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名無し
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2021/12/27(月) 17:40:39
報告
でも、有名な自殺の名所の一覧とかを見てみると、日本のそれは大概が心霊スポット化していますけど、海外のものはそういうわけでもなさそうなんですよねえ。
どうしてかは知りませんが。
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名無し
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2021/12/31(金) 12:18:13
報告
List of reportedly haunted locations in France - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reportedly_haunted_locations_in_France
英語版ウィキペディアを見てると、一応心霊スポットの一覧の中に挙げられてはいるみたいですね。
でも、扱いとしては、かなり地味ですが。
ただ、エッフェル塔に限らず、海外では自殺の名所は心霊スポットとしてはあまり焦点が当てられないきらいがあるように思えます(自殺防止などの倫理的な観点もあるのかもしれません)。
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名無し
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2022/01/04(火) 18:01:04
報告
エッフェル塔は建設当時、フランスの芸術家たちから猛反対され、中でもモーパッサンは、エッフェル塔を見なくて済むからという理由でエッフェル塔1階のレストランに通っていたそうです。
今の状況を見て、彼らはあちらで何を思うのでしょうか。
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2022/12/29(木) 21:14:09
報告
I had never heard about this although I live in France. Perhaps because we don't talk about suicide as often? I checked this information, it's true. It is surprising! The most interesting is the fact that about 370 people died here. The first suicide took place on the 23 August 1891 and a murder was commited in 1963. It is so scary !
Furthermore, places where accidents, murders or suicides have taken place are not considered as haunted places as such, unlike in Japan. In France at least, it's quite frowned upon to believe in spirits and if you tell someone about a strange experience, they will sometimes laugh at you or think it was your imagination. But some people believe in the supernatural, and therefore consider that these places are potentially haunted.
I don't know about other countries, but I think that in England or the United States, places that have been hit by misfortune are more often considered haunted. I find it easier to find haunted places for these two countries than for France.
Finally,according to me, we don't qualified places as haunted to make depressed people less curious so that they don't think about ending it.
I hope my comment has answered your questions about the French view of the unexplainable.
(I'm sorry if I didn't understand well what you commented on before. I'm learning Japanese, but I'm having a bit of trouble because I have very little time to study it. I used a translator to check if I understood correctly ^^')
♪Bonus: some French legends that have been forgotten.
•"la brebis noire"(the black sheep) stuck to the back of person it crossed, putting itself on his shoulders. It becomes heavier and heavier until it kills the person. To protect yourself from it, you have to put your shoes on backwards
•In the year 371, a "rain of wool" fell in the Pas-de-Calais, in Arras, and restored fertility to the soil.
•There are many legends related to love for young women, such as the "Baie à présages", located in Le Croisic, Loire-Atlantique. The women threw a pin into the water. If it got stuck in seaweed, they could hope to get married within the year.
•Napoléon Bonaparte, is said to haunt a castle in Laval-du-Tarn.
•There is a "Loup drapé"(draped wolf), a horse that offers children to ride on its back to kidnap them, in the Gard.
•In the castle of Rosay-sur-Lieure, in the Eure, a marquise haunted this place during a century, until 1870.
•in the 17th century, people believed in the "Basilic" (Basilisc, in English) or "Sewer snake", a winged snake with the head and legs of a rooster. It haunted the sewers of Paris.
•The "double lièvre"(double hare) is a creature made up of two hares that work alternatively, so that it does not get tired. Since the 16th century, it is said to have been seen in the forest of Rambouillet, in the Yvelines. Baron Münchhausen had hunted it.