Hans Schindler, authornames H.S. Bellamy and Hans Schindler Bellamy, was an English professor in Vienna and an author on pseudoarchaeology. His books investigate the work of Austrian cosmologistHanns Hörbiger and German selenographerPhilipp Fauth and the now-defunct Cosmic Ice Theory. Hans Schindler was an English teacher at the Folk High School in the Vienna district of Margareten. Between 1930 and 1938 he published several English textbook as well as two booklet on English folksongs and on the history of the English language. As Jews and social-democrats he and his wife Rosie were fierce opponents of the Nazi-party. After the Anschluss of 1938 both fled to Britain, where he became a BBC-surveillor of German radio broadcasts. In 1946 he returned to Vienna and continued his work for the Folk High Schools. He died in 1982 and was buried in Kfar Menahem, where his son lived; his wife then also settled in Israel, where she died in 2015 at the age of 102. In 1936 Schindler's his first book on the Cosmic Ice Theory was published under the pen-name H.S. Bellamy by the London Publisher Faber & Faber Ltd. The book describes Hörbiger's theory in detail, as well as its application to world myths. In 1945 he published a study on Book of Genesis; his subsequent books develop the World Ice Theory in light of other Bible books, the Atlantis myth, and the Tiwanacuarchaeological site in Bolivia. The books he wrote with Peter Allen were awarde by the Sociedad Arqueológica de Bolivia in 1958. In 1971 he finished a book by the deceased right-wing author Rudolf Elmayer von VestenbruggEingriffe aus den Kosmos. In 1975 Schindler delivered a lecture at the 2nd World Congress of the Ancient Astronaut Society in Zürich.
The Atlantis Myth. Faber & Faber: London, 1948. 8o.
Life History of our Earth. Based on the geological application of Hoerbiger's Theory. Faber & Faber: London, 1951
The Calendar of Tiahuanaco. A disquisition on the time measuring system of the oldest civilization in the world. Faber & Faber: London, 1956, with Peter Allan
The Great Idol of Tiahuanaco. An interpretation in the light of the Hoerbiger theory of satellites of the glyphs carved on its surface. Faber & Faber: London, 1959, with Peter Allan