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Hoaxes: Now, now, Tom, stop vandalising Wikipedia. You're not allowed to take out references to your nastiness and stupidity.
Hoaxes: Amina
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==Hoaxes==
==Hoaxes==
* [[Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari]], nonexistent Syrian civil rights activist and the supposed author of the blog ''[[A Gay Girl In Damascus]]'', created by Tom MacMaster, an American man living in Edinburgh.
* [[Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari]], nonexistent Syrian civil rights activist and the supposed author of the blog ''[[A Gay Girl In Damascus]]'', created by an American man living in Edinburgh.
* [[William Ashbless]], a 19th-century fictitious poet and adventurer.
* [[William Ashbless]], a 19th-century fictitious poet and adventurer.
* Bilitis, nonexistent Ancient Greek poet. Supposed author of ''[[The Songs of Bilitis]]'', a collection of erotic poetry "discovered" by [[Pierre Louÿs]].
* Bilitis, nonexistent Ancient Greek poet. Supposed author of ''[[The Songs of Bilitis]]'', a collection of erotic poetry "discovered" by [[Pierre Louÿs]].

Revision as of 03:39, 6 June 2017

This article lists the fictitious people, i.e., nonexistent people, which, unlike fictional people, are those somebody has claimed to actually exist. Usually this is done as a practical joke or hoax, but sometimes fictitious people are 'created' as part of a fraud. Sometimes the line between the two categories is blurred, e.g., as in the case of Abdul Alhazred. A pseudonym may also be considered by some to be a "fictitious person", although this is not the correct definition.

Hoaxes

Pseudonyms

This list includes pseudonyms supplied with a biography suggesting the existence of a person distinct from the actual person with the pseudonym in question, often with the purpose of a hoax.

See also Category:Collective pseudonyms (many of them were not claimed as "real" people).

Arts & entertainment

Academia

Politics

Covert Operations

  • Major William Martin, R.M., a dead courier found floating off the coast of Spain possessing documents outlining future Allied strategy. The documents were misinformation planted by the Security Service on the body of Glyndwr Michael, an alcoholic tramp who had died after ingesting rat poison and who was dressed in the appropriate uniform.[1]

Sports

Unclassified

Please help in putting them into appropriate sections.

References

  1. ^ Ben Macintyre, "Operation Mincemeat", Bloomsbury, 2010, passim.