Greetings,
Vampire myths go back thousands of years and occur in almost every culture around the world. Their variety is almost endless; from red eyed monsters with green or pink hair in China to the Greek Lamia which has the upper body of a woman and the lower body of a winged serpent; from vampire foxes in Japan to a head with trailing entrails known as the Penanggalang in Malaysia.
However, the vampires we are familiar with today, although mutated by fiction and film, are largely based on Eastern European myths. The vampire myths of Europe originated in the far East, and were transported from places like China, Tibet and India with the trade caravans along the silk route to the Mediterranean. Here they spread out along the Black Sea coast to Greece, the Balkans and of course the Carpathian mountains, including Hungary and Transylvania.
Our modern concept of the vampire still retains threads, such as blood drinking, return from death, preying on humans at night, etc in common with the Eastern European myths. However many things we are familiar with; the wearing of evening clothes, capes with tall collars, turning into bats, etc are much more recent inventions.
On the other hand, many features of the old myths such as the placing of millet or poppy seeds at the gravesite in order to keep the vampire occupied all night counting seeds rather than preying on relatives, have all but disappeared from modern fiction and film.
Even among the Eastern European countries there is a large variety of vampires.
Today everyone is familiar with vampires, but in Britain very little was known of vampires prior to the 18th century. What brought the vampire to the attention of the general public? During the 18th century there was a major vampire scare in Eastern Europe. Even government officials frequently got dragged into the hunting and staking of vampires.
This controversy was directly responsible for England's current vampire myths. In fact, the word Vampire only came into English language in 1732 via an English translation of a German report of the much publicized Arnold Paole vampire staking in Serbia.
Western scholars seriously considered the existence of vampires for the first time rather than just brushing them off as superstition. It all started with an outbreak of vampire attacks in East Prussia in 1721 and in the Austro-Hungarian empire from 1725-1734.
Two famous cases involved Peter Plogojowitz and Arnold Paole. Plogojowitz died at the age of 62, but came back a couple of times after his death asking his son for food. When the son refused, he was found dead the next day. Soon Plogojowitz returned and attacked some neighbours who died from loss of blood.
In the other famous case Arnold Paole, an ex-soldier turned farmer who had been attacked by a vampire years before, died while haying. After death people began to die and it was believed by everyone that Paole had returned to prey on the neighbours.
These two incidents were extremely well documented. Government officials examined the cases and the bodies, wrote them up in reports, and books were published afterwards of the Paole case and distributed around Europe. The controversy raged for a generation. The problem was exacerbated by rural people having an epidemic of vampire attacks and digging up bodies all over the place. Many scholars said vampires didn't exist - they attributed reports to premature burial, or rabies which causes thirst.
However, Dom Augustine Calmet, a well respected French theologian and scholar, put together a carefully thought out treatise in 1746 which said vampires did exist. This had considerable influence on other scholars at the time.
Eventually, Austrian Empress Marie Theresa sent her personal physician to investigate. He said vampires didn't exist and the Empress passed laws prohibiting the opening of graves and desecration of bodies. This was the end of the vampire epidemics. But by then everyone knew about vampires and it was only a matter of time before authors would preserve and mould the vampire into something new and much more accessible to the general public.
This is just folk-lore, they could be real, but who knows, there could be one right behind you... But we will only know once we feel the numbing pain in our necks as we fall to the dark seduction of death eternal...
Kind Regards And Blessed Be
2006-08-04 21:02:12
·
answer #1
·
answered by Lord Laeto 2
·
1⤊
0⤋
yes..
an animal called vampire
but a human called Vampire? Hmm.. there was a TV show where they introduce 2 couple (vampire) lady?? and called themself as Vampire..
Unlike in the movie, they able to see with camera and eat a blood.. But they eat any clean blood not human blood...
out there.. There might be a vampire.. remember what Matrix said!!! There was an error that make system error and that system make them into strange things but able to defeat by a strange way like using cross.
2006-08-05 03:57:52
·
answer #2
·
answered by Goban Gabin 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
You are a pathetic excuse for a living organism. You are an idiot. How can you ask a question as idiotic as that? Your idiocy is mind-boggling. I want to take my keyboard and whack your head with it. You need to start asking questions that make sense. Your parents should be ASHAMED of you. You have offended me so greatly, it is indescribable. There are NO vampires. Stop making rumors about us. Oops... I mean them. There are NO Vampires, at all. Excuse me but I must retire to my coffin. Damn! I mean bed. Bed. Retire to my bed.
2006-08-05 03:09:01
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
OKAY, MAYBE THIS WILL HELP AS EVERYONE ELSE IS BEING MEAN IT SEEMS. THERE ARE MANY WAYS TO DEFINE A VAMPIRE. THERE ARE THOSE THAT DRINK OR SUCK BLOOD YES BUT MOST OF THEM DO IT AS A FAD OR SOMETHING, THERE IS A MEDICAL CONDITION CALLED VAMPIRES IN WHICH THE BODY CANNOT SUSTAIN ITSELF WITHOUT EXTRA VITAMINS AND MINERALS FOUND IN BLOOD AND LIVER HEARTS ETC. LOOK IT UP IT IS A REAL CONDITION. THERE ARE ALSO THOSE WE CALL PSYCHIC VAMPIRES WHICH ARE PEOPLE WHO ARE SO NEEDY OR EMOTIONAL THAT THEY SUCK THE ENERGY FROM YOU MANY WHOM DON'T EVEN REALIZE THAT THEY DO THAT.
2006-08-08 01:15:52
·
answer #4
·
answered by Kat 2
·
1⤊
0⤋
Yes, they do. Don't listen to the rather ignorant responses you've gotten on here regarding the issue. Check the link below.
2006-08-05 23:57:22
·
answer #5
·
answered by ravencadwell 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
The only real vampires in the world are vampire bats...and maybe leeches....yuck!
2006-08-05 03:01:18
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
No there is not u just dumb *** hell cpme lick my pussy that's the vampire 4 u nut in my mouth
2006-08-05 03:00:19
·
answer #7
·
answered by killa k 1
·
0⤊
1⤋
Do not play games, O Mortal.
2006-08-09 01:45:05
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
yes,there's one right behind YOU
2006-08-05 03:00:23
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
no
2006-08-05 03:21:38
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋