Podcasts about poyais

Scottish soldier, adventurer, and confidence trickster

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  • 88EPISODES
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Best podcasts about poyais

Latest podcast episodes about poyais

We Have Concerns
History's Greatest Con Man

We Have Concerns

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 55:32


In the 19th century, Scottish scammer Gregor MacGregor made a fortune selling land in Poyais. The only problem? Poyais never existed. Jeff and Anthony step through the history of this nortious fraudster, and try to resist parallels to modern American liars.Link to this week's article: https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/gregor-macgregor-map-of-poyaisSupport the show and get bonus episodes, videos, Discord community access and more! http://patreon.com/wehaveconcernsJeff on Twitter: http://twitter.com/jeffcannataAnthony on Twitter: http://twitter.com/acarboniIf you've seen a story you think belongs on the show, share it on the Discord, send it to wehaveconcernsshow@gmail.com or leave it on the subreddit: http://reddit.com/r/wehaveconcerns

Brottshistoria
34. Landet som inte fanns: Gregor MacGregors stora bluff

Brottshistoria

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2024 50:20


I detta avsnitt dyker vi ner i ett av historiens mest bisarra och häpnadsväckande bedrägerier: berättelsen om Gregor MacGregor – mannen som sålde ett land som inte ens fanns! På tidigt 1800-tal lyckades MacGregor, med sin charm och ett par kreativa kartor, övertyga hundratals människor att lämna sina hem i Storbritannien för att skapa ett nytt liv i det tropiska paradiset Poyais. Problemet? Poyais existerade bara i hans egen fantasi. Med löften om rikedomar och obegränsade möjligheter lurade han sina offer rakt in i en dödlig fälla. Hur gick det till? Och hur lyckades han komma undan med ett av historiens största koloniala bluffar? Lyssna när vi utforskar MacGregors falska kungarike och konsekvenserna för de som satte sin tro – och sina liv – i hans händer. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mord Mot Mord
326. Bedragarprinsen från Poyais och familjen Godards försvinnande

Mord Mot Mord

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 53:31


Anna berättar om Gregor McGregor (ett namn), en otroligt märklig bedragare som fick först ett gott gäng britter att flytta till hans hittepåland och sen ett gott gäng fransmän. Trots att han tog alla pengar han kom över tyckte alla att han var toppen. Karin berättar om familjen Marie-France, Yves, Camille och Marius Godard. Pappa Yves och barnen försvann under mystiska omständigheter på en segelbåt i Frankrike 1999. Mamma Marie var dock spårlöst försvunnen redan innan övriga familjemedlemmar hade hunnit sätta segel.

Historia en Podcast
168. La estafa de Poyais

Historia en Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2024 25:12


VISITÁ NUESTRA WEB: https://www.historiaenpodcast.com.ar/ Hoy hablaremos de la historia de Gregor MacGregor, un estafador inglés que tuvo la idea de inventar en Estado, Poyais, para estafar a sus coterráneos. ¿Hasta dónde llegará la inventiva fraudulenta de este personaje? Descubrila en este episodio...

Murder They Wrote with Laura Whitmore and Iain Stirling

This week, Iain tells the story of Gregor MacGregor, a 19th-century trickster who took con artistry to a whole new level. In 1820, Gregor invented his own country – complete with a national flag and even a currency – and managed to convince hundreds of British people to uproot their lives and move thousands of miles away, under the false pretence of a prosperous new life in South America.Murder They Wrote with Laura Whitmore and Iain Stirling is available weekly on BBC Sounds. Subscribe now so you never miss an episode. Email us at lauraandiain@bbc.co.uk.

Patrick Boyle On Finance
History's Greatest Conman!

Patrick Boyle On Finance

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 29:58 Transcription Available


Send us a Text Message.Gregor MacGregor was a Scottish soldier, adventurer, and con man who invented a Central American country called “Poyais,” in 1820 which he claimed to rule as the “Cazique.” MacGregor attempted to draw British and French investors and settlers to his fictional country. Hundreds invested in Poyaisian government bonds and land certificates, while about 250 emigrated to MacGregor's invented country. MacGregor's Poyais scheme has been called one of the most brazen confidence tricks in history.Patrick's Books:Statistics For The Trading Floor:  https://amzn.to/3eerLA0Derivatives For The Trading Floor:  https://amzn.to/3cjsyPFCorporate Finance:  https://amzn.to/3fn3rvCPatreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/PatrickBoyleOnFinanceBuy Me a Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/patrickboyleVisit our website: www.onfinance.orgFollow Patrick on Twitter Here: https://twitter.com/PatrickEBoylePatrick Boyle on YouTubeThe Land That Never Was By David Sinclair: https://amzn.to/4eVC3ED Support the Show.

Viracasacas Podcast
RT Comentado 20 - Aventureiros do Reino de Poyais

Viracasacas Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 65:44


Olá, pessoas Nesta semana o Caio Almendra resolveu devolver a gentileza e me contar uma história sobre uma figura que é parte aventureiro, parte militar mas, em grande parte, um golpista. Com certeza ele amaria viver em 2024. Tomara que vocês gostem da história tanto quanto eu.

The Poisoners' Cabinet
Ep 206 - Gregor MacGregor & The Land That Never Was

The Poisoners' Cabinet

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024 68:33


Ep 206 is loose, and we have the tale of one of the boldest confidence tricks in history!Who was Gregor MacGregor? Where was the wonderous land of Poyais? And how many medals can a man wear and still walk?The secret ingredient is...the island of Curaçao!Sources this week inclue:en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_MacGregorallthatsinteresting.com/gregor-macgregorwww.historytoday.com/miscellanies/gregor-macgregor-prince-poyaiswww.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofScotland/Gregor-MacGregor-Prince-Of-Poyais/Get cocktails, poisoning stories and historical true crime tales every week by following and subscribing to The Poisoners' Cabinet wherever your get your podcasts.Listen to the Podcast on iTunes, Spotify and find us on Acast: https://shows.acast.com/thepoisonerscabinet Join us Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thepoisonerscabinetFind us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thepoisonerscabinetFollow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thepoisonerscabinet/Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ThePoisonersCabinetListen on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@ThePoisonersCabinet Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Loremen Podcast
S5 Ep31: Loremen S5Ep31 - Gregor MacGregor, The Prince of Nowhere

Loremen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 35:30


The Loreboys meet the audacious Scottish con man "Sir" Gregor MacGregor. Calling himself the Cazique of Poyais, this charismatic ex-soldier is the mastermind behind a debacle that will make Fyre Island look like Centre Parcs. He's selling land and government bonds belonging to the Central American kingdom of Poyais. The big problem being: Poyais doesn't exist. The year is 1823, and this South Sea bubble is going to pop. Around 170 victims of the scam will die. But will Scotland's biggest hoaxter get off Scot free? (Yes.) Join us for another Loremen Live in Oxford on 25th May: https://oldfirestation.org.uk/whats-on/loremen-podccast/ This episode was edited by Joseph Burrows - Audio Editor. LoreBoys nether say die! Support the Loremen here (and get stuff): patreon.com/loremenpod ko-fi.com/loremen Check the sweet, sweet merch here... https://www.teepublic.com/stores/loremen-podcast?ref_id=24631 @loremenpod youtube.com/loremenpodcast www.instagram.com/loremenpod www.facebook.com/loremenpod

Verbrechen der Vergangenheit
Hochstapler Gregor MacGregor: Das Paradies, das es nicht gab

Verbrechen der Vergangenheit

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2024 41:15


Ein traumhafter Ort muss dieses Fürstentum Poyais in Mittelamerika sein: Fruchtbares Land und angenehmes Klima bietet es ebenso wie komfortable Häuser, prachtvolle Boulevards, ein Theater und ein Opernhaus. Jeder kann dort zu Wohlstand kommen, zumal es kaum Steuern zu zahlen gilt. Allein: Poyais ist eine Erfindung des schottischen Hochstaplers Gregor MacGregor. Und für die Menschen, die seiner Lüge glauben und dort 1823 eintreffen, wird sein Fantasiereich zur tödlichen Falle.Redaktion+Host: Insa Bethke/GEO EPOCHE Gast: Oliver FischerSprecher: Peter KaempfeProduktion: Lia Wittfeld/Audio AllianceBITTE BEACHTEN: Auf RTL+ ist alle zwei Wochen eine neue Folge von "Verbrechen der Vergangenheit" zu hören, auf anderen Plattformen erscheint der Podcast 14 Tage später.Wer uns folgen möchte: GEO Epoche ist auf Instagram (@geo_epoche), Facebook (@geoepoche) und X (@GeoEpoche).AKTION: Hörerinnen und Hörer dieses Podcasts können unterwww.geo-epoche.de/podcast kostenlos ein eBook aus unserem Heft "Verbrechen der Vergangenheit" herunterladen.Außerdem können Sie unter www.geo-epoche.de/angebot ein GEO EPOCHE-Magazin inkl. der digitalen GEO EPOCHE-Ausgabe im Abonnement gratis lesen.Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.htmlUnsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.

Unbelievable! w/ Kurt & Luis
The Fraudster of Death & The Prince of Poyais

Unbelievable! w/ Kurt & Luis

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 63:19


Luis tells Kurt of two men (not funny) scamming people out of their entire livelihoods (kinda funny?). Go on a journey from Venezuela, to Scotland, to Syria as we travel the world of scams, frauds, and cons.

Criminalia
Welcome to the Season Finale of Criminalia's 'Confidence Artists'

Criminalia

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 39:08


Welcome to the final episode of our season on grifts and grafts here on Criminalia, where we've been exploring the stories of some of the most notorious swindles and swindlers throughout history. And, of course there were plenty of cocktails and mocktails to go around, too. Listen as Holly and Maria continue their tradition, highlighting their Top 3 shows and favorite drinks of the season.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Criminalia
'Cazique' Gregor MacGregor, the Man Who Fabricated a Country

Criminalia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 38:18


Poyais: a magical place, and the picture of Caribbean paradise. And according to Scottish swindler Gregor MacGregor, it could all be yours … if you invested in his land, Poyais. In the early 19th century, MacGregor invented his own country, and then conned investors into buying the bonds of a country that did not exist.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

kaizen con Jaime Rodríguez de Santiago
#152 Burbujas (I) - Fraudes, confianza y países imaginarios

kaizen con Jaime Rodríguez de Santiago

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 22:01


(NOTAS Y ENLACES DEL CAPÍTULO AQUÍ: https://www.jaimerodriguezdesantiago.com/kaizen/152-burbujas-i-fraudes-confianza-y-paises-imaginarios/)Hace mucho tiempo, allá por el capítulo 52 de kaizen, hablamos de la irracionalidad. Lo hicimos en el contexto de la pandemia y de las distintas fases en la respuesta a la misma. Hoy vamos a volver al tema, al de la irracionalidad, pero sin pandemia esta vez. Y lo vamos a hacer para hablar de otra maravillosa manifestación de nuestra irracionalidad colectiva: las burbujas, a las que vamos a dedicar dos capítulos. Aunque antes, eso sí, vamos a empezar con una de las mejores historias que he escuchado en mucho tiempo. Su protagonista es alguien de quien lo más normal es que no hayas oído hablar nunca: un tipo llamado Gregor MacGregor. No, no es el macarra ése de las artes marciales mixtas. Aunque lo mismo fue su tataratatara-abuelo o algo así. A diferencia de él, nuestro MacGregor era escocés y vivió en el siglo XIX. Entró en la armada británica con sólo 16 años, la edad más joven a la que se permitía por entonces, y ascendió rápido. Apenas un año después era ya teniente, algo que habitualmente se tardaba unos tres años en conseguir. Y poco después se casó con la hija de un almirante, que tenía una importante fortuna, y que era además pariente de dos generales y de un miembro del parlamento británico. Apenas un par de meses después de casarse, MacGregor volvió a Gibraltar, donde estaba destinado, y compró el rango de capitán. Por aquella época se podía pagar y evitarte los 7 años que habitualmente costaba alcanzarlo por méritos. Como tal vez hayas empezado a intuir, nuestro amigo escocés tenía una especie de obsesión por los rangos y las medallas, y por tomar atajos en la vida en general, algo que le hizo muy poco popular entre los soldados. De hecho, tras luchar contra los franceses en Gibraltar y en Portugal, tuvo un enfrentamiento con un superior que hizo que le invitaran amablemente a dejar el ejército. Quiso la casualidad que, ya sin él, su batallón tuviera una participación muy destacada contra los franceses y se ganara una enorme reputación. Reputación que el propio MacGregor decidió aprovechar de vuelta en Inglaterra. Se paseaba por Edimburgo haciéndose llamar Coronel o Sir y lo hacía en los carruajes más llamativos que podía; pero allí le conocía todo el mundo y la cosa no colaba mucho. Así que se mudó con su familia a Londres donde con estas mentiras consiguió ganar cierto status.Sin embargo, para su desgracia y especialmente la de su mujer ambos perdieron algo en 1811: ella la vida y él su principal fuente de ingresos y de influencias, que era ella. Y justo cuando parecía que los sueños de grandeza de MacGregor se esfumaban definitivamente, la casualidad volvió a ponerse de su lado y quiso que conociera en Londres a Francisco de Miranda, un general revolucionario venezolano, que luchó en mil batallas. Participó en la independencia de Estados Unidos, la Revolución Francesa y en la independencia de la propia Venezuela. Viendo como el tal Miranda era recibido con todos los honores y halagos, MacGregor tuvo una idea: se iría a América a combatir y ganar fama. Así es como nuestro protagonista llegó a Venezuela, como llegaba a todas partes: presumiendo de cosas. Contó que conocía a Miranda, se hizo pasar por Sir y exageró sus logros militares en Portugal. Todo ello le valió el cargo de coronel y que el gobierno Venezolano pusiera un batallón a su mando. Estuvo cuatro años peleando contra los españoles y al parecer se ganó una fama por fin merecida. Sin embargo, sus últimas misiones no salieron tan bien y en 1820 acabó llegando con un puñado de mercenarios a la Costa de Mosquitos, unas tierras entre Nicaragua y Honduras que, como su nombre insinúa, no eran especialmente acogedoras. De hecho, en el siglo XVIII se habían ido de allí la mayoría de los colonos europeos debido a la insalubridad de la zona y su escaso valor económico. Para cuando llegó MacGregor únicamente quedaban unos pocos nativos. Y aquí es en realidad cuando empieza la verdadera historia de Gregor MacGregor y la de un país que nunca existió. Bienvenidos a Poyais.

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior
Acontece que no es poco | El reino imaginario de Poyais

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 14:23


El 22 de enero de 1823, el escocés Gregor MacGregor engañó a casi 300 paisanos haciéndoles creen que viajaban al paraíso, a descubrir el reino de Poyais.

Acontece que no es poco con Nieves Concostrina
Acontece que no es poco | El reino imaginario de Poyais

Acontece que no es poco con Nieves Concostrina

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 14:23


El 22 de enero de 1823, el escocés Gregor MacGregor engañó a casi 300 paisanos haciéndoles creen que viajaban al paraíso, a descubrir el reino de Poyais.

La Ventana
Acontece que no es poco | El reino imaginario de Poyais

La Ventana

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 14:23


El 22 de enero de 1823, el escocés Gregor MacGregor engañó a casi 300 paisanos haciéndoles creen que viajaban al paraíso, a descubrir el reino de Poyais.

Night Classy
147. Rattlesnake King and Gregor MacGregor

Night Classy

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2023 87:38


Snek oil, apply directly to the forehead! Snek oil, apply directly for the forehead! That's our interpretation of what an 1800s commercial for snake oil would sound like. And don't get it confused with the very real and highly effective Chinese folk medicine! Learn the origins of the snake oil idiom with Kat, then learn about our next conman of the week: Gregor MacGregor! The “Prince of Poyais” conned his way into the Mosquito Coast, and it's worse than it sounds! https://linktr.ee/NightClassy Add us on BeReal @katjawinterb and @hollysancha! (and @tadturbo for alec) Produced by Parasaur Studios © 2023

El búnquer
Gregor MacGregor, el pr

El búnquer

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2022 51:09


Programa 3x72. Us advertim que si encara no heu escoltat el cap

2 Monicas & a Microphone
World's Most Notorious Con Men | Poyais, George C. Parker, Ponzi, Bernie Madoff, Lou Pearlman, Sam Israel III, Charles Forbes, Theranos

2 Monicas & a Microphone

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 62:00


Ep. 86 Do you know the man named Ponzi? How about the men who sold the Brooklyn Bridge? And the man who sold the island that never existed or what we now called Honduras? Theranos? We cover these cons and more in this episode. Our second season ends with a light hearted take on True Crime, if you can call the Biggest Cons in the world light. || Real relatable entertainment focusing on history, culture and curiosities || Thank you to our Legacy Sponsor! Kris Porter Travel Concierge - Contact Kris today to start planning that family cruise, quick get-a-way or once in a lifetime trip. Consultations are free, memories are priceless. krisporter@travelmation.net @travelwithgraceandjoy on IG Mention 2Monicas in your call or email. Click here to start your planning https://tinyurl.com/2monicas https://www.virginvoyages.com/book/voyage-planner/find-a-voyage Cruise Virgin! Treat yourself to fabulous with an adults only experience that won't disappoint Support the Show! https://www.forceofnatureclean.com/ref/2monicaspodcast/?campaign=100Episodes Force of Nature Clean - It's strong enough to kill bacteria and viruses just like bleach, but it has no toxic chemicals whatsoever! It also has reusable bottles, it's so much better for the environment than typical cleaners. Click the link to start your journey to a toxin free clean. 2 Monicas Podcast a Nothing Serious Production https://2monicaspodcast.com Follow us on all social media @2monicaspodcast Additional Nothing Serious productions: Parenting with Heart featuring Kristin Schmoke Spotlight Interviews

Turtlezone Tiny Talks - 20 Minuten Zeitgeist-Debatten mit Gebert und Schwartz
Turtlezone Tiny Talks - Ticket ins Paradies Poyais gefällig?

Turtlezone Tiny Talks - 20 Minuten Zeitgeist-Debatten mit Gebert und Schwartz

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 34:30


Wirtschafts- und Finanzbetrüger gibt es schon so lange, wie Menschen Handel treiben. In den Steinzeit-Höhlen, im alten Ägypten, in Rom, in Griechenland – über alle Epochen hinweg. Und immer wieder ist es gelungen, oder wurde es zumindest versucht, Menschen über den Tisch zu ziehen und sich an ihnen zu bereichern. Oder Werte zu unterschlagen. Wir können dafür tausende Jahre zurückblicken. Sobald es Gewichte und Maßeinheiten gab, wurde versucht, diese zu fälschen. Sobald es Wertgegenstände gab und ärmere wie reichere Menschen, entstand der Wucher. Begonnen hat es mit dem Tausch von Erzen. Und Überlieferungen von Bestrafungen zeugen schon aus vorbiblischen Zeiten davon, dass die Gier oft stärker war als die Angst vor den Konsequenzen. Entsprechende Gesetze kannte man schon im alten Ägypten. Gregor MacGregor, der selbsternannte „Cazique von Poyais“ – der Fürst eines fiktiven Fürstentums. Er schafft es in den 20er-Jahren des 19. Jahrhunderts die Mundpropaganda über ein traumhaftes Fürstentum in Mittelamerika, Poyais, in Gang zu bringen. Ein Paradies für alle diejenigen, die sich tausende Kilometer von Großbritannien entfernt eine lukrative neue Existenz aufbauen wollen. McGregor verfasste und veröffentlichte dafür eigens einen über 300 Seiten umfassenden Reiseführer, machte mit Zeitungsanzeigen und Flyern jede Menge Öffentlichkeitsarbeit für Poyais, bevor er dann in die Landvermarktung einstieg. Zuvor hatte er in London sogar eine angebliche Botschaft eröffnet. Fast 200 hoffnungsvolle Menschen verkauften ihr Hab und Gut und erwarben bei ihm, dem schillernden Fürsten dieses Paradies, Grundstücke und zusätzlich tauschten sie ihr restliches Vermögen in die ebenfalls fiktive Währung des Fürstentums, den „Poyais-Dollar“. McGregor organisierte eine Schifffahrt für die Auswanderer und im Januar 1823 stach die „Kennersley Castle“ in See. Fast zwei Monate sollte die Seereise ins Paradies dauern. Dann kam das böse Erwachen. Ein Drama für die armen Opfer, aber ein Paradebeispiel dafür, wie gut Betrug funktioniert, wenn man ihn mit vertrauensbildenden Maßnahmen flankiert.

Snax Pax
S13E05 Cons & Frauds: Prostate of Poyais

Snax Pax

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2022 109:21


Join Snaxton and Goose as they discuss Gregor MacGregor and the paradise island of Poyais and quack prostate doctor John R. Brinkley in this weeks episode of Cons & Frauds. Make sure to rate/download, comment, and subscribe.

AI CONFINI - di Massimo Polidoro
La truffa del Paese che non c'è

AI CONFINI - di Massimo Polidoro

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2022 22:35


Questa è la storia di una truffa clamorosa: nel 1822, dall'Inghilterra in tanti decidono di emigrare nel Sud America in cerca di fortuna, in particolare in un Paese che è stato descritto come ricchissimo e accogliente: il Poyais. A centinaia si imbarcano e partono verso... il nulla. Perché il Poyais non esiste. Aderisci alla pagina PATREON e sostieni i miei progetti e il mio lavoro: http://patreon.com/massimopolidoroPartecipa e sostieni su TIPEEE il progetto del mio Tour 2022 in tutta Italia: https://it.tipeee.com/massimopolidoro Scopri il mio Corso online di Psicologia dell'insolito: https://www.massimopolidorostudio.com​Ricevi l'Avviso ai Naviganti, la mia newsletter settimanale: https://mailchi.mp/massimopolidoro/avvisoainaviganti e partecipa alle scelte della mia communitySeguimi:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/massimopolidoro/ Gruppo FB: https://www.facebook.com/groups/MassimoPolidoroFanClub Pagina FB: https://www.facebook.com/Official.Massimo.Polidoro Twitter: https://twitter.com/massimopolidoro Sito e blog: http://www.massimopolidoro.com Iscriviti al mio canale youtube: https://goo.gl/Xkzh8A

Cosas muy importantes • Historia Curiosa
E62 • Grandes Estafas • Cosas Muy Importantes • Culturizando

Cosas muy importantes • Historia Curiosa

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 54:05


Desde el "hombre de confianza", al príncipe de Poyais; desde la creadora de la estafa piramidal hasta el verdadero protagonista de "Atrápame si puedes"... En este episodio de Cosas Muy Importantes hacemos un recorrido por algunos protagonistas de una larga historia de tramposos y sus tristemente célebres estafas. Una producción de D+Media Agency @DplusMediaAgencyProducción EjecutivaDaniela Ormazábal y Federico CapocciEdición, montaje y música originalFederico CapocciSuscríbete a nuestro Patreon para contenido exclusivo y sorpresashttps://www.patreon.com/cosasmuyimportantes

Your Brain on Facts
Gregor MacGregor (ep. 190)

Your Brain on Facts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2022 17:46


People used to say "If you believe that, I have some swampland in Florida to sell you," but they really should have said, "I have some lovely acres in the Republic of Poyais you can buy, but you have to act now!"  Presenting one of my favorite con artists ever, the man who declared himself prince of a South American country that didn't exist, Gregor MacGregor (yes, that's really his name). Links to all the research resources are on the website. Hang out with your fellow Brainiacs.  Reach out and touch Moxie on Facebook, Twitter,  or Instagram.  Become a patron of the podcast arts! Patreon or Ko-Fi.  Or buy the book and a shirt. Music: Kevin MacLeod,  Want to start a podcast or need a better podcast host?  Get up to TWO months hosting for free from Libsyn with coupon code "moxie."   Remember back in episode 155, Hate to Burst your Bubble, we talked about, among other things, the Florida real estate boom and bust of the 1920s?  It's where we get the phrase, “if you believe that, I have some real estate in Florida to sell you.”  100 years before that, we could have been saying, “I have some acreage in Poyais to sell you.”  Never been to Poyais?  Trust me, it's amazing.  The weather is always perfect, sunny and warm.  Located along the eastern coast of present-day Nicaragua and Honduras, the soil of Poyais is so fertile, you can get three harvests of corn a year.  The trees are heavy with fruit and the forests teem with entrees in the form of game animals.  If you look into the rivers, you'll not only see water cleaner and more pure than you've ever seen in your life and more fish than you could hope to catch, but in the river bed, the sparkle of gold fills your eyes, not from flecks and dust, but nuggets as big as walnuts, just laying there, waiting for you to scoop them up.  The only thing missing is settlers to develop and leverage its resources to the fullest.  Wanna get your share?  Better hurry; hundreds of people are investing all their savings in a piece of the perfect Poyais.  All you have to do is [] to the Cazique or prince.  Who is the prince of this equatorial new world paradise?  A Scotsman named Gregor MacGregor.     MacGregor was born in 1786.  His father, who died when Gregor was 4, was a captain sailing with the East India Company, so adventuring on a quest for riches might well have been in his blood.  A clever chap from the get-go, Gregor enrolled in the University of Edinburgh at age 15, though he never finished his degree.  No shade thrown there, I'm a 3-time community college drop-out and look how I turned out!  (pause, sigh)  At age 17, he took after his grandfather and joined the British Army, where he quickly rose up the ranks to lieutenant, captain, and major, largely by buying the next rank up, but that's pretty much how it was done back then.  Two years after enlisting, MacGregor married a Royal Navy Admiral's daughter, and a mere five years after that, probably because he'd married into money, he retired from the army.  The young couple moved to London, where Gregor called himself Sir and claimed to be a baronet, which ranks underneath baron in British noble hierarchy and is apparently a modest enough lie that no one would think to put the effort and time into checking it out.     But ‘easy street' only lasted another year before his wife died.  No more wife meant no more wealthy in-laws, so MacGregor sold his Scottish estate and relocated to Caracas, Venezuela, where he married another wealthy family's daughter.  Never let it be said he's not consistent.  Wife 2 was actually a cousin of Simon Bolivar, of Bolivia fame.  He was able to sell his military prowess to Francisco de Miranda, the Venezuelan revolutionary general.  There was rather a lot of revolution going on in Spanish colonies at the time while Spain was well distracted dealing with a certain actually-of-average-height French emperor.  At least MacGregor wasn't lying about his soldiery, securing a number of victories and becoming a notable figure for the revolutionary set all across LatAm.     In 1820, MacGregor moved to a former British Colony, in Nicaragua, which, true to its name, a swampy and pest-infested area that Europeans had until that point left to the Mosquito Natives.  In 1830, MacGregor traded jewelry and rum for eight million acres of land.  Now that was either an F-ton of rum or the land was utterly worthless.  I'll give you three guesses.  The land was completely useless for farming, kinda of a big deal, being the production of foodstuff and whatnot.     Realizing there was no way he could draw settlers in with the land as it was, MacGregor decided to draw them in with the land as it wasn't.  So he headed back to England, where he was well-known in society circles for his military achievements, leading his men into battle against great odds.  Society not knowing that he'd also abandoned his men.  Twice.  But he rubbed elbows with the muckety-mucks nonetheless, telling them all about his new world paradise, the Republic of Poyais.  And he went so far beyond Baron Munchausenian story-telling.   Gregor made up a whole country and everything that goes along with it.  To hear him tell it, the Republic of Poyais was not an impenetrable, parasite-ridden jungle, but a glorious tableau with a thriving civilization with a parliament, banks, an opera house and cathedral.  The weather was ideal, a perpetual summer that was very appealing to Londoners.  The soil was so rich that farming required almost no labor.  The rivers that wound down the mountains teemed with fish and the surrounding forests were thick with game animals.  In this dubious district, the capital of St Joseph had a massive infrastructure and a population of about 20,000 people.  The economy was robust, if you felt like doing anything other than scooping up all the gold that was just laying around.  MacGregor had pamphlets promoting printed, and they sold in the thousands around the streets of London and Edinburgh.  He started a nationwide campaign to attract investment, taking out big ads in newspapers and even opened sales offices.     The world-building that went into this scam would have made GRRM blush.  Maybe even JRR Tolkien.  Feel free to at me on social media; I love a spirited nerd debate.  He came up with a tricameral Parliament and a commercial banking system.  Like an African dictator, he designed Poyaian military uniforms, several, different ones for different regiments.  He published a 350 page guidebook, under the pen name Thomas Strangeways, with a sliver of real facts about the region, but the Pacman portion of the pie chart all came from his preposterous posterior.  The book was full of detailed sketches and MacGregor had a seemingly endless supply of official-looking documents.  He had offices set up in London, Glasgow and Edinburgh to sell land certificates, which people eagerly bought.  The whole operation looked completely legit; you wouldn't even think to doubt it.  MacGregor didn't just succeed in his con, he was *wildly successful.  Not only did MacGregor raise £200,000 directly – the bond market value over his life ran to £1.3 million, or about £3.6 billion today – but he convinced seven ships' worth of eager settlers to make their way across the Atlantic. It became a popular investment, and many sank their life savings in land deed in Republic of Poyais.  A London Bank underwrote a £2000 pound loan, £23mil or $30mil today, secured with the land sales.     MacGregor was signing up settlers left and right.  Settlers meant development, which meant the value of bonds and land certificates would go up, which would attract more settlers and investors, driving the price up further.  Gee, it's like crime does kinda pay.  Skilled tradesmen were promised free passage and ostensibly, supposedly government contract work.  Don't think it was only the under-educated among the population that bought into this – bankers, doctors, civil servants, you name it.  Whole families signed up and backed their bags.   In September 1822, the first fifty settlers sailed for Poyais and were very confused when the landed.  There was…nothing there.  No port, not even a dock.  I mean, there were trees and snakes and mosquitos, but no city, no road, no nothing.  The settlers believed they were lost, but they couldn't get a ride to the “right” place because that ship had sailed.  Literally, the ship left them immediately.  So they set up camp.  150 more people, including children, shortly joined them.  They searched for civilization as best they could, but the rainy season descended on them, bringing on clouds of mosquitos, whose tiny bags were packed with yellow fever and malaria.  A few settlers who were saved by a passing ship informed the British Colony of Honduras about the situation. The colony organized a rescue mission, but only a third of the population was still alive and rescued. In the meantime, five more ships set for Poyais had to be stopped by the Honduras government.  They were informed that Poyais did not exist. It was Mickey Mouse, mate, spurious, not genuine.  Twisting the knife counter-clockwise, the King revoked the land grant and told them they were now illegal squatters and had swear allegiance or GTFO.  Dozens were too weak to leave.  In a particularly depressing bit of math, of 250 or so who had set sail for Poyais, with all their hopes and dreams pinned to this mythical land, 180 died.      That's not even the crazy bit.  Of those 70 who barely survived their ordeal, many of them did *not blame MacGregor.  Six of the survivors, including one man who lost two children to the ordeal, signed an affidavit insisting that blame lay not with MacGregor but with Hector Hall, a former army officer who was supposed to be in charge of the settlement.  They declared "[W]e believe that Sir Gregor MacGregor has been worse used by Colonel Hall and his other agents than was ever a man before, and that had they have done their duty by Sir Gregor and by us, things would have turned out very differently at Poyais". MacGregor claimed he's been a victim too, defrauded and embezzled from by his own agents and undermined by merchants in British Honduras because the richness of Poyais threatened their profits   Now I love a Scottish accent, but this must have been one charming melon-farmer.  MacGregor didn't know it, but he had actually been using “the six principles of persuasion.”  These comes from a 1984 book by Robert Cialdini, “Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion,” which looked at the factors that affect the decisions that people make, especially as pertains to sales, naturally.  At the core of his work is the idea that decision-making is effortful, so individuals use a lot of rules of thumb and decision making shortcuts (heuristics) when deciding what to do, and of course once you know what those things are, you can manipulate them to your advantage.  They are authority (in the sense that they're an authority on the subject), scarcity, reciprocity (i.e. you scratch my back, I'll scratch yours), consistency (I still believe in this idea as much as I always have), social validation (everyone you know is buying one of these), and friendship or liking (picture the smile on a used car salesman).  MacGregor seemed to know these instinctively.   Mcgregor skipped town when the scandal broke, claiming he needed to take his wife to warm, dry Italy for her health, and headed across the channel to France and began the whole thing all over again.  In Paris, he persuaded the Compagnie de la Nouvelle Neustrie, a firm of traders looking to break into the South American market, to seek investors and settlers for Poyais in France.  In a matter of months, he had a new group of settlers and investors ready to go.  Concurrent to all this, he tried to get in good with King Ferdinand VII of Spain, proposing to make Poyais a Spanish protectorate and a base of operations from which Spain could reconquer Guatemala.  Spain, at least, ignored MacGregor.  MacGregor might not have realized that France was more stringent than England in its passport requirements: when the government saw a flood of applications to a country no one had heard of, a commission was set to investigate the matter.  Or maybe he figured he was on a roll and utterly bulletproof.  This time, Mcgregor et al were arrested and tried.  But he was found not guilty on all accounts, mostly because one of his accomplices was hiding in the Netherlands with a ton of incriminating documents.  Once he felt that London had probably forgotten his colossal scam, he headed back…and started another scam.  Smaller this time; I guess he's learning.  But the bonds didn't sell well this time, and what's worse -for everyone- other fraudsters started pulling their own fake paradise scams following his model.  He retired to Edinburgh, then to Venezuela after the death of his wife, where he was granted citizenship and a pension as a retired general.  He never faced any consequences for his actions and when he died in 1845, Gregor MacGregor was buried with full military honors.  So the moral of the story is … crime does pay?  That's a terrible lesson.     Crocker Land   In 1907, Robert Peary was the most famous, and most experienced Arctic explorer in the world, but he had a problem—he hadn't yet managed to become the first to visit the most arctic of arctic places, the North Pole, and his cash reserves were becoming nonexistent. The previous year, he had almost made it—supposedly getting within 175 miles or 280 kilometers—but was turned around by a combination of storms and depleting supplies, but Robert Peary was sure he could get there if he just had another try. He possessed the kind of confidence that only a man with a Lorax level mustache can have. All he needed to make another journey was money. However, the arctic adventure capital market was a bit reluctant to give him more after the previous failures, so, Peary hatched a plan. The key to that plan was a wealthy San Francisco financier named George Crocker, who had previously donated $50,000 to Peary's failed 1906 voyage. This was, of course, a time when 50k bought you more than two buckets of movie theatre popcorn and a calculus textbook. Peary wanted Crocker to help fund his new voyage but, considering the previous trip he financed achieved diddly squat, this could be tough. But what if, and hear me out, the previous voyage wasn't a colossal failure. Peary thought of a way to not only convince Crocker that the previous voyage hadn't been a failure, but also to butter him up a little bit by doing the one thing that rich people love more than anything else—naming things after them. And so, Peary revealed that on his 1906 voyage, though he hadn't made it to the North Pole, he had seen, from a distance, an enormous, previously undiscovered land mass. He wrote that he spotted, “faint white summits,” 130 miles northwest of Cape Thomas Hubbard, and that once he got closer, he could make out, “the snow-clad summits of the distant land in the northwest, above the ice horizon.” In honor of George Crocker, the San Francisco financier, Peary named this beautiful, snow-peaked land mass, “Crocker Land.” But then Robert Peary had two problems. The first problem? George Crocker had already given most of his money to boring causes like rebuilding San Francisco after the earthquake of 1906, and so as flattered as he may have been, there wasn't money left for funding Peary's arctic antics. The second problem? The island was totally, 100%, made up. Now normally, this might not be such a big deal. Guy makes up an imaginary island, who cares? Captain James Cook did so three centuries ago and still nobody's called him out, but this fake island ended up mattering a lot. You see, eventually, Robert Peary did manage to secure funding for another voyage, mostly from the National Geographic Society. On April 6, 1909, he finally made it to the North Pole, or at least, he said he did. He had a picture, but this could be any old pile of snow. He returned home proudly proclaiming that he was the first man ever to reach the North Pole, to which a guy named Frederick Cook, another Arctic explorer, replied, “um…I was there, like, a year ago,” but, Cook said that he'd sailed through where this giant land mass called Crocker's Land was supposedly located. If I know anything about boats, it's that they don't work well on land and, since Cook hadn't found a thing except for cold water and walrus farts, someone's lying here. But, because of this, the existence of Crocker Land became crucially important as it would prove who had really gone to the North Pole first. If it did exist, then Frederick Cook must be lying about going to the North Pole. If it didn't exist, Frederick Cook did go to the North Pole, and Robert Peary was the liar. Of course, at that time you couldn't just fire up your handy household satellite to check and so, to settle it, a man named Donald McMillian decided to go on another expedition to find the land. Not only would this prove who was telling the truth, but it would possibly give McMillan the opportunity to be the first to step onto what was considered, “the last great unknown place in the world.” That voyage was, incredibly, a failure. In addition to their ship getting stuck in the ice for three years before they could return home, the only bright spot came when a crew member saw what looked to be the island—a beautiful, snowy-peaked landmass—but it turned out to be a mirage. In light of that fact, some have suggested that Peary didn't lie about the island, but was actually just seeing a mirage, but unfortunately for Peary's reputation, it looks like that's letting him off too easy. Historians looked at Peary's original notes and logs for the date that Crocker's Land was supposedly discovered, and they found that he doesn't mention anything about it. All he says happened that day was that he climbed up some rocks, and then climbed down the rocks. Plus, the early drafts of his book even didn't include anything about it, but then three paragraphs about Crocker Land mysteriously showed up just before the book was published—just when Peary needed to get more money. In other words, Crocker Land was a load of crock. One of Peary's major issues, aside from inventing an island, was that, when he supposedly went to this north pole, his crew did not include a single navigator who could make their own independent observations as to whether or not they were truly at the pole, or just some pile of ice, and so people didn't believe him. In the archives of the American Geographical Society in Milwaukee lies a century-old map with a peculiar secret. Just north of Greenland, the map shows a small, hook-shaped island labeled “Crocker Land” with the words “Seen By Peary, 1906” printed just below.   The Peary in question is Robert Peary, one of the most famous polar explorers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the man who claimed to have been the first to step foot on the North Pole. But what makes this map remarkable is that Crocker Land was all but a phantom. It wasn't “seen by Peary”—as later expeditions would prove, the explorer had invented it out of the thin Arctic air.   By 1906, Peary was the hardened veteran of five expeditions to the Arctic Circle. Desperate to be the first to the North Pole, he left New York in the summer of 1905 in a state-of-the-art ice-breaking vessel, the Roosevelt—named in honor of one of the principal backers of the expedition, President Theodore Roosevelt. The mission to set foot on the top of the world ended in failure, however: Peary said he sledged to within 175 miles of the pole (a claim others would later question), but was forced to turn back by storms and dwindling supplies.   Peary immediately began planning another attempt, but found himself short of cash. He apparently tried to coax funds from one of his previous backers, San Francisco financier George Crocker—who had donated $50,000 to the 1905-'06 mission—by naming a previously undiscovered landmass after him. In his 1907 book Nearest the Pole, Peary claimed that during his 1906 mission he'd spotted “the faint white summits” of previously undiscovered land 130 miles northwest of Cape Thomas Hubbard, one of the most northerly parts of Canada. Peary named this newfound island “Crocker Land” in his benefactor's honor, hoping to secure another $50,000 for the next expedition.   His efforts were for naught: Crocker diverted much of his resources to helping San Francisco rebuild after the 1906 earthquake, with little apparently free for funding Arctic exploration. But Peary did make another attempt at the North Pole after securing backing from the National Geographic Society, and on April 6, 1909, he stood on the roof of the planet—at least by his own account. “The Pole at last!!!" the explorer wrote in his journal. "The prize of 3 centuries, my dream and ambition for 23 years. Mine at last."   Peary wouldn't celebrate his achievement for long, though: When the explorer returned home, he discovered that Frederick Cook—who had served under Peary on his 1891 North Greenland expedition—was claiming he'd been the first to reach the pole a full year earlier. For a time, a debate over the two men's claims raged—and Crocker Land became part of the fight. Cook claimed that on his way to the North Pole he'd traveled to the area where the island was supposed to be, but had seen nothing there. Crocker Land, he said, didn't exist.   Peary's supporters began to counter-attack, and one of his assistants on the 1909 trip, Donald MacMillan, announced that he would lead an expedition to prove the existence of Crocker Land, vindicating Peary and forever ruining the reputation of Cook.   There was also, of course, the glory of being the first to set foot on the previously unexplored island. Historian David Welky, author of A Wretched and Precarious Situation: In Search of the Last Arctic Frontier, recently explained to National Geographic that with both poles conquered, Crocker Land was “the last great unknown place in the world.” American Geographical Society Library. University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Libraries. After receiving backing from the American Museum of Natural History, the University of Illinois, and the American Geographical Society, the MacMillan expedition departed from the Brooklyn Navy Yard in July 1913. MacMillan and his team took provisions, dogs, a cook, “a moving picture machine,” and wireless equipment, with the grand plan of making a radio broadcast live to the United States from the island.   But almost immediately, the expedition was met with misfortune: MacMillan's ship, the Diana, was wrecked on the voyage to Greenland by her allegedly drunken captain, so MacMillan transferred to another ship, the Erik, to continue his journey. By early 1914, with the seas frozen, MacMillan set out to attempt a 1200-mile long sled journey from Etah, Greenland, through one of the most inhospitable and harshest landscapes on Earth, in search of Peary's phantom island.   Though initially inspired by their mission to find Crocker Land, MacMillan's team grew disheartened as they sledged through the Arctic landscape without finding it. “You can imagine how earnestly we scanned every foot of that horizon—not a thing in sight,” MacMillan wrote in his 1918 book, Four Years In The White North.   But a discovery one April day by Fitzhugh Green, a 25-year-old ensign in the US Navy, gave them hope. As MacMillan later recounted, Green was “no sooner out of the igloo than he came running back, calling in through the door, ‘We have it!' Following Green, we ran to the top of the highest mound. There could be no doubt about it. Great heavens! What a land! Hills, valleys, snow-capped peaks extending through at least one hundred and twenty degrees of the horizon.”   But visions of the fame brought by being the first to step foot on Crocker Land quickly evaporated. “I turned to Pee-a-wah-to,” wrote MacMillan of his Inuit guide (also referred to by some explorers as Piugaattog). “After critically examining the supposed landfall for a few minutes, he astounded me by replying that he thought it was a ‘poo-jok' (mist).”   Indeed, MacMillan recorded that “the landscape gradually changed its appearance and varied in extent with the swinging around of the Sun; finally at night it disappeared altogether.” For five more days, the explorers pressed on, until it became clear that what Green had seen was a mirage, a polar fata morgana. Named for the sorceress Morgana le Fay in the legends of King Arthur, these powerful illusions are produced when light bends as it passes through the freezing air, leading to mysterious images of apparent mountains, islands, and sometimes even floating ships.   Fata morganas are a common occurrence in polar regions, but would a man like Peary have been fooled? “As we drank our hot tea and gnawed the pemmican, we did a good deal of thinking,” MacMillan wrote. “Could Peary with all his experience have been mistaken? Was this mirage which had deceived us the very thing which had deceived him eight years before? If he did see Crocker Land, then it was considerably more than 120 miles away, for we were now at least 100 miles from shore, with nothing in sight.”   MacMillan's mission was forced to accept the unthinkable and turn back. “My dreams of the last four years were merely dreams; my hopes had ended in bitter disappointment,” MacMillan wrote. But the despair at realizing that Crocker Land didn't exist was merely the beginning of the ordeal.   MacMillan sent Fitzhugh Green and the Inuit guide Piugaattog west to explore a possible route back to their base camp in Etah. The two became trapped in the ice, and one of their dog teams died. Fighting over the remaining dogs, Green—with alarming lack of remorse—explained in his diary what happened next: “I shot once in the air ... I then killed [Piugaattog] with a shot through the shoulder and another through the head.” Green returned to the main party and confessed to MacMillan. Rather than reveal the murder, the expedition leader told the Inuit members of the mission that Piugaattog had perished in the blizzard.   Several members of the MacMillan mission would remain trapped in the ice for another three years, victims of the Arctic weather. Two attempts by the American Museum of Natural History to rescue them met with failure, and it wasn't until 1917 that MacMillan and his party were finally saved by the steamer Neptune, captained by seasoned Arctic sailor Robert Bartlett.   While stranded in the ice, the men put their time to good use; they studied glaciers, astronomy, the tides, Inuit culture, and anything else that attracted their curiosity. They eventually returned with over 5000 photographs, thousands of specimens, and some of the earliest film taken of the Arctic (much of which can be seen today in the repositories of the American Geographical Society at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee).   It's unclear whether MacMillan ever confronted Peary about Crocker Land—about what exactly the explorer had seen in 1906, and perhaps what his motives were. When MacMillan's news about not having found Crocker Land reached the United States, Peary defended himself to the press by noting how difficult spotting land in the Arctic could be, telling reporters, “Seen from a distance ... an iceberg with earth and stones may be taken for a rock, a cliff-walled valley filled with fog for a fjord, and the dense low clouds above a patch of open water for land.” (He maintained, however, that "physical indications and theory" still pointed to land somewhere in the area.) Yet later researchers have noted that Peary's notes from his 1905-'06 expedition don't mention Crocker Land at all. As Welky told National Geographic, “He talks about a hunting trip that day, climbing the hills to get this view, but says absolutely nothing about seeing Crocker Land. Several crewmembers also kept diaries, and according to those he never mentioned anything about seeing a new continent.”   There's no mention of Crocker Land in early drafts of Nearest the Pole, either—it's only mentioned in the final manuscript. That suggests Peary had a deliberate reason for the the inclusion of the island.   Crocker, meanwhile, wouldn't live to see if he was immortalized by this mysterious new land mass: He died in December 1909 of stomach cancer, a year after Peary had set out in the Roosevelt again in search of the Pole, and before MacMillan's expedition.   Any remnants of the legend of Crocker Land were put to bed in 1938, when Isaac Schlossbach flew over where the mysterious island was supposed to be, looked down from his cockpit, and saw nothing. Bradley Land was the name Frederick Cook gave to a mass of land which he claimed to have seen between (84°20′N 102°0′W) and (85°11′N 102°0′W) during a 1909 expedition. He described it as two masses of land with a break, a strait, or an indentation between.[1] The land was named for John R. Bradley, who had sponsored Cook's expedition.   Cook published two photographs of the land and described it thus: "The lower coast resembled Heiberg Island, with mountains and high valleys. The upper coast I estimated as being about one thousand feet high, flat, and covered with a thin sheet ice."[2]   It is now known there is no land at that location and Cook's observations were based on either a misidentification of sea ice or an outright fabrication. Cook's Inuit companions reported that the photographs were actually taken near the coast of Axel Heiberg Island.[   Cook described two islands lying at about 85 degrees North, which he named Bradley Land.  These islands, like Peary's “Crocker Land,” do not exist, yet Cook's partisans have tried to resuscitate Cook's credibility by linking “Bradley Land” to a discovery made in the Arctic only since Dr. Cook's death.      After World War II, aerial reconnaissance revealed a number of large tabular bergs drifting slowly clockwise in the arctic basin north of Ellesmere Island. Several arctic researchers and scientists have suggested these so-called ice islands—breakaway pieces of its ancient ice shelf—are probably what Cook mistook for “Bradley Land,” and Cook's advocates have repeated these statements to support the doctor's claim.       Cook gave this description of “Bradley Land”: “The lower coast resembled Heiberg Island, with mountains and high valleys. The upper coast I estimated as being about one thousand feet high, flat, and covered with a thin sheet ice.”      Ice islands are no more than 100 to 200 feet thick, total. They are nearly flat with only rolling undulations and rise only about 25 feet above sea level. Cook's “Bradley Land” therefore does not remotely resemble an ice island, or even an ice island magnified by mirage. And Cook published two pictures of the high, mountainous land he called “Bradley Land.”        Cook's Inuit companions are reported to have said these pictures were of two small islands off the northwest coast of Axel Heiberg Island; others believe they are of the coast of Heiberg Island itself, though the pictures have never been duplicated.      Ren Bay  has been suggested as the site.  Ellesmere trekker Jerry Kobalenko reports he could not match the picture exactly to that site, but Cook might have taken it at a time when fog obscured prominent landmarks, as he did in Alaska, making it impossible to duplicate now.  In each picture the photographer is standing on a point above the flat ice.  Kobalenko's was taken off a ten-foot hillock.   Sources: https://www.jetsetter.com/magazine/islands-to-visit-before-they-disappear/ Brigadoon https://www.history.com/news/the-con-man-who-invented-his-own-country https://www.huffpost.com/entry/sandy-island-doesnt-exist_n_2184535 https://interestingengineering.com/10-islands-on-maps-that-never-actually-existed https://www.thesun.co.uk/tech/8350278/mysterious-island-that-didnt-exist-four-years-ago-is-now-teeming-with-life-sea-volcano/ https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20160127-the-conman-who-pulled-off-historys-most-audaciou s-scam https://www.spurlock.illinois.edu/collections/notable-collections/profiles/crocker-land.html https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/crocker-land-peary-arctic-continent https://research.bowdoin.edu/crocker-land-expedition/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=th_KQOeh-Co http://humbug.polarhist.com/bland.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandy_Island,_New_Caledonia https://www.historytoday.com/miscellanies/gregor-macgregor-prince-poyais   There are Islands that have disappeared and not in the global warming, vanishing coastline type of way. These Islands are called Phantom Islands. To be considered a Phantom Island, a piece of land must have been agreed to exist at one point before eventually being undiscovered or corrected. Basically, academics and cartographers thought an island was real and then eventually found out it wasn't. For example, Atlantis would not be considered a Phantom Island because it was always considered a legend. But perhaps the best example of a Phantom Island is Burmeja. Bermeja first appeared on maps in the year 1539, and for nearly 400 years, it was accepted as a real island located in the Gulf of Mexico. But in the 2000s, the United States and Mexico were in a dispute over an oil field in the Gulf of Mexico. Basically, Burmeja marked the outermost limit of Mexico's economic territory. The oil field would have been within that border marked by Burmeja, thus making it Mexico's property. But when the Mexican government set a team to verify the island's position, it was gone. The team had the exact coordinates for the island, and Bermeja had appeared on maps for 400 years, but it just wasn't there. The team searched all over the Gulf of Mexico and concluded that Bermeja simply no longer existed. There are a few theories about how Bermer disappeared. One is that it vanished into the ocean as a result of natural geographic shifts. This has happened elsewhere in the world, so it's entirely plausible. There's also a theory that Birmingham was intentionally destroyed by the United States so they could gain access to the oil field. It's a bold strategy, and you would think someone would have noticed an entire island being blown up. But America has done worse things in the name of oil. Some people say early Mexican officials may have added it to the map in an effort to just expand their borders. This, again, would be a pretty bold strategy, but perhaps an effective one in the 15th century. The most likely explanation is that Burmeja never existed. It was a mistake by some cartographer in the 1500s, and everyone just went with it. Early cartographers were also known to add fake Islands to their maps to prevent plagiarism. These fake Islands would tip them off if their map was ever copied. But Burmeja has appeared in various ships, logs, and inventories, some of which were official documents from the Mexican government. Ultimately, Burmette was never found, and no one really knows why. But Bermuda has not been the only Phantom Island. The Baja Peninsula was believed to be the island of California for years before it was corrected. A fictitious place called Sandy Island appeared on maps for over a century near Australia. It was even on Google maps. Today, scientists think early explorers just saw a large piece of pumice stone floating in the ocean. Arctic Explorer Robert E. Pierre made up the Island Crocker land in an effort to scam some money from one of his investors. There have been dozens more of these Phantom Islands over the years with each having been undiscovered for different reasons. Today, though, thanks to satellite imagery, Phantom Islands are probably a thing of the past you. Con artists have long recognised that persuasion must appeal to two very particular aspects of human motivation – the drive that will get people to do something, and the inertia that prevents them from wanting to do it. In 2003, two social psychologists, Eric Knowles at the University of Arkansas and Jay Linn at Widener University, formalised this idea by naming two types of persuasive tactics. The first, alpha, was far more frequent: increasing the appeal of something. The second, omega, decreased the resistance surrounding something. In the one, you do what you can to make your proposition, whatever it may be, more attractive. You rev up the backstory – why this is such a wonderful opportunity, why you are the perfect person to do it, how much everyone will gain, and the like. In the other, you make a request or offer seem so easy as to be a no-brainer – why wouldn't I do this? What do I have to lose? Psychologists call it the ‘approach-avoidance' model of persuasion They called the juxtaposition the approach-avoidance model of persuasion: you can convince me of something by making me want to approach it and decreasing any reasons I might have to avoid it. According to Columbia University psychologist Tory Higgins, people are usually more likely to be swayed by one or other of the two motivational lines: some people are promotion-focused (they think of possible positive gains), and some, prevention-focused (they focus on losses and avoiding mistakes). An approach that unites the alpha with the omega appeals to both mindsets, however, giving it universal appeal – and it is easy to see how MacGregor's proposition offered this potent combination.  

Choses à Savoir
Qui a inventé un pays pour le vendre ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2022 2:14


L'Écossais Gregor MacGregor imagina l'une des supercheries les plus audacieuses de l'Histoire. En effet, il n'hésita pas à inventer de toutes pièces un pays dont il vendit les richesses à des gens crédules.Du militaire...Né en 1786, Gregor MacGregor s'enrôle d'abord dans l'armée britannique. Puis il part pour l'Amérique du Sud, où les colonies espagnoles s'émancipent les unes après les autres.Il participe ainsi, en tant qu'officier, à la guerre d'indépendance du Venezuela, qui oppose ce pays à l'Espagne entre 1810 et 1823. Il épouse une parente de Simon Bolivar, le libérateur du Venezuela et d'autres pays d'Amérique latine.En 1817, MacGregor parvient à s'emparer d'une île possédée par les Espagnols. Mais ces faits d'armes finissent par le lasser. Il est d'ailleurs tenu pour un couard, peu courageux face au feu....Au "prince de Poyais"Gregor MacGregor imagine alors une activité plus lucrative. En 1820, il arrive au Honduras et se fait octroyer, par un potentat local, 32.000 hectares de terrain. Il s'agit d'une terre ingrate, impropre à la culture.Mac Gregor baptise son domaine "Poyais", d'après le nom d'une tribu voisine. L'année suivante, il se rend en Angleterre, paré d'un nouveau titre. En effet, il se fait appeler "Cazique de Poyais", autrement dit le "chef" ou le "prince" de ce nouveau territoire.D'après ses dires, le "Poyais" est un véritable État, avec son système de gouvernement, plutôt démocratique, et même un service militaire, auquel sont assujettis les habitants.Pour donner plus de vraisemblance à son histoire, MacGregor invente une monnaie et un drapeau pour ce nouveau pays. Et il parvient à susciter l'intérêt autour de lui. Des Anglais vendent leurs biens pour faire fortune dans le nouvel État, d'autres signent des contrats de travail.Pas moins de trois navires transportent ces immigrants vers le Poyais. À l'arrivée, la désillusion est rude. À la place des villes annoncées, les nouveaux venus ne trouvent que des terres incultes et quelques masures.Dans ce climat inhospitalier, une centaine de colons succombent à la malaria ou meurent d'inanition. Pourtant, aucune de ces victimes ne s'est plainte de la supercherie imaginée par Gregor MacGregor. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Scam Goddess
Welcome to Boo Boo City w/ Brittani Warrick

Scam Goddess

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 61:57


What's poppin' con-gregation? This week, Brittani Warrick joins us to discuss how a 19th century Scottish man, convinced people to establish the new country of Poyais, however it didn't actually exist. Plus, one antique store goes viral after a tik toker exposes the real cost of antique swans. Stay Schemin'!Research By Kaelyn Brandt. SOURCES:https://www.distractify.com/p/tiktok-goodwill-thrift-shophttps://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofScotland/Gregor-MacGregor-Prince-Of-Poyais/https://allthatsinteresting.com/gregor-macgregorhttps://medium.com/lessons-from-history/the-untold-truth-about-poyais-a-dead-land-sold-as-a-mystical-paradise-bf6719715229

Weird Brunch
Bananaing

Weird Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 82:47


This episode brought to you by russet potatoes.Whitney launches into Starfish Prime and the race to nuclear bombs in space.Lisa tracks the infamous Kandahar Giant that was purportedly taken down by U.S. special forces in Afghanistan in 2002.Hayly encounters Gregor MacGregor, a Scottish conman who defrauded hundreds while creating 1822's own Fyre Fest, aka Poyais.

That's News to Me
Episode 34 - Prince Crashington

That's News to Me

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2022 31:23


That's News to MeShow Notes Sources from Story 1https://apnews.com/article/oddities-arrests-florida-west-palm-beach-fb19a5d3699310da848d92693ce2da43 Sources from Story 2https://onlyfunfacts.com/history/gregor-macgregor-poyais/ Co-HostsMookie GErica B Edited by Nelson Crawford Subscribe!Don't miss an episode! Be sure to subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. If you like this episode, help us make sure others can find it too! Write a review (especially the FIVE STAR kind) and we'll give you a shout on our next episode! Follow That's News to Me on:Instagramhttps://www.instagram.com/twisteddreamscomedy/Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/Thats-News-to-Me-112502543717327 Theme song written and performed by Nancy R. SmithFollow her on Instagram!https://www.instagram.com/nancyreginaa_/IntroOn this week's episode, Mookie answers the question: what does a stolen car, a train, a house, and a crashed forklift all have in common? A DRUNK FLORIDA MAN! While Erica unearths the little-known story of the OG swindler Gregor MacGregor, the Prince of Poyais. Never heard of it? Hmmm. Hold My Beer! This Forklift Won't Crash Itself!A few weeks ago, Florida was busy out-Florida-ing itself when a man decided to go to a local bar. After a lot of too many alcoholic beverages, he wisely figured it was time to go home. The problem was that he couldn't find his car. He searched and searched all he could on foot but turned up nothing. So, he naturally realized he could increase the radius of his search if he had a car. Luckily, there were a lot to choose from in the bar parking lot. He “borrowed” one of the cars and took off in search of his own missing vehicle. All was good until the “borrowed” car got stuck on a train track. Sucks, right? You know what sucks even worse? An oncoming train. But that's not where it ends! Take a listen. This story is SO Florida-Meets-The-Hangover. Hey, I'd watch that movie!I'm a Prince, DAMMIT!Waaay back in the 1800's, this thing called the “Internet” didn't exist. And a man named Gregor MacGregor took full advantage of the lack of knowledge sharing capability of the time for his own financial gain. He rose through the ranks of the British military to ultimately become a general. He earned wealth, social status, and (most imperative to his scheme) credibility. But if you know anything about our stories, it's not gonna end well. To solidify his infamy, he created a country from his imagination and convinced TWO COUNTRIES of its existence. He even sold land to unsuspecting Brits and French (frenchies? French people? I have no idea what they're called)! WHAAAT?What's Next Do you have a crazy news story we should cover? Let us know! Send us a note at thatsnews2me2@gmail.comThat's News to Me Logo designed by Lydia Phelps

BISTORY - Storie dalla Storia
Bistory S05E01 Gregor MacGregor

BISTORY - Storie dalla Storia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 29:02


Gregor MacGregor (1786-1845) – Scozzese furbo e avventuriero, generale ed eroe per convenienza di qualcuno, grande truffatore per il resto del mondo. Un creativo dell'imbroglio che ha ingannato migliaia di investitori e di sognatori in un'epoca di grandi opportunità e cambiamenti geopolitici mondiali. Dimenticato dalla storia quanto vivo nella memoria di chi ha deliberatamente rovinato.

Zeitsprung
GAG332: Wie Gregor MacGregor ein Land verkaufte, das es gar nicht gab

Zeitsprung

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 40:55


Der Schotte Gregor MacGregor zählt zu den dreistesten Hochstaplern der Geschichte. In den 1820er-Jahren verkaufte er (sehr erfolgreich!) Staatsanleihen und Grundstücke eines Landes, das es gar nicht gab: Poyais an der Miskitoküste im heutigen Honduras. Viele Auswanderwillige verloren nicht nur jede Menge Geld, für einige endete die Geschichte auch tödlich. Denn die fast 300 Siedlerinnen und Siedler landeten nicht wie versprochen in der Hauptstadt St. Joseph, sondern im Dschungel mit zu wenig Lebensmitteln, aber umgeben von jeder Menge Mücken, die Gelbfieber übertrugen. Das erwähnte Buch ist von David Sinclair und heißt „[The Land That Never Was](https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/965198.The_Land_That_Never_Was): Sir Gregor MacGregor and the Most Audacious Fraud in History“. **AUS UNSERER WERBUNG** Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? [**Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte!**](https://linktr.ee/GeschichtenausderGeschichte) **NEU: Wer unsere Folgen lieber ohne Werbung anhören will, kann das über eine kleine Unterstützung auf [Steady](https://steadyhq.com/geschichtefm) tun.** **Wir freuen uns, wenn ihr den Podcast bei [Apple Podcasts](https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/geschichten-aus-der-geschichte/id1044844618) rezensiert oder bewertet. Für alle jene, die kein iTunes verwenden, gibt's die Podcastplattform [Panoptikum](http://panoptikum.io/), auch dort könnt ihr [uns](https://panoptikum.io/podcasts/84) empfehlen, bewerten aber auch euer ganz eigenes PodcasthörerInnenprofil erstellen.** **Wir freuen uns auch immer, wenn ihr euren Freundinnen und Freunden, Kolleginnen und Kollegen oder sogar Nachbarinnen und Nachbarn von uns erzählt!**

The John Batchelor Show
S4 Ep1799: Ransomware; & What is to be done? Georgianna Shea @FDD

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2021 11:50


Photo: One dollar, Bank of Poyais, Republic of Poyais (1820s). After fighting in South and Central America, the Scottish soldier Gregor MacGregor created an elaborate scam claiming to have been made a Cacique of the entirely fictitious Cazique of Poyais, all in an effort to defraud land investors. Nearly 200 died in 1822–23 in connection with MacGregor's deception. Ransomware; & What is to be done?  Georgianna Shea @FDD https://www.fdd.org/analysis/2021/11/08/how-to-free-business-ransomware-dystopia/  

Historias de la economía
Gregor Macgregor, el estafador que se inventó un país y vendió su deuda

Historias de la economía

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2021 12:06


Gregor MacGregor era un escocés que en el siglo XIX se inventó un país ficticio, al que llamó Poyais, y perpetró un fraude con sus bonos por valor de 1,3 millones de libras de entonces, que hoy equvaldrían a unos 3.600 millones. Se le acabó conociendo como 'el rey de los estafadores'.Entró en la armada británica con tan solo 16 años, y ascendió rápidamente en el ejército. Fue enviado a la península ibérica a luchar contra los franceses, primero en Gibraltar y luego en Portugal. Su obsesión con el rango y con las medallas le hizo muy impopular entre los soldados. Y un enfrentamiento con un superior provocó que fuera invitado a abandonar el ejército. Quiso la suerte que, ya sin él, su batallón hiciera un gran trabajo en el país luso, que le llevó a ganar fama internacional. Y pese a que MacGregor no estaba presente, presumía de ese logro. En su vuelta a Edimburgo, se hacía llamar Coronel, o Sir, y paseaba en llamativos carruajes. Pero ni siquiera estas mentiras le permitieron ganar status social, por lo que emigró a Londres con su familia, donde su mensaje falso sí que le ayudó a ganar cierta respetabilidad.Pero en 1811 su mujer, de buena familia, falleció, perdiendo así su principal fuente de ingresos y de influencias. No sabía qué hacer con su vida. Coincidió esta crisis vital con el paso por Londres de Francisco de Miranda, general revolucionario venezolano, que fue recibido con grandes halagos. Al ver el trato que le daban, pensó que si se iba a América a combatir podría ganar fama y ser recibido igual en su vuelta a casa. Y allá que se fue.Conociendo a Miranda, haciéndose pasar por Sir, presumiendo de los logros de su batallón en Portugal... al llegar a Venezuela le dieron el cargo de coronel y pusieron un batallón bajo su mando. Sumó algunos triunfos, y con su conocimiento de tácticas europeas logró mejorar la disciplina de las tropas. Estuvo 4 años combatiendo contra los españoles, y demostró verdadera habilidad militar. El propio Simón Bolívar le escribió una carta agradeciéndole los "prodigiosos servicios prestados al país".MacGregor recibe una misión especial de Bolívar. Irse a Estados Unidos y liberar Florida, para frenar el apoyo a los realistas en Venezuela. En 1817, conquistó la Isla de Amelia, en la costa de Florida. Sin embargo, Estados Unidos consiguió anexionarse la isla y pactar con los españoles la cesión. En una última escaramuza militar, llega a Colombia a luchar a la isla de San Andrés. Sale mal, y acaba llegando a la costa de la actual Honduras. Y comienza su historia como estafador a gran escala. Básicamente, desembarca en Costa de Mosquitos, un territorio del que se habían ido prácticamente todos los colonos europeos, por su insalubridad y su poco potencial económico. Solo quedaban nativos. A su vuelta a Londres, en 1821, asegura que Jorge Federico Augusto, rey de Mosquitos, le ha nombrado cacique de Poyais, un territorio mayor que Gales, presuntamente rico en recursos naturales, pero sin desarrollar. La realidad es que había comprado el terreno a cambio de joyas y ron, pero ni le había dado el cargo ni eran tierras apropiadas para la agricultura y la ganadería.Las promesas de riqueza del militar, junto con la fama que le precedía, caló. Y MacGregor consiguió vender bonos de un país que no existía. Y no solo eso, sino que organizó expediciones de colonos. El timador escocés aprovechó un clima propicio tras la derrota de Napoleón, con la economía británica creciendo. Como consecuencia, el Gobierno conseguía emitir deuda a intereses cada vez más bajos, que rondaban el 3%. En estas circunstancias, los inversores comenzaron a buscar opciones con mayores rentabilidades. Primero, pusieron sus ojos en países como Rusia, Prusia o Dinamarca. Otros apostaron por las minas. Pero había una nueva inversión muy atractiva: todos aquellos países que surgieron del colapso del imperio español.Y de esa moda se aprovechó MacGregor. En 1822 colocó unos bonos de Poyais con rendimientos del 6%, el doble de lo que ofrecían los británicos. Aunque no existía ningún registro del país, las promesas hicieron su efecto, ayudadas por una campaña de publicidad enorme, que incluyó anuncios en prensa, panfletos, libros e incluso una canción que comenzó a sonar por las calles de Londres, Edimburgo y Glasgow.MacGregor prometió de todo a sus inversores: los nativos no solo eran pacíficos y amables, sino que amaban a los británicos. La situación geográfica del nuevo país era inmejorable y su tierra era muy fértil, con facilidad para cultivar tabaco y azúcar. Había abundante agua. Oro. Incluso las cosechas de maíz se recolectaban tres veces al año, cuando en el resto del mundo conseguir dos ya es muy bueno. Creó su propia moneda (el dólar de Poyais) una bandera, himno, y un mapa detallado (y falso).Pero el fraude no se quedó ahí. Aunque obtuvo financiación en Londres, se dirigió a su tierra natal, Escocia, para buscar colonos. Allí se encontraba una banca muy desarrollada, que permitía el acceso a financiación a mucha más gente. Un contexto perfecto para MacGregor, quien comenzó a vender tierras del país ficticio. Consiguió llenar 7 barcos con un total de alrededor de 250 colonos, que partieron hacia América entre 1822 y 1823. Obviamente, el fraude se descubriría pronto.A finales de 1822 llegaron los primeros colonos al reino ficticio y se dieron de bruces con la realidad. Allí no había puerto, ni infraestructuras ni nada parecido a lo prometido por MacGregor. Tan solo unos indígenas, que es verdad que no eran hostiles, pero tampoco esos amantes de los británicos que pretendía el estafador.No tuvieron más remedio que intentar adaptarse, pero pronto comenzaron las peleas y las muertes. Un barco les rescató y llevó a Belice, pero la malaria y la fiebre amarilla se cobraron su peaje: finalmente fallecieron dos tercios de los pobladores. Londres actuó y mandó a la marina al rescate de las cinco naves que estaban de camino a Poyais.En el otoño de 1823, con todo el timo destapado, MacGregor huyó a París. ¡Lo increíble es que allí logró repetir la estafa! Encontró nuevos inversores y nuevos colonos. Pero las autoridades francesas fueron más diligentes que las británicas, y en cuanto hubo peticiones de pasaportes, iniciaron una investigación que acabó con el arresto del escocés en 1825. En el juicio fue absuelto, gracias a la pericia de su abogado, y volvió a Londres.De manera más increíble, intentó una nueva colocación de bonos de Poyais, para intentar pagar a los inversores iniciales, es decir, iniciar una estafa piramidal. Pero ya no coló, y tuvo que volver a Edimburgo. Perseguido por sus estafados, tuvo que emigrar a Caracas, donde murió en 1845, a los 58 años de edad, aunque antes fue condecorado, nacionalizado y recibido con honores. Fue enterrado en la Catedral de Caracas.

Content Academy: Making the Grade
Episode 079 - Dr. Blood and the Cazique of Poyais

Content Academy: Making the Grade

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2021 49:48


In this episode we're talkin' classic con men of the 1800s. Plus, Georgia gives us her thoughts on tea, Rupert Grint, and bathing! Thanks for listening!

El Corito Histórico
Corito Histórico #81 - Gregor MacGregor "El Prócer Charlero"

El Corito Histórico

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2021 67:02


En este Corito Histórico, los muchachos Javier Lara (en Twitter @vzla_apesta) y Doriann Márquez (en Twitter @Hostioso0294) a petición del público, cuentan las aventuras y desventuras de Gregor MacGregor. Uno de los próceres extranjeros con más condecoraciones en el Panteón Nacional. Desde su juventud en Escocia, sus intentos de ascensión social por medio del arribismo, su participación breve en las guerras napoleónicas, hasta la aparición de Venezuela en el horizonte cuando al quedar viudo y sin nadie de quién vivir, decide aventurarse pensando en su viejo conocido Francisco de Miranda. En Venezuela consigue éxitos como ayudante de Miranda que lo hacen casarse con una mujer de la nobleza caraqueña, y luego de la caída de la República luchará para las Provincias Unidas de Nueva Granada hasta la caída de Cartagena, cuando se une a Bolívar en lo que será su Expedición de los Cayos, dónde termina con acciones de heroísmo en la Batalla del Juncal ganándose la Orden de los Libertadores. Tras estos honores, vino su historia criminal en Florida intentando apoderarse de esta colonia española, luego en Portobelo y Riohacha, hasta que llega a Londres, dónde urde su gran estafa con el invento del “Principado de Poyais” en la Costa Mosquitia, dónde estafa a más de 200 personas en un monto de aproximadamente 200 mil libras, con total impunidad. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/coritohistorico/message

History's B-Side
16 | The Cazique of Poyais

History's B-Side

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 77:59


In which Matt tells the story of Gregor MacGregor, the self-proclaimed prince of a non-existent country, Phil tries to clear the name of his great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather, and we try to determine when lying goes too far. You can support or become a member of History's B-Side here: https://historysbside.com/support

GedankenSpiele
Der Kazike von Poyais

GedankenSpiele

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2021 111:14


Von Habgier und großen Träumen

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 55:32


Throughout recorded human history, people have figured out how to use the latest “technology” to scam, con or hack others for their own benefit. William Chaloner (1650–1699): Serial counterfeiter and confidence trickster proven guilty by Sir Isaac Newton. Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845): Scottish con man who tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of Poyais. Cassie Chadwick (1857–1907): Canadian who defrauded banks out of millions by pretending to be the illegitimate daughter and heir of Andrew Carnegie. Joseph Weil (1875–1976): Chicago's infamous Yellow Kid posed as bank presidents, inventors, millionaires, and scientists. “I have played more roles in real life than the average actor ever dreamed of.” Frank Abagnale, Jr. (born 1948): U.S. check forger and impostor turned FBI consultant, who impersonated a PanAm airline pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and a teacher to illegally make over $2.5 million. The 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can is based on his autobiography. Is there a term for this? Yup. Social engineering is the psychological manipulation of a person by a malicious attacker/s into performing actions or divulging confidential information for the purpose of information gathering, fraud, or system access. It differs from a traditional “con” when it is one of many steps in a complex scheme. Social engineering techniques are based on specific attributes of human decision-making known as cognitive biases, aka “bugs in the human hardware” that are exploited to create attack techniques. Did you know that you risk being hacked when you use the forgot password function on websites that require login? An improperly secured password-recovery system can grant a malicious attacker full access to your account, and lock you out. The good news: Social engineering as a force for good can be in your future — to help you regain your confidence and control. When you use human hacking for good, you can become more empathetic, generous and kind, and leave people feeling better for having met you, says master hacker and social engineering pioneer and author Christopher Hadnagy, who is on this panel. We'll ask Chris Hadnagy, Ryan MacDougall, Maxie Reynolds and Shane McCombs for their take on The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 55:32


Throughout recorded human history, people have figured out how to use the latest “technology” to scam, con or hack others for their own benefit. William Chaloner (1650–1699): Serial counterfeiter and confidence trickster proven guilty by Sir Isaac Newton. Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845): Scottish con man who tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of Poyais. Cassie Chadwick (1857–1907): Canadian who defrauded banks out of millions by pretending to be the illegitimate daughter and heir of Andrew Carnegie. Joseph Weil (1875–1976): Chicago's infamous Yellow Kid posed as bank presidents, inventors, millionaires, and scientists. “I have played more roles in real life than the average actor ever dreamed of.” Frank Abagnale, Jr. (born 1948): U.S. check forger and impostor turned FBI consultant, who impersonated a PanAm airline pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and a teacher to illegally make over $2.5 million. The 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can is based on his autobiography. Is there a term for this? Yup. Social engineering is the psychological manipulation of a person by a malicious attacker/s into performing actions or divulging confidential information for the purpose of information gathering, fraud, or system access. It differs from a traditional “con” when it is one of many steps in a complex scheme. Social engineering techniques are based on specific attributes of human decision-making known as cognitive biases, aka “bugs in the human hardware” that are exploited to create attack techniques. Did you know that you risk being hacked when you use the forgot password function on websites that require login? An improperly secured password-recovery system can grant a malicious attacker full access to your account, and lock you out. The good news: Social engineering as a force for good can be in your future — to help you regain your confidence and control. When you use human hacking for good, you can become more empathetic, generous and kind, and leave people feeling better for having met you, says master hacker and social engineering pioneer and author Christopher Hadnagy, who is on this panel. We'll ask Chris Hadnagy, Ryan MacDougall, Maxie Reynolds and Shane McCombs for their take on The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP
The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Coffee Break with Game-Changers, presented by SAP

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 55:32


Throughout recorded human history, people have figured out how to use the latest “technology” to scam, con or hack others for their own benefit. William Chaloner (1650–1699): Serial counterfeiter and confidence trickster proven guilty by Sir Isaac Newton. Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845): Scottish con man who tried to attract investment and settlers for the non-existent country of Poyais. Cassie Chadwick (1857–1907): Canadian who defrauded banks out of millions by pretending to be the illegitimate daughter and heir of Andrew Carnegie. Joseph Weil (1875–1976): Chicago’s infamous Yellow Kid posed as bank presidents, inventors, millionaires, and scientists. “I have played more roles in real life than the average actor ever dreamed of.” Frank Abagnale, Jr. (born 1948): U.S. check forger and impostor turned FBI consultant, who impersonated a PanAm airline pilot, a doctor, a lawyer, and a teacher to illegally make over $2.5 million. The 2002 movie Catch Me If You Can is based on his autobiography. Is there a term for this? Yup. Social engineering is the psychological manipulation of a person by a malicious attacker/s into performing actions or divulging confidential information for the purpose of information gathering, fraud, or system access. It differs from a traditional “con” when it is one of many steps in a complex scheme. Social engineering techniques are based on specific attributes of human decision-making known as cognitive biases, aka “bugs in the human hardware” that are exploited to create attack techniques. Did you know that you risk being hacked when you use the forgot password function on websites that require login? An improperly secured password-recovery system can grant a malicious attacker full access to your account, and lock you out. The good news: Social engineering as a force for good can be in your future — to help you regain your confidence and control. When you use human hacking for good, you can become more empathetic, generous and kind, and leave people feeling better for having met you, says master hacker and social engineering pioneer and author Christopher Hadnagy, who is on this panel. We’ll ask Chris Hadnagy, Ryan MacDougall, Maxie Reynolds and Shane McCombs for their take on The Future of Social Engineering: You As The Good Human Hacker!

Relative Disasters
Relative Disasters Addendum - The Pre-Poyais Life of Gregor MacGregor, 1786-1821

Relative Disasters

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2021 48:43


A little something to tide you over while we prepare the next episode! Here's Greg's quick look at look at the early life of the walking disaster Sir Gregor MacGregor, creator of the Poyais Scheme and swindler of hundreds. Intrigued? For a complete bibliography and the full disaster rundown, please see Episode 04 - The Poyais Scheme.

Relative Disasters
Relative Disasters, Episode 4 - The Poyais Scheme of 1822

Relative Disasters

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2021 44:22


*Note from Greg: The audio quality in this episode isn't great; the original sound files became corrupted during the editing process and I had to rebuild them - hence a lot of changes in quality and "pops". Apologies! We're working on a better version. In the meantime, enjoy a rough cut! In Episode 4 we take a ride with swindler Gregor McGregor all the way to the beautiful tropical country of Poyais. You'll hear all about investment bubbles, South American political movements, the tried and true military strategy of running quickly away from the enemy, and how a Scottish con man convinced thousands of people to sink their life savings into shares of an imaginary paradise. Sources for this episode include: "Sketch of the Mosquito Shore: Including the Territory of Poyais...", T. Strangeways, 1820 "He promised people paradise — and sent them to their deaths", L. Getlin, New York Post, 2018 "The Fraud of the Prince of Poyais on the London Stock Exchange", B. Taylor, Global Financial Data, 2020 "Gregor MacGregor, Prince of Poyais", J. Brain, Historic UK, 2020 "The Con Man Who Invented His Own Country", E. Andrews, History, 2016

The History Buffet
Scotland's Most Notorious Conman, The Cipher of the Monks, and our favorite Thanksgiving sides

The History Buffet

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2020 44:35


On this week's episode of learn all about the infamous conman Gregor MacGregor a Scottish born British soldier who pulled off one of the most brazen confidence tricks in history. Also this week hear about the numeric system created by the Cistercian monks that almost won out to be the main number system used throughout the world! In honor of Thanksgiving Joey and Stock dish about their favorite side dishes for Thanksgiving dinner! Listen and enjoy!

The Constant: A History of Getting Things Wrong

In September of 1822, a ship carrying 70 immigrants left London bound for St. Joseph, a bustling city on The Mosquito Coast in the small Central American nation of Poyais. They were followed by hundreds more pilgrims, all looking for a better life. They were about to be severely disappointed. Visit andstillivote.org to join the fight for voting rights today.Get 10% off your first month of online counseling by visiting:http://betterhelp.com/theconstantVisit our Patreon here.BUY OUR MERCH, YOU FILTHY ANIMALS!Listen to Historical Blindness hereand Rumble Strip hereMusic by:Blue Dot SessionsLee Rosevere

Citation Needed
Gregor MacGregor

Citation Needed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 45:05


General Gregor MacGregor (24 December 1786 – 4 December 1845) was a Scottish soldier, adventurer, and confidence trickster who attempted from 1821 to 1837 to draw British and French investors and settlers to "Poyais", a fictional Central American territory that he claimed to rule as "Cazique". Hundreds invested their savings in supposed Poyaisian government bonds and land certificates, while about 250 emigrated to MacGregor's invented country in 1822–23 to find only an untouched jungle; more than half of them died. MacGregor's Poyais scheme has been called one of the most brazen confidence tricks in history.

Citation Needed
Gregor MacGregor

Citation Needed

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2020 45:05


General Gregor MacGregor (24 December 1786 – 4 December 1845) was a Scottish soldier, adventurer, and confidence trickster who attempted from 1821 to 1837 to draw British and French investors and settlers to "Poyais", a fictional Central American territory that he claimed to rule as "Cazique". Hundreds invested their savings in supposed Poyaisian government bonds and land certificates, while about 250 emigrated to MacGregor's invented country in 1822–23 to find only an untouched jungle; more than half of them died. MacGregor's Poyais scheme has been called one of the most brazen confidence tricks in history.

Disastrous Podcast
14 The Fake Country Scam | Can I Get a Poyais?

Disastrous Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2020 61:16


Today we are talking about the Poyais Scam. A true story of a man who invited his own country became a fake prince and conned people into living there. Instagram: disastrouspodcastTwitter: disastrouspodCWebsite: disastrouspodcast.com

The Economic History Podcast
Boom and Bust: Bubbles or Fires?

The Economic History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2020 44:10


This week, we meet Professor John Turner to discuss his new book "Boom and Bust: A Global History of Financial Bubbles" with Will Quinn. We cover their original interpretation of historical bubbles using their newly developed concept of the bubble triangle. Among other things, we look at the  railway and bicycle manias, the Wall Street Crash and two recent Chinese bubbles. We also contemplate the variety of costs of investment in Poyais bonds.  

Crapules
Le vendeur de pays imaginaire

Crapules

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2020 19:20


Voici l'histoire de Gregor MacGregor, militaire écossais peu farouche, reconverti en Prince de Poyais, pays imaginaire qu'il a réussi à vendre à des personnes bien réelles, jusqu'à mener 250 colons britanniques à leur perte. (Ah et à un moment il cause une crise économique en Angleterre.)  Retrouvez Crapules sur Twitter :  https://twitter.com/CrapulesStudio   Musiques de fond par Kevin MacLeod  Sources : Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, Thomas Strangeways, 1822  The Phantom Atlas: The Greatest Myths, Lies and Blunders on Maps, Edward Brooke-Hitching, 2016 Truth: A Brief History of Total Bullsh*t, Tom Philips, 2019 The conman who pulled off history's most audacious scam, Maria Konnikova, BBC, 2016

Historiepodden
Gregor MacGregor, fyrsten av svindel

Historiepodden

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 41:44


VANLIG EPISODE - Dagens hovedperson var en så dyktig svindler at han fant opp et land som ikke eksisterte, og deretter tjente skyhøye summer på det. Møt Gregor MacGregor, fyrsten av det vakre sentralamerikanske landet Poyais.

Historiepodden
Gregor MacGregor, fyrsten av svindel

Historiepodden

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2020 41:44


VANLIG EPISODE - Dagens hovedperson var en så dyktig svindler at han fant opp et land som ikke eksisterte, og deretter tjente skyhøye summer på det. Møt Gregor MacGregor, fyrsten av det vakre sentralamerikanske landet Poyais.

Tremenda Vaina
28 - Hombres cachorros, Heridas fluorescentes, Loro delatador, Poyais: El paîs imaginario.

Tremenda Vaina

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 27:59


Alguna vez en tu vida te han contado una historia tan improbable, tan extraña, cómica o loca que no la puedes creer? Bienvenido al mundo de Tremenda Vaina! En cada episodio te contamos, cuatro historias increíbles ,insospechables, absolutamente inimaginables, casi absurdas y totalmente asombrosas, de las cuatro historias solo una es mentira, cual sera? Eso es Tremenda Vaina! No te pierdas el podcast de Tremenda Vaina! Cada semana Roman Rojas y Danilo Alvarez te traen cuatro historias desde la ciudad de Nueva York!Las historias de esta semana! Tremenda Vaina Ep. 28:Hombres cachorros, Heridas fluorescentes, Loro delatador, Poyais: El paîs imaginario. 

Tremenda Vaina
28 - Hombres cachorros, Heridas fluorescentes, Loro delatador, Poyais: El paîs imaginario.

Tremenda Vaina

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 30:28


Alguna vez en tu vida te han contado una historia tan improbable, tan extraña, cómica o loca que no la puedes creer? Bienvenido al mundo de Tremenda Vaina! En cada episodio te contamos, cuatro historias increíbles ,insospechables, absolutamente inimaginables, casi absurdas y totalmente asombrosas, de las cuatro historias solo una es mentira, cual sera? Eso es Tremenda Vaina! No te pierdas el podcast de Tremenda Vaina! Cada semana Roman Rojas y Danilo Alvarez te traen cuatro historias desde la ciudad de Nueva York! Las historias de esta semana! Tremenda Vaina Ep. 28: Hombres cachorros, Heridas fluorescentes, Loro delatador, Poyais: El paîs imaginario.  Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Con Artists
Gregor MacGregor Pt. 2: “Poyais”

Con Artists

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 49:01


When a string of military failures under Gregor's leadership led to his exile from South America in 1820, the Scotsman returned to Europe a disgrace. But soon his desire for fame and fortune led him to create his most famous, and devious, con yet—the Poyais scheme.

BrainStuff
How Did Gregor MacGregor Swindle People into Moving to a Country that Didn't Exist?

BrainStuff

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2020 5:32


In the early 1800s, one swindler tricked hundreds of people into investing in a nonexistent country -- and even into moving there. Learn about Gregor MacGregor's invented kingdom of Poyais in this episode of BrainStuff. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Con Artists
Gregor MacGregor Pt. 1: “Poyais”

Con Artists

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 51:41


In the early 19th century, Gregor MacGregor's family name had been disgraced. But the young Scot was determined to put his clan back on the map. Following his meteoric rise and fall in the military, Gregor’s desperation for glory led him to pull his first unintentional con.

113 miljard
#032 - Gregor MacGregor

113 miljard

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2020 31:39


Nee, dat is geen typfout, zo heet de beste man echt! Gregor MacGregor was een Schot met een droom. Om het arme volk van Engeland aan een blokhutje in het paradijs te helpen. Witte stranden, verboden vruchten, overal goudmijnen. Hij was immers de Prins van Poyais. Of... bestaat dat land helemaal niet? Ga het beluisteren in de nieuwe #113miljard!

Anachronismo!
RECAST - Saturnalia, Gregor MacGregor's Poyais Scheme

Anachronismo!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2019 56:07


We're taking xmas off! We hope that you're having a wonderful holiday and that we can help you distract yourself from your families with the re-cast of one of our favorite episodes. We'll be back with new stuff in 2020, see you then! This episode features guest host David Fouhy subbing in for Noel. We dive into Saturnalia: a Roman festival of rebirth that if you squint at it looks an awful lot like xmas, if xmas was way cooler and involved making servants into princes for a week. There were gifts of wax, feasting, dancing and the softest of meats. We even talk about it’s place in Roman politics and it’s roots in some small amount of human sacrifice (probably).Then Fouhy tells us all about Gregor MacGregor and the Poyais Scheme. Gregor, an ex-soldier who married into the nobility, managed to put together what some are calling, “the biggest dick move in history.” Gregor, after a short and unlustrous career in the military, made up an entire country in the ass end of nowhere and sold British people land there. When those people tried to sail and settle in this place that DID NOT EXIST, hundreds of them died. But the survivors still believed in him! And he fled to France to do it again, before returning to England to do it again. He got away with this scheme over and over, and eventually set himself up as a knight in Caracas with the money he made off this scam. Just the fucking worst. Oh, he also tried to free Florida from the Spanish and had a 200-mile battle march or whatever, but really, we hate this dude.Talking points include: over 30 mentions of soft meats! ironic punishments, the finest in wax fruits and heads, and more.

The Nonessential Podcast
Episode 73: Gregor MacGregor's Tropical Paradise

The Nonessential Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2019 40:41


Gregor MacGregor, the man so Scottish they named him twice, led a successful military career, for three different countries before launching a naval war of his own against Spain. His feats of daring led him to the discovery of a lush tropical paradise, of which he became the ruling prince. The rest is Nonessential history.  Sources: Allen, Victor. Gregor MacGregor, Prince of Poyais. History Today. July 11, 2018. https://www.historytoday.com/miscellanies/gregor-macgregor-prince-poyais Gregor MacGregor. Undiscovered Scotland. Last accessed on December 23, 2019. https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/usbiography/mac/gregormacgregor.html

Bad Ideas Podcast
The Poyais Scheme - Gregor MacGregor's Fake Country

Bad Ideas Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2019 28:22


Gregor MacGregor was nearly a household name in London for his antics in Central America and the army. When he tried to create a colony in modern day Honduras this notoriety would help him promote and sell huge swaths of land and securities. The only problem was, his country didn't really exist. || More Human Echoes stuff: http://humanechoes.com || Become a member for BONUS PODCASTS on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/HumanEchoes   Watch our Gaming Content: https://www.youtube.com/HumanEchoesGaming    Bad Ideas Podcast on iTunes: http://apple.co/2yrDfyx   Buy some T-shirts: http://bit.ly/1NetNNP   Join our Community Discord: https://discord.gg/vyMvJx7    Listen to Bad Ideas: https://youtu.be/BadIdeas Watch Dwarf Fortress: https://youtu.be/4shyDUgoc6c   Streaming Weekly-       Twitch: https://Twitch.tv/manicpixidrmgirl       Mixer: https://Mixer.com/HumanEchoes   You can also follow the Human Echoes Peeps on Twitter! @HumanEchoes @tsouthcotte @albert_berg @josephdevon @ManicPix

THATIANA PRETELT #LAESPIADEHISTORIAS

THATIANA PRETELT ESCRITORA PANAMEÑA LA ESPIA DE HISTORIAS

El Corito Histórico
Corito Histórico #3 - Los Próceres Corruptos

El Corito Histórico

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 52:07


En este episodio de “El Corito Histórico” Javier Lara (En twitter @vzla_apesta) y Doriann Márquez (En twitter @Hostioso0294), tocan el tema de la corrupción, buscando los orígenes de este mal permanente en la historia nacional, citando los casos de dos próceres de la independencia, con cuestionamientos morales y éticos posteriores a sus gestas en pro de la República. El primer caso es el de Gregor MacGregor, oficial escocés venido a Venezuela, con actuaciones destacadas al servicio de la Primera República, las Provincias Unidas de la Nueva Granada, en la Expedición de los Cayos, la Tercera República, fundador de la República de Florida, en una misión encomendada por el Libertador en pro de la causa patriota, y el fin de sus gestas al dedicarse en Europa a la estafa, por medio del invento de su propio principado ubicado en la actual Nicaragua (Territorio de Poyais), ofreciendo tierras, inversiones y hasta bonos de la deuda a la alta sociedad de entonces, logrando amasar fortuna suficiente para mantenerse y evitar la cárcel aun cuando sus acciones causaron muertes y la ruina de muchos. El segundo caso es el de Francisco Antonio Zea, patriota neogranadino, botánico, científico y precursor de la independencia junto a Nariño, Caldas y Torres. Quién tras años de vida en Europa siendo actor de primera al frente la invasión napoleónica de España, volvió a América a ser parte de la Expedición de Los Cayos junto a Bolívar y otros próceres con el fin de libertar el continente. A las órdenes de Bolívar fue director del Correo del Orinoco, presidente del Congreso de Angostura y primer Vicepresidente de la Gran Colombia al ser fundada. Su accionar se empieza a torcer al volver a Europa como Ministro Plenipotenciario ante la Gran Bretaña, dónde reconoce deuda y solicita préstamos en nombre de la República sin los procedimientos adecuados ni autorización del Congreso, llegando a pedir 2 millones de libras esterlinas colocando como garantía derechos de exportación e importación de todo el país, y sin lograr que todo el dinero llegara a destino, existiendo sospechas hasta hoy sobre el destino del dinero, dado que jamás respondió ante las instituciones competentes, al morir antes de volver a Colombia. Suscríbete al canal, comenta, da like, comparte y no seas corrupto. Arte del Corito Histórico: Cheska Ballesteros (@Cheskacsk) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/coritohistorico/message

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior
Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior | Estafadores y panolis

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2019 58:04


Los estafadores lo son por el dinero o por el poder, por prestigio o por postureo. El escocés Gregor MacGregor lo hizo por todo eso junto, y el espabilado de él consiguió vender por parcelas un país imaginario a más de doscientos británicos. Era el reino de Poyais, y estaba en la Costa de los Mosquitos.

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior
Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior: Estafadores y panolis (04/08/2019)

Cualquier tiempo pasado fue anterior

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2019 58:04


Los estafadores lo son por el dinero o por el poder, por prestigio o por postureo. El escocés Gregor MacGregor lo hizo por todo eso junto, y el espabilado de él consiguió vender por parcelas un país imaginario a más de doscientos británicos. Era el reino de Poyais, y estaba en la Costa de los Mosquitos.

Do Go On
192 - Conman, “Prince” Gregor MacGregor

Do Go On

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2019 77:50


Throughout the 1800s Scottish solider Gregor MacGregor fought in wars across South America before returning home and claiming to be a prince of a country that he'd created called Poyais. He started selling land and shares in what he claimed to be a true paradise on Earth, which was all well and good until hundreds of people wanted to go and live on the land that they'd bought...Tickets to our 200th episode and quiz live in Brisbane August 11 here.Our website: dogoonpod.comSupport the show and get rewards like bonus episodes: patreon.com/DoGoOnPod Submit a topic idea directly to the hat: dogoonpod.com/Submit-a-Topic Twitter: @DoGoOnPodInstagram: @DoGoOnPodFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoGoOnPod/Email us: dogoonpod@gmail.comCheck out our other podcasts:Book Cheat: https://play.acast.com/s/book-cheatPrime Mates: https://play.acast.com/s/prime-mates/ Our awesome theme song by Evan Munro-Smith and logo by Peader ThomasREFERENCES AND FURTHER READINGhttps://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/usbiography/mac/gregormacgregor.htmlhttps://www.historytoday.com/miscellanies/gregor-macgregor-prince-poyaishttp://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160127-the-conman-who-pulled-off-historys-most-audacious-scamhttps://www.ancestry.com.au/contextux/historicalinsights/poyais-schemehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_MacGregor See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Considering the Scam
10 - Gregor MacGregor: Fake New Country

Considering the Scam

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2019 41:16


Join Considering the Scam this week as we discuss Gregor MacGregor and his attempt to lure settlers to a new country he called Poyais. You can follow us on Twitter @consideringscam on Instagram @consideringthescam and you can email us at consideringthescam@gmail.com 

PBnJ Podcast
Episode 97 - Poyais Possum Babies

PBnJ Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2019 61:25


Guys we got a mouth full of sammich for ya. Full plate, and so much to cover! We got a story about Jordan's wife rescuing some animals; Patrick sucks at darts; his kids' first flea market experience; Bryce's movie shell game; the amazing exploits of Gregor MacGregor and so much more you will not be disappointed. We THOROUGHLY enjoyed ourselves this episode, so we hope you enjoy this show just as much as we did! Please don't forget to like/comment/share; email us at PBnJPodcast@gmail.com; visit us on Facebook; view the live stream of this very episode on YouTube; and of course, check out the high quality audio version anywhere you get your podcasts from! We hope you enjoy, and we will see you all next week. iTunes:https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/id1223843538 Google Play Music:https://play.google.com/music/m/Ilz7kgridais42ldnzjkskz5u5u?t=PBnJ_Podcast RSS:https://pbnjpodcast.podbean.com/feed/

Cults, Cryptids, and Conspiracies
Episode 98: Buy Some Land and Huff Chemicals

Cults, Cryptids, and Conspiracies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2019 116:35


Cristina tells us of the mythical land of Poyais that has gold aplenty and redwoods. If you meet Gregor McGregor who tries to sell you a plot to this land maybe think twice.Chelsea talks about chemical trails in the sky! It's clearly the government poisoning us but in what way?Thanks for listening and remember to like, rate, review, and email us at: cultscrytpidsconspiracies@gmail.com or tweet us at @C3Podcast. Also check out our Patreon: www.patreon.com/cultscryptidsconspiraciesMany thanks to TJ Shirley for our theme song!

Conned
Paradise

Conned

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2019 30:41


Many people dream of retiring overseas. Imagine emigrating half way round the world, leaving your friends, and family behind only to find that the place you were promised does not exist. Image this, many years before the invention of air travel...

Anachronismo!
Ep 36- Saturnalia, Gregor MacGregor’s Poyais Scheme

Anachronismo!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2018 55:10


This episode features guest host David Fouhy subbing in for Noel. We dive into Saturnalia: a Roman festival of rebirth that if you squint at it looks an awful lot like xmas, if xmas was way cooler and involved making servants into princes for a week. There were gifts of wax, feasting, dancing and the … Continue reading "Ep 36- Saturnalia, Gregor MacGregor’s Poyais Scheme"

Footnoting History
How to Make a Fortune in Fictional Poyais

Footnoting History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2018 16:49 Transcription Available


(Lesley) While the brave, the curious, and the outlawed began new lives in New World colonies, industrialists in Europe began searching for investment opportunities. The realities of travel, however, meant that leaps of faith were common for investors. In this episode, Lesley digs deep into the story of a confidence trickster who fabricated an entire country in need of investment. Unfortunately, exotic Poyais did not exist. Who wants to buy the Brooklyn Bridge when you could buy a country the size of Wales instead?

Ridiculous History
Gregor MacGregor Invented a Country and Convinced People to Invest in It

Ridiculous History

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2018 60:37


When His Serene Highness Gregor the First, Sovereign Prince of the State of Poyais and its Dependencies, and Cacique of the Poyer nation visited London, he made a huge impression. Hundreds of people jumped at the chance to buy land in his remote, Central American paradise. There was only one problem -- the Cacique, whose real name was Gregor Macgregor, made the entire nation up out of thin air in one of history's largest, most audacious (and most ridiculous) scams. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers

Footnotes of History
19 - The Greatest Showman: MacGregor's South American Mania

Footnotes of History

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2018 45:34


Want more FOH? Visit footnotesofhistory.com/join Get the shownotes at footnotesofhistory.com/19 In the 1820s, the capital markets of Britain surged on the ramping price of South American bonds. As the Spanish Empire was beaten back, new countries were popping up all over the map. Governments in Columbia, Venezuela and Bolivia all sent word to London for loans to start their new nations and suddenly boasting the prospects of a very healthy ROI. Among these nations was Poyais – freed from the yoke of Spain in the early 1810s and gifted by the Mosquito King to one Brigadier-General Sir Gregor MacGregor of the 57th Regiment of Foot and Knight of the Portuguese Order of Christ. MacGregor, the now “Cazique” of Poyais, arrived in Britain to consult on his nation’s prospects and to encourage emigration of pioneering individuals to its shores. Spoiler alert: almost nothing about Poyais was true - as MacGregor’s hapless confidants (both financial and colonial) found out to their cost.

Mysteries Abound
EPISODE 165 - Mysteries Abound

Mysteries Abound

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2018


The Prince of Poyais @ 1:23 (Talltree Butterflies / Keenan) Colonial Horror @ 10:20 (Finding Frangipanis / Jane Aubourg) Ramadan @ 17:05 (Deep Blue Snow / Al Phlipp and The Woo Team) Mysteries of the Art World @ 21:54 (Anamalization / Dr Sounds) Ships Under San Francisco @ 44:02 People Swallowing Stream @ 47:57 (Breeze Across the Heather / M. A. Ward) Blair Adams @ 51:41 Times of Departure @ 1:00:20 The Drifter / EsGi)

History Nugs
History Nugs S2E3: Gregor MacGregor, Cazique Of Poyais

History Nugs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2017 82:05


This week, on a regular, real History Nugs (finally, am I right), Jack and Sarah tell you the story of the greatest scam of all time. And it was only against rich white people, so it was a cool scam. Jack's Twitter: https://twitter.com/Jackapedia_ Sarah's Twitter: https://twitter.com/meattunic Notes for this episode: http://bit.ly/2hgHTYV Outro Music: "The Prince of Poyais (Ballad of Gregor MacGregor)" by Frazzappa Rate us on iTunes! http://bit.ly/HistoryNugsItunes Buy a shirt! http://bit.ly/LuminousMerch

That's Weird
The Prince of Poyais & Radium Girls

That's Weird

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2017 38:30


We're shocked by a heartless con man and the horrific reason some women used to glow. Find our show notes at www.thatsweird.org Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThatsWeirdCast Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thatsweirdcast Join our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thatsweirdcast Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thatsweird --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Almost History
AH 07 The Prince of Poyais - settling in the country that never was

Almost History

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2017 22:12


In 1822, Gregor MacGregor committed what The Economist newspaper has called the ‘biggest fraud in history’ and ‘the greatest confidence trick of all time’. Investors, many of them Scottish, put forward vast sums towards creating a colony in central America. They were told it was a sure bet, a land of milk and honey - another paradise on the isthmus. Sounds familiar? If you listened last week, you might think that once bitten, Scots would be twice shy. Instead, bonds for Gregor MacGregor’s Principality of Poyais were oversubscribed and colonists easy to find. They would all profit from this rich and fertile land that was larger than Wales and ripe for settlement. The only problem was that Poyais didn’t exist. Do you like the podcast? Please rate or review the podcast and share it with friends. On iTunes, this takes a couple of steps but it is the best way to help me reach a wider audience. 1. Search for Vaguely Interesting History on the Podcast app. 2. Tap the podcast artwork under the Podcasts heading (the red and white logo). 3. Tap reviews and leave a star rating or, even better, add a review as well! Music credits The theme music is Newsroom by Riot. The other music featured in this episode was High School Snaps by Broke For Free (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Broke_For_Free/Slam_Funk/Broke_For_Free_-_Slam_Funk_-_06_High_School_Snaps) and Behind Your Window by Kai Engel (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kai_Engel/Idea/Kai_Engel_-_Idea_-_04_Behind_Your_Window). Both are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Futility Closet
150-The Prince of Nowhere

Futility Closet

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2017 30:21


In 1821, Scottish adventurer Gregor MacGregor undertook one of the most brazen scams in history: He invented a fictional Central American republic and convinced hundreds of his countrymen to invest in its development. Worse, he persuaded 250 people to set sail for this imagined utopia with dreams of starting a new life. In this week's episode of the Futility Closet podcast we'll describe the disastrous results of MacGregor's deceit. We'll also illuminate a hermit's behavior and puzzle over Liechtenstein's flag. Intro: In 1878, a neurologist noted that French-Canadian lumberjacks tended to startle violently. Each year on Valentine's Day, someone secretly posts paper hearts in Montpelier, Vt. Sources for our feature on Gregor MacGregor: David Sinclair, Sir Gregor MacGregor and the Land That Never Was, 2003. Matthew Brown, "Inca, Sailor, Soldier, King: Gregor MacGregor and the Early Nineteenth-Century Caribbean," Bulletin of Latin American Research 24:1 (January 2005), 44-70. T. Frederick Davis, "MacGregor's Invasion of Florida, 1817," Florida Historical Society Quarterly 7:1 (July 1928), 2-71. Emily Beaulieu, Gary W. Cox, and Sebastian Saiegh, "Sovereign Debt and Regime Type: Reconsidering the Democratic Advantage," International Organization 66:4 (Fall 2012), 709-738. R.A. Humphreys, "Presidential Address: Anglo-American Rivalries in Central America," Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 18 (1968), 174-208. Courtenay de Kalb, "Nicaragua: Studies on the Mosquito Shore in 1892," Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York 25:1 (1893), 236-288. A.R. Hope Moncrieff, "Gregor MacGregor," Macmillan's Magazine 92:551 (September 1905), 339-350. "The King of Con-Men," Economist 405:8816 (Dec. 22, 2012), 109-112. "Sir Gregor MacGregor," Quebec Gazette, Oct. 18, 1827. Guardian, "From the Archive, 25 October 1823: Settlers Duped Into Believing in 'Land Flowing With Milk and Honey,'" Oct. 25, 2013. Maria Konnikova, "The Con Man Who Pulled Off History's Most Audacious Scam," BBC Future, Jan. 28, 2016. "Thomas Strangeways", Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, 1822. A Bank of Poyais dollar, printed by the official printer of the Bank of Scotland. MacGregor traded these worthless notes for the settlers' gold as they departed for his nonexistent republic. Listener mail: Robert McCrum, "The 100 Best Novels: No 42 - The Thirty-Nine Steps by John Buchan (1915)," Guardian, July 7, 2014. This week's lateral thinking puzzle was inspired by an item in Dan Lewis' Now I Know newsletter. Here's a corroborating link (warning -- both links spoil the puzzle). You can listen using the player above, download this episode directly, or subscribe on iTunes or Google Play Music or via the RSS feed at http://feedpress.me/futilitycloset. Please consider becoming a patron of Futility Closet -- on our Patreon page you can pledge any amount per episode, and we've set up some rewards to help thank you for your support. You can also make a one-time donation on the Support Us page of the Futility Closet website. Many thanks to Doug Ross for the music in this episode. If you have any questions or comments you can reach us at podcast@futilitycloset.com. Thanks for listening!  

Language of Bromance
142 Gregor MacGregor Used Land Salesman

Language of Bromance

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2017 62:28


Buckle up for one of the world's greatest schemers of all time.  Back in late 1800 England a group of Multi-First Name people ruined some lives.  Gregor MacGregor hooked up with a self proclaimed King around Honduras by the name of King George Frederic Augustus.  The King ruled an area known as the Mosquito Coast.   Around Mosquito Coast there was some land that King George Frederic Augustus was going to part with and sold to Gregor MacGregor.  This land was purchased at the high price of some Rum and Jewellery.  The land was mostly jungle and not much in the way for farming or raising livestock.   Gregor MacGregor traveled back to England with a signed document from King George Frederic Augustus and started his scam. Taking advantage of a booming England Economy Gregor MacGregor convinced people of his newly formed country Poyais as it’s Country’s Cazique.   Gregor MacGregor reminds Richard and Shawn of a used Car Salesman and the two work out how MacGregor would do his best to “Get You In The Land of Poyais Today”.   Give a listen to The Language of Bromance in Episode 142 Gregor MacGregor Used Land Salesman. Follow Language of Bromance @LanguageOfBro Email EatTheBeaver@LanguageofBromance.com Like us on Facebook Leave a Review and Subscribe on iTunes, Google Play Music,  PodBros Network and Stitcher. Become a LOBarmy Patreon Go to TweakedAudio.com and use the Promo code LOBarmy to get 33% off your order.   About Language of Bromance   Together Richard and Shawn formed the podcast The Language of Bromance and from there it has been nothing but fun. The duo laugh about things they go through, stories in the news and even getting serious discussing net neutrality along with other issues. Every so often their friendship turns to a bitter rivalry with their nerdiest creation the draft episodes. An original take on a best of or a top 10 list. The draft episodes are done like an NFL Draft 7 rounds where Richard and Shawn flip-flop picks on various topics.

The Pop List
5 More True Stories That SHOULD Be Made Into A Movie

The Pop List

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2017 56:47


The Oscars love to honor movie makers that bring a good true story to the silver screen, so with the Academy Awards coming up this Sunday, we decided to revisit one of our most popular subjects.      All fascinating, all true, and all primed for the Hollywood treatment.      5 True Stories That SHOULD Be Made Into a Movie, this week on The Pop List       Listen. Learn. Enjoy.

Revolutions
5.17a- Supplemental Gregor MacGregor

Revolutions

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2016 40:31


Do not buy land in Poyais. 

The Weird History Podcast
41 His Majesty Gregor MacGregor, King of Con-Men and Cacique of Poyais

The Weird History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2015 23:00


In 1820 a Scotsman named Gregor MacGregor pulled off one of the most audacious cons of all time. MacGregor claimed to be descendant of Rob Roy and ancient kings of Scotland, and also claimed to have been granted a certain […]

Tyranny of Time
The Territory of Poyais

Tyranny of Time

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2013


 In the early 1800s hundreds of settlers leave Britain for the beautiful and promising Central American colony of Poyais hear their fate and that of their charming Scottish governor.Direct Link or Subscribe Via itunes (you will get all new episodes directly in your iTunes) Music from Steven Smith,  http://myspace.com/stephengeorgesmith Want to learn more? Check out this book by David Sinclair The Land That Never Was: Sir Gregor MacGregor And The Most Audacious Fraud In History.tyrannyoftime@gmail.com.http://tyrannyoftimepodcast.blogspot.com.@TofTPodcast on twitter. Donate via PayPal..

Gresham College Lectures
Ghost of Scandals Past: A Short History of Financial Scandals

Gresham College Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2013 29:13


The litany of great financial scandals is long, and sadly unending. Dickens himself covers scandals we would recognise today in Little Dorrit and Nicholas Nickleby. Beyond Dickens, the South Sea Bubble (of course), railway shares, bonds in newly independent countries (Kingdom of Poyais), never again... IOS, Saavundra, Rolls Razor, Bank of Gibraltar, BCCI, never again... endowment mortgages, Barlow Clowes, Equitable Life, Maxwell, Lloyd's names, Lehman Brothers, payment protection insurance, never again... This symposium seeks, through the ghosts of scandals past, present and future, to see what lessons we can learn and to assess which is rosier, the future of finance or of financial scandals.

Gresham College Lectures
Ghost of Scandals Present: Modern Pitfalls

Gresham College Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2013 29:12


The litany of great financial scandals is long, and sadly unending. Dickens himself covers scandals we would recognise today in Little Dorrit and Nicholas Nickleby. Beyond Dickens, the South Sea Bubble (of course), railway shares, bonds in newly independent countries (Kingdom of Poyais), never again... IOS, Saavundra, Rolls Razor, Bank of Gibraltar, BCCI, never again... endowment mortgages, Barlow Clowes, Equitable Life, Maxwell, Lloyd's names, Lehman Brothers, payment protection insurance, never again... This symposium seeks, through the ghosts of scandals past, present and future, to see what lessons we can learn and to assess which is rosier, the future of finance or of financial scandals.

Gresham College Lectures
Ghost of Scandals Future: Great Expectations

Gresham College Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2013 30:37


The litany of great financial scandals is long, and sadly unending. Dickens himself covers scandals we would recognise today in Little Dorrit and Nicholas Nickleby. Beyond Dickens, the South Sea Bubble (of course), railway shares, bonds in newly independent countries (Kingdom of Poyais), never again... IOS, Saavundra, Rolls Razor, Bank of Gibraltar, BCCI, never again... endowment mortgages, Barlow Clowes, Equitable Life, Maxwell, Lloyd's names, Lehman Brothers, payment protection insurance, never again... This symposium seeks, through the ghosts of scandals past, present and future, to see what lessons we can learn and to assess which is rosier, the future of finance or of financial scandals.

Gresham College Lectures
Panel Discussion: Never Again?

Gresham College Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2013 58:56


The litany of great financial scandals is long, and sadly unending. Dickens himself covers scandals we would recognise today in Little Dorrit and Nicholas Nickleby. Beyond Dickens, the South Sea Bubble (of course), railway shares, bonds in newly independent countries (Kingdom of Poyais), never again... IOS, Saavundra, Rolls Razor, Bank of Gibraltar, BCCI, never again... endowment mortgages, Barlow Clowes, Equitable Life, Maxwell, Lloyd's names, Lehman Brothers, payment protection insurance, never again... This symposium seeks, through the ghosts of scandals past, present and future, to see what lessons we can learn and to assess which is rosier, the future of finance or of financial scandals.

Gresham College Lectures
What the Dickens? The City's Great Financial Scandals, Past and Future

Gresham College Lectures

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2013 17:08


The litany of great financial scandals is long, and sadly unending. Dickens himself covers scandals we would recognise today in Little Dorrit and Nicholas Nickleby. Beyond Dickens, the South Sea Bubble (of course), railway shares, bonds in newly independent countries (Kingdom of Poyais), never again... IOS, Saavundra, Rolls Razor, Bank of Gibraltar, BCCI, never again... endowment mortgages, Barlow Clowes, Equitable Life, Maxwell, Lloyd's names, Lehman Brothers, payment protection insurance, never again... This symposium seeks, through the ghosts of scandals past, present and future, to see what lessons we can learn and to assess which is rosier, the future of finance or of financial scandals.