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Vampire
Vampire
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A black and white painting of a man lying on a table, while a woman is kneeling over him.
The Vampire, by Philip Burne-Jones, 1897

A vampire is a mythical creature that subsists by feeding on the vital essence (generally in the form of blood) of the living. In European folklore, vampires are undead humanoid creatures that often visited loved ones and caused mischief or deaths in the neighbourhoods which they inhabited while they were alive. They wore shrouds and were often described as bloated and of ruddy or dark countenance, markedly different from today's gaunt, pale vampire which dates from the early 19th century.

Vampiric entities have been recorded in cultures around the world, but the term vampire was first popularized in Western Europe following reports of an 18th-century mass hysteria drawing on a pre-existing folk belief in Southeastern and Eastern Europe. This delusion led, in certain cases, not only to individuals being accused of vampirism, but also to the corpses of such suspected vampires being pierced with stakes.[1] Local variants in Southeastern Europe were also known by different names, such as shtriga in Albania, vrykolakas in Greece and strigoi in Romania, cognate with Italian strega, meaning 'witch'.

In modern times, the vampire is generally held to be a fictitious entity, although belief in similar vampiric creatures (such as the chupacabra) still persists in some cultures. Early folk belief in vampires has sometimes been ascribed to the ignorance of the body's process of decomposition after death and how people in pre-industrial societies tried to rationalize this, creating the figure of the vampire to explain the mysteries of death. Porphyria was linked with legends of vampirism in 1985 and received much media exposure, but has since been largely discredited.[2]

The charismatic and sophisticated vampire of modern fiction was born in 1819 with the publication of "The Vampyre" by the English writer John Polidori; the story was highly successful and arguably the most influential vampire work of the early 19th century. Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula is remembered as the quintessential vampire novel and provided the basis of the modern vampire legend, even though it was published after fellow Irish author Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's 1872 novel Carmilla. The success of this book spawned a distinctive vampire genre, still popular in the 21st century, with books, films, television shows, and video games. The vampire has since become a dominant figure in the horror genre.

Etymology and word distribution

[edit]

The exact etymology is unclear.[3][4] The term "vampire" finds its earliest records in English, Latin and French, and references to vampirism were found in Russia, Poland and North Macedonia.[5] The English term was derived (possibly via French vampyre) from the German Vampir, in turn derived in the early 18th century from the Serbian вампир (vampir).[6][7][8] Despite this being a popular explanation, it may be noted that a pagan worship of upyri was already attested in Old Russian in the 11–13th century.[9][10] Some claim an origin from Lithuanian.[11][12] Oxford and others[13] maintain a Turkish origin (from Turkish uber, meaning "witch"[13]), which passed to English via Hungarian and French derivation.[14][15] It is, however, almost universally accepted that the modern word "Vampire" is derived from the Old Slavic languages[13] form "онпыр (onpyr)", with the addition of the "v" sound in front of the large nasal vowel (on), characteristic of Old Bulgarian.[16][17] Parallels are found in virtually all Slavic and Turkic languages: Bulgarian and Macedonian вампир (vampir), Turkish: Ubır, Obur, Obır, Tatar language: Убыр (Ubır), Chuvash language: Вупăр (Vupăr), Bosnian: вампир (vampir), Croatian vampir, Czech and Slovak upír, Polish wąpierz, and (perhaps East Slavic-influenced) upiór, Ukrainian упир (upyr), Russian упырь (upyr'), Belarusian упыр (upyr), from Old East Slavic упирь (upir') (many of these languages have also borrowed forms such as "vampir/wampir" subsequently from the West; these are distinct from the original local words for the creature). In Albanian the words lu(v)gat and dhampir are used; the latter seems to be derived from the Gheg Albanian words dham 'tooth' and pir 'to drink'.[18][4] The origin of the modern word Vampire (Upiór means Hortdan, Vampire or witch in Turkic and Slavic myths.) comes from the term Ubir-Upiór, the origin of the word Ubir or Upiór is based on the regions around the Volga (Itil) River and Pontic steppes. Upiór myth is through the migrations of the Kipchak-Cuman people to the Eurasian steppes allegedly spread. The Bulgarian format is впир (vpir, other names: onpyr, vopir, vpir, upir, upierz).[16][17]

Czech linguist Václav Machek proposes Slovak verb vrepiť sa 'stick to, thrust into', or its hypothetical anagram vperiť sa (in Czech, the archaic verb vpeřit means 'to thrust violently') as an etymological background, and thus translates upír as 'someone who thrusts, bites'.[19] The term was introduced to German readers by the Polish Jesuit priest Gabriel Rzączyński in 1721.[13]

The word vampire (as vampyre) first appeared in English in 1732, in news reports about vampire "epidemics" in eastern Europe.[20][a] After Austria gained control of northern Serbia and Oltenia with the Treaty of Passarowitz in 1718, officials noted the local practice of exhuming bodies and "killing vampires".[22] These reports, prepared between 1725 and 1732, received widespread publicity.[22][23]

Folk beliefs

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The notion of vampirism has existed for millennia. Cultures such as the Mesopotamians, Hebrews, Ancient Greeks, Manipuri and Romans had tales of demons and spirits which are considered precursors to modern vampires. Despite the occurrence of vampiric creatures in these ancient civilizations, the folklore for the entity known today as the vampire originates almost exclusively from early 18th-century southeastern Europe,[24] when verbal traditions of many ethnic groups of the region were recorded and published. In most cases, vampires are revenants of evil beings, suicide victims, or witches, but they can also be created by a malevolent spirit possessing a corpse or by being bitten by a vampire. Belief in such legends became so pervasive that in some areas it caused mass hysteria and even public executions of people believed to be vampires.[25]

Description and common attributes

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A painting of a woman with red hair.
Vampire (1895) by Edvard Munch

It is difficult to make a single, definitive description of the folkloric vampire, though there are several elements common to many European legends. Vampires were usually reported as bloated in appearance, and ruddy, purplish, or dark in colour; these characteristics were often attributed to the recent drinking of blood, which was often seen seeping from the mouth and nose when one was seen in its shroud or coffin, and its left eye was often open.[26] It would be clad in the linen shroud it was buried in, and its teeth, hair, and nails may have grown somewhat, though in general fangs were not a feature.[27] Chewing sounds were reported emanating from graves.[28]

Creating vampires

[edit]
An image of a woman kissing a man with wings.
Illustration of a vampire from Max Ernst's Une Semaine de Bonté (1934)

The causes of vampiric generation were many and varied in original folklore. In Slavic and Chinese traditions, any corpse that was jumped over by an animal, particularly a dog or a cat, was feared to become one of the undead.[29] A body with a wound that had not been treated with boiling water was also at risk. In Russian folklore, vampires were said to have once been witches or people who had rebelled against the Russian Orthodox Church while they were alive.[30]

In Albanian folklore, the dhampir is the hybrid child of the karkanxholl (a lycanthropic creature with an iron mail shirt) or the lugat (a water-dwelling ghost or monster). The dhampir sprung of a karkanxholl has the unique ability to discern the karkanxholl; from this derives the expression the dhampir knows the lugat. The lugat cannot be seen, he can only be killed by the dhampir, who themself is usually the son of a lugat. In different regions, animals can be revenants as lugats; also, living people during their sleep. Dhampiraj is also an Albanian surname.[31]

Prevention

[edit]

Cultural practices often arose that were intended to prevent a recently deceased loved one from turning into an undead revenant. Burying a corpse upside-down was widespread, as was placing earthly objects, such as scythes or sickles,[32] near the grave to satisfy any demons entering the body or to appease the dead so that it would not wish to arise from its coffin. This method resembles the ancient Greek practice of placing an obolus in the corpse's mouth to pay the toll to cross the River Styx in the underworld. The coin may have also been intended to ward off any evil spirits from entering the body, and this may have influenced later vampire folklore. This tradition persisted in modern Greek folklore about the vrykolakas, in which a wax cross and piece of pottery with the inscription "Jesus Christ conquers" were placed on the corpse to prevent the body from becoming a vampire.[33]

Other methods commonly practised in Europe included severing the tendons at the knees or placing poppy seeds, millet, or sand on the ground at the grave site of a presumed vampire; this was intended to keep the vampire occupied all night by counting the fallen grains,[34][35] indicating an association of vampires with arithmomania. Similar Chinese narratives state that if a vampiric being came across a sack of rice, it would have to count every grain; this is a theme encountered in myths from the Indian subcontinent, as well as in South American tales of witches and other sorts of evil or mischievous spirits or beings.[36]

Identifying vampires

[edit]

Many rituals were used to identify a vampire. One method of finding a vampire's grave involved leading a virgin boy through a graveyard or church grounds on a virgin stallion—the horse would supposedly balk at the grave in question.[30] Generally a black horse was required, though in Albania it should be white.[37] Holes appearing in the earth over a grave were taken as a sign of vampirism.[38]

Corpses thought to be vampires were generally described as having a healthier appearance than expected, plump and showing little or no signs of decomposition.[39] In some cases, when suspected graves were opened, villagers even described the corpse as having fresh blood from a victim all over its face.[40] Evidence that a vampire was active in a given locality included death of cattle, sheep, relatives or neighbours. Folkloric vampires could also make their presence felt by engaging in minor poltergeist-styled activity, such as hurling stones on roofs or moving household objects,[41] and pressing on people in their sleep.[42]

Protection

[edit]
Garlic, Bibles, crucifixes, rosaries, holy water, and mirrors have all been seen in various folkloric traditions as means of warding against or identifying vampires.[43][44]

Apotropaics—items able to ward off revenants—are common in vampire folklore. Garlic is a common example;[45] a branch of wild rose and hawthorn are sometimes associated with causing harm to vampires, and in Europe, mustard seeds would be sprinkled on the roof of a house to keep them away.[46] Other apotropaics include sacred items, such as crucifix, rosary, or holy water. Some folklore also states that vampires are unable to walk on consecrated ground, such as that of churches or temples, or cross running water.[44]

Although not traditionally regarded as an apotropaic, mirrors have been used to ward off vampires when placed, facing outwards, on a door (in some cultures, vampires do not have a reflection and sometimes do not cast a shadow, perhaps as a manifestation of the vampire's lack of a soul or their weakness to silver).[47] This attribute is not universal (the Greek vrykolakas/tympanios was capable of both reflection and shadow), but was used by Bram Stoker in Dracula and has remained popular with subsequent authors and filmmakers.[48]

Some traditions also hold that a vampire cannot enter a house unless invited by the owner; after the first invitation they can come and go as they please.[47] Though folkloric vampires were believed to be more active at night, they were not generally considered vulnerable to sunlight.[48]

Reports in 1693 and 1694 concerning citings of vampires in Poland and Russia claimed that when a vampire's grave was recognized, eating bread baked with its blood mixed into the flour,[49] or simply drinking it, granted the possibility of protection. Other stories (primarily the Arnold Paole case) claimed the eating of dirt from the vampire's grave would have the same effect.[50]

Methods of destruction

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See caption
A runestone with an inscription to keep the deceased in its grave[51]

Methods of destroying suspected vampires varied, with staking the most commonly cited method, particularly in South Slavic cultures.[52] Ash was the preferred wood in Russia and the Baltic states,[53][page needed] or hawthorn in Serbia,[54] with a record of oak in Silesia.[55][56] Aspen was also used for stakes, as it was believed that Christ's cross was made from aspen (aspen branches on the graves of purported vampires were also believed to prevent their risings at night).[57] Potential vampires were most often staked through the heart, though the mouth was targeted in Russia and northern Germany[58][59][page needed] and the stomach in north-eastern Serbia.[60] Piercing the skin of the chest was a way of "deflating" the bloated vampire. This is similar to a practice of "anti-vampire burial": burying sharp objects, such as sickles, with the corpse, so that they may penetrate the skin if the body bloats sufficiently while transforming into a revenant.[61]

Decapitation was the preferred method in German and western Slavic areas, with the head buried between the feet, behind the buttocks or away from the body.[52] This act was seen as a way of hastening the departure of the soul, which in some cultures was said to linger in the corpse. The vampire's head, body, or clothes could also be spiked and pinned to the earth to prevent rising.[62]

See caption
800-year-old skeleton found in Bulgaria stabbed through the chest with an iron rod[63]

Romani people drove steel or iron needles into a corpse's heart and placed bits of steel in the mouth, over the eyes, ears and between the fingers at the time of burial. They also placed hawthorn in the corpse's sock or drove a hawthorn stake through the legs. In a 16th-century burial near Venice, a brick forced into the mouth of a female corpse has been interpreted as a vampire-slaying ritual by the archaeologists who discovered it in 2006.[64] In Bulgaria, over 100 skeletons with metal objects, such as plough bits, embedded in the torso have been discovered.[63]

Further measures included pouring boiling water over the grave or complete incineration of the body. In Southeastern Europe, a vampire could also be killed by being shot or drowned, by repeating the funeral service, by sprinkling holy water on the body, or by exorcism. In Romania, garlic could be placed in the mouth, and as recently as the 19th century, the precaution of shooting a bullet through the coffin was taken. For resistant cases, the body was dismembered and the pieces burned, mixed with water, and administered to family members as a cure. In Saxon regions of Germany, a lemon was placed in the mouth of suspected vampires.[65]

Ancient beliefs

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A painting of a naked woman with a snake wrapped around her.
Lilith, 1887 by John Collier. Stories of Lilith depict her as a demon drinking blood.

Tales of supernatural beings consuming the blood or flesh of the living have been found in nearly every culture around the world for many centuries.[66] The term vampire did not exist in ancient times. Blood drinking and similar activities were attributed to demons or spirits who would eat flesh and drink blood; even the devil was considered synonymous with the vampire.[67] Almost every culture associates blood drinking with some kind of revenant or demon, or in some cases a deity. In India tales of vetālas, ghoulish beings that inhabit corpses, have been compiled in the Baitāl Pacīsī; a prominent story in the Kathāsaritsāgara tells of King Vikramāditya and his nightly quests to capture an elusive one.[68] Piśāca, the returned spirits of evil-doers or those who died insane, also bear vampiric attributes.[69]

The Persians were one of the first civilizations to have tales of blood-drinking demons: creatures attempting to drink blood from men were depicted on excavated pottery shards.[70] Ancient Babylonia and Assyria had tales of the mythical Lilitu,[71] synonymous with and giving rise to Lilith (Hebrew לילית) and her daughters the Lilu from Hebrew demonology. Lilitu was considered a demon and was often depicted as subsisting on the blood of babies,[71] and estries, female shapeshifting, blood-drinking demons, were said to roam the night among the population, seeking victims. According to Sefer Hasidim, estries were creatures created in the twilight hours before God rested. An injured estrie could be healed by eating bread and salt given to her by her attacker.[72]

Greco-Roman mythology described the Empusae,[73] the Lamia,[74] the Mormo[75] and the striges. Over time the first two terms became general words to describe witches and demons respectively. Empusa was the daughter of the goddess Hecate and was described as a demonic, bronze-footed creature. She feasted on blood by transforming into a young woman and seduced men as they slept before drinking their blood.[73] The Lamia preyed on young children in their beds at night, sucking their blood, as did the gelloudes or Gello.[74] Like the Lamia, the striges feasted on children, but also preyed on adults. They were described as having the bodies of crows or birds in general, and were later incorporated into Roman mythology as strix, a kind of nocturnal bird that fed on human flesh and blood.[76]

In Turkic mythology, an ubır is a vampiric creature characterized by various regional depictions. According to legends, individuals heavily steeped in sin and practitioners of black magic transform into ubırs upon their death, taking on a bestial form within their graves. Ubırs possess the ability to shape-shift, assuming the forms of both humans and various animals. Furthermore, they can seize the soul of a living being and exert control over its body. Someone inhabited by a vampire constantly experiences hunger, becoming increasingly aggressive when unable to find sustenance, ultimately resorting to drinking human blood.[77]

Medieval and later European folklore

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See caption
Lithograph showing townsfolk burning the exhumed skeleton of an alleged vampire

Many myths surrounding vampires originated during the medieval period. With the arrival of Christianity in Greece, and other parts of Europe, the vampire "began to take on decidedly Christian characteristics."[78] As various regions of the continent converted to Christianity, the vampire was viewed as "a dead person who retained a semblance of life and could leave its grave-much in the same way that Jesus had risen after His death and burial and appeared before His followers."[78] In the Middle Ages, the Christian Churches reinterpreted vampires from their previous folk existence into minions of Satan, and used an allegory to communicate a doctrine to Christians: "Just as a vampire takes a sinner's very spirit into itself by drinking his blood, so also can a righteous Christian by drinking Christ's blood take the divine spirit into himself."[79][80] The interpretation of vampires under the Christian Churches established connotations that are still associated in the vampire genre today.[81] For example, the "ability of the cross to hurt and ward off vampires is distinctly due to its Christian association."[82][83]

The 12th-century British historians and chroniclers Walter Map and William of Newburgh recorded accounts of revenants,[25][84] though records in English legends of vampiric beings after this date are scant.[85] The Old Norse draugr is another medieval example of an undead creature with similarities to vampires.[86] Vampiric beings were rarely written about in Jewish literature; the 16th-century rabbi David ben Solomon ibn Abi Zimra (Radbaz) wrote of an uncharitable old woman whose body was unguarded and unburied for three days after she died and rose as a vampiric entity, killing hundreds of people. He linked this event to the lack of a shmirah (guarding) after death as the corpse could be a vessel for evil spirits.[87]

In 1645, the Greek librarian of the Vatican, Leo Allatius, produced the first methodological description of the Balkan beliefs in vampires (Greek: vrykolakas) in his work De Graecorum hodie quorundam opinationibus ("On certain modern opinions among the Greeks").[88] Vampires properly originating in folklore were widely reported from Eastern Europe in the late 17th and 18th centuries. These tales formed the basis of the vampire legend that later entered Germany and England, where they were subsequently embellished and popularized.[89] An early recording of the time came from the region of Istria in modern Croatia, in 1672; Local reports described a panic among the villagers inspired by the belief that Jure Grando had become a vampire after dying in 1656, drinking blood from victims and sexually harassing his widow. The village leader ordered a stake to be driven through his heart. Later, his corpse was also beheaded.[90]

Première page du Tractat von dem Kauen und Schmatzen der Todten in Gräbern (1734), ouvrage de vampirologie de Michael Ranft
Title page of treatise on the chewing and smacking of the dead in graves (1734), a book on vampirology by Michael Ranft

From 1679, Philippe Rohr devotes an essay to the dead who chew their shrouds in their graves, a subject resumed by Otto in 1732, and then by Michael Ranft in 1734. The subject was based on the observation that when digging up graves, it was discovered that some corpses had at some point either devoured the interior fabric of their coffin or their own limbs.[91] Ranft described in his treatise of a tradition in some parts of Germany, that to prevent the dead from masticating they placed a mound of dirt under their chin in the coffin, placed a piece of money and a stone in the mouth, or tied a handkerchief tightly around the throat.[92] In 1732 an anonymous writer writing as "the doctor Weimar" discusses the non-putrefaction of these creatures, from a theological point of view.[93] In 1733, Johann Christoph Harenberg wrote a general treatise on vampirism and the Marquis d'Argens cites local cases. Theologians and clergymen also address the topic.[91]

Some theological disputes arose. The non-decay of vampires' bodies could recall the incorruption of the bodies of the saints of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches. Indeed, vampires were traditionally considered highly problematic within Christianity, as their apparent immortal existence ran against the Christian belief that all true believers may look forward to an eternal existence with body and soul as they were resurrected, but only at the end of time when Jesus returns to judge the living and the dead. Those who are resurrected as immortal before this are thus in no way part of the divine plan of salvation. The imperfect state of the vampire body and how they, in spite of their immortal nature, still needed to feed of the blood of the living, further reflected the problematic aspect of the vampires. Contrary to how the incorruptible saints foreshadowed the immortality promised all true Christians at the end of time, the immortality of the undead vampires was thus not a sign of salvation, but of perdition.[94] The unholy dimension of vampirism may also be reflected in how, in parts of Russia, the very word heretic, eretik, was synonymous with a vampire. Whoever denied God or his commandments became an eretik after his death, the improperly immortal figure that wandered the night in search of people to feed on.[95] A paragraph on vampires was included in the second edition (1749) of De servorum Dei beatificatione et sanctorum canonizatione, On the beatification of the servants of God and on canonization of the blessed, written by Prospero Lambertini (Pope Benedict XIV).[96] In his opinion, while the incorruption of the bodies of saints was the effect of a divine intervention, all the phenomena attributed to vampires were purely natural or the fruit of "imagination, terror and fear". In other words, vampires did not exist.[97]

18th-century vampire controversy

[edit]
Dom Augustine Calmet (1750)

In the early 18th century, despite the decline of many popular folkloric beliefs during the Age of Enlightenment, there was a dramatic increase in the popular belief in vampires, resulting in a mass hysteria throughout much of Europe.[25] The panic began with an outbreak of alleged vampire attacks in East Prussia in 1721 and in the Habsburg monarchy from 1725 to 1734, which spread to other localities. The first infamous vampire case involved the corpses of Petar Blagojević from Serbia. Blagojević was reported to have died at the age of 62, but allegedly returned after his death asking his son for food. When the son refused, he was found dead the following day. Blagojević supposedly returned and attacked some neighbours who died from loss of blood.[89]

In the second case, Miloš Čečar, an ex-soldier-turned-farmer who allegedly was attacked by a vampire years before, died while haying. After his death, people began to die in the surrounding area; it was widely believed that Miloš had returned to prey on the neighbours.[98][99]

The Blagojević and Čečar incidents were well-documented. Government officials examined the bodies, wrote case reports, and published books throughout Europe.[99] The problem was exacerbated by rural epidemics of so-called vampire attacks, undoubtedly caused by the higher amount of superstition that was present in village communities, with locals digging up bodies and in some cases, staking them.[100] Even government officials engaged in the hunting and staking of vampires.[89]

The hysteria, commonly referred to as the "vampire controversy,"[101] continued for a generation. At least sixteen contemporary treatises discussed the theological and philosophical implications of the vampire epidemic.[102] Dom Augustine Calmet, a French theologian and scholar, published a comprehensive treatise in 1751 titled Treatise on the Apparitions of Spirits and on Vampires or Revenants which investigated and analysed the evidence for vampirism.[100][b] Numerous readers, including both Voltaire (critical) and numerous demonologists (supportive), interpreted the treatise as claiming that vampires existed.[100][c]

The controversy in Austria ceased when Empress Maria Theresa sent her personal physician, Gerard van Swieten, to investigate the claims of vampiric entities. Van Swieten concluded that vampires did not exist and the Empress passed laws prohibiting the opening of graves and the desecration of bodies, thus ending the vampire epidemic. Other European countries followed suit. Despite this condemnation, the vampire lived on in artistic works and in local folklore.[100]

Non-European beliefs

[edit]

Beings having many of the attributes of European vampires appear in the folklore of Africa, Asia, North and South America, and India. Classified as vampires, all share the thirst for blood.[105]

Africa

[edit]

Various regions of Africa have folktales featuring beings with vampiric abilities: in West Africa the Ashanti people tell of the iron-toothed and tree-dwelling asanbosam,[106] and the Ewe people of the adze, which can take the form of a firefly and hunts children.[107] The eastern Cape region has the impundulu, which can take the form of a large taloned bird and can summon thunder and lightning, and the Betsileo people of Madagascar tell of the ramanga, an outlaw or living vampire who drinks the blood and eats the nail clippings of nobles.[108] In colonial East Africa, rumors circulated to the effect that employees of the state such as firemen and nurses were vampires, known in Swahili as wazimamoto.[109]

Americas

[edit]

The Rougarou is an example of how a vampire belief can result from a combination of beliefs, here a mixture of French and African Vodu or voodoo. The term Rougarou possibly comes from the French loup-garou (meaning "werewolf") and is common in the culture of Mauritius. The stories of the Rougarou are widespread through the Caribbean Islands and Louisiana in the United States.[110] Similar female monsters are the Soucouyant of Trinidad, and the Tunda and Patasola of Colombian folklore, while the Mapuche of southern Chile have the bloodsucking snake known as the Peuchen.[111] Aloe vera hung backwards behind or near a door was thought to ward off vampiric beings in South American folklore.[36] Aztec mythology described tales of the Cihuateteo, skull-faced spirits of those who died in childbirth who stole children and entered into sexual liaisons with the living, driving them mad.[30]

During the late 18th and 19th centuries the belief in vampires was widespread in parts of New England, particularly in Rhode Island and eastern Connecticut. There are many documented cases of families disinterring loved ones and removing their hearts in the belief that the deceased was a vampire who was responsible for sickness and death in the family, although the term "vampire" was never used to describe the dead. The deadly disease tuberculosis, or "consumption" as it was known at the time, was believed to be caused by nightly visitations on the part of a dead family member who had died of consumption themselves.[112] The most famous, and most recently recorded, case of suspected vampirism is that of nineteen-year-old Mercy Brown, who died in Exeter, Rhode Island, in 1892. Her father, assisted by the family physician, removed her from her tomb two months after her death, cut out her heart and burned it to ashes.[113]

Sarah Roberts (1872–1913) was an Englishwoman who died and was buried in Pisco, Peru. After her death, a legend evolved that she was a vampire and bride of Dracula. On June 9, 1993, the 80th anniversary of her death, locals in Pisco feared she would come back to life and take her revenge.[114]

Asia

[edit]

Vampires have appeared in Japanese cinema since the late 1950s; the folklore behind it is western in origin.[115] The Nukekubi is a being whose head and neck detach from its body to fly about seeking human prey at night.[116] Legends of female vampiric beings who can detach parts of their upper body also occur in the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia. There are two main vampiric creatures in the Philippines: the Tagalog Mandurugo ("blood-sucker") and the Visayan Manananggal ("self-segmenter"). The mandurugo is a variety of the aswang that takes the form of an attractive girl by day, and develops wings and a long, hollow, threadlike tongue by night. The tongue is used to suck up blood from a sleeping victim.[117] The manananggal is described as being an older, beautiful woman capable of severing its upper torso in order to fly into the night with huge batlike wings and prey on unsuspecting, sleeping pregnant women in their homes. They use an elongated proboscis-like tongue to suck fetuses from these pregnant women. They also prefer to eat entrails (specifically the heart and the liver) and the phlegm of sick people.[117]

The Malaysian Penanggalan is a woman who obtained her beauty through the active use of black magic or other unnatural means, and is most commonly described in local folklore to be dark or demonic in nature. She is able to detach her fanged head which flies around in the night looking for blood, typically from pregnant women.[118] Malaysians hung jeruju (thistles) around the doors and windows of houses, hoping the Penanggalan would not enter for fear of catching its intestines on the thorns.[119] The Leyak is a similar being from Balinese folklore of Indonesia.[120] A Kuntilanak or Matianak in Indonesia,[121] or Pontianak or Langsuir in Malaysia,[122] is a woman who died during childbirth and became undead, seeking revenge and terrorising villages. She appeared as an attractive woman with long black hair that covered a hole in the back of her neck, with which she sucked the blood of children. Filling the hole with her hair would drive her off. Corpses had their mouths filled with glass beads, eggs under each armpit, and needles in their palms to prevent them from becoming langsuir. This description would also fit the Sundel Bolongs.[123]

See caption
A stilt house typical of the Tai Dam ethnic minority of Vietnam, whose communities were said to be terrorized by the blood-sucking ma cà rồng

In Vietnam, the word used to translate Western vampires, "ma cà rồng", originally referred to a type of demon that haunts modern-day Phú Thọ Province, within the communities of the Tai Dam ethnic minority. The word was first mentioned in the chronicles of 18th-century Confucian scholar Lê Quý Đôn,[124] who spoke of a creature that lives among humans, but stuffs its toes into its nostrils at night and flies by its ears into houses with pregnant women to suck their blood. Having fed on these women, the ma cà rồng then returns to its house and cleans itself by dipping its toes into barrels of sappanwood water. This allows the ma cà rồng to live undetected among humans during the day, before heading out to attack again by night.[125]

Jiangshi, sometimes called "Chinese vampires" by Westerners, are reanimated corpses that hop around, killing living creatures to absorb life essence () from their victims. They are said to be created when a person's soul (魄 ) fails to leave the deceased's body.[126] Jiangshi are usually represented as mindless creatures with no independent thought.[127] This monster has greenish-white furry skin, perhaps derived from fungus or mould growing on corpses.[128] Jiangshi legends have inspired a genre of jiangshi films and literature in Hong Kong and East Asia. Films like Encounters of the Spooky Kind and Mr. Vampire were released during the jiangshi cinematic boom of the 1980s and 1990s.[129][130]

Modern beliefs

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In modern fiction, the vampire tends to be depicted as a suave, charismatic villain.[27] Vampire hunting societies still exist, but they are largely formed for social reasons.[25] Allegations of vampire attacks swept through Malawi during late 2002 and early 2003, with mobs stoning one person to death and attacking at least four others, including Governor Eric Chiwaya, based on the belief that the government was colluding with vampires.[131] Fears and violence recurred in late 2017, with 6 people accused of being vampires killed.[132]

A woman showing teeth with fangs.
A vampire costume

In early 1970, local press spread rumours that a vampire haunted Highgate Cemetery in London. Amateur vampire hunters flocked in large numbers to the cemetery. Several books have been written about the case, notably by Sean Manchester, a local man who was among the first to suggest the existence of the "Highgate Vampire" and who later claimed to have exorcised and destroyed a whole nest of vampires in the area.[133] In January 2005, rumours circulated that an attacker had bitten a number of people in Birmingham, England, fuelling concerns about a vampire roaming the streets. Local police stated that no such crime had been reported and that the case appears to be an urban legend.[134]

The chupacabra ("goat-sucker") of Puerto Rico and Mexico is said to be a creature that feeds upon the flesh or drinks the blood of domesticated animals, leading some to consider it a kind of vampire. The "chupacabra hysteria" was frequently associated with deep economic and political crises, particularly during the mid-1990s.[135]

In Europe, where much of the vampire folklore originates, the vampire is usually considered a fictitious being; many communities may have embraced the revenant for economic purposes. In some cases, especially in small localities, beliefs are still rampant and sightings or claims of vampire attacks occur frequently. In Romania during February 2004, several relatives of Toma Petre feared that he had become a vampire. They dug up his corpse, tore out his heart, burned it, and mixed the ashes with water in order to drink it.[136]

Origins of vampire beliefs

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Commentators have offered many theories for the origins of vampire beliefs and related mass hysteria. Everything ranging from premature burial to the early ignorance of the body's decomposition cycle after death has been cited as the cause for the belief in vampires.[137]

Pathology

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Decomposition

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Author Paul Barber stated that belief in vampires resulted from people of pre-industrial societies attempting to explain the natural, but to them inexplicable, process of death and decomposition.[137] People sometimes suspected vampirism when a cadaver did not look as they thought a normal corpse should when disinterred. Rates of decomposition vary depending on temperature and soil composition, and many of the signs are little known. This has led vampire hunters to mistakenly conclude that a dead body had not decomposed at all or to interpret signs of decomposition as signs of continued life.[138]

Corpses swell as gases from decomposition accumulate in the torso and the increased pressure forces blood to ooze from the nose and mouth. This causes the body to look "plump", "well-fed", and "ruddy"—changes that are all the more striking if the person was pale or thin in life. In the Arnold Paole case, an old woman's exhumed corpse was judged by her neighbours to look more plump and healthy than she had ever looked in life.[139] The exuding blood gave the impression that the corpse had recently been engaging in vampiric activity.[40] Darkening of the skin is also caused by decomposition.[140] The staking of a swollen, decomposing body could cause the body to bleed and force the accumulated gases to escape the body. This could produce a groan-like sound when the gases moved past the vocal cords, or a sound reminiscent of flatulence when they passed through the anus. The official reporting on the Petar Blagojevich case speaks of "other wild signs which I pass by out of high respect".[141] After death, the skin and gums lose fluids and contract, exposing the roots of the hair, nails, and teeth, even teeth that were concealed in the jaw. This can produce the illusion that the hair, nails, and teeth have grown. At a certain stage, the nails fall off and the skin peels away, as reported in the Blagojevich case—the dermis and nail beds emerging underneath were interpreted as "new skin" and "new nails".[141]

Premature burial

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Vampire legends may have also been influenced by individuals being buried alive because of shortcomings in the medical knowledge of the time. In some cases in which people reported sounds emanating from a specific coffin, it was later dug up and fingernail marks were discovered on the inside from the victim trying to escape. In other cases the person would hit their heads, noses or faces and it would appear that they had been "feeding".[142] A problem with this theory is the question of how people presumably buried alive managed to stay alive for any extended period without food, water or fresh air. An alternate explanation for noise is the bubbling of escaping gases from natural decomposition of bodies.[143] Another likely cause of disordered tombs is grave robbery.[144]

Disease

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Folkloric vampirism has been associated with clusters of deaths from unidentifiable or mysterious illnesses, usually within the same family or the same small community.[112] The epidemic allusion is obvious in the classical cases of Petar Blagojevich and Arnold Paole, and even more so in the case of Mercy Brown and in the vampire beliefs of New England generally, where a specific disease, tuberculosis, was associated with outbreaks of vampirism. As with the pneumonic form of bubonic plague, it was associated with breakdown of lung tissue which would cause blood to appear at the lips.[145]

In 1985, biochemist David Dolphin proposed a link between the rare blood disorder porphyria and vampire folklore. Noting that the condition is treated by intravenous haem, he suggested that the consumption of large amounts of blood may result in haem being transported somehow across the stomach wall and into the bloodstream. Thus vampires were merely sufferers of porphyria seeking to replace haem and alleviate their symptoms.[146]

The theory has been rebuffed medically as suggestions that porphyria sufferers crave the haem in human blood, or that the consumption of blood might ease the symptoms of porphyria, are based on a misunderstanding of the disease. Furthermore, Dolphin was noted to have confused fictional (bloodsucking) vampires with those of folklore, many of whom were not noted to drink blood.[147] Similarly, a parallel is made between sensitivity to sunlight by sufferers, yet this was associated with fictional and not folkloric vampires. In any case, Dolphin did not go on to publish his work more widely.[148] Despite being dismissed by experts, the link gained media attention[149] and entered popular modern folklore.[150]

Juan Gómez-Alonso, a neurologist, examined the possible link of rabies with vampire folklore. The susceptibility to garlic and light could be due to hypersensitivity, which is a symptom of rabies. It can also affect portions of the brain that could lead to disturbance of normal sleep patterns (thus becoming nocturnal) and hypersexuality. Legend once said a man was not rabid if he could look at his own reflection (an allusion to the legend that vampires have no reflection). Wolves and bats, which are often associated with vampires, can be carriers of rabies. The disease can also lead to a drive to bite others and to a bloody frothing at the mouth.[151][152]

Psychodynamic theories

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In his 1931 treatise On the Nightmare, Welsh psychoanalyst Ernest Jones asserted that vampires are symbolic of several unconscious drives and defence mechanisms. Emotions such as love, guilt, and hate fuel the idea of the return of the dead to the grave. Desiring a reunion with loved ones, mourners may project the idea that the recently dead must in return yearn the same. From this arises the belief that folkloric vampires and revenants visit relatives, particularly their spouses, first.[153]

In cases where there was unconscious guilt associated with the relationship, the wish for reunion may be subverted by anxiety. This may lead to repression, which Sigmund Freud had linked with the development of morbid dread.[154] Jones surmised in this case the original wish of a (sexual) reunion may be drastically changed: desire is replaced by fear; love is replaced by sadism, and the object or loved one is replaced by an unknown entity. The sexual aspect may or may not be present.[155] Some modern critics have proposed a simpler theory: People identify with immortal vampires because, by so doing, they overcome, or at least temporarily escape from, their fear of dying.[156]

Jones linked the innate sexuality of bloodsucking with cannibalism, with a folkloric connection with incubus-like behaviour. He added that when more normal aspects of sexuality are repressed, regressed forms may be expressed, in particular sadism; he felt that oral sadism is integral in vampiric behaviour.[157]

Political interpretations

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See caption
Political cartoon from 1885, depicting the Irish National League as the "Irish Vampire" preying on a sleeping woman

The reinvention of the vampire myth in the modern era is not without political overtones.[158] The aristocratic Count Dracula, alone in his castle apart from a few demented retainers, appearing only at night to feed on his peasantry, is symbolic of the parasitic ancien régime. In his entry for "Vampires" in the Dictionnaire philosophique (1764), Voltaire notices how the mid-18th century coincided with the decline of the folkloric belief in the existence of vampires but that now "there were stock-jobbers, brokers, and men of business, who sucked the blood of the people in broad daylight; but they were not dead, though corrupted. These true suckers lived not in cemeteries, but in very agreeable palaces".[159]

Karl Marx defined capital as "dead labour which, vampire-like, lives only by sucking living labour, and lives the more, the more labour it sucks".[d] Werner Herzog, in his Nosferatu the Vampyre, gives this political interpretation an extra ironic twist when protagonist Jonathan Harker, a middle-class solicitor, becomes the next vampire; in this way the capitalist bourgeois becomes the next parasitic class.[160]

Psychopathology

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A number of murderers have performed seemingly vampiric rituals upon their victims. Serial killers Peter Kürten and Richard Trenton Chase were both called "vampires" in the tabloids after they were discovered drinking the blood of the people they murdered. In 1932, an unsolved murder case in Stockholm, Sweden, was nicknamed the "Vampire murder", because of the circumstances of the victim's death.[161] The late-16th-century Hungarian countess and mass murderer Elizabeth Báthory became infamous in later centuries' works, which depicted her bathing in her victims' blood to retain beauty or youth.[162]

Vampire bats

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See caption
A vampire bat in Peru

Although many cultures have stories about them, vampire bats have only recently become an integral part of the traditional vampire lore. Vampire bats were integrated into vampire folklore after they were discovered on the South American mainland in the 16th century.[163] There are no vampire bats in Europe, but bats and owls have long been associated with the supernatural and omens, mainly because of their nocturnal habits.[163][164]

The three species of vampire bats are all endemic to Latin America, and there is no evidence to suggest that they had any Old World relatives within human memory. It is therefore impossible that the folkloric vampire represents a distorted presentation or memory of the vampire bat. The bats were named after the folkloric vampire rather than vice versa; the Oxford English Dictionary records their folkloric use in English from 1734 and the zoological not until 1774. The danger of rabies infection aside, the vampire bat's bite is usually not harmful to a person, but the bat has been known to actively feed on humans and large prey such as cattle and often leaves the trademark, two-prong bite mark on its victim's skin.[163]

The literary Dracula transforms into a bat several times in the novel, and vampire bats themselves are mentioned twice in it. The 1927 stage production of Dracula followed the novel in having Dracula turn into a bat, as did the film, where Béla Lugosi would transform into a bat.[163] The bat transformation scene was used again by Lon Chaney Jr. in 1943's Son of Dracula.[165]

In modern culture

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The vampire is now a fixture in popular fiction. Such fiction began with 18th-century poetry and continued with 19th-century short stories, the first and most influential of which was John Polidori's "The Vampyre" (1819), featuring the vampire Lord Ruthven.[166] Lord Ruthven's exploits were further explored in a series of vampire plays in which he was the antihero. The vampire theme continued in penny dreadful serial publications such as Varney the Vampire (1847) and culminated in the pre-eminent vampire novel in history: Dracula by Bram Stoker, published in 1897.[167]

Over time, some attributes now regarded as integral became incorporated into the vampire's profile: fangs and vulnerability to sunlight appeared over the course of the 19th century, with Varney the Vampire and Count Dracula both bearing protruding teeth,[168] and Count Orlok of Murnau's Nosferatu (1922) fearing daylight.[169] The cloak appeared in stage productions of the 1920s, with a high collar introduced by playwright Hamilton Deane to help Dracula 'vanish' on stage.[170] Lord Ruthven and Varney were able to be healed by moonlight, although no account of this is known in traditional folklore.[171] Implied though not often explicitly documented in folklore, immortality is one attribute which features heavily in vampire films and literature. Much is made of the price of eternal life, namely the incessant need for the blood of former equals.[172]

Literature

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See caption
Cover from one of the original serialized editions of Varney the Vampire

The vampire or revenant first appeared in poems such as The Vampire (1748) by Heinrich August Ossenfelder, Lenore (1773) by Gottfried August Bürger, Die Braut von Corinth (The Bride of Corinth) (1797) by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Robert Southey's Thalaba the Destroyer (1801), John Stagg's "The Vampyre" (1810), Percy Bysshe Shelley's "The Spectral Horseman" (1810) ("Nor a yelling vampire reeking with gore") and "Ballad" in St. Irvyne (1811) about a reanimated corpse, Sister Rosa, Samuel Taylor Coleridge's unfinished Christabel and Lord Byron's The Giaour.[173]

Byron was also credited with the first prose fiction piece concerned with vampires: "The Vampyre" (1819). This was in reality authored by Byron's personal physician, John Polidori, who adapted an enigmatic fragmentary tale of his illustrious patient, "Fragment of a Novel" (1819), also known as "The Burial: A Fragment".[25][167] Byron's own dominating personality, mediated by his lover Lady Caroline Lamb in her unflattering roman-a-clef Glenarvon (a Gothic fantasia based on Byron's wild life), was used as a model for Polidori's undead protagonist Lord Ruthven. The Vampyre was highly successful and the most influential vampire work of the early 19th century.[174]

Varney the Vampire was a popular mid-Victorian era gothic horror story by James Malcolm Rymer and Thomas Peckett Prest, which first appeared from 1845 to 1847 in a series of pamphlets generally referred to as penny dreadfuls because of their low price and gruesome contents.[166] Published in book form in 1847, the story runs to 868 double-columned pages. It has a distinctly suspenseful style, using vivid imagery to describe the horrifying exploits of Varney.[171] Another important addition to the genre was Sheridan Le Fanu's lesbian vampire story Carmilla (1871). Like Varney before her, the vampiress Carmilla is portrayed in a somewhat sympathetic light as the compulsion of her condition is highlighted.[175]

A person is lying in a bed while another person is reaching on the bed towards them.
Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu, illustrated by D. H. Friston, 1872

No effort to depict vampires in popular fiction was as influential or as definitive as Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897).[176] Its portrayal of vampirism as a disease of contagious demonic possession, with its undertones of sex, blood and death, struck a chord in Victorian Europe where tuberculosis and syphilis were common. The vampiric traits described in Stoker's work merged with and dominated folkloric tradition, eventually evolving into the modern fictional vampire.[166]

Drawing on past works such as The Vampyre and Carmilla, Stoker began to research his new book in the late 19th century, reading works such as The Land Beyond the Forest (1888) by Emily Gerard and other books about Transylvania and vampires. In London, a colleague mentioned to him the story of Vlad Țepeș, the "real-life Dracula", and Stoker immediately incorporated this story into his book. The first chapter of the book was omitted when it was published in 1897, but it was released in 1914 as "Dracula's Guest".[177]

The latter part of the 20th century saw the rise of multi-volume vampire epics as well as a renewed interest in the subject in books. The first of these was Gothic romance writer Marilyn Ross's Barnabas Collins series (1966–71), loosely based on the contemporary American TV series Dark Shadows. It also set the trend for seeing vampires as poetic tragic heroes rather than as the more traditional embodiment of evil. This formula was followed in novelist Anne Rice's highly popular Vampire Chronicles (1976–2003),[178] and Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series (2005–2008).[179] In the 2006 Peter Watts's novel Blindsight, vampires are depicted as a subspecies of homo sapiens that predated on humanity until the dawn of civilization. The various supernatural characteristics and abilities traditionally assigned to vampires by folklore are justified on naturalistic and scientific basis.[180]

Film and television

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Count Dracula, a vampire who emigrates from Transylvania to England and preys upon the blood of living victims, poster of Dracula (1931)

Considered one of the preeminent figures of the classic horror film, the vampire has proven to be a rich subject for the film, television, and gaming industries. Dracula is a major character in more films than any other but Sherlock Holmes, and many early films were either based on the novel Dracula or closely derived from it. These included the 1922 silent German Expressionist horror film Nosferatu, directed by F. W. Murnau and featuring the first film portrayal of Dracula—although names and characters were intended to mimic Dracula's.[181] Universal's Dracula (1931), starring Béla Lugosi as the Count and directed by Tod Browning, was the first talking film to portray Dracula. Both Lugosi's performance and the film overall were influential in the blossoming horror film genre, now able to use sound and special effects much more efficiently than in the Silent Film Era. The influence of this 1931 film lasted throughout the rest of the 20th century and up through the present day. Stephen King, Francis Ford Coppola, Hammer Horror, and Philip Saville each have at one time or another derived inspiration from this film directly either through staging or even through directly quoting the film, particularly how Stoker's line "Listen to them. Children of the night. What music they make!" is delivered by Lugosi; for example Coppola paid homage to this moment with Gary Oldman in his interpretation of the tale in 1992 and King has credited this film as an inspiration for his character Kurt Barlow repeatedly in interviews.[182] It is for these reasons that the film was selected by the US Library of Congress to be in the National Film Registry in 2000.[183]

The legend of the vampire continued through the film industry when Dracula was reincarnated in the pertinent Hammer Horror series of films, starring Christopher Lee as the Count. The successful 1958 Dracula starring Lee was followed by seven sequels. Lee returned as Dracula in all but two of these and became well known in the role.[184] By the 1970s, vampires in films had diversified with works such as Count Yorga, Vampire (1970), an African Count in 1972's Blacula, the BBC's Count Dracula featuring French actor Louis Jourdan as Dracula and Frank Finlay as Abraham Van Helsing, and a Nosferatu-like vampire in 1979's Salem's Lot, and a remake of Nosferatu itself, titled Nosferatu the Vampyre with Klaus Kinski the same year. Several films featured the characterization of a female, often lesbian, vampire such as Hammer Horror's The Vampire Lovers (1970), based on Carmilla, though the plotlines still revolved around a central evil vampire character.[184]

The Gothic soap opera Dark Shadows, on American television from 1966 to 1971, featured the vampire character Barnabas Collins, portrayed by Jonathan Frid, which proved partly responsible for making the series one of the most popular of its type, amassing a total of 1,225 episodes in its nearly five-year run. The pilot for the later 1972 television series Kolchak: The Night Stalker revolved around a reporter hunting a vampire on the Las Vegas Strip. Later films showed more diversity in plotline, with some focusing on the vampire-hunter, such as Blade in the Marvel Comics' Blade films and the film Buffy the Vampire Slayer.[166] Buffy, released in 1992, foreshadowed a vampiric presence on television, with its adaptation to a series of the same name and its spin-off Angel. Others showed the vampire as a protagonist, such as 1983's The Hunger, 1994's Interview with the Vampire and its indirect sequel Queen of the Damned, and the 2007 series Moonlight. The 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula by Francis Ford Coppola became the then-highest grossing vampire film ever.[185]

This increase of interest in vampiric plotlines led to the vampire being depicted in films such as Underworld and Van Helsing, the Russian Night Watch and a TV miniseries remake of Salem's Lot, both from 2004. The series Blood Ties premiered on Lifetime Television in 2007, featuring a character portrayed as Henry Fitzroy, an illegitimate-son-of-Henry-VIII-of-England-turned-vampire, in modern-day Toronto, with a female former Toronto detective in the starring role. A 2008 series from HBO, entitled True Blood, gives a Southern Gothic take on the vampire theme, while taking on the discussion on what the actual existence of vampires would mean to for instance equality before the law and religious beliefs.[179] In 2008 Being Human premiered in Britain and featured a vampire that shared a flat with a werewolf and a ghost.[186][187] The continuing popularity of the vampire theme has been ascribed to a combination of two factors: the representation of sexuality and the perennial dread of mortality.[188]

Video games

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The role-playing game Vampire: The Masquerade has been influential upon modern vampire fiction and elements of its terminology, such as embrace and sire, appear in contemporary fiction.[166] Popular video games about vampires include Castlevania, which is an extension of the original Bram Stoker novel Dracula, and Legacy of Kain.[189] The role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons features vampires.[190]

Modern vampire subcultures

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Vampire lifestyle is a term for a contemporary subculture of people, largely within the Goth subculture, who consume the blood of others as a pastime; drawing from the rich recent history of popular culture related to cult symbolism, horror films, the fiction of Anne Rice, and the styles of Victorian England.[191] Active vampirism within the vampire subculture includes both blood-related vampirism, commonly referred to as sanguine vampirism, and psychic vampirism, or supposed feeding from pranic energy.[192][193]

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A vampire is a folkloric undead entity originating in Eastern European traditions, conceptualized as a reanimated corpse that returns from the grave to torment the living by draining their blood or vital energy, thereby sustaining its own semblance of existence. The term "vampire" derives from Slavic roots such as Old Church Slavonic ǫpirь or related forms like Serbian vampir, entering Western European languages in the early 18th century through reports of Balkan exhumations where bodies appeared undecayed and blood-engorged, misinterpreted as evidence of postmortem activity. These beliefs, documented as early as 1047 in Old Russian texts, surged during the 1720s–1730s in Serbia and surrounding regions amid plagues and wars, prompting mass grave-digging and ritual stake-piercings to neutralize suspected revenants, phenomena later explained by natural postmortem processes like purge fluid accumulation and bacterial bloating rather than supernatural causation. Empirical attributions link vampire lore to observable pathologies, including tuberculosis outbreaks causing familial "wasting" deaths resembling blood-sucking contagion, rabies-induced aggression and hydrophobia mimicking aversion to holy water, and porphyria's photosensitivity, gingival recession exposing teeth, and reddish excretions evoking bloodlust. Defining traits in folklore include nocturnal predation, shapeshifting into animals, and vulnerabilities to staking, decapitation, or sunlight exposure—though the latter is largely a 19th-century literary innovation—reflecting causal fears of premature burial and disease transmission in pre-modern societies lacking forensic pathology. While evolving into romanticized predators in Gothic fiction, the vampire's core persists as a cultural artifact of human confrontation with mortality, contagion, and bodily decay, unsubstantiated by empirical evidence of actual undead entities.

Etymology

Linguistic origins and regional variations

The English word vampire first appeared in print in 1732, derived from the German Vampyr, which itself stemmed from the Serbian vampir as reported in Austrian military dispatches from the during the 1726–1732 vampire hysteria involving cases like Peter Plogojowitz and . This Serbian term, documented in South Slavic dialects by the early 18th century, reflects a phonetic variant of the Proto-Slavic root ǫpyrь or upirь, attested in Old Church Slavonic sources from the 11th century as opiri, potentially linked to verbs meaning "to drink" or "to fly" in nocturnal predation contexts, though etymological derivations remain contested among Slavic linguists. Alternative hypotheses trace it to Turkic ubyr ("witch" or "bloodsucker") via medieval interactions between Slavic and nomadic Turkic groups, evidenced by phonetic parallels in Tatar and Chuvash dialects where ubyr denotes malevolent spirits. Linguistic variations across Slavic regions highlight dialectal shifts: in East Slavic languages like Russian, the form is upyr' (упырь), appearing in folklore texts from the 16th century to describe revenants; Polish uses upiór, evolving from medieval obyr with connotations of restless dead; while Czech and Slovak employ upír, closer to the South Slavic vampir. In Bulgarian, vǎpir coexists with upir, reflecting Ottoman-era influences, but native folklore prefers terms like lampir for blood-drinking corpses. Romanian folklore, despite popular associations with vampirism, lacks a direct cognate for vampir—using strigoi (from Latin striga, "screech owl" or witch) or moroi (nightmare spirit)—with vampir adopted post-19th century via French literary influence rather than indigenous roots. Non-Slavic European variants diverge further, such as Greek vrykolakas (from Bulgarian vǎrkolak, werewolf-vampire hybrid) or Albanian lugat (blood demon), underscoring how the core vampir/upir cluster remained confined to Slavic etymological domains until Western dissemination. These regional forms often overlapped semantically with werewolves (vukodlak in Serbian), indicating fluid boundaries in pre-modern folk taxonomies.

Core Attributes in Folklore

Physical traits, behaviors, and sustenance

In Eastern European folklore, particularly from 18th-century Serbian and Hungarian accounts, vampires manifested physically as reanimated corpses that defied expected , often appearing ruddy-faced, bloated, and engorged with fresh, upon exhumation, with oozing from the , , and eyes. Such descriptions, as in the 1725 case of in , included bodies that remained flexible and lifelike months or years after burial, sometimes accompanied by elongated nails or hair growth interpreted as signs of undeath. Reports compiled by scholars like Augustin Calmet in 1746 detailed similar traits, such as intact skin and coagulated in veins, attributing these to vampiric activity rather than natural postmortem processes like purge fluids or formation. Vampiric behaviors centered on nocturnal excursions from the to harass the living, prioritizing close kin or spouses by entering homes undetected, often through cracks or keyholes, and inflicting harm that mimicked wasting diseases like . These entities were said to choke or suffocate victims during sleep, leaving puncture marks or bruises rather than dramatic neck bites, and their presence correlated with outbreaks of illness in villages, as villagers linked sudden deaths to the vampire's influence. In some Slavic variants, vampires exhibited animalistic traits like howling or shape-shifting into animals such as wolves, though core accounts emphasized humanoid revenants returning repeatedly until staked or burned. Sustenance derived primarily from human , imbibed to sustain the vampire's animated state and propagate further undeath among victims, with positing that extraction caused , , and eventual transformation in the drained. Historical testimonies, including those from the in around 1726–1732, described vampires gorging until bodies swelled, regurgitating excess , which explained observed corpse bloating as of recent feeding. While was central, some accounts noted consumption of other vital essences, such as breath or life force, leading to without visible wounds, reflecting pre-modern causal attributions of transmission to predation rather than pathogens. These traits, rooted in empirical observations of anomalous burials amid plagues, underscore how encoded naturalistic explanations for decay anomalies and patterns absent rigorous .

Origins, identification, and lifecycle

In Eastern European folklore, particularly Slavic traditions dating to at least the 11th century, vampires—known as upir in Old Russian texts from 1047—were believed to originate as revenants rising from graves due to improper burial rites, suicide, excommunication from the church, or being born under omens such as the seventh child of the same sex or with a caul over the face. These origins reflected fears of unresolved death taboos and contagious misfortune, with the undead returning to drain life from kin or villagers, often amid plagues like the 18th-century outbreaks that fueled mass exhumations in Serbia and Bulgaria. Malevolent spirits were also thought to possess corpses, animating them as blood-feeding entities, distinct from mere ghosts by their corporeal predation. Identification relied on post-mortem examinations during suspected outbreaks, where villagers exhumed bodies showing undecomposed flesh, ruddy cheeks, elongated nails or hair growth, or fluid—mistaken for fresh blood—oozing from orifices, as documented in 18th-century Habsburg reports from the Balkans. Behavioral signs included sudden deaths in a locality clustering around a recent grave, livestock wasting away, or crops failing, prompting accusations against the deceased as the culprit; in some accounts, the suspect's shadow fleeing or aversion to daylight confirmed suspicions. These traits stemmed from incomplete decomposition processes, exacerbated by shallow graves or adipocere formation in wet soils, which folklore interpreted as supernatural vitality rather than natural pathology. The lifecycle of a vampire in entailed nocturnal excursions from the grave to sustain itself by sucking blood from sleeping victims, preferentially relatives, leading to , weakness, and eventual death in those attacked, thereby propagating more unless interrupted by staking or . Unlike living beings, vampires lacked a natural span, persisting indefinitely in a liminal state of hunger-driven animation until physical destruction severed their tie to the corpse, with no beyond cursing victims into similar rises; some variants described swelling post-feeding, mimicking bloating from purge fluids in decay. This cycle embodied causal fears of death's incompleteness, where unappeased spirits perpetuated communal harm until ritually neutralized, as in documented cases like the 1725 Serbian vampire Peter Plogojowitz, whose exhumation revealed "fresh" blood after causing nine deaths.

Protective measures and destruction methods

In Eastern European folklore, particularly among Slavic communities, garlic was employed as a repellent against vampires, with its pungent odor believed to mask the scent of blood and deter the undead from entering homes or approaching victims. This practice drew from broader medieval European associations of garlic with warding off evil spirits and disease, as its antimicrobial properties, including allicin, were empirically linked to combating infections mistaken for vampiric activity. Households often strung garlic bulbs over doors and windows, a custom documented in accounts from Romania and Serbia during the 18th-century vampire panics. Religious artifacts served as primary protective talismans in Christian-influenced regions of the and , where crucifixes, , and Bibles were thought to invoke divine power to repel vampires, rooted in the belief that the undead were soulless and thus vulnerable to symbols of faith. , blessed by clergy, was sprinkled on thresholds or carried in vials, with historical records from 1725 Serbian cases, such as that of Peter Plogojowitz, noting its use to prevent nocturnal visitations. Other measures included scattering poppy seeds or millet outside graves, exploiting the notion that vampires compulsively counted them until dawn, delaying their attacks—a pragmatic deterrent tied to observed behaviors of obsessive revenants in exhumed bodies. Destruction methods focused on preventing reanimation rather than combating active vampires, typically involving exhumation followed by mutilation of the corpse to release trapped spirits or immobilize the body. In southern Slavic traditions from the medieval period onward, driving a wooden stake—often hawthorn, ash, or wild rose—through the heart or abdomen pinned the vampire to its coffin, a practice evidenced in 1732 Austrian military reports on Serbian vampire hunts, where stakes were hammered to emit gushing fluids interpreted as proof of undeath. This was not depicted as instantaneous death but as a binding ritual, with the stake later burned alongside the body to ensure finality. Supplementary techniques included , severing the head and placing it between the feet or under the armpit to thwart reassembly, followed by of the remains, as recorded in 18th-century Bulgarian and Greek Orthodox responses to alleged outbreaks. In some Venetian and Polish variants, bricks or stones were forced into the mouth of suspects during to block consumption, a preventive measure from 16th-17th century anti-vampire rites aimed at neutralizing potential threats before they arose. These methods reflected causal attributions to or decomposition anomalies, with empirical observations of bloating and at the mouth reinforcing the need for thorough over mere exposure to , which held no destructive role in pre-19th-century accounts.

Historical Evolution of Beliefs

Pre-modern and ancient precedents

Beliefs in blood-drinking or life-force draining entities predate the European vampire folklore associated with undead revenants, appearing in ancient Mesopotamian mythology as demons like the lilitu, female spirits that targeted newborns and pregnant women by draining their vitality. These entities, akin to the Ekimmu—vengeful ghosts of the improperly buried who spread sickness and seized the living—exhibited nocturnal predation and possession, laying groundwork for later vampiric sustenance motifs without the reanimation of corpses. In Sumerian and Assyrian texts dating to around 2000 BCE, such demons were warded off with incantations and amulets, reflecting early causal links between improper burial rites and restless predation. Hebrew traditions extended these motifs through , derived from Mesopotamian lilitu, portrayed as a nocturnal demoness who seduced men to exhaustion and drank the blood of infants, as referenced in Isaiah 34:14 around 700 BCE. Similarly, Ornias, a shape-shifting demon in the pseudepigraphal (1st-3rd century CE, drawing on older lore), drained life force by sucking blood from extremities, controllable only by divine intervention. These figures emphasized seduction, blood consumption, and vulnerability of the young or isolated, paralleling vampiric traits while rooted in demonic rather than ontology. In mythology, entities like the empusae—daughters of the goddess —manifested as nocturnal seductresses who drained blood and life force from men through illusionary beauty, often shifting to reveal monstrous forms like flaming hair and bronze legs. , cursed by to devour her own children, evolved into a shape-shifting child-eater who sucked blood from victims, embodying eternal hunger and vengeance as described in works like ' fragments (5th century BCE). The , death-spirits active on battlefields, lapped blood from wounds, linking predation to mortality and disease. Greek revenant tales involved corporeal seeking intercourse or harm, prefiguring reanimation without full vampiric . Roman lore featured the striges, owl-like witches or bird-demons that transformed at night to suck blood from infants via beak-like mouths, as detailed in Ovid's Fasti (1st century CE), where they disemboweled and fed on young flesh and blood. Protected against by rituals involving hawthorn, fish, and sacred offerings to goddess Carna, striges combined avian predation with human malice, influencing later European blood-sucking folklore. These ancient precedents, spanning Mesopotamia to Rome from circa 2000 BCE to 1st century CE, provided archetypal elements—bloodlust, nocturnality, and anti-life essence—of vampirism, though distinct from the Slavic undead model that crystallized later.

Medieval to early modern European accounts

In medieval Europe, accounts of revenants—corporeal returning from graves to torment the living—appear in ecclesiastical chronicles, predating the modern vampire archetype but sharing traits like nocturnal visitations and corporeal decay resistance. , an Augustinian canon writing around 1190 in his Historia rerum Anglicarum, documented multiple cases in , describing these entities as "monstrous visions" that physically manifested, oppressed households, and spread pestilence until exhumed and desecrated. One narrative recounts a man who, after death, haunted his wife nightly, crushing her until a priest-led exhumation revealed an undecayed, flushed corpse; staking and beheading it ended the disturbances. Newburgh attributed such returns to divine judgment on sinners, emphasizing moral causation over supernatural inevitability, and noted their commonality as warnings against impiety. Similar reports in Walter Map's (c. 1180–1193) and Gerald of Wales' Cambriae (1191) describe Welsh and English revenants causing localized deaths, often resolved by grave disturbance, reflecting folk anxieties over improper burials amid plagues like the 1347–1351 , which amplified fears of contagious . Archaeological evidence corroborates these beliefs through deviant burials: in 6th–11th-century Anglo-Saxon sites like , , skeletons show skull mutilations, stones rammed into mouths, or stakes through bodies—practices aimed at immobilizing potential revenants, as interpreted from contemporary texts linking such measures to preventing reanimation. These interventions, documented in ecclesiastical records, targeted outsiders or criminals, suggesting causal attributions to social deviance rather than universal risk, with chroniclers like Newburgh framing them as empirical responses to observed phenomena like bloating or blood from orifices, later misinterpreted as vampiric feeding. By the (c. 1500–1800), Slavic regions under Ottoman and Habsburg influence saw evolved identifying upir or vampir—blood-draining arising from suicides, excommunications, or violent deaths—who bloated, grew ruddy post-mortem, and preyed on kin, prompting mass exhumations. The earliest named case, Alilović of Kringa, (d. 1656), reportedly returned post-burial to choke villagers; exhumed in 1672, his undecayed body was staked and decapitated amid exorcisms, as recorded in local Dominican friar accounts. In Habsburg , 1720s epidemics fueled panics: Peter Plogojowitz (d. 1725) allegedly killed nine neighbors via throat-biting apparitions, his corpse found fresh with blood at the mouth; officials beheaded and burned it on May 7, 1725, halting deaths. (d. 1726), a former soldier, similarly rose, infecting others; a 1732 military commission report detailed 17 exhumed bodies showing liquid blood and chew-marks, leading to burnings, with symptoms empirically tied to gases and rabies-like diseases misread as . These incidents, amplified by refugee migrations post-Ottoman wars, reached via diplomatic dispatches, sparking theological debate; Lutheran pastor Michael Ranft's 1734 Tractat skeptically analyzed "chewing corpses" (Kauen und Schmatzen) as natural , rejecting vampirism while cataloging Serbian testimonies. Catholic scholar Dom Augustin Calmet's 1746 Dissertations sur les apparitions compiled cases like Paole's, advocating empirical verification over credulity, though affirming possible demonic agency; his work, drawing from Habsburg reports, influenced Enlightenment scrutiny but highlighted biases in clerical sources favoring explanations amid rural illiteracy and disease fears. Such accounts underscore causal realism: arose from observable burial anomalies (e.g., preservation) and epidemics, with authorities intervening to restore order, not confirm ontology.

18th- and 19th-century panics and investigations

In the early , a series of reported vampire outbreaks occurred in rural Serbian villages under Habsburg administration, prompting official investigations amid fears of revenants causing disease and death. One of the earliest documented cases involved , a peasant from Kisilova who died on December 20, 1724; following his burial, nine villagers reportedly died after claiming nocturnal attacks by him, exhibiting symptoms like exhaustion and blood at the mouth. Local officials exhumed his body on July 7, 1725, finding it undecayed with fresh blood in the veins and mouth despite eight weeks in the grave, leading to the staking of the corpse and cessation of further deaths in the village. A more widespread panic followed in 1726–1732 near , centered on , a former Ottoman soldier who died after a fall from a hay wagon; Paole had previously claimed to have killed a vampire during and smeared himself with its as protection. After his death, local animals consuming from his tainted fields sickened, and 16 villagers died with signs attributed to vampirism, including bite marks and expulsion. Exhumed in 1727, Paole's body appeared fresh, with fluid ; it was staked and burned, but the epidemic persisted, infecting others who became "vampires" post-mortem. In January 1732, Habsburg military surgeon Johannes Flückinger led an official inquiry, exhuming 17 bodies—including Paole's son and a named —who showed undecomposed flesh, flowing from orifices, and signs of recent feeding, such as undigested in stomachs; all were staked, decapitated, and burned per local custom. Flückinger's report, Visum et Repertum, detailed these findings and was published widely, fueling continental hysteria by attributing the phenomena to contagious undeath rather than natural causes like incomplete or burial gases. These Balkan episodes, likely exacerbated by plagues and famines misinterpreted through , prompted scholarly scrutiny in Protestant and Catholic . German theologian Michael Ranft's 1734 Tractat von dem Kauen und Schmatzen der Todten in Gräbern analyzed exhumations skeptically, arguing that sounds of chewing from graves stemmed from natural decomposition gases and burrowing animals, not hunger, and dismissed vampire reports as peasant superstitions amplified by rumor. French Benedictine Dom Augustin Calmet's 1751 Traité sur les apparitions des esprits et sur les vampires compiled over 20 Eastern European cases, including Paole's, noting bodies' apparent vitality due to soil conditions preserving flesh or formation, yet Calmet withheld endorsement of the supernatural, urging empirical caution amid theological debates on . Such works reflected Enlightenment efforts to rationalize against evidence of postmortem changes, though they inadvertently popularized vampire lore across . By the 19th century, analogous panics arose in rural New England, linked to tuberculosis outbreaks where "consumption" mimicked vampiric draining, with victims appearing flushed yet wasting away; families exhumed relatives to burn organs, believing it halted contagion. Between 1810 and 1892, at least 80 such rituals occurred in Rhode Island, Vermont, and Connecticut, often involving heart removal and cremation. The case of Mercy Lena Brown in Exeter, Rhode Island, epitomized this: after her death from tuberculosis on January 17, 1892—following her mother and sister's similar fates—her grieving father George and locals exhumed her on March 17 amid ongoing family illnesses; finding her body oddly preserved with liquid blood in the heart, they extracted and burned it, mixing the ashes into a tonic for her surviving brother. Newspaper accounts, including in the Providence Journal, publicized the event, marking it as the last major U.S. vampire incident, though driven by grief and medical ignorance rather than verified undeath, as autopsies later linked to tubercular lung fluid and adipocere.

Global Variants

African and Middle Eastern equivalents

In various African folk traditions, blood-draining entities parallel European vampire motifs through nocturnal predation and life-force consumption. Among the Akan peoples of , d'Ivoire, and , the asanbosam is depicted as a vampiric with iron hooks for feet and hands, lurking in canopies to seize passersby and extract , often leaving puncture wounds on limbs. Similarly, the of Ewe folklore in and manifests as a luminous firefly by day but shapeshifts at night into human or animal form to possess victims, particularly children, draining their and causing illness or death, with detection aided by its aversion to iron. The , another Ashanti figure, embodies a living witch who detaches its life essence to feed on and life energy from crops, , or sleeping humans, emitting a blue glow from its eyes and emitting a fetid , underscoring beliefs in as a vector for vampiric harm. ![A painting of a naked woman with a snake wrapped around her.](./assets/Lilith_JohnCollierpaintingJohn_Collier_painting Middle Eastern lore features demonological beings akin to vampires in their seductive, life-sapping assaults, rooted in ancient Mesopotamian and Near Eastern cosmologies. The lilitu, a class of female demons in Sumerian and Babylonian texts dating to the third millennium BCE, were wind spirits that infiltrated homes to seduce men during , drain vitality, and prey on infants by strangling or suckling , embodying chaotic forces countered by protective amulets. This archetype evolved into the Jewish , first referenced in Isaiah 34:14 around the 8th century BCE, portrayed in medieval Kabbalistic works like the Alphabet of (8th-10th century CE) as Adam's rebellious first wife who, after refusing subordination, consorts with demons and targets newborns to drink their , reflecting patriarchal anxieties over female autonomy and . In , the goddess , whose cult flourished from the Old Kingdom (c. 2686-2181 BCE), was invoked for her blood-thirsty rampages, quelling divine rage by slaughtering humans and lapping their until intoxicated, symbolizing both destructive fury and ritual appeasement through offerings. These entities differ from revenants by emphasizing demonic origins over reanimated corpses, yet share causal mechanisms of fear-driven explanations for unexplained deaths and blood loss in pre-modern societies lacking medical .

American indigenous and colonial lore

In the folklore of the tribes of northeastern , the skadegamutc—translated as "ghost witch" or "spirit witch"—embodies an entity formed from the corpse of an evil shaman who refuses to stay buried. This being rises nocturnally to feed on the life force of the living, using retained magical abilities to curse victims, into animals, and cause wasting illnesses akin to consumption. Protective rituals among the Wabanaki involved shamanic exorcisms or destruction of the corpse to prevent such revenants, reflecting causal attributions of to spiritual predation rather than microbial origins. Among the () people of the , the appears as a gaunt, skeletal hunter with glowing red eyes, descending from the night sky to prey on fallen warriors by consuming their entrails or vital essence. This emaciated figure, often depicted as skin-and-bones with membrane wings, parallels vampiric sustenance through bodily invasion, though emphasizing cannibalistic feasting over blood-drinking; its lore underscores warnings against in battle, with the undead state resulting from unresolved violent death. Other indigenous traditions feature analogous life-draining spirits, such as the and Wyandot flying head (daqqanoenyent), a detached, fiery-eyed cranium that devours humans whole, or the Kwakwaka'wakw bukwus, an drowned ghost that lures victims to watery graves while mimicking the living to extract vitality. These entities, while not identical to European sanguinarians, share undead persistence, nocturnal attacks, and causation of familial plagues, often linked empirically to famines, epidemics, or premature burials misinterpreted through pre-scientific lenses. European colonial settlers in transplanted vampire beliefs, associating reanimated corpses with disease clusters and unexplained exhumations as early as the 1700s in . In the Louisiana colony, the 1728 arrival of the filles à la cassette (Casket Girls)—French wards shipped to New Orleans for marriage—spawned persistent rumors of vampiric origins, claiming the young women concealed coffins of homeland soil and exhibited pale, nocturnal habits, fueling fears of infiltration amid colonial isolation and mortality rates exceeding 50% in early settlements. These tales, unsubstantiated by records but documented in 18th-century accounts, blended immigrant folklore with hardships like outbreaks, where victims' flushed-yet-wasted appearances evoked blood-theft. By the mid-18th century, colonists ritualistically opened graves during surges—killing over 900 per million annually in by 1790—to burn hearts or redistribute ashes, interpreting flushed cadavers and fluid preservation as signs of vampiric revival causing family deaths. Such practices, rooted in causal realism of observed decay anomalies rather than imported alone, persisted into the early republic, with no documented executions but multiple verified desecrations tied to empirical observations of disease patterns misattributed to revenants. Indigenous-colonial interactions rarely merged these lores, though some accounts speculated on syncretic spirits blending native revenants with settler vampires.

Asian and Oceanic undead traditions

In , the (stiff corpse) embodies an undead that moves by hopping on stiffened legs with outstretched arms, primarily absorbing the (vital energy) of the living through contact or inhalation, though some variants drain blood under later influences. These creatures originate from corpses animated due to improper burial rites, soul loss during transport, or Taoist failures, with accounts tracing to 18th-century texts like those describing plague-related resurrections in rural areas. Jiangshi exhibit aversion to sunlight, mirrors, and sticky rice, which disrupts their rigidity, and are subdued via Taoist incantations or peach wood swords piercing the crown. Indian traditions feature the , a spectral entity that possesses and animates corpses in charnel grounds, exhibiting vampiric traits through life-force extraction and shape-shifting, often depicted as knowledgeable yet malevolent in ancient tales like the (circa 11th century CE compilations of older oral lore). Unlike blood-focused vampires, vetalas disrupt funerals, possess the uncremated dead, and pose riddles to travelers, with requiring ritual or mantras to sever spirit-corpse bonds; their persistence links to unresolved deaths or curses, as in stories where they haunt kings or ascetics. Southeast Asian undead include the Malaysian , a cursed woman's detached head trailing viscera, which flies nocturnally to suck blood from pregnant women or newborns, reverting to human form by dawn after reattaching; origins stem from women practicing for beauty or dying in , with documented in 19th-century Malay manuscripts warning of vinegar baths to trap the shrunken organs. In the Philippines, the encompasses shape-shifting undead or witch-like beings that disembowel victims for viscera or blood, mimicking normal villagers by day and transforming via a retractable or flight; colonial-era Spanish records from the 16th-17th centuries describe them preying on remote communities, countered by , holy objects, or silver, reflecting fears of unexplained . Japanese yokai lore yields coastal variants like the iso onna (coast woman), undead or spectral females whose hair extends to strangle and drain blood from fishermen, rooted in Edo-period (1603-1868) tales of shipwrecked souls; similarly, the nure-onna (wet woman), a serpentine hybrid, lures victims to suck life essence, with protections including scattering rice to distract or reciting sutras. Oceanic traditions, spanning Aboriginal and Pacific islands, emphasize ancestral spirits over strictly undead vampires, though blood-sucking entities appear; the Australian yara-ma-yha-who, a diminutive red with sucker-tipped digits, drains blood from tree-perched victims before regurgitating them altered, per 19th-century ethnographic collections of oral myths, but functions as a living predator rather than . In Melanesian lore from Vanuatu's Banks Islands, the talamaur—a sorcerous projection akin to a life-draining wraith—steals vitality, documented in early 20th-century anthropological reports, yet remains tied to living shamans rather than autonomous . These reflect ecological fears like isolation and unexplained draining illnesses, with scant evidence of widespread corpse-reanimating blood-drinkers compared to Asian counterparts.

Empirical Explanations

Pathological and medical underpinnings

Scholars have proposed that arose partly from misinterpretations of symptoms associated with rare pathological conditions, where afflicted individuals exhibited , aversion to light, aggressive behavior, or apparent "blood consumption," leading pre-modern observers to attribute causes amid limited knowledge. One frequently cited condition is , a group of inherited metabolic disorders disrupting production in blood, resulting in accumulation of toxic precursors. and congenital erythropoietic porphyria cause leading to severe skin blistering and scarring upon sunlight exposure, exposing teeth in a fang-like manner, anemia-induced pallor, reddish urine or teeth from buildup, and neurological symptoms including or seizures that could manifest as erratic nocturnal behavior. Historical cases in , where vampire panics peaked in the , coincided with undiagnosed sufferers avoiding daylight and exhibiting retracted lips, fueling perceptions of blood-drinking ; however, the disorder's rarity (affecting roughly 1 in 100,000) and lack of for blood-craving—patients sometimes ingested blood or urine for symptom relief, per anecdotal reports—limit its explanatory power, as no single disease fully accounts for all vampire traits like or shape-shifting. Rabies, a viral transmitted via bites from infected animals like dogs or bats, provides a stronger causal link to vampiric and contagion motifs, with epidemics aligning temporally with 18th-century European vampire hysterias. The induces hydrophobia (fear of water mimicking aversion to ), aerophobia (sensitivity to drafts or light), , , violent spasms, and an urge to bite, often progressing to and death within days to weeks; transmission through saliva during bites parallels the of vampires spreading via neck wounds, while paralytic rabies could simulate or undeath. A 1998 analysis in argued rabies epidemics in rural areas explained clustered "vampire" incidents, as infected humans exhibited nocturnal wandering and foaming at the mouth interpreted as blood-lust. Tuberculosis (TB), known historically as consumption, contributed to familial vampire panics, particularly in 19th-century New England, where outbreaks decimated households and exhumations revealed "fresh" corpses with bloodied lungs mistaken for revenants feeding on the living. The disease causes progressive emaciation, flushed cheeks, nocturnal coughing of blood-tinged sputum (resembling victims drained by vampires), and clustered deaths within families, prompting rituals like staking or burning hearts—as in the 1892 Mercy Brown case in Rhode Island, where her exumed body showed liquid blood and undigested food, attributed to TB rather than undeath. Such beliefs persisted due to TB's high mortality (killing 25% of Europeans in the 19th century) and misunderstanding of latency, with "vampire" interventions sometimes involving consuming ashes of the deceased's heart in blood or milk, reflecting desperate folk medicine. Other deficiencies like , from niacin shortage in corn-based diets, produced the "four Ds"— (light sensitivity), , (hallucinations), and —mirroring pale, mad vampires, but its role remains marginal compared to infectious diseases. While these offer empirical bases for specific symptoms, vampire lore integrates broader cultural fears of and contagion, not reducible to pathology alone, as evidenced by inconsistencies across regions and eras.

Psychological and premature burial factors

Sleep paralysis, a condition involving temporary inability to move or speak during the transition between wakefulness and sleep, has been linked to ancient of nocturnal assailants akin to vampires, where sufferers report hallucinations of shadowy figures pressing on the chest and draining vitality. These experiences, documented across cultures, feature entities like succubi or incubi that parallel vampire predation, suggesting a neurological basis for blood-sucking myths rather than supernatural events. Psychological interpretations further posit that vampire lore served as a cultural mechanism to process and fear of , with figures symbolizing unresolved loss and the human desire for . Premature burial fears, exacerbated by conditions like —a state of with —contributed to vampire panics by prompting exhumations revealing bodies in disturbed positions or with fluid resembling blood, misinterpreted as signs of reanimation. Historical accounts from the , such as those analyzed by Michael Ranft in 1734, attributed noises like chewing or smacking to trapped individuals reviving post-interment, fueling beliefs in restless corpses rather than decomposition gases or vermin. cases, potentially psychic or neurological in origin, led to innovations like safety coffins with bells, reflecting widespread anxiety over misdiagnosed death in pre-modern medicine. These empirical factors, grounded in misperceived physiological states, explain the persistence of vampire exhumation rituals without invoking the .

Archaeological and zoological evidence

Archaeological investigations have uncovered numerous deviant burials across Europe featuring measures intended to immobilize the deceased and prevent their return as revenants, practices retrospectively linked to vampire folklore due to similarities with 18th-century accounts of staking and mutilation. These include iron stakes driven through the torso, decapitation with the head placed between the legs, sickles or scythes laid across the neck or hips to sever the body if it swelled during decomposition, bricks or stones forced into the mouth to block feeding on blood or grave soil, and padlocks on toes to hinder walking. Such rituals appear from the early medieval period through the 17th century, often coinciding with plague outbreaks or in marginal communities, reflecting folk anxieties over improper death, disease contagion, or social deviance rather than empirical encounters with supernatural entities. Specific examples illustrate regional variations: In , , a 10th-century from 2012 excavations showed an iron stake through the chest, alongside a decapitated skull nearby, interpreted as an anti-revenant precaution amid Byzantine-era beliefs. In , , a 16th-century female burial unearthed in 2009 contained a brick jammed in the mouth, evidencing an exorcism ritual against vampiric rising as described in contemporaneous texts. A 5th-century child grave in Lugnano in Teverina, , discovered in 2018, featured large stones in the mouth and between the legs, suggesting efforts to contain a perceived threat from the infant, possibly linked to or outsider status. In northern , 17th-century sites like Pień (excavated 2022) yielded a woman's with a over the and a on her toe, while a 1650 female burial included similar implements plus a triangular , both from plague contexts. Recent 2024 digs in , , revealed a medieval with analogous anti-vampire traits, underscoring persistence into the . These findings, documented through osteological analysis and , indicate widespread but localized superstitions grounded in observable postmortem changes like bloating or blood seepage, not verified activity. Zoological evidence offers no substantiation for vampires but highlights blood-feeding adaptations in certain mammals that may have indirectly influenced mythic tropes post-contact. The ( rotundus), one of three hematophagous , exclusively consumes blood from mammals like or , using heat-sensing pits, razor-sharp incisors for shallow wounds, and with anticoagulants to lap up flowing blood without immediate clotting; adults weigh 25-40 grams and roost in colonies of up to 2,000 in caves or hollow trees across , Central, and . First scientifically described in the early , these bats were named for their sanguinary habits evoking European vampire legends, though their New World distribution precludes direct inspiration for Old World predating 1492. Observations of feeding—nighttime approaches, painless bites, and subsequent host —mirror some vampire attributes, yet European myths more plausibly stem from veterinary parasites like ticks or leeches, or misattributions of predator scavenging on corpses, rather than transatlantic faunal influence. No zoological analogs exist for immortal, shape-shifting blood-drinkers, affirming vampires as cultural constructs without basis in vertebrate biology.

Representations in Culture

Literary origins and transformations

The modern literary vampire originated with John Polidori's 1819 novella The Vampyre, the first English prose work to depict the creature as an aristocratic seducer rather than a folkloric revenant. Penned during a stormy gathering at Villa Diodati near Lake Geneva in 1816 alongside Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and Mary Shelley, the story featured the vampire Lord Ruthven, a Byronic figure who ensnares and drains victims through charm and proximity. Initially published anonymously and erroneously attributed to Byron, it shifted vampire portrayals from rural peasant undead to urbane predators, influencing subsequent gothic fiction. Mid-19th-century penny dreadfuls further popularized and sensationalized the vampire, with Varney the Vampire; or, The Feast of Blood serialized weekly from 1845 to 1847 in 109 issues totaling over 666,000 words and 232 chapters. Attributed primarily to James Malcolm Rymer, the narrative followed Sir Francis Varney, a vampiric nobleman cursed from the English Civil War era, introducing explicit fangs for blood extraction and themes of remorseful monstrosity amid gothic excesses like premature burials and family curses. This sprawling, low-cost serial form democratized vampire lore, embedding physiological details and moral ambiguity into popular consciousness. Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's 1872 Gothic novella advanced the genre by centering a female vampire who forms an intimate, predatory bond with her adolescent female victim, Laura, evoking psychological dread and unspoken erotic tension through dreamlike visitations and blood-drinking disguised as kisses. Published in the collection In a Glass Darkly, it drew on Styrian while pioneering sapphic undertones in vampire , predating Bram Stoker's Dracula by 25 years and contributing motifs of aristocratic disguise and inevitable doom. Bram Stoker's 1897 Dracula consolidated these developments into the definitive vampire archetype, portraying Transylvanian as an immortal invader who travels to via ship, preys on victims like and , and wields powers including shape-shifting into bats or wolves, hypnotic influence, and , countered by stakes, , and holy symbols. Synthesizing with prior literary innovations, the novel's 27 chapters across letters, diaries, and logs emphasized technological clashing with ancient , cementing vampires as symbols of and degeneration in Western imagination. In many dark fantasy and horror-oriented fictional portrayals, vampirism features detailed mechanics that underscore its horrific and corrupting nature. Transformation commonly involves a vampire biting and draining a victim to near-death, often followed by the victim ingesting the vampire's blood or being subjected to a curse, resulting in a painful undeath accompanied by loss of humanity and intense bloodlust. Vampires typically possess superhuman strength, speed, rapid regeneration, immortality, shapeshifting into forms such as bats, wolves, or mist, hypnotic or mesmeric abilities, enhanced senses, and sometimes weather control or necromancy. Weaknesses frequently include fatal or debilitating exposure to sunlight, destruction by a wooden stake through the heart or decapitation, repulsion or harm from holy or religious symbols, garlic, silver, running water, fire, and the requirement of an invitation to enter private dwellings. These depictions emphasize the horror of the condition, the moral corruption it entails, and the grim costs of power and immortality. Twentieth-century literature transformed the vampire from Stoker's foreign threat to introspective, often sympathetic figures, reflecting existential and romantic sensibilities. Early works like ' scholarly defenses maintained monstrous traits, but Anne Rice's 1976 humanized and Lestat as tormented immortals grappling with isolation, morality, and desire, spawning a subgenre of philosophical bloodsuckers that prioritized emotional depth over horror. This evolution paralleled broader shifts in toward anti-heroes, diluting folkloric causality with psychological realism while amplifying erotic and redemptive elements.

Audiovisual media adaptations

The earliest significant vampire film adaptation appeared in the silent era with Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror (1922), directed by F.W. Murnau as an unlicensed rendition of Bram Stoker's Dracula, substituting Count Orlok for the titular count to circumvent copyright restrictions. This German Expressionist work, starring Max Schreck as the rat-like Orlok, originated the trope of vampires perishing in sunlight, a detail absent from Stoker's novel or traditional folklore. Universal Pictures' Dracula (1931), helmed by Tod Browning with Bela Lugosi in the lead role, delivered the first official cinematic take on Stoker's novel, portraying the count as a charismatic seducer rather than a grotesque monster. The film proved a box-office hit, earning approximately $421,000 in rentals domestically and catalyzing Universal's monster movie cycle amid the Great Depression's escapist demand for horror. Lugosi's hypnotic performance, delivered in his thick Hungarian accent, cemented the cape-clad aristocrat archetype despite his limited salary of $3,500 for seven weeks' work. British studio Hammer Films revitalized vampire cinema post-World War II, launching its Dracula series with (1958, released as Horror of Dracula in the U.S.), where embodied a savage, blood-dripping count opposite Peter Cushing's Van Helsing. Employing vivid , explicit fangs, and arterial gore—innovations over prior black-and-white restraint—the film grossed £170,000 in the UK alone and spawned eight sequels through 1973, grossing millions collectively while adapting Stoker's character to emphasize eroticism and violence. Television brought serialized vampire narratives with ABC's (1966–1971), a daytime that pivoted to elements upon introducing , a remorseful 18th-century vampire played by in April 1967. Frid's portrayal of the "vulnerable vampire"—cursed yet sympathetic—propelled ratings from near-cancellation to peaks of 20 million viewers, influencing gothic horror's mainstream appeal through 1,225 episodes blending vampirism with and . Contemporary adaptations often prioritize psychological depth and romance over monstrosity, as in Neil Jordan's 1994 film , adapted from Anne Rice's 1976 novel and starring as the hedonistic Lestat and as the tormented Louis, which explored eternal ennui and explored moral ambiguities in undeath. The AMC series reboot (2022–present) expands Rice's lore with heightened explicitness. Stephenie Meyer's Twilight Saga films (2008–2012), centering abstinent "vegetarian" vampires who glitter in sunlight, amassed $3.3 billion worldwide across five entries, driven by teen romance amid supernatural restraint. These shifts reflect evolving cultural emphases from predatory threats to conflicted immortals, diverging from empirical folkloric roots in disease and .

Interactive media and merchandise

Vampire-themed video games emerged in the late 1970s, with early text-based adventures such as The Count (1979) for the platform, where players navigate a castle to defeat a vampire lord. Action-oriented titles followed, including (1986), developed by , which spawned a long-running series centered on vampire hunters combating and his minions in side-scrolling gameplay. Role-playing games expanded the trope, notably Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines (2004) by , enabling players to assume vampire identities amid factional intrigue in a contemporary , with mechanics for blood management, discipline powers, and dialogue-driven quests. Later entries include Vampyr (2018) by Dontnod Entertainment, a narrative action RPG in which a 1918 physician grapples with vampiric urges, where player choices to feed or spare citizens alter district progression and endings. Survival and open-world variants like V Rising (2022) by Stunlock Studios emphasize base-building and boss fights as a customizable vampire lord in a gothic realm. Mobile apps extend interactivity, such as The Vampire Diaries Pocket Game (released around 2015), a choose-your-own-adventure title simulating battles against supernatural foes in the setting. Board and tabletop games incorporate vampires in deduction and strategy formats; One Night Ultimate Vampire (2014) by Bézier Games is a quick-play for 3-10 players, where roles like villagers and vampires activate abilities during a five-minute night phase to identify hidden threats. Vampire: The Masquerade – Chapters (2021) adapts the RPG into a solo or cooperative board game with branching narratives, investigations, and combat tied to feeding mechanics. Merchandise tied to vampire lore includes novelty items like plastic fangs, capes, and costumes, which surge in demand during Halloween, capitalizing on franchise tie-ins such as Twilight or Dracula. In addition to these commercial products, enthusiasts frequently create homemade vampire fangs using safe household materials, reflecting modern fan practices and accessibility beyond purchased items. Popular methods include selecting white press-on nails that fit the canine teeth, cutting and filing them to sharp points, and attaching them with a small amount of denture adhesive cream (such as Fixodent) by holding for 10-15 seconds; cutting a 2-inch piece of white plastic straw, folding and trimming it into pointed fangs with slits for flexibility to slide over teeth without adhesive; molding non-toxic clay into fang shapes and securing with denture adhesive; or trimming cotton balls for temporary application. Safety practices emphasize using only oral-safe adhesives like denture cream, avoiding superglue or non-dental glues to prevent tooth damage or ingestion risks, and removing fangs before eating or sleeping. Print-on-demand platforms like CafePress listed 1,380,000 vampire-themed products in 2011, spanning T-shirts, mugs, stickers, and faux tombstones, reflecting broad commercialization of the motif across apparel and home goods. Collectibles from games like Vampire: The Masquerade include licensed apparel and accessories, though official outputs remain limited compared to literary or film adaptations.

Contemporary Phenomena

Subcultural communities and lifestyles

The vampire subculture, emerging in the late 20th century amid the goth and alternative scenes, consists of individuals who adopt lifestyles inspired by vampire folklore and media portrayals, often emphasizing nocturnal aesthetics, dark fashion, and ritualistic gatherings. Participants range from casual enthusiasts who incorporate vampire themes into personal style and philosophy to more committed groups forming structured "houses" or "courts" that mimic hierarchical vampire societies from fiction. This subculture overlaps with other fringe communities, including otherkin and BDSM practitioners, but maintains distinct events like vampire balls and festivals where members engage in role-play, music, and symbolic feedings. Key organizations include the New Orleans Vampire Association (NOVA), established in 2005 as a non-profit alliance of local vampire houses to promote education and community standards, drawing on the city's historical association with vampiric lore. In New York, the Court of Lazarus, founded in 2002, operates as a metropolitan society hosting private meetings and public events for self-identified vampires. Similar groups exist internationally, such as Australia's vampire courts, which expanded from goth origins to include professionals from diverse backgrounds by the , organizing secretive gatherings focused on energy exchange rituals. Online forums, including 's Vampire Community group with thousands of members, facilitate discussions on practices and connect isolated individuals globally. Lifestyles within the vary: "lifestylers" prioritize aesthetic and philosophical immersion, such as wearing fangs, consuming rare meats, or adhering to codes of and predation metaphors, without literal consumption. A subset known as sanguinarians claims a physiological need for , typically obtaining small, consensual amounts from "donors" via cuts or cups to avoid health risks, while psi-vampires report draining pranic or emotional energy through proximity, touch, or tantric methods. Events like the annual Endless Night Vampire Festival in New Orleans, held since 1998, attract hundreds for masquerade balls, live music, and workshops on safe feeding practices, blending entertainment with subcultural bonding. These communities emphasize and in blood-related activities, though participation remains niche, with estimates of several thousand self-identified vampires worldwide as of the .

Claims of real vampirism and critical analysis

Contemporary self-identified "real vampires" assert a physiological or energetic necessity to consume blood or life force, distinguishing their experiences from fictional depictions or mere aesthetic subcultural participation. Sanguinarians report cravings for , claiming ingestion alleviates symptoms such as fatigue, headaches, and weakness, typically obtaining small quantities—often 1-2 teaspoons—from consenting donors via cuts or , with rituals emphasizing and to mitigate health risks. vampires, by contrast, describe "feeding" on ambient through proximity or touch, purportedly to maintain vitality, without physical blood consumption. Surveys within these communities, such as those compiled by anthropologist Joseph Laycock, estimate several thousand adherents alone, often integrating these practices into broader lifestyles influenced by gothic or interests. Documented clinical cases of vampirism, termed or informally Renfield's syndrome, involve rare psychiatric presentations featuring compulsive blood-drinking, sometimes linked to , , or . For instance, a 1983 study detailed three patients exhibiting periodic (blood consumption), necrophilic affinities, and identity disturbances, treated via and antipsychotics with varying success. More recent reports include a 2013 Turkish case of a man with multiple personalities and blood addiction, alongside adolescent delusions requiring intervention. These differ from subcultural claims by involving pathological compulsion rather than managed ritual, often culminating in , assaults, or legal consequences, as in forensic literature linking vampiric delusions to violent crimes. Critical examination reveals no empirical validation for or inherent vampiric ; self-reported benefits lack controlled studies, relying on anecdotal susceptible to and effects within echo-chamber communities. Physiologically, ingested provides negligible beyond trace iron and proteins, insufficient to explain purported systemic relief, while posing documented risks of bacterial , transmission, and allergic reactions—prompting community guidelines for testing donors. Psychological analyses attribute claims to psychosomatic responses, cultural priming from media saturation, or underlying conditions like pica or body dysmorphic tendencies, rather than novel biology; mainstream views organized vampirism as a lifestyle identity, not , absent distress or impairment. Sources from affected individuals warrant caution due to vested interests in validating experiences, contrasting with peer-reviewed dismissals of etiological myths like porphyria links, which fail replication in genetic or metabolic assays. Absent falsifiable evidence—such as verifiable , aversion to beyond , or measurable energy transfer—claims reduce to subjective systems, akin to other modern spiritual movements, without causal mechanisms defying known biology.

References

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