Check out Europe’s darkest and weirdest destinations
Netflix latest hit travel show, Tark Tourism, has put spooky, scary and downright morbid tourism on the map.
Search results for the destinations have increased by a whopping 1,000 per cent in the UK alone since the show was launched, according to We Are Promotional.
If you’d prefer to explore for yourself rather than just ‘Netflix and Chill’ we’ve created the ultimate list of macabre attractions. So forget your beach towel and pack the tissues as we take you on the REAL tour of Europe – the one that’s not in the guidebooks!
Costa Concordia Shipwreck, Italy
Type: Shipwreck
Location: Isola del Giglio, Italy
Closest Airport: Milan
Costa Concordia was a cruise ship that had 3,206 passengers and 1,023 crew members on board when it crashed on 13th January 2012. The ship hit an underwater rock off the waters off the coast of Tuscany near Isola del Giglio.
The ship was only so close to the coast because of a foolish attempt by, Francesco Schettino, the captain, to perform a ‘sail by salute’ – the practice of sailing close by to an island for the interest of passengers and crew.
The impact caused two long strips of steel from the ship’s hull to be shredded resulting in water entering the hull. The ship then capsized and the disaster claimed the lives of 32 passengers.
Today you can visit the rusted and battered remains of the cruise ship by boat. Locals run hour-long tours on zodiacs that leave from Genoas old harbour and take you within 200 yards of the morbid spectacle.
Babenhausen Barracks, Germany
Type: WW2 Barracks
Location: Hessen, Germany
Closest Airport: Frankfurt (FRA)
Dark tourism has lead to a rise in the number of visitors to various WW2 sites across Europe with Auschwitz seeing over 2 million visitors in 2016 but if you’re looking for something a little less crowded and a little more out there check out the Babenhausen Barracks in Germany.
The barracks used to house soldiers but fell into disrepair after WW2, but a section of them has now been turned into a museum. The reason they make the list of dark tourism hotspots in Europe is that there are frequent reports of paranormal activity at the barracks.
Nothing will raise the hairs on your arms quite like a good ghost story and Babenhausen Barracks has a great one. When you get there you may get a fright as you hear German voices coming from the basement shouting commands to their officers.
Lights in the building have been known to turn off and on by themselves so be sure you bring a flashlight with you.
German soldiers have been seen strolling the halls in their military uniforms and soldiers who have visited the site even report picking up a telephone in the barracks and hearing a woman’s voice “speaking backwards” – no one is able to make out what she is saying.
Oradour-sur-Glane, France
Type: Post-war Ghost-town/Memorial Museum
Location: Oradour-sur-Glane, France
Closest Airport: Limoges
A visit to Oradour-sur-Glane in France is a truly moving experience but you could expect nothing less from a village that was entirely wiped out by the Nazi SS forces in June of 1944.
On June 10th 1944 the war was drawing to a close, Allied troops had just stormed the beaches in Normandy, completing the largest seaborne invasion in history and changing the course of the war.
Men, women and children in the village were rounded up by the Waffen SS and massacred. 642 people were killed – some asphyxiated, some machine-gunned and some burnt alive.
Stepping into the village is like stepping through time. All the remains have been left where they were found as a reminder of the tragedy that happened here and as a warning of the atrocities that happen in war.
The events are still shrouded in mystery. No one knows why this small town was chosen to experience this ultimate horror – theories of Russian gold and revenge killings still remain controversial and we may never know why this poor settlement was chosen.
Overtoun Suicide Bridge
Type: Celtic mythological site
Location: Dumbarton, Scotland
Closest Airport: Glasgow
Near the quiet and peaceful village of Milton in Scotland, there is a mysterious bridge. For reasons unknown, this bridge has been attracting suicidal dogs since the 1960’s.
If you’ve ever owned a dog you probably realise why this is such a strange occurrence – you’re probably thinking ‘I didn’t even know dog suicide was a thing.’ According to most people and canine psychologist Dr. David Sands, it’s not, making the fact that an estimated 50 dogs have taken their lives here even weirder.
What is even stranger than and adds to the theory that these are suicides rather than freak accidents is that on occasion these dogs can be seen climbing the parapet wall before they make their jump. Some dogs are even so lucky as to survive their brush with death only to return to the bridge and attempt the second jump.
The Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has even gone so far as to send investigators to the bridge to determine the cause of these dogs suicides. They were also unable to explain the cause of this bizarre behaviour.
The Festival of Near Death Experiences
Type: Celebration of life/Festival
Location: As Nieves, Pontevedra
Closest Airport: Vigo via Madrid
The festival of near-death experiences – or the Fiestas de Santa Marta de Ribarteme as the locals call it – is home to all manner of weird and wonderful events and activities. Burning effigies, running with bulls, tomato fights and wine battles are just some of the fun events a day at this festival will hold in store.
People from all over, who have had a near-death experience, will make the long journey to this remote Spanish village with their friends and family. Once they arrive they are put into coffins and play dead. Their family then carries their coffin through the local streets along with a procession of mourners.
The collection of strange processions then meet at the cemetery of the local church – The Church of Santa Marta de Ribarteme. Prayers are said to Saint Marta and everyone gives thanks for their lives and that they were saved from death by presenting a gift (usually money) to the Saints statue.
Pripyat, Ukraine
Type: Nuclear disaster
Location: Pripyat, Ukraine
Closest Airport: Kiev-Zhulhany
On April 25 1986, during a late night safety test there was simulated station power blackout. The safety systems were intentionally turned off for the test but due to a number of flaws in the reactor design and human error the nuclear reactor exploded.
To this day, the full human impact of Chernobyl is unknown. The estimates differ significantly with some saying the number of people affected tops a million. After this event and the tragic consequences that are still being felt today, no one ever expected it to become a tourist attraction.
Today, the Ukrainian government allows tourists to take short and regulated visits 30 miles into the exclusion zone and into the abandoned town of Pripyat.
Tens of thousands of people were evacuated from the town during the Chernobyl explosion, homes, schools and even an amusement park were left behind to decay. Untouched by humans since their evacuation, stepping into this town is like stepping into a post-apocalyptic movie.
The ghost town is like a freeze frame form the soviet-era, with communist propaganda hanging from the walls and hammer and sickles stuck to notice boards and streetlamps. As you walk through the town you will get the feeling that you are frozen in time as all the clocks have stopped at 11:55 – the moment that power was cut to the town.
Vilnius, Lithuania
Type: Museum
Location: Vilnius, Lithuania
Closest Airport: Vilnius
Until 1991, Vilnius, Lithuania was home to a full operation KGB headquarters and prison.
Nowadays it has been converted into the Museum of Genocide Victims showing exhibits to educate visitors about the repression of Lithuanian citizens under Soviet rule, including the deportations to Siberian gulags.
Both the German Gestapo and the KGB have operated within the building committing and planning numerous atrocities. For most people, the events that happened in Lithuania under the rule are unfamiliar as it is not a thing that is taught in Western Europe so there is no better place to go and learn that this useful and educational museum.
The museum includes a basement with KGB prisons cells and an execution room showing visitors some of the ghastly elements of this extremely dark site. Political prisoners, as well as local Lithuanians were interrogated and tortured here with over 1,000 victims being killed in their execution room.
Some of the basement cells are completely preserved, not having changed a bit since they were last operational in 1991 giving the museum true authenticity.
- Troubles Tours, Northern Ireland
Type: City Tour
Location: Belfast, Northern Ireland
Closest Airport: Belfast
Now known as the Emerald of Ireland, Belfast was once associated more with gruesome than green.
For years, from the sixties well into the late nineties, no one wanted to step foot in Belfast due to ‘The Troubles.’ Now, in post-Troubles Belfast, tourists flock to the streets to learn about the brutal history of the IRA.
Today you can get a black taxi tour of the city where you will be driven to various areas of significance during the troubles. From political murals the Falls and the Shankill which show their own graphic tale of the Troubles of Northern Ireland to the peace line that was used to keep nationalists and unionists apart during these times and lead to further division among the communities.
You can also get a tour of Crumlin Road Jail and Court House. This old Victorian building played a significant role in ‘The Troubles.’ It is the place where many people involved in the war were convicted, imprisoned and even executed.
Pompeii, Italy
Type: Archeological site
Location: Pompeii, Italy
Closest Airport: Naples
Pompeii has been famed for centuries for its volcanic eruption in 79AD that left the entire city in ruin. It is probably one of the oldest dark sites in Europe and although the term ‘dark tourism’ was coined fairly recently, people have been making the voyage to see the destroyed city for centuries.
The site is the largest and most well preserved Roman town. The very reason the ancient city was preserved so well is the same reason it became a dark tourism spot – the covering of ash it got the night of the disastrous eruption of Mt Vesuvius.
The site lay covered in ash but was discovered in the 18th Century and has since held a draw for those interested in the grim and gruesome. In the archaeological dig of the site, a number of both glorious and grousoume discoveries have been made from beautiful mosaics to perfectly preserved human bodies.
The bodies are the main draw for many dark tourists – seeing perfectly preserved roman citizens as they try to flee the eruption, displaying the last agonizing moments of Pompeii is a once in a lifetime opportunity.
The Battle of the Somme, France
Type: Battlefield
Location: Somme, France
Closest Airport: Paris
As soon as someone mentions The Battle of the Somme, in your mind, you immediately conjure up the bloody images of a World War 1 battlefield. At this spot, three million soldiers of about 20 nationalities fought along 45km of land.
The battle was fought between 1st July and 1st November in 1916 close to the Somme River in France. It is one of the bloodiest battles in history with 57,000 British troops dying on the first day alone.
Today and forever the Somme will be scarred by the great battle that took place here. You can take a walking tour along the battlefield and see many of the trenches still in place as well as walk among the cemeteries and memorials put up in the area for all those who died there.
You can also visit Historial de la Grande Guerre along the riverfront at the town of Peronne. It is home to an extensive ray of trilingual exhibitions which include loads of interactive media and are thought-provoking and educational.
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