison was the leader of a territorial militia fighting the Native American Indians led by two brothers, Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa. Harrison and his men beat the Indian forces at the battle of Tippecanoe and went on to assault their village. William Henry Harrison was hailed as a hero and consequently won the presidency in 1840 using the slogan ‘Tippecanoe and Tyler too’. Harrison’s streak of luck ended quickly though. He only served as president for a month before he died of pneumonia after catching a cold – the first to fall victim to Tecsumseh’s curse, which states that any president elected in a year ending in a ‘0’ would die while in office.
Think that sounds crazy? Abraham Lincoln was the next to fall victim to the curse. Elected in 1860, he was assassinated during his presidency in 1865. James Garfield (1880), William McKinley (1900), Warren G. Harding (1920), Franklin Roosevelt (for his third term he was elected in 1940) and John F. Kennedy (1960) have all followed Harrison and Lincoln’s precedent of dying while in office. Ronald Reagan, elected in 1980, was next in line for a tragic end and came close in 1981 when he was shot by John Hinckley. But Reagan survived the assassination attempt and became the first president to break Tecumseh’s curse.
Thirteen Reasons NEVER to Become a Roman Emperor
Rome has always been known for its decidedly bloody and hedonistic history. Many of the Roman emperors themselves were consumed by power and a somewhat acute paranoia about their various enemies. Then again, maybe their paranoia wasn’t completely unsubstantiated …
And we can’t forget Caesar, not emperor but Dictator Perpetuus or ‘dictator for life’ as named by his Senate. Yes, the same Senate which contained a group of men (including the infamous Brutus) who stabbed Caesar twenty-three times with knives and daggers. We’re guessing their version of ‘life’ was shorter than his.
CAESAR’S LAST WORDS
‘UM, YOU GUYS MISSED A SPOT.’
Don’t Forget to Pack!
Ancient Essentials for the Afterlife
Romans often put coins in the mouths of the dead. The coins were your fare for crossing the River Styx which blocked entry to the underworld. You also needed some honey cakes to feed Cerberus, the three-headed dog that guarded the entrance to the land of the dead.
When the body of Alexander the Great was moved back from Babylon to Macedonia, it was drenched in honey.
In Ancient Egypt, preserving bodies through mummification was a requirement for the journey to the underworld. The Book of Coming Forth by Day – more commonly known as the Book of the Dead – was often buried with prominent Egyptians. It contained spells and rituals intended to guide the soul to the afterlife including mummification instructions.
If a lifetime of servitude wasn’t enough, several ancient cultures had their slaves killed when a powerful leader died. In Fiji, slaves and wives were often strangled when a male died. In Japan, dozens of slaves would kill themselves when a member of the nobility kicked it. In Africa, slaves, dogs and horses were killed when a king went kaput. And in ancient China, it wasn’t unknown for servants and retainers to be buried alive along with the person of significance. Was it a power thing? Maybe a fear of loneliness? We’ll never know for sure, but you can probably imagine the conversation among servants or wives when a big guy croaked . . .
‘Are you sure he’s dead? Check again.’
‘I’ve checked three times already!’
[silence] ‘Oh crap.’
Today, the Chinese burn prayer money to send to the deceased instead. There must have been a collective sigh of relief the day