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Topic: Anneliese Michel


  
  Anneliese Michel Resource Page - anneliese michel
Anneliese Michel was raised in the small Bavarian town of Klingenberg am Main, where her father operated a sawmill.
Suffering from major seizures, Anneliese returned to secondary school in the fall of 1970, and was still able to attend the University of Wurzburg in September 1973, where she studied elementary education.
Anneliese had all these symptoms, which gave rise to the theory, that the cause of death was suffocation.
www.governpub.com /Anneliese-Michel-anneliese-michel.php   (7486 words)

  
 : HotGhost.com : True Story of Emily Rose
Anneliese Michel (21 September 1952 1 July 1976) was a German woman who was believed to have been possessed by a demon and subsequently underwent an exorcism.
Anneliese began committing acts of self-mutilation at this time, and the act of tearing off her clothes and urinating on the floor became commonplace.
Anneliese's attacks were sometimes so strong that she would have to be held down by 3 men, or even chained up.
www.hotghost.com /Emily_Rose.htm   (1527 words)

  
 RopeofSilicon.com - Print this article
Anneliese is now also suffering from pneumonia, totally emaciated and having high temperature, but she can't waive due to her endless genuflections; her parents have even taken to helping her doing them.
To her mother she says: "Mother, I'm afraid." Anna Michel recorded the death of her daughter on the next day, the 1st of July 1976 and at noon, Pastor Ernst Alt informs the prosecuting authorities in Aschaffenburg, which was when the senior prosecutor began investigating.
It is believed that Anneliese's body didn't find peace after her death, it was said her body doesn't decay, which was said after her corpse was exhumed one-and-a-half years after her burial.
www.ropeofsilicon.com /tools/printarticle.php?id=2507   (1273 words)

  
 The Exorcism of Emily Rose/Anneliese Michel
Anneliese (also spelled Annelise) was born on September 21, 1952.
They were told Anneliese should continue with the prescribed orthodox course of treatment and medication.
At times, the alleged attacks of the demons were so strong that Anneliese had to be held by the strong men or be chained up.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/paranormal_realm/118382   (387 words)

  
 Emily Rose: The Real Story of Anneliese Michel's Exorcism - MoviesOnline   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
From her birth on the 21st of September, 1952, Anneliese Michel enjoyed the life of a normal, religiously nurtured young girl.
Anneliese's parents and the two exorcists were accused of negligent homocide.
Anneliese's parents, as well as the exorcists, were found guilty of manslaughter resulting from negligence and omitting first aid.
www.moviesonline.ca /movienews_1253.html   (1546 words)

  
 The Phoenix   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Anneliese believed she was possessed by six demons, and the Catholic church allowed local priests to perform the rite of Exorcism.
Anneliese and her parents were convinced she was possessed by several demons.
Anneliese had predicted the day she would be free of the demons: July 1, 1976.
jayrey.blogspot.com   (2143 words)

  
 Anneliese Michel - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anneliese Michel (September 21, 1952 – July 1, 1976) was a Catholic woman from Germany who believed she was possessed by six or more demons and subsequently underwent an exorcism.
Anneliese experienced severe psychiatric disturbances from the age of 16 to her death at age 23.
November 1973 – Anneliese started her treatment with Tegretol (carbamazepine), which, according to Physicians Desk Reference, should not be prescribed to women of childbearing age due to its dangerous effect on red blood cells.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Anneliese_Michel   (1362 words)

  
 Emily Rose True Story of Anneliese Michel Exorcism - Real Story
Anneliese was convinced that she had been possessed by several demons, including Lucifer, Judas Iscariot, Nero, Cain, Hitler, and Fleischmann, a disgraced Frankish Priest from the 16th century.
According to the autopsy, on July 1, 1976 Anneliese Michel succumbed to the effects of severe dehydration and malnourishment.
When she was a teenager, Anneliese slept on a bare stone floor to atone for the sins of wayward priests and drug addicts, who could be observed sleeping on the hard ground at the local train station (washingtonpost.com).
www.chasingthefrog.com /reelfaces/emilyrose.php   (2084 words)

  
 DVD Times - The Exorcism of Emily Rose
Anneliese was a devout Catholic but in 1968, she was diagnosed as epileptic following such symptoms as rigidity, contortions and paralysis.
During a short stay in a psychiatric hospital Anneliese began having hallucinations, during which she would claim to have seen demonic faces, which led her to believe that she was possessed by demons.
Not even in death was Anneliese left in peace as her body was exhumed shortly before the trial began following word that a Carmelite nun had a vision that Anneliese's body had not deteriorated after death but, to date, any apparent miracle has not be substantiated by the Catholic Church.
www.dvdtimes.co.uk /content.php?contentid=60822   (2215 words)

  
 Emily Rose: The True Story of Anneliese Michel
Anneliese then turns to her priest who believes that she is possessed by an evil force.
Anneliese was often violent and her behavior was what "normal" people would find repulsive.
Forensic evidence concludes that Anneliese starved to death and subsequent investigations into her untimely death leads to arguments as to whether Anneliese was really possessed by evil spirits or had epilepsy.
www.halloween-website.com /emily_rose.htm   (391 words)

  
 Movie Forums - The Excorcism of Emily Rose
Anneliese Michel (September 21, 1952 - July 1, 1976) was a German college student who died during an exorcism.
Michel's exorcism was carried out by two priests, Fathers Arnold Renz and Ernst Alt, on behalf of Bishop Josef Stangl, who was bishop of Wurzburg in what was then West Germany.
The Michel case was the subject of a 1981 book, "The Exorcism of Anneliese Michel," by Felicitas D. Goodman, then a linguistics and anthropology professor at Denison University in Ohio, which defended the exorcism technique.
www.movieforums.com /community/printthread.php?t=10854   (2302 words)

  
 Emily Rose/Anneliese Michel : Home
It was determined that Anneliese must be saved from the possession by several demons, including Lucifer, Judas Iscariot, Nero, Cain, Hitler, and Fleischmann, a disgraced Frankish Priest from the 16th century and other demons.
However I believe treated sooner Anneliese would have survived because her life began to turn to normal she was able to do ordainairy things such as going to church.
The last exorcisim rite was on July 1976 when Anneliese was suffering from pneumonia.
www.saintemilyrose.zoomshare.com   (485 words)

  
 Exorcism - Paranormal Phenomenon Hot Spots
BERLIN -- The first person to recognize that Anneliese Michel was possessed by demons was an older woman accompanying the girl on a pilgrimage.
She noticed that Anneliese would not walk past a certain image of Jesus, refused to drink water from a holy spring and smelled bad -- hellishly bad.
Two years after Michel's death, a German court found her parents and the two priests involved guilty of negligent manslaughter and sentenced them to six months in prison, suspended with three years' probation.
www.hotspotsz.com /cat87.html   (1238 words)

  
 Emily Rose: The Real Story of Anneliese Michel's Exorcism - HorrorMovies.ca   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
In the fall of 1970 Anneliese returned to school, and while other girls live the freedom of the 70s, she starts believing to be possessed.
Anneliese’s parents and the 2 Exorcists were accused of negligent homicide.
The cause of death, as diagnosed by the Forensics: “Anneliese starved to death” !
www.horror-movies.ca /horror_1253.html   (1450 words)

  
 Lo-Fi Tribe » Blog Archive » The Exorcism of Anneliese Michel   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Anneliese Michel was a German woman born on September 21, 1952 in Leiblfing, Bavaria.
Anneliese Michel supposedly abandoned her bed to sleep on the stone floor; she ate spiders, flies, and coal; she committed acts of self-mutilation; and even began drinking her own urine.
Psychiatrists who testified also raised the question of “Doctrinaire Induction.” Doctrinaire Induction is a term which points to the priests as the providers of the contents of Anneliese Michel’s psychotic behaviors.
www.lofitribe.com /2006/11/08/the-exorcism-of-anneliese-michel   (589 words)

  
 TIME.com: Tidings -- May 8, 1978 -- Page 1
When Anneliese Michel died at the age of 23 in Klingenberg, West Germany, in the summer of 1976, she was little more than a skeleton, weighing a mere 68 Ibs.
Anneliese's release from evil spirits came only with death, after she starved herself during a nightmarish ten-month series of Roman Catholic exorcism rituals.
Anneliese's parents had agreed to the exorcism with the local bishop's approval after doctors failed to rid her of epileptic-like convulsions.
www.time.com /time/magazine/article/0,9171,919629,00.html   (711 words)

  
 Squible » A Reality Scarier than the Movie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Anneliese Michel, a former student-teacher at nearby Wuertzburg University, was, by all accounts, a deeply religious person raised by deeply religious parents in the small Bavarian town of Klingenberg, where her father operates a sawmill.
Stangl, who approved the Michel exorcism and was in contact a dozen times with the two priests via letters on the case, was investigated by state authorities, but they decided not to indict him or ask him to appear at the trial.
Anneliese michel, your life’s experience set fourth a journey into the unknown, questions on top of more questions the only true story was taken to the grave with you.
www.squible.com /2005/09/16/a-reality-scarier-than-the-movie   (4693 words)

  
 Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > Exorcism of Anneliese Michel
On march 2 1987, the two exorcists and Anneliese’s parents were charged of negligent homicide, on the grounds that they had allowed the girls death without seeking medical help for her.
For the Roman Catholic Church, the death of Anneliese Michel was a nightmare come true, demonstrating the dangers inherent in the ritual of exorcism and the murky distinctions between priestly and medical responsibility.
Anneliese Michel died because her parents and her priest were retards.
www.unexplained-mysteries.com /forum/lofiversion/index.php/t50071.html   (8942 words)

  
 Political Affairs Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
After translating and reading article after article about the "real life Emily Rose" Anneliese Michel and then watching the movie (which gives you a disturbing visual but hollywood revised version of the stroy)I find myself torn between psychological diagnosis of schizophrenia and a spiritual diagnosis of demonic posession.
I do not mean to be turning the post into a spiritual banter but it is hard to deny the simple evil which accompanied Michel (Emily Rose) all the way to her grave...Whether there were demons active inside her body or active inside her mind they were alive with her non-the-less.
The director answers none of the questions he poses in the movie and leaves you as an audiende (A jury even) to conclude for yourself whether the girl suffered from Psychotic-epilepsy or really was the victim of 6 demons one of which being Lucifer himself.
www.politicalaffairs.net /forum/message/215   (358 words)

  
 The American Spectator
The movie is based on a European legal case from the 1970s involving Anneliese Michel, a twentyish German woman, now something of a folk hero, who died after months of exorcisms.
In Hollywood's very loose but effective adaptation of the Michel trial (the movie transfers the setting to the American Midwest and restricts the criminal prosecution to the exorcist), this theme of Church cowardice is commendably taken up.
In the Michel trial, the German bishops actually used its outcome to call on the Vatican to rewrite the exorcism ritual so that it would incorporate all the proper secularist assumptions.
www.spectator.org /dsp_article.asp?art_id=8898   (755 words)

  
 See This Movie: "The Exorcism of Emily Rose" (a.k.a. Analiese Michel in Real Life) - from Jim and Lynnette's Fun Times ...
The controversy stems from the fact that this exorcism was sanctioned by the Church, and that her parents (Anna and Josef Michel) allowed everything to happen as it did.
One of the "rituals" Anneliese performed during her delusions was to kneel repeatedly -- up and down, up and down -- until she lost her strength to continue.
After a 10-month series of bi-weekly exorcisms (67 to be exact), Anneliese Michel eventually shattered her kneecaps and starved to death.
thefuntimesguide.com /movabletype/archives/2005/12/exorcism_michel.html   (1700 words)

  
 Exorcism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (via CobWeb/3.1 planetlab3.cs.columbia.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Generally, it is currently found mainly in Eastern Europe and Africa, with some cases gaining media coverage; Anneliese Michel is perhaps the most recent of these.
Anneliese Michel (September 21, 1952 - June 30, 1976) was a German college student who died during an exorcism.
The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005 movie) was inspired by the Anneliese Michel case.
en.wikipedia.org.cob-web.org:8888 /wiki/Exorcism   (3930 words)

  
 The Exorcism of Emily Rose - Anneliese Michel
Inspired by true events, the film stars Laura Linney as the lawyer who takes on the task of defending the priest (Tom Wilkinson) who performed the controversial exorcism.
Based on the true life experience of Anneliese Michel; In 1968 she began to suffer severe shaking, and was diagnosed with "Grand Mal" epilepsy, (or "psychotic epilepsy").
From here on, her life in turmoil, and the doctors doing all they could medically in their power to help, she then turns to the church in hopes of being exorcised of her 'demonic possession.'
www.wintersteel.com /Emily_Rose.html   (347 words)

  
 Commentary, September 15, 2005 Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster, It’s Back, Choose Sponsors More Carefully, ...
Because of the strength of the fits, and the severity of the depression that followed, Anneliese was admitted for treatment at the local hospital.
Soon after the attacks began, Anneliese adopted the conviction that she was “possessed,” an easy delusion to slip into because of her religious background.
A church commission later declared that Anneliese Michel had not been possessed, but superstition carried the day; her corpse was exhumed – eleven and a half years after her burial – to confirm that it had decayed as would have been expected if she’d not been possessed.
www.randi.org /jr/200509/091605church.html   (7317 words)

  
 Cuyamungue Institute
The German courts found her parents and the priests who attended her guilty of negligent homicide.
The courts concluded that Anneliese dies because she had been subjected to extensive and severe Exorcism rites, rather than continuing the medications she had been given for epileptic seizures.
The paradigm that guided the court's decision was a medical/ psychological one that views reality as a uniform phenomenon, and digressions from that reality as manifestations of pathology.
www.ritualbodypostures.com /bookstore.html   (1259 words)

  
 Indiana Paranormal Investigations
Here are three links that contain pretty much the same information, I'm not sure of their source but it must be the same.
You can also check your local library for a copy, although they are scarce, at this website: WorldCat.
The title of the book in German is Anneliese Michel und ihre Dämonen.
indianaparanormal.com /exorcism.html   (1585 words)

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