Source: Wikipedia. Die Glocke is a purported top secret Nazi scientific technological device, secret weapon, or Wunderwaffe. First described by Polish journalist and author Igor Witkowski in Prawda o Wunderwaffe , it was later popularized by military journalist and author Nick Cook who associated it with Nazi occultism, antigravity and free energy research.
Mainstream reviewers have criticized claims about Die Glocke as being pseudoscientific, recycled rumors, and a hoax. Die Glocke and other alleged Nazi "miracle weapons" have been dramatized in video games, television shows, and novels.
Cook described Witkowski's claims of a device called "The Bell" engineered by Nazi scientists that was "a glowing, rotating contraption" rumored to have "some kind of antigravitational effect", be a "time machine", or part of an "SS antigravity program" for a flying saucer called the "Repulsine".
Cook's publication introduced the topic in English without critically discussing the subject. According to reviewer Julian Strube, Kurlander "cites from the reservoir of post-war conspiracy theories" and "heavily relies on sensationalist accounts More routes More lodging More services This route on your website.
Kammler disappeared in the closing days of World War II and was never seen again. Still, some UFO conspiracy theorists believe U. As the legend goes, this culminated in the so-called Kecksburg Incident , when a bell-shaped UFO allegedly crashed outside Kecksburg, Pennsylvania in December Does any of this check out?
Type keyword s to search. Today's Top Stories. Buy It Now. Add to cart. Sold by rarewaves-usa Facing the overwhelming power and equipment of the Allies, Hitler authorized the construction of Wunderwaffe wonder weapons. This story offers an explanation of the focus on the "Die Glocke" project. There were other Wunderwaffe projects but "The Bell" was the one most-cloaked in secrecy.
If its powers could be harnessed by the Nazis, it could be the bargaining chip to bring the Allies to the negotiating table and improve the surrender terms of the Third Reich. Its powers were believed to be so staggering that at the end of World War II, all of the scientists and laborers working on "Die Glocke" were murdered. This work of fiction attempts to explain this mystery.
Additional Product Features Target Audience. Discussion of Die Glocke originated in the works of Igor Witkowski. Witkowski wrote that he first discovered the existence of Die Glocke by reading transcripts from an interrogation of former Nazi SS Officer Jakob Sporrenberg.
According to Witkowski, he was shown the allegedly classified transcripts in August by an unnamed Polish intelligence contact who said he had access to Polish government documents regarding Nazi secret weapons. Although no evidence of the veracity of Witkowski's statements have been produced, they reached a wider audience when they were retold by British author Nick Cook, who added his own views to Witkowski's statements in The Hunt for Zero Point.
Allegedly an experiment carried out by Third Reich scientists working for the SS in a German facility known as Der Riese "The Giant" [5] near the Wenceslaus mine and close to the Czech border, Die Glocke is described as being a device "made out of a hard, heavy metal" approximately nine feet wide and 12 to 15 feet high, having a shape similar to that of a large bell. According to Cook, this device ostensibly contained two counter-rotating cylinders which would be "filled with a mercury-like substance, violet in color.
This metallic liquid was code-named "Xerum " and was otherwise cautiously "stored in a tall thin thermos flask a meter high encased in lead".
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