He resolved the myth of the English monster more than 500 years ago
He resolved the myth of the English monster more than 500 years ago
A myth in English folklore, a giant with burning eyes and wild dog-like claws, raced through the countryside and caused terror, five centuries ago, killed a number of worshipers and left claws on the door of a church. But scientists proved that the story The ages may be real after they find a monster-like skeleton, the Daily Mail reported.
The monster attacks coincided with the storm that swept across the plains of eastern England in August 1577. According to legend, the loud thunder of the Holy Trinity Church in the village of Blytheberg, close to the English province of Savolk, "Inside, a man and a boy are killed by worshipers, and the next station was in St. Mary's Church, 12 miles from the Holy Trinity, where two worshipers were also killed.
For centuries the "black dog" remained a legend, until last year archaeologists found a 7-foot-tall dog skeleton near an ancient temple just a few miles from the two churches where the beast was said to have killed the worshipers 500 years ago.
Experts began examining the bones and the surrounding materials two days ago with the equipment of the 21st century, and their results may answer the question whose answer has been absent for centuries: Is the "black dog" a myth or a fact?