Although the Dutch Flying not actually 'a pirate ship, the legend that' created around it allows us to enter into the spirit of adventure and fascinating piracy. So 'I decided to start the new series Superimago about pirates, linked to the blog: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~ http://superrealityblog.blogspot.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ beginning at this legend-hued dark and mysterious. So 'for the new series PIRATES here you The legend of the Flying ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ Of all the legends and marinate no 'more' disturbing and fascinating at the same time that the Flying Dutchman . The legend is based on a ship really existed, led by a true catfish, Hendrik Vanderdecker that in 1680 the Lord sailed from Amsterdam direct to Batavia, Netherlands Indies. By contract, he should bring back a load of goods on behalf of the company that owned the ship, but Vanderdecker, not without malice, was estimated to be able to buy other merchandise on their behalf, to sell and get rich without having to share anything with the company that gave him work. The ship, according to legend, was struck while crossing a formidable tropical storm, the captain and I try 'make every possible maneuver to proceed. Against every precaution, the captain insult 'the storm as if it were his own personal challenge, even before his official, swore that he would challenge the fate and rounded the Cape of Good Hope. This results in 'terror among sailors who Vanderdecker admonished for conduct that went against every rule, and endangering the lives of all and they pleaded in the name of God, to abandon his mad intentions and wait for the storm subside. Nothing, however, 'pote' stop it, and the ship, a prey to the fury of the sea, was soon overwhelmed, broke 'into two parts and all its occupants perished in the waves. As punishment, Vanderdecker was sentenced to serve their grave responsibility 'of the death of all its crew steering his ship until the day of Judgement. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The legend, as we see, and 'beautiful and romantic, but many witnesses take it very seriously, and swear that it is not, after all, a mere story hearth. In 1835 the captain and crew of a British ship sighted during a storm, a ship that "... approached by the fury of the storm, with all the sails." The commander immediately ordered to report their presence, since 'the boat, at incredible speed, was approaching to the side, risking death as a disastrous impact. Then, suddenly, when it had reached a dangerously short distance and disappeared into thin air, leaving stunned everyone present. In 1881, the British ship Bacchante, a wood merchant class, lost a man overboard. The official report that was drawn on the episode has the disconcerting "Meyers, a sailor, drowned amid the waves despite being made every effort to place it safe. fell into the sea after having sighted a strange ship that although he had reduced the sails in tatters, we followed the same route to to take stern dangerously. " Another more 'recent' sighting was the Flying Dutchman, it is said, in March 1939 beach Glencairn, South Africa . The next day, a local newspaper, reported 'the news that dozens of swimmers had observed the vessel and dwelt on the details of the vision by noting that the vessel had spotted all the sails in tatters and proceeded rapidly despite the complete absence of wind. Some scholars have explained the sighting of Glencairn as a collective mirage. But however, this explanation has not attracted a lot of conviction, even if it falls into the category of probability, because it would be difficult for swimmers of Glencairn imagine a ship of the seventeenth century in a detailed way, since most of them had never seen one! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (article from http:/ / www.ilcancello.com / mistero_miti_olandese_volante.htm )
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