Édouard Riou's Comet Strike Devastates Medieval Town — Jules Verne Era
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Édouard Riou's Comet Strike Devastates Medieval Town — Jules Verne Era

This dramatic engraving eerily predicted the Tunguska-style impact event concept decades before 1908, though it frames the disaster in medieval rather than scientific terms. A blinding radiant explosion tears through the sky above a cobblestoned European street, sending debris raining down while panicked crowds, fallen horses, and scattered bodies fill the foreground in chaotic devastation. The Gothic church spire and Flemish-style architecture ground the catastrophe in Old World terror, making cosmic destruction feel biblical rather than astrophysical.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Édouard Riou
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 7/10

This is proto-disaster science fiction at its most visceral — a cosmic catastrophe rendered with Victorian melodrama and crowd-panic spectacle. It anticipates the apocalyptic disaster subgenre that would later dominate pulp magazines, emphasizing helpless human chaos against an indifferent cosmic force.

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