THE MOST HAUNTED HOTELS IN EUROPE
EUROPE’S MOST HAUNTED HOTELS
Here are some of the most haunted hotels in Europe, by the way, just in case you’re headed over there and in the mood for collecting a couple of hotel ghost stories of your own.
Scotland
Chateau de Marcay
France
Chateau de Brissac
France
Shelbourne Hotel
Ireland
Germany
Romania
GHOSTS IN BORDEAUX, FRANCE
My cousin, who claims to have a third eye that enables her to see spirits, recently recalled checking into a chateau hotel in Bordeaux, France. She said she saw images of people from the past all along the hotel corridor, as she was walking to her room.
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“They all looked pale and were lined up against the wall expressionless,” she told me. And this is what I said to her after she told me this: “If we ever travel together somewhere, and you see a ghost in one of our hotels, please don’t tell me about it.“
GHOSTS IN EUROPE
However, hotel ghost stories are quite normal in Europe. Mos Europeans I’ve spoken to don’t seem to care much about having to live with spirits long gone. They even put up patiently with the idiosyncrasies of the ghosts – taking everything in with an amused air.
Perhaps banging doors and footsteps on the second floor are as much a part of their lives as cable television and the internet.
HAUNTINGS IN INNSBRUCK, AUSTRIA
Many years ago, I checked into a small hotel in Innsbruck, Austria which had all its walls painted black. The somber atmosphere should have foretold of eerie occurrences.
However, I naively chalked this up to a taste for the avant-garde and a penchant for dark colors. In the middle of the night, however, the radio began blaring at full blast. Startled out of my sleep, I immediately shut it off.
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Later, amidst the fog of a waking dream, it came on again. The skeptical might attribute this to faulty wiring but who really knows? And why did the radio only turn on at midnight?
HOTEL GHOST STORIES IN VENICE
Another summer, I was staying alone at one of Venice’s top hotels and very much enjoying a room filled with antiques and facing the Grand Canal. However, again, in the middle of the night, I awoke with a jolt, feeling incredibly hot and suffocated.
I automatically assumed it was the air conditioning and so I called the front desk to complain. The night clerk arrived within minutes, white as a sheet. Without explanation, he moved me to another room where I promptly resumed a comfortable rest.
SUFFOCATING IN VENICE
I thought it odd that he hadn’t even bothered to check the room’s cooling system, but soon forgot about this. I stayed on for a few more days, walking around Venice and making the rounds of my favorite shops. I even spent a day at the Lido, hanging around a beach.
Later, I bumped into one of the young men at the concierge desk at a pizzeria one evening. When I mentioned my experiences, he told me that my first hotel room was known to be haunted, and that guests often complained feeling suffocated while sleeping there. Aah, I said to myself. So that’s why the night clerk looked like he’d literally seen a ghost…