Meet the Most Mysterious Man in History

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“Sin can only be overcome, if it is first understood.”

– Rasputin (55A/c.1900), Publication; cited at 5:24 in video

Just found this video, made two-weeks ago, today and watched up to the quote cited. I’ve always been a little puzzled-curious about Rasputin. If anyone thinks he is top 2000 genius candidate mind, please comment.

Note: Presently I’m audio-books listening to Gunter Grass’ A4/1959 The Tin Drum, about Oscar, a psychiatric patient, who tells his entire reaction existence story, about how he went on his journey, from before birth to his psychiatric days, with a small book he made by shuffling pages of Rasputin together with pages of Goethe’s Elective Affinities.

He says that Rasputin is one who lets women fall in love with him, and Goethe is one who lets himself fall in love with women.

👍︎︎ 1 👤︎︎ u/JohannGoethe 📅︎︎ Dec 07 2022 🗫︎ replies
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Take a look back through history and you'll  find no shortage of famous figures who blur   the boundaries between fact and fiction. Think  Leonidas I of Sparta or King Midas - both were   100% real, but it's safe to say many of the  stories surrounding them probably weren't.   Most of these titans of times gone by  only rose to true world fame after their   tales were corrupted and endlessly  embelished, long after their deaths. But every once in a while, someone  emerges from the haze of history whose   dazzling deeds are so inexplicable they  become legends within their own lifetime. The subject of today's video is one such man,   and his story is quite simply one of  the most unbelievable I've ever shared   on this channel. It's hard to know where to  begin really, so how about some highlights. 1. He was born a peasant,   but rose to control the whole of Russia 2. He had the power to heal the sick and the best   doctors of his time couldn't explain how he did it 3. He survived multiple assassination attempts,   including being poisoned, stabbed, and shot 4. He had the power of prophecy, and made several   bold predictions that subsequently came true 5. He slept with thousands of women,   despite never bathing 6. He brought down a 300-year old   Royal dynasty almost singlehandedly 7. And, most importantly of all,   his pickled penis is preserved  in a Russian museum to this day This is the larger than life  story of Grigori Rasputin,   or as I like to call him, the magical sex  wizard who brought down the Russian monarchy. Rasputin's story is one of the most outlandish  ever told, but his beginnings were about as   humble as it gets. He was born a peasant in 1869  in the tiny Siberian village of Pokrovskoye. He had seven siblings, but only Rasputin made it to adulthood. Very little is known   about those early years beyond the  fact that, like most of his peers,   he received little in the way of education.  It's likely he could neither read nor write   until adulthood, and he was regularly  in trouble with the local authorities   thanks to a penchant for committing minor  crimes and a major appetite for hard drink   and soft women. By 18 he was married and  would soon raise 3 children of his own. So far so utterly boring - at this point  in our story Rasputin's life wasn't all   that dissimilar to thousands of other Russian  men of the era. But in 1897 at the age of 28,   he decided to take a pilgrimage to the St.  Nicholas Monastery at Verkhoturye. It was   a journey that would dramatically alter both  his life and the course of Russian history. Rasputin wasn't an especially religious man  prior to the pilgrimage, and his reasons for   undertaking a 500 mile round trip in the name  of a God he wasn't all that well acquainted   with are unknown. Some sources claim it  was an excuse to make a swift exit from   Pokrovskoye after being caught stealing a  horse - but I say that the heavy drinking,   wantonly womanising Rasputin took the pilgrimage  because lads weekends hadn't been invented yet. Whatever the truth, when Rasputin returned  some months later he was a man transformed   by religious fervour. Well, I say  'transformed' - he still drank like   a sailor and chased women night and day, he  just did a lot more praying in his downtime. Over the following few years, he travelled  Russia extensively, styling himself as a   wandering holy man. He also developed his  own unique brand of religion built on the   foundations of an outlawed Christian sect  known as the Khlysts, whose murky practices   were rumoured to included mass orgies and  self flagellation (not at the same time). For his part, Rasputin preached that sin could  only be overcome if it was first understood,   which basically gave him free rein to do all  the fun stuff life has to offer in the name   of theological research. He also taught that it  was possible to get closer to God by achieving a   state of sexual exhaustion, preferably by having  as much sex as possible with Rasputin himself.   Bearing in mind that he was one of the  scariest-looking individuals to ever live   and was famous for never washing and therefore  smelled like a badger's arsehole, you might be   surprised to learn that, somehow, this strange  strategy for seducing women actually worked.. Rasputin soon gathered a large number  of followers, and there were growing   whispers that, during his time in the Siberian  wilderness, he’d developed certain… abilities.   Some said he could read minds, others that he  could heal the sick with the touch of a hand,   and all agreed that there was  something otherworldly about the man. By the early 1900s, he'd caused enough of a stir  to attract the attention of several important   people in the Russian Orthodox Church. Eventually,  those lofty connections led him to St. Petersburg. Rasputin's arrival in the then-Russian  capital was perfectly timed. The city's   aristocracy were positively obsessed  with all things occult and supernatural,   so when the badger-scented Siberian turned  up amid rumours of magical powers in 1905   armed with a soul-piercing stare,  everyone wanted a piece of him.   He received invitations from many of the most  influential and affluent families in the city. Rung by rung, he hauled himself up St.  Petersburg's teetering social ladder until,   in November 1905, he reached the final boss  - he was invited to meet Tsar Nicholas II,   Emperor of all of Russia and patriarch  of the centuries old Romanov family,   and his wife Alexandra Feodorovna, the Tsarina. The encounter was planned for just a few minutes,   but the self-proclaimed mystic worked his  unique brand of black magic on the monarchs,   and it was well over an hour  before he emerged from the palace. It's often said that people believe what they want  to believe, and that no doubt helped Rasputin win   over the Russian royals. You see, the Tsar and  Tsarina were absolutely desperate for the rumours   about Rasputin to be true. Because if he really  could heal the sick, that meant he had the power   to save their son, Alexei, who also happened  to be the heir to the entire Russian empire. Alexei suffered from haemophilia, a rare  genetic disorder that prevents the blood   from clotting properly. That might sound like  a fairly minor ailment, but sufferers live   their entire lives on a knife-edge, where even a  small injury can lead to devastating blood loss. Haemophilia is a serious illness even  today, but in 20th century Russia it   was essentially a death sentence - the  average life expectancy was just 13. Alexei was the youngest of 5 children, but since  his elder siblings were all inconveniently female,   the line of succession relied solely  on his survival. In other words,   if Rasputin could keep Alexei alive, he wasn't  just saving the life of a treasured son,   he was safeguarding the future  of the entire Romanov dynasty. And it wouldn't be long before the holy man was   given a chance to put his  magic where his mouth was. As an interesting aside, at the time haemophilia  was so common among European royalty that it was   often referred to as the 'royal disease'.  Historians have subsequently traced the   rogue genes back to a single 'patient zero'  - none other than the so-called ‘grandmother   of Europe’ Queen Victoria. She was  a carrier, and her offspring spread   haemophilia around Europe's aristocracy,  including the royal families of Spain,   Germany, and Russia (Queen Victoria was  Alexei Romanov's great grandmother). Anyway, Rasputin was duly summoned to use his  magic powers on the boy, and here's where things   start to get a little weird. It's easy to dismiss  Rasputin as a fraud - a charismatic chancer who   somehow bluffed his way to the top. But whatever  hocus pocus he employed on the Russian heir...   it actually worked. And not just once  - Alexei's chief physician would later   recall that whenever the boy was ill,  Rasputin would turn up at his bedside,   spit, and Alexei would recover in no time. In one of the more famous incidents, the prince  suffered internal bleeding during a bumpy carriage   ride back from a hunting trip. Before long he'd  fallen so gravely ill that a priest was summoned   to perform his last rites and a hasty telegram was  penned announcing the boy's death to the world. Rasputin was back home in Siberia at the  time, and the desperate Tsarina sent him   a telegram of her own asking him to pray for  her son. Despite being hundreds of miles away,   Rasputin replied explaining that  God had personally assured him   the prince would live so long as no  doctors interfered in his recovery. I don't know about you, but if  I was a fraudulent faith healer,   getting rid everyone with a modicum of medical  knowledge would be the last thing I'd do.   But the Tsarina obliged, and, against all common  sense, Alexei began to recover almost immediately. Even today, more than 100 years later, nobody  really knows exactly what Rasputin was doing   to improve Alexei’s health. It could be he was  leveraging knowledge of internal bleeding cases   in horses from his time in Siberia, while others  believe his cures relied on some form of hypnosis.   Still others put his miraculous healing  powers down to nothing more than simple   psychology - by dismissing the Prince's army of  doctors and calming his mother's frayed nerves,   Rasputin may simply have created a calmer,  quieter atmosphere more conducive to recovery.   Add a powerful placebo effect  into the mix and who knows... If that's all a bit vague for you, don’t worry,  I have a slightly more concrete theory. Aspirin   was a ubiquitous painkiller in Russia at the  time, and would almost certainly have been   prescribed for Alexei. But it turns out that  aspirin thins the blood and is basically oral   kryptonite for haemophiliacs. That little  medical factoid wasn't known to science   until a good 50 years after Rasputin's  death, but it may be that by regularly   recommending Alexei's doctor's be ignored in  favour of the healing power of God's grace,   Rasputin was unwittingly protecting the prince  from the harmful effects of ingesting aspirin. Of course, there's always the possibility  that Rasputin really had gained magical   healing powers by shagging his way  around Russia and refusing to bathe,   but I'm going to go ahead and  put that one down as a long shot. Ultimately it doesn't really matter how he was  doing it. By ensuring blood flowed through the   prince’s veins - and more importantly  by keeping it there whenever he got   so much as paper cut - Rasputin gained the  unshakeable loyalty of the Tsar and Tsarina. Still, Rasputin wasn't one to take chances, and so  to truly seal his position in the royal household,   this big-dicked mystic made a prophecy, claiming  that his destiny was linked with theirs and that   if anything untoward ever happened to  him, the house of Romanov would fall.   Again, it's easy to scoff  at such an obvious ploy...   except the prophecy would indeed later come  true - but let's not get ahead of ourselves. Tsar Nicholas II named Rasputin as his official  lamplighter, a role which saw him look after the   royal household’s religious icons and gave him  unparalleled access to Russia's rulers. Rasputin   made the most of his position, and before  long he wasn't just healing Prince Alexei,   he was advising on matters of state  and influencing foreign policy. But his elevated status had done nothing  to smooth Rasputin's rough manners,   nor diminish any of his various... appetites.  Rumours abounded that the mystic would accept   sexual favours and other bribes in return for  putting in a good word with the Tsar and his wife,   and when he couldn't get what he wanted by abusing  his newfoundpower, he simply took it by force. Rasputin was accused of rape on multiple  occasions, including by the governess who   looked after Alexei's older sisters. But  20th century Russia's version of the MeToo   movement never really got off the ground.  Despite the weight of claims against him,   including some from within the royal  family itself, Rasputin was untouchable.   The governess was fired, and his  other accusers simply ignored. Even so, a growing faction of religious and  political leaders were becoming increasingly   concerned about Rasputin's influence in the  palace. Several senior members of the Russian   Orthodox Church openly denounced him as a  heretic, and Prime Minister Peter Stolypin   tried to get him exiled. The Russian secret  police - a precursor of the KGB - opened an   investigation into Rasputin's conduct  which found, among many other things,   that he'd exposed himself in one of  St. Petersburg's best restaurants. In 1914 while visiting his wife (who for  some reason hadn't divorced him yet),   Rasputin was stabbed in the stomach by a noseless  peasant woman who believed he was the antichrist.   It was the kind of wound that would typically be  fatal, and after somehow escaping his attacker   on foot, Rasputin was left in a coma that  nobody expected him to wake from. But he   did. And before long he was back in the capital,  where his power was about to reach its pinnacle. Just a few weeks before Rasputin's near death  experience, a little known Austro-Hungarian royal   was visited by an assassin of his own. The royal  in question was known to his buddies as Archduke   Franz Ferdinand, and, unlike Rasputin, he didn’t  survive the hit. As you're no doubt aware, Franz   Ferdinand's death set off a chain of events that  culminated in the start of the First World War. In July 1914, Germany declared war on Russia, and  Tsar Nicholas II left St. Petersburg to personally   lead his troops on the battlefields of Europe.  Leaving only his wife behind to run the country. Alexandra had always been more swayed by Rasputin,   and without her husband around she gave her  mind to the mystic entirely. Within the space   of 18 months she'd appointed and dismissed no  fewer than four prime ministers, five ministers   of the interior, and three ministers of war,  with Rasputin guiding her hand at every turn. It was soon an open secret on the streets of St.  Petersburg that, along with accepting Rasputin’s   advice, the Tsarina had also invited him into her  bed. Admittedly there isn't any hard evidence that   the affair ever happened, but considering how  highly the Tsarina regarded Rasputin - not to   mention that his religious ideology was to screw  every living thing in Russia - it’s difficult not   to believe the rumours. There's also the fact  that renowned scholar Boney M famously sang 'Ra   Ra Rasputin, lover of the Russian Queen.' And  if that isn't proof then I don't know what is. Regardless of whether or not they were actually  sleeping together, Russia’s greatest love machine   had clearly become the true power behind  the throne - the Wormtongue to Alexandra's   Théoden. But every Wormtongue eventually  meets his Gandalf, and in December 1916,   a group of noblemen decided it was time to  saddle up Greyfax and go drive the demon out. They were led by Prince Felix Yusupov  (husband of the Tsar's niece), Grand   Duke Dmitri Pavlovich (the Tsar's first cousin),  and prominent politician Vladimir Purishkevich.   Of course, unlike Gandalf the Grey none of  these men actually had any magical powers,   and so they were forced to chose a  more prosaic approach - to save Russia,   they were going to have to  murder Grigori Rasputin. But as we’ve already seen, Rasputin  was not an easy man to kill. He was invited to Yusopov's palace in  St. Petersburg, where he was taken to a   receiving room in the basement. There, he was  given tea and a platter of small cakes. Which   all sounds very civil as far as murders go...  except the cakes had been laced with cyanide. Rasputin was oblivious to the danger, and soon  enough he was tucking into the poisonous pastries.   But when he was finished, rather than, you know,  drop dead, Rasputin merely asked if Yusopov had   anything stronger than tea to wash down the cakes.  Yusopov fetched some Madeira wine - also laced   with cyanide - but despite guzzling three glasses,  Rasputin didn't develop so much as heartburn. To this day we still have absolutely no idea how  Rasputin ate enough Cyanide to kill an entire   village and lived - though in a very recent  study rats were fed both cyanide and garlic   and survived. Turns out the sulfur content  of garlic can combat cyanide in the body,   and every day Rasputin ate a  frightening amount of garlic. Anyway, since the poison had failed to, well,  poison him, Yusopov pulled out his pistol   and shot Rasputin squarely in the chest,  and that finally seemed to do the trick.   Rasputin’s body was stripped, and one of  the co conspirators drove to Rasputin's   house wearing the dead man's clothes to make it  look as though he'd returned home as planned. Next it was time to dispose of the corpse. That  was Yusopov's job, but when he went back down to   the cellar, something rather unexpected happened  - Rasputin stood up and punched him in the face. Yusopov fled the basement with a naked and very  much not-dead Rasputin in hot pursuit. A naked   man running is never a pretty sight, and the  bloody, grizzled Rasputin was no exception. But   all the commotion brought Yusopov's friends  to the scene, and more shots were fired.   When the smoke had cleared, Rasputin was once more  on the ground, this time with a bullet through his   forehead. It's safe to assume Yusopov and Co were  a little rattled at this point, so they spent the   next few minutes kicking the crap out of the  corpse, just to make sure it really *was* a   corpse. Then they dumping the body in a nearby  frozen river, by way of a fishing hole. According   to some reports, despite having been poisoned  (twice), shot multiple times, and beaten to   a bloody pulp, Rasputin was still moving when  he disappeared beneath the silent black water. He was found the following day, pressed up  against the underside of the ice as though   trying to break free, his still open eyes staring  blankly up towards the sky. The mad monk was dead. Meanwhile on the battlefields of Europe,  things were going badly for the Russians.   Nicholas II was turning out to be an  absolutely useless military commander,   and a series of serious tactical and logistical  blunders saw his troops lose battle after battle. The situation back home wasn't much better either.  The country had been crippled by the war effort,   and there was widespread hunger and discontent.  Confidence in the monarchy was at an all time low,   and despite trying to hang onto power, in  1917, the Tsar was forced to abdicate when   angry demonstrators took over large swathes of  the capital backed by members of the Russian armed   forces. The 300 year rule of the Romanovs was  at an end, and the Russian revolution had begun. The Tsar and his family were held under house  arrest, where they would remain for about   a year. During which time the Bolsheviks,   led by Vladimir Lenin, seized control of the  Russian government. On the 17th July 1918,   Bolshevik soldiers broke into a basement where  the Romanovs were being held and started firing.   They didn't stop until the former Tsar and Tsarina  and every single one of their children were dead. At the start of this video, I mentioned that  Rasputin was a man who blurred the lines between   myth and reality, and there are certainly many  aspects of this tale that stretch credulity. Certain elements are widely accepted fact  - Rasputin really did rise from nothing   to have a huge influence over the Russian  monarchy, and he certainly played a large   role in its eventual downfall. But others are  contested. Some historians believe details of   Rasputin's debaucherous lifestyle were  exaggerated in order to discredit him,   and it seems a fairly safe bet that the events  of his murder have been… spiced up a little bit.  Oh, and for those of you still wondering when   the hell I'm going to get to Rasputin’s  penis, don't worry - the wait is over. The fate of Rasputin's pecker remains a  surprisingly hot topic even now. According to   one story, it was removed not long after his death  under orders from Grand Duchess Tatiana, daughter   of the Tsar, who was one of the many women  who claimed to have been raped by the mystic.   As of today, you can find pickled penises  purported to belong to Rasputin in multiple   museums all over Russia. Of course, there  is a slight logical phallus...y with that   statement. Despite his reputation  as a lover of epic proportions,   so far as I know, God only gave Rasputin  *one* penis with which to do his holy work. Over the years, several of the  appendages have been tested to   determine their providence. At least  one turned out to be a sea cucumber,   and another - a 12 inch behemoth of frankly  frightening proportions - was found to   have belonged not to Rasputin,  but to a poorly endowed horse. The truth is, while it's still  widely reported that Rasputin's   penis was severed after his death,  like so many things about his life,   this one is probably just a myth - we know  for certain that the offending appendage was   still attached during the autopsy, and  there’s evidence it was later removed. By most accounts, Grigori Rasputin was a  pretty terrible human being, but his story   really is fascinating. And if nothing else,  it remains proof of something many of us have   suspected for a long time - that you don't need  to have good personal hygiene to go far in life. Thanks for watching.
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Channel: Thoughty2
Views: 2,348,160
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Length: 25min 7sec (1507 seconds)
Published: Mon Nov 21 2022
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