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NY Post
New York Post
19 Dec 2023


NextImg:Message invoking Satan, likely over ‘spurned love and jealousy,’ unearthed on medieval ‘curse tablet’

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned?

Archaeologists learned the devil really is in the details after discovering a medieval “curse” tablet that appeared to invoke the lord of darkness against a pair of unlucky lovebirds.

The satanic “rock” verse was detailed in a memo released by the city of Rostock, Germany, where it was discovered.

“Was this about spurned love and jealousy, should someone be put out of the way?” the researchers inquired in a translated statement.

According to the release, the “inconspicuous piece of metal” was originally found under a latrine (aren’t all the best hate messages?) in the Northern City, leading researchers to believe that it was simply a construction scrap, Live Science reported.

Researchers believed the hellish hitpiece could’ve been written by a “spurned” lover.

However, upon unfurling this 15th-century artifact, they uncovered a cryptic message etched in Gothic, which read: “sathanas taleke belzebuk hinrik berith.”

Researchers interpreted these hell-roglyphics as a call for Satan (bezlebuk) and the demonic spirit Berith to unleash their wrath on a woman named Taleke and a man named Hinrik (Heinrich).

As of yet, the identity of both the sender and the couple remains unclear, however, researchers have some theories on the reason for this Luciferian recruitment ad.

“Did someone want to break up Taleke and Heinrich’s relationship?” postulated the researchers, who wondered if a “spurned” lover had wanted Beezlebub to rub out the object of their jealousy.

Jörg Ansorge, an archaeologist with the University of Greifswald who helmed the excavation, found the discovery “very special” given that similar “curse tablets” generally hailed from Rome and Greece circa 800 B.C. to A.D. 600.

The Satanic tablet’s location beneath the latrine, on the other hand, is not unusual. These trolling stones were often placed where the target wouldn’t be able to find them, per the press release.

In 2016, researchers discovered five 2,400-year-old curse tablets in Athens, which implored the underworld gods to carry out a divine hit on a group of tavern keepers.