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VAMPIRE MYTHs Presentati Prese ntation: on: Prof. Mr. Mr. Maqsood Maqs ood Hasni Ha sni (P.PhD .PhD.) .)
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Contents
Awakening Vampire types Vampires: a history A Definition of the Chupacabra The Chupacabra becomes a recurring legend VAMPIRE MYTHS SLAYERS & HUNTERS SLAYERS & HUNTERS
MAY THE GROUND NOT RECEIVE THEE The Animistic Vampire in New England
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Awakening By Crimson Angel
There are many articles all over the net touching on the subject of awakenings. But the general consensus seems to be that it can be a very confusing and frustrating time for the individual that is indeed awakening. It sometimes feels that you are losing your mind, or that you are being invaded and taken over hence causing a fear of losing control. And personally that has been the hardest part for me and probably the hardest part for most. The fear that you no longer have control of your mind and/or body. Some fear this process and change so much so that they even try and bury it deeply inside of themselves. Which in my opinion is very dangerous, not only to the individuals’ mental and physical well being but also dangerous to those whom they come in contact with. If this person denying his/her true self manages to survive, what sort of life would they have? They would constantly be feeling drained and most likely be sick continuously. They would always be wondering what that something is that is missing from their life. And they would be so moody that it would make it hard and almost impossible for people to be around them. They would always have that nagging hunger and without the necessary nourishment that a vampire body requires they would die, most likely at a young age. How would one actually define an awakening? For starters I think it to be much like that of a child being born. A child when born instinctively knows that they are human but through learning they come to understand what being human is all about. A child being raised by animals would indeed learn to live as an animal but they would always know that they were different. Through the awakening, we as young “people”, I use that term loosely so as not to cause any conflict, instinctively know what we are but through gaining knowledge we learn to BE who we are. Not just exist but live the life we are fated to live. For example: A child just learning to walk or talk has the knowledge and knows that they are capable of this due to their genes, but to actually be able to complete this task they have to first be taught. So for a vampire to embrace whom they are they must be taught what it means to be this “unnatural creature.” For it to be a true awakening in every sense of the word you first must be discovered. Usually someone will happen into your life that you take a
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liking to almost instantly. Through this person’s guidance you are able to discover your true form through self-exploration. These memories, we will call them now for the lack of a better word, are buried deep within our minds and perhaps even our DNA. Through self-exploration you are able to dig these out and bring them into the physical world and into your life. Most of you are probably saying that “I never had this kind of stranger enter into my life. And I know that I have awakened.” My question would be how do you know that for sure? It doesn’t matter how strong a mind a person has, without someone to share experiences and “symptoms” with a person would go crazy. Especially with the brainwashing that we as a society have to deal with. There is no doubt in my mind that I myself would have suffered this fate without guidance….and I have always considered myself to be pretty strong. You might ask yourself when does this awakening happen? At what time in my life would it happen? When a vampire is young they always “feel” or even “know” that they are different. I think the entire awakening is happening all of your life. Your entire growth from baby into adulthood is all part of the lesson. All part of the process to your true existence. The entire time you are growing up the awakening is happening. But here we are talking about the absolute realization that you are indeed what you are. A true mental and physical realization of that feeling of being different and what it really means. Accepting the predatory part of ourselves. This is what I think the community is meaning when they are referring to an awakening. Realizing that you can eat and eat and that empty feeling is still there. That those migraines happen when you are feeling that hunger and emptiness. That hearing those people across the room or the hum from the TV isn’t just a coincidence. The list can go on and on and then again some things you may experience that are unique just to you, but my point is the awakening happens when you are reborn into yourself with an open mind without all the society brainwashing. One first has to realize that a vampire’s existence is possible and they have to realize that what society calls a vampire is all crap. You have to search for what being a vampire means to you, and continue to search until you honestly feel that that answer is right for you. For one to accept the awakening they first have to believe it in their heart that it is possible and that it is indeed happening. For some that process is
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very hard. Depending on your upbringing and religious background it may be almost an impossible task for some to overcome. But for those people maybe it just wasn’t meant to be in this lifetime. Always keep in mind that through an awakening you must have patience…and always remember that it doesn’t just happen over night. You don’t just wake up one day and say “Hey, I have awakened and I am a creature of the night.” What is a vampire? A vampire, or vampire as it is sometimes spelled, is an individual with a need for higher quantities of energy than can be provided by natural food sources, and therefore, is endowed with the ability to siphon that energy from other sources, such as blood, as is most common, and also from the psychic plane. What I mean by the psychic plane, is the energy that surrounds us all, the energy that is naturally prevalent through the mysteries of the earth, and it is coincidentally, this energy that is drawn upon by professional psychics, telepaths, and magic users. It is a gift that all creatures are born with, and is called prana, or pranic energy. Vampires have naturally adapted, as have many other creatures on this planet, to sustain their needs. They, like other creatures, have evolved into an entire different species, a race of humans, with a difference. We are human in all senses of the word, but generally possess many traits and characteristics that set us apart, aside of course from the need extra prana. Many people cannot fathom the idea that a separate species of human might actually exist, that it is possible for a being to live on blood, but in truth, one has but to look at nature to see that anything is possible. For instance, there are many types of "vampires" in the animal kingdom. Mosquitoes, ticks, fleas, spiders, bats, and leeches to name just a few, each species existing, ENTIRELY on blood. So, as you can see, anything is possible.......... What are some vampire characteristics? Well, first of all, vampires are as diverse a species as humans. While there are indeed some characteristics that tend to be a mainstay among vampires, there are, as in everything else, exceptions to every rule. Physically, vampires are for the most part, stronger, faster, and our bodies do heal quickly, presumably because of the amount of energy consumed and our amazing clotting ability. Vampires are not immortal, although many live abnormally long lives, far beyond the
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norm in fact, and this is presumably due to the intake of not only added energy, but an excess of essential nutrients, vital to keeping the body alive and healthy. Mentally, vampires are normally quite strong, intelligent, inventive, imaginative, aggressive, and at times overbearing. Most vampires are egotistical, and crave the spotlight. They have natural tendencies toward the Occult, usually because of their abilities to manipulate naturally occurring energy. They quite generally have aptitudes for literature, art, crafts, and inventions, and can usually be found in trades such as writers or artists, sciences, drafting, construction, teachers, tattoo artists, sculpters, and any other career that is creative in nature. Do vampires live in clans? Not normally. Unless one would consider their families their clan. The creation of the term clan has come from and been made popular belief by Role Playing Games, most notably the game Vampire, The Masquerade. Most real vampires do not participate in these role playing games, and quite generally disassociate themselves from those that do. It must be said though that many vampires crave the company of others like them, and spend much time and go to great lengths to find them. Usually when they find others, they find themselves moving close, living in close proximity to others, for companionship of someone who understands. The life of a real vampire is not normally glamorous or glitzy, as it is portrayed in Hollywood, but in truth is more subtle and laid back, most choosing instead to travel and discover the many wonders of the earth on their own, or in the company of others like them. They do not generally advertise their nature to the communities around them, and appear as "normal" as those around them, although clear differences can be seen, mostly in their attitudes, confidence, and their general ability to be leaders. Some vampires have taken their abilities, and flaunted them, gaining cultural "status" as it were, on the premise, that, Hey, who really believes anyway? How do vampires feed? Vampires in the modern world do not take "victims". They do not kill, or maim to feed. It is true that in years past, people were "hunted" by vampires, yes, and there were several who actually kept slaves for feeding, and were known to the rest of the worlds as cruel. Elizabeth Bathory, Marquis de Sade, Vlad Dracul, are but a few of the more notable names in history who flaunted their vampirism, or thirst for blood, and many throughout the years have tried to discount the fact
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that the possibility of them being vampires was true, due mostly to the fact that mass panic might rear it's ugly head. Today's vampires use a more subtle approach, and quite generally tend to be able find those individuals that have a blood fetish, or vampire fantasies, or quite simply just like to be bitten and nibbled on. Once these individuals are found, they are used as willing donors for a hungry vampire. Many vampires have more than one donor, sometimes having as many as five or six on hand, depending on the vampire's need for energy, and how fast he or she uses that energy. this is true for blood vampires or psycic vampires. It also must be noted that many vampires have more than one donor because the act of feeding tends to weaken the donor, causing weariness, and exhaustion, and even at times, sickness if fed on too much. Vampires also feed unconcsiously at times, and manipulate energies around them without even realizing it. It is for this reason that many are not able to be around animals, electronics, and sensitive equipment. These individuals who have not mastered control of their needs find themselves unable to wear wristwatches, and have endless problems with telephones, computers, alarm clocks, and even vehicles. Animals tend to shy away from people like this, while conversely,a vampire who has his needs under control, is a magnet for animals, and is generally quite good at befriending those animals that are mean tempered and/or do not get along well with others.
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Vampire types By Aneria Romana There are three types of human walking this planet
There are three different types of humans. The first is your Vampires; second is your Nils (normal people); third is your half breeds or awakened humans (your witches as a generic term for all psionic capable humans). Vampires are in a category all of their own, see types of vampires and what vampires are not. The dictionary definiyion of the word nil is nothing. Psi-vampires are called this because of energy needs and awakened humans have a limited energy ability(they can use it but don't feed on it). This leaves the nil meaning they have no energy ability so they are your normal people. The term nil is not an insult. Nils tend to be very closed minded (like all people they don't want to believe anyone can do anything they can't). They find it very difficult to believe that vampires exist and can do things they fear to dream of so they find it hard to believe that witches and vampires exist (especially the "civilized" ones). Superstitious people tell stories of boogy man and vampires to frighten children. They forget that those stories are based on things that once were very numerous and well known but due to the inquisition and other such things have gone underground. When a nil does realize what we are they will tend to first panic and then try to explain it away as a trick or imagination or even forget it totally within a day or so, unless someone is there to remind them (how mobs were started). In the distant past we called all half breeds Juns which became Djun/Djunn and then Djinn and then genie and then witch or wizard and now adays since people take offence to the term witch the term awakened human has been coined to phrase. Today we still use the term but in reference to someone that has
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acquired our abilities (limited version) from massive blood transfusions. Thes Juns have one or two abilities and the disadvantages but that is as close as them come to being one of us. Warning all Juns are deceiptive and can not be totally trusted. We keep them close so we can make sure they have not joined the ranks of hunters or are trying to cause us harm on their own. Two nils can reproduce, two awakened humans can, a vampire and a nil can, a vampire and an awakened human can, but two fully awakened vampires can not (it is possible if one of the vampires in a pair is still in the latent phase when impregnation is attempted). For a better idea of the difference in psi-vampires (us) and psyvampires or psychich vampires (which we are NOT) see my what's in a name page. Types of Vampires
There are two types of vampires roaming the planet. There are your sanguinarians and your psi-vampires. Sanguinarians are blood-drinkers. And unlike the myths of vampires,they do NOT go around killing people for their blood. They keep a ring of willing donors that willingly donate blood to them. They do not need great amounts of blood,just a small amount,no more than what would fill a shot glass is necessary to them. Psi-vampires feed on life/pranic energy either by proximity or by touch. When one awakens their body automatically starts feeding on the energy at hand and it could take the young vampire months to realize what they are and how to control their growing abilities. Most prefer to feed from the strong emotions of others and not from the person directly. It is safer for both the vampire and the person(not victim) being drained. It is easier to know sanguinarians than psi-vampires because you can physically see a sanguinarian drink your blood but it is harder to know a psi-vampire because you can not see them feed. Psi-vampires are responsible for the myths of incubus and succubus. Vampires falsely have a bad reputation due to myths and movies, none of which is based on fact or reality.
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~ The Dhampir ~ The ironic thing about this part is that it contradicts most folklore. Most everywhere, the vampyre cannot spawn children or have sex. I mean...he's dead. His penis doesn't work. However the dhampir is found in the same areas that spawned the legends vampyres can't have kids. Anyway the dhampir is a child of a male vampyre and a female Gypsy. A dhampir could not be spawned by any other human. Very rarely the woman would become pregnant from this unholy union. Almost always the child would be born boneless..and thus would die quickly. However, on rare rare rare occasions, the child would be born with bones and lives. Always the child of this union was male. And this child had special powers that allowed him to become a powerful vampyre hunter. He was able to feel a vampyre just by looking at him. He was able to destroy a vampyre without special weapons. As well, the Dhampir could enchant a pistol and make it slay a vampyre as surely as a wooden stake would. The dhampir was considered a powerful member of the gypsy community, but treated normally. They were not immortal and they did not have powers similar to the ones Vampyre Hunter D displays...but some dhampirs did have a semi-slippery like body due to the fact they were normally born without bones. The powers of a dhampir would be passed to the male offspring that he created and that they created and so on. These abilities could only be inherited, never learned. In the real world the dhampir was a bit different. Someone claiming to be a dhampir would come to a village looking for work as a hunter or else he would go to where a town reported a vampyre problem. He would start by mentioning an unholy stench in the air that only he could smell. He would then attempt to find the source of this scent. He hold then take off his short and look through the sleeve as if it was a telescope. He would then describe the shape and appearance of the invisible undead that only he could see. He would then engage in a dramatic fight with the undead...but sometimes would just shoot it. Once killed the vampyre would stink even more...and sometimes a pool of blood would run on the ground. Most often he would not be killed and the vampyre would flee to another town. The dhampir would
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stick around long enough to get his pay and go to the next town...and fight the vampyre anew.
~ The Vampyres of Malaysia ~
The are two kinds of vampyre in Malaysia. The first is the langsuyar. The langsuyar is a beautiful woman who reacted strongly to the loss of her stillborn baby. She flew into the trees and became a night demon who sucked the blood from other people's children. Another way to become a langsuyar is to die during childbirth. To prevent the dead mother from rising from the grave, the body would be treated with a needle in the palm of the hand, eggs under her arms, and glass beads were placed in the mouth. Sometimes the langsuyar would repent and live a normal life, marrying a new husband and having children.. Although at night she would still go off and feed from others. They also had long hair that would cover the tell-tale hole in her neck. It was through that hole which they sucked the blood. The other vampyre of Malaysia is the pontianak. This is a stillborn child who would become a vampyre. It was similar to the langsuyar in every way though. ~ Vampyre's form ~
No doubt most of you think of a vampyre in terms of Annie Rice, Buffy, V:TM pictures or Hollywood films when picturing the vampyre. But that is a more modern vampyre. You see, the vampyre of folklore was a lot ickier than that. (Although not as icky as Count Orlok. ew.) The original vampyre of Eastern Europe was a corpse, but a corpse notable for several uncorpselike characteristics. It's body would be bloated and swollen, thus making the skin as tight as a drum. It's fingernails would be long and hard, still growing as the creature lived it's undeath. It would be buried in the rags it was sent to the grave in. It would stink of death. The ends of the appendages might be rotting away, after all...it WAS dead. In appearance, the vampyre's visage was horrible, but not because it was monsterous...but because it was
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still decaying. Not to mention all vampyres in recorded history were peasants and serfs. Try living a life of hard labor in the fields for 40 years and see how pretty you are! So, if one was to take the vampyre of recorded history and use it's appearance for a modern day vampyre, you can bet a lot of teen-age girls would daydream about one coming to visit..... ~ Peter Kurten: a "real" Vampyre ~ Often cited as the real thing when it comes to the vampyric, Peter Kurten---the so-called Dusseldorf vampyre was a serial killer in Germany during 1929-1930. He was born in Mulheim, Germany and was one of ten children. He was the son of an Alcoholic and a brutal father. He lived part of his youth with the town dogcatcher and enjoyed killing the unclaimed dogs. Kurten was 9 when he killed his first person. He pushed a playmate into the alter and repeated the act with a second boy to attempted to save the first. His next known attempt at homicide was 8 years later when he tried to rape and kill a young woman. He was sent to jail for 4 years for his unsuccessful effort. He lived on the streets after his release, but was back in the slammer a year later after a series of thefts and burglaries. He would later claim to have killed two of his prison mates with poison. I in 1913, back on the streets in Dusseldorf, he killed again, this time a 10 year old girl. He cut her throat with a knife and repeatedly experienced orgasm as the blood spurted out. It was not until 1929 that Kurten began his series of crimes that were to earn him his place in criminal history. In February of that year, he attempted the murder of one woman and succeed in the murder of 2 children, one male and one female. All died by stabbing. His attempts at murder, often unsuccessful, did not aid police. They accused a mentally-ill man to be convicted of the murder of the boy Kurten had actually killed! That summer, he was more successful, killing 9 people in August alone. All of these crimes involved blood-drinking from the dead victim. He continued his killing spree until the winter of 1929-1930. In may he attempted the strangling death of a young woman, then for reasons unknown...stopped and let her go. She identified him and he was
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arrested. During his crime spree, he confused the police by continually changing his method of killing. Only as he began his confession and accurately related each crime was any doubt of him perpetrating them removed. He was convicted and executed by decapitation on July 2, 1931. ~ The German Vampyre ~ Like in most of Eastern Europe, the vampyre and Germany have had a long history together. This country's version of the undead varies slightly from the commonly known folklore vampyre. The most well-known German vampyre is the Nachtzeherer, which means, "Night waster." This was the vampyre of Northern Germany. In the southern part of the country it was named, "Bluatsauger" or bloodsucker. Other synonyms for these members of the Undead are, "NAchttoter" (Night Killer) and "Neuntoter" (Killer of nine). These vampyres were created by unusual death and birth occurrences. As usual in folklore, a suicide victim would become a vampyre, but in Germany, any person who died through accidental death became undead as well. Similar to the Polish vamp, a German child born with a caulk on his head was destined to be a vampyre...especially if the caulk was blood red! A final quirky nature of German vampyres is that is a person's name is not removed from his/her burial clothing, it would rise from the dead as a vampyre! The Nachtzehrer was also identified with epidemics and plagues, and thus could be associated with Nosferatu. When a group of people suddenly died from a similar disease, the first to die was deemed vampyre and was dispatched with. When the Nachtzehrer was found in the tomb/grave, it was known to have chewed on their own flesh and clothing, although this was most likely from rats and the like which dug up the shallow grave where there were no coffins. This type of vampyre would rise from the grave and attack the living, but unlike other vampyres...this one did not drink blood. Instead it consumed the entire body of it's victim, like a ghoul would. It would also raise from the dead a bride. This bride would be the corpse of a woman who died in childbirth. When the undead were unearthed from their coffins the Nachtzehrer would be found laying in pools of blood, because it had gorged itself to the point where it could not hold down all that the greedy vampyre had consumed. Here the vampyre was dispatched
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with..but not by the means we all are accustomed towards hearing. Sometimes the vampyre was destroyed by placing a clump of earth underneath it's chin. Other times a stone or a coin were placed in the corpses mouth. Another method was to tie a white hankerchief around the vampyre's neck. And the most drastic measure of all was not the stake through the stomach, but the head was cut off and a spike was driven through it's mouth to pin the head and tongue into place. Some belief in folklore vampyre still exists in rural Germany to this day. In the late 1980's Affons Schweiggert investigated reports in Germany that a Bluatsauger was terrorizing local villages. In these villages, the vampyre was still taken deadly serious. ~ The Italian Vampyre ~ The vampyre first reached Italy when "the vampyre plague" hit Serbia and Eastern Europe in the 17th century. The vampyre plague is the Golden Era for the undead. Countless sightings and reports from Man, clergy, officer and doctor remain from that time about firsthand accounts of vampyres. As the plague was beginning, a Franciscan from Pavia, Ludovico Maria Sinistrari included the vampyre in his study of demonic phenomena, "de Daemonialitate, en Incubus et succubus." He then explained the vampyre in theological terms. He believed that vampyres were a separate race from those of Adam and Eve. Vampyres had souls like those of humans, but their corporeal selves were of a different, perfect nature. I could understand this thought if he used 20th century Americanized vampyres, but back then, the vampyre was a festering fat, balding exhausted reanimated corpse munching on family and cattle. Not too romantic, and a far cry from perfection in my opinion. He also stated vampyres were creatures that were parallel human beings....not evil opposites. A more modern view of our vampyre bloodsucker came from JH Zedler and his "grosses volstandige Universal-lexicon aller wissenschften und kunste" in 1745. He stated vampyres were just a superstition and excuse to explain diseases science could not rationalize. Cardinal Giuseppe Davanzati echoed these beliefs, stating that vampyre outbreaks only occurred in rural and popular areas of the world...thus making vampirism, "The fruit of imagination" as well as ignorance,
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fear, superstition and to use a modern term, trendy. It became almost a fad to have a vampyre outbreaks. Hey, it got your town noticed and explained a lot of problems you were having. Besides, peasants didn't have much else to do besides mulch and die. I'm sure this is much to the Cardinal's chagrin, but vampirism became even more widespread in the mid 18th century throughout central and eastern Europe. The first Romance to ever be published in Italy was, "IL Vampiro" by Franco Mistrali in 1869. This was preceded by an opera by the same name in 1801 by A. De Gasperini. I've never seen the opera, but I think it would be interesting. franco's tale took place in Monaco and revolved around blood and incest. His vampyre was presented in the same decadent, aristocratic manner akin to kaets, goethe, polidori and Byron. Only one real folklore work on the undead ever came out of Italy, and that was 1908's Vampiro, by Enrico Boni. It is about the historic vampyre plague and is one of the only books ever printed about the superstitions and fear of Italy at that time of the plague. Italy doesn't have much original works on the vampyre. It has tended to take from Western Europe and use their mythology. Perhaps this is because for the most part, as the vampyre mythos was being built up in the 1600's, the "plague" of the Undead passed over the boot shaped country until near the end of it. ~ The Greek Vampyre ~ I will tell you there are five variations of the Greek vampyre. I would like to start by saying This vampyre, like other Greek vampyres are and were not revivified corpses. Rather they were evil spirits. The Lamiai was named after Lamia (Which is where the mistake of that word being used with vampyres comes from) who was a Libyan queen. Lamia was the daughter of Belus and Libya... the latter was was loved By Zeus, the King of the Greek Gods (But hey, back then, who didn't get it on with Zeus?). Hera, as usual, became jealous and took her vengeance on Lamia by stealing all her children that had been fathered by Zeus. Lamia retired to her cave, and being unable to strike at the Queen of the gods, used human mothers as her scapegoat and drank the blood from their children. Her actions transformed her into a hideous beast, and thus Lamia and her lamiai were born. Later Lamia became identified with the class of beings that resembled her; course ugly women with serpentine lower bodies. Their feet were totally
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different.
One would be brass, while the other was shaped like a goat, donkey or Oxen's hoof. The Lamiai were known primarily as demonic spirits that sucked the blood from children, as I have already said. They were, however, able to transform into beautiful woman in order to seduce men for breeding. Although the lamiai are not believed to exist any longer in Greece, they have become a method for scaring children, much the same way the US uses the bogeyman... ~ Vampyre ~ One of the more famous "real vampyre" reports was that of a man who served the Lord of Alnwick Castle. The man, who was known for being exceedingly wicked, was plagued by an unfaithful wife. Having hidden himself on the roof above his bed to spy on her, he fell to the ground and died the next day. Following his burial, the man was seen walking through the town. People became increasingly afraid and locked themselves in their houses after dark. During this time an unknown disease broke out, which of course, was blamed on the vampyre. Finally, on Palm Sunday, the local priest assembled a group of devout residents, as well as some of the leaders of the community, and they entered the cemetery. They uncovered the body, which appeared gorged on blood and they struck it with a spade. The body was deemed evil, set on fire and the epidemic ended. The town went back to their happy little ways. ~ The blood is the life ~ Okay everyone and their gerbil has seen someone use "The Blood is the Life" with vamp lit, movies and the like. And most of you also know that it is a bible quote. Just for facts the line is Deuteronomy 12:23 and it reads, "Only be sure that thou eat not the blood: for the blood is the life, and thou mayest not eat the life with the flesh." It still has the same connotations in relations towards the Undead. ~ Polish Vampyres ~
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A type of vampyre found amongst the Kashubian people of northeast Poland in the Vjesci, also spelled vjeszczi or vjescey. According the myths, a person who would become a vampyre was born with a caul (membrane cap) on his head at the time of birth. When such a child was born, the cap was removed, dried, ground up and fed to the person on their seventh birthday. These actions would prevent the man from becoming a Vjesci. Otherwise...bam! Undead. The Potential vjesci looked perfectly human, but was restless and easily excitable. He also had a ruddy complexion. At the time of his death he would renounce God. His body would cool much much slower then a normal corpse and the limbs would remain limber. The lips and cheeks would remain red and spots of blood would seep from his cheeks and fingernails. The Vjesci never actually died. At Midnight after his burial, he would awake and eat his clothing and then bits of his own flesh. He then left the grave and attacked family member, by sucking out all their blood. Not sated, he'd move on to the neighbors. There were several steps to be taken in ridding the community of the vampyre. First all people in the town would receive a Eucharist wafer. Then a little earth was placed in the undead's coffin to prevent it from returning there. A crucifix or a coin would be placed in the Vjesci's mouth if it was till in the coffin for it to suck on. A net would be wrapped around the vampyre with the understanding that the vampyre could only untie one knot from the net a year and he could not rise from the coffin until all the knots were untied. A bag of seeds would be placed in the coffin for similar reasons. Lastly the body would be placed face down in the coffin, so when the vampyre awoke, it would merely dig deeper into the earth instead of coming up to terrorize peasants. (Man, those polish don't mess around!). *g* Vampire names from around the world Africa:
asabonsam, obayifo
Australia:
yara-ma-yha-who
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Bosnia:
lampir
Bulgaria:
obur
China:
chiang-shih
Czech Republic:
upir
France:
melusine, lamiai
Germany:
nachtzehrer
Great Britain:
vampyre
Greece:
vrykolakas
Hungary:
lidérc
India:
kali
Italy:
vampiri
Japan:
kappa
Malaysia:
langsuyar,
Mexico:
tlahuelpuchi, chupacabra
Myanmar:
thaye, tasei
Phillipines:
aswang
Romania:
strigoi
Russia:
uppyr
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United States:
vampire
Thailand:
pontianak
The following LEXICON of TERMINOLOGY is the terminology used by, and concocted by the SANGUINARIUM and it's members. Many members of the Vampire Community in general have adopted the use of some of this terminology, so, in order to establish a more perfect union amongst vampires, here it is, in all its glory. LEXICON OF SANGUINARIUM TERMINOLOGY (BASIC VERSION) Adra: a vampyric sponsor or mentor. Ardetha (are-death-aa): someone who is made a vampyre through a ritual or ceremony. Ancients: Refers to the ancient deities and mythical/spiritual personas such as Lilith, Set, The Ancient Vampiric Gods, Caine, Kali, etc. Awakening: The physical and mental changes involved when one's vampirism begins to manifest itself, if one is a latent vampire. Beast: The primal, animalistic, bestial nature of a frustrated or desperate vampire. It's destructive and cold, and if you don't control it, then you will be under its control. Beacon: A particular feeling or energy signature generated by vampyres in general, but latent or potential vampyres in particular. The beacon seems to exist to attract other vampyres to the potential so that they may instigate the awakening process. Black Swan: A non-Vampyre lover or friend who does not feel the draw to become sanguine, but who is nevertheless favorably inclined towards Vampyres. They may or may not frequent vampyre nightclubs and usually understand the Vampyre-fetish lifestyle. Black Veil: 13 tenets of common sense, ettiquite and responsibility used by many households within the vampyre community.
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Blood Bond: a rite, ritual or ceremony marking a commitment to a coven or an individual. It is also a term to reflect a vampyre marriage. Blood Drinker: Anyone who drinks blood, regardless of motivation. Blood Fetishist: Someone who is erotically attracted to the sight, taste or smell of blood; they generally have no physical need to consume it, and will usually be happy with small amounts. Blood Junkie: A derogatory term for someone who experiences the physical need to consume blood, a sanguinarian Dayside: the mundane life we must all lead, paying taxes, mundane family relations, rent, dayjob, etc. Donor: Someone who gives/shares their blood or energy consentually. Bloodletting: The act of cutting the physical flesh to extract blood. This is commonly used for blood play, fetishism and feeding. Bloodplay: Similar to bloodletting, bloodplay is the act of using blood in sexual or fetish situations. Bloodplay can also refer to the integration blood and bloodletting in ritual. Cainus Lupus: a term for tribal or shamanistic members of the Sanguinarium who related to wolves. Commonly related to werevoles. Caste/path: one of three roles (guardian, priest & companion) used in many Sanguinarium households started by the Kheperian Order. Calmae (cal-may): a term refering to an initiate and formal member of a Sanguinarium household or court, who is familiar with the Scroll of Elorath and abides by the tenets/traditions of a household and the Black Veil. Chi: Chi is the Chinese term for life energy. It is also often referred to as pranic energy or life force. Chi is the bio-electrical energy which runs our bodies on a subtle level. Energy vampires and many psivamps believe that they can manipulate chi and feed upon it to sate their hungers. To a certain extent, blood vampires also feed upon chi, for a great deal of this subtle energy is believed to be concentrated into the blood. Clinical vampirism: A psychological condition, also referred to as
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Renfield's Syndrome, in which the afflicted person experiences a psychological urge to drink blood. This urge is often satisfied with their own blood, and sufferers of Renfield's Syndrome typically bear slashes from razors and knives up and down their arms from where they have drawn blood from themselves. This condition is similar to a new pathology, known as SMS, or Self-Mutilation Syndrome, which is becoming alarmingly common in American youths. Clutch: a small group of vampyres, who are apart of a larger household, usually 3-13 members who gather for socialization, ritual, initiation and training. Coming out of the Coffin: a term for going public about one's vampyrism. Court: a geographicly based formal Quabal and organization with their own ceremonies, traditions, hierarchy and memberships. Coven: Covens are groups of individuals and organizations who embellish the vampyre/vampire lifestyle; who band together under a specific theme, set of ideals, traditions, common Sigil, havens, membership requirements, hierarchy and rites. Dhampyri: someone who was born a vampyre or awakened before puberty. Elder: A prominent member of the Vampyre community who is honored and respected for their experience, accomplishments and devotion, a teacher. Elders are often those individuals who have helped establish a community. Embrace: The act of turning one into a vampire by the giving of one's blood to another. Energy signature: Term used to indicate the unique energy-pattern, feeling, or vibes that each individual has. Vampyres are believed to have a particular energy signature that can be recognized by those familiar with it. In this way, others skilled in magick and psychic practices may identify us for what we are. Energy Vampire: An individual who has a need to feed upon the life force of others. Most energy vampyres feed upon chi or psychic energy and avoid drinking blood.
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Family Dentist or Fangsmith: a term refering to someone who makes dental quality fangs. Feeding: The act of consuming pranic energy (blood) or psychic energy (emotional and elemental energy) Fledgling: a newly awakened, unintiated and unexperienced vampyre. Fruitbat: a nutty or insane vamp. Gaja (ga-jaa): a fashion vampire, one who does not embrace the Strigoi Vii philosophy and is only focused on the aesthetic aspects of the vampyre scene. Golden Circle: The people around a small coven or circle, which include black swans, vampyres, kitra, etc. Grimoire (grim-wor): a journal and book of lessions and notes each Sahjaza initiate should keep on their advancement of study and involvement within the family. Quabal (qua-ball): a gathering for socialization, ritual, initiations and education. Haematodipsia: A strong form of haematophilia. Haematomania: A strong psychological craving for blood. Haematophilia: An erotic attraction to the taste, sight (or smell) of blood. Haven: a vampyre gathering place. Most often a gothic nightclub, bar or coffee house. Household: a generic term for a family or organization within the Sanguinarium community. Kali: a blood-thirsty goddess from India who has been chosen by some to be a goddess of vampirism. Kithal: Someone who has been initiated into one or more covens. Kitra (key-traa): in the vampyric caste system this is an initiated member who functions as a donor, advisor, companion, watcher and
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altar to focus and balance energy during rituals. A mix of vampyre and donor. Klavasi (latent vampyre): someone who has awakened after puberty. Human: Term used for the purposes of distinguishing those who are not vampire. (this term is misleading because it implies that vampires are not human.) The Hunger: The desire to feed, also identified as the Thirst. The Hunger is both a psychological and physical sensation. Physically, it manifests as an intense hunger or thirst - but not for physical food or drink. Hunter: Someone that hunts, stalks, threatens, or does harm (whether it be physical, psychical, psychological, or emotional) to someone because s/he is a vampire, or because the hunter believes them to be so. Blade applies to seriously unbalanced individuals who really are on some sort of holy hate crusade and intend to follow through with violence or action. Invisable: someone kicked out of a household for violating the traditions, black veil or rules of that family. They are stripped of any titles, initiations and completely ignored. Im Kheperu: The ritual of transformation used by some to induct a new member into the vampyre community. Im Kheperu also denotes the holy day, concurrent with the Pagan festival Samhain, when this rite is most often performed. As a festival, Im Kheperu ushers in the Dark Side of the Year, a time when our powers wax greatly and our sense of our natures is heightened significantly. Im Sekhemu: The double-power. This also denotes the holy day, concurrent with the Pagan festival Beltane, when the last peak in power is celebrated before the coming of the Light Side of the Year. During the Im Sekhemu, which properly lasts over a span of days leading up to Beltane, everything about us is heightened to an almost excruciating degree. We feel the last swansong of power just before the Dark Year fades, and at the same time we experience the greatest hunger as that power heightens all of our sensations. Sekhemu can also refer to the driving sensation brought about by this peak in hunger and power.
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Latent vampire (ardetha): Someone who is already naturally a vampire, but whose vampiric tendencies have not yet manifested. Leech: 1.) A small, bloodsucking worm; 2.) An incredibly rude and derogatory (well, at least disrespectful...) term to call someone who is a vampyre. Lilitu / Lilian: Also the Children of Lilith. This is an order or movement within the vampyre community which promotes the idea that Lilith was the spiritual forebear of vampyres. The Long Night: Name for the festival celebrated on the Winter Solstice. This night is the peak of the Darkside of the year, and many households and covens gather together to celebrate the longest night. This is a festival of community where everyone relaxes and socializes. It is also the traditional night to recognize new members of the community or to perform rites of passage, such as raising someone from Calmae to Elder. Mentor: The one who made you a vampire or awakened you and/or taught/guided you. Mortal: Term used for the purposes of distinguishing those who are not vampire. (This term is, at best, misleading because it implies that vampires are "immortal".) Mradu (mra-doo): an initated "knighted" and appointed guardian and protector in the vampyric caste system. Mundane: Term used to distinguish those who are not vampires. The Nephilim: A rather widespread belief within the vampiric community which asserts that vampyres are the inheritors of the Nephilim. The Nephilim are demi-human beings who were sired by angels, as told in Enoch I, a book that was dropped from the Bible in the early stages of its canonization. Nightside: the primal nature, the AKA "the dragon" which includes the side of oneself which is awakened during ritual, sexual arousal, artistic creation, Nomaj: A vampyre mystic, astrologer or user of sangomancy.
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of the Blood: A term sometimes used to refer to someone as being a vampire. Pandemonium: a term for a generally unpleasant experience which includes but is not limited to an acute heightening of all of a vampyre's sensitivities, a change in the person's manner, alterations in breathing,pulse rate, and thought patterns, as their body gears up to go out and attempt to satisfy the thirst. This phenomenon is when the "beast" or "darkside" is very definitely felt as a real force within the vampyre's psyche and the vampyre's self-control totters on a razoredge. This particular phenomenon is experienced by both sanguines and psi-vamps alike, and it serves as a distinguishing factor between those who are real vampyres and those who are simply blood fetishists. Polyamory: Refers to multiperson committed relationships, which are not uncommon among households in the vampyre community. Porphyria: An acute medical condition which has been postulated by some scholars to have inspired the vampire myths of the past. Sufferers of porphyria have pale, flaky skin and are very sensitive to sunlight. They are also severely anemic, and some sufferers of porphyria have been know to drink blood in an attempt to relieve the cravings brought about by anemia. Poser: Someone pretending or claiming to be a vampire who is not, with the intent of deceiving others, by making false claims as to their powers, abilities,lifespan, etc. Prana: Like Chi, Prana is life energy. Prana is a Hindu term, and it is strongly associated with the breath as well as the life. See also Chi and Psychic Energy Pranic energy: Refers to blood and sexual energy. Primus: A vampyre, almost always an elder, who founded or is the leader of a large family or coven of vampyres. Psychic energy: Refers to emotional and elemental(energy of the earth), also the life-force that surrounds and is contained in living things. Psychic Attack: A term used for an attack by an psi-vampire. Any uninvited draining of one's vital energy. One is said to have
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experienced a Psi-vamp attack when a psi-vampire has targeted and successfully fed from you, without your consent. Another view is that psychic vampire attacks ONLY take the form of such draining by the use of the psyche. Psychic vampire: Someone who feeds from psychic energy, drains lifeenergy rather than blood from others. Technically speaking in some views, psychic vampire is a vampire who is psychic while a psi-vampire is a vampire who feeds on energy, preferably emotional energy. Pranic (pran-ick): to feed from the aura and chakras of consenting donors. Ramkht (rom-ket): an ordained vampyric priest who acts as a ritual leader, creative director and catalyst. Ravass Bhavatan (rav-ass bov-aton): a ceremony or ritual kick someone out of a household, making them invisable and stripping them of their titles. Real Vampire: Someone who has a condition which includes but is not limited to a physical thirst and need for blood (which is non-erotic in nature; and in more significant quantity than is generally required or desired by other blood-drinkers), or psychic energy (real need exists for energy draining of others emotional energy and that of the earth.) Real Vampire/RealVamp: A sanguine, psychic, or energy vampyre. A real vampyre has a particular condition which includes but is not limited to the following characteristics: a real need for blood or life energy; heightened sensitivities; light sensitivity; a largely nocturnal sleep cycle. The heightened sensitivities are believed by many to include a number of psychic abilities, such as empathy, astral projection, clairvoyance, and energy manipulation. The sensitivity to light and the nocturnal body cycle are not so limiting that a real vampyre cannot be up and out during the day, it is simply an effort for them to do so. Renfield's Syndrome: is a psychological condition in which the sufferer has an affinity for drinking blood. Sufferers of Renfield's Syndrome typically bear slashes on their hands and arms where they have withdrawn quantities of their own blood to drink. Ronin: a vampyre who is awakened and is not a member of a household. In the Japanese feudal system , ronin were Samurai who
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lacked allegiance to a particular house, but who were nonetheless honorable and skilled as samurai. RPGer: Role-Player: One who engages in roleplaying games like VtM and others. Sometimes RPGers are also lifestylers, others distinguish between their 'human' life and their role and have nothing to do with Vampires. Safari: A form of play-hunting when a vampyre or coven of vampyres goes out to find donors but not bring them home. Maybe a little nibbling, but never feeding.This was used in the late 1970s to teach fledglings how to hunt in discos. Sanguinarium (sang-ween-are-ee-um): the vampire / vampyre network which abides by the Black Veil. Sanguinarian :Someone who has a physical thirst, need, craving for blood (which is non-erotic in nature) in more significant quantity than is generally required or desired by other blood-drinkers). Sanguine: A term which indicates a blood-drinking vampyre. Energy vampyres or psi-vamps, if they supplement their feeding with the active drinking of blood, are considered to be sanguines. Strigoi Vii: means "living vampire" in ancient Romanian and is used to refer to the philosophy used by the Sahjaza and the condition of being a vampyre. Seeker: Someone who is seeking after vampires, or knowledge of vampires, usually desiring to become one him/herself. Setians: A belief within the vampyre community that links vampirism back to the Egyptian God Set. Sexual Vampirism: A relatively rare variety of vampirism that feeds primarily from sexual energy. Sire: A very literary term often used by Ann Rice fans and few RPGers. Someone who is responsible for turning someone into a vampire. Sigil: see households. Slayer: A person that makes public and obnoxious claims of killing people who are (or who the slayer thinks are) vampires.
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SMS: A psychological condition which has apparently begun to grow among American youth. Sufferers of SMS, often known as cutters, feel the need to cut into their flesh and watch themselves bleed. Some sufferers of SMS also drink the blood drawn out this way, although this is not standard for the disease. Source: Someone from whom a vampire will get blood. Solitary: a vampyre who chooses not to be involved with a coven and has little if any interested in going out in the scene. See also Ronin. Somnusium: to take a brake from the Sanguinarium, scene or the vampyre philosophy and lifestyle. Starseed Vampires: a tradition or movement within the vampyre community which asserts the extra-terrestrial origins of the vampyre race. Incubus / Succubus: A vampyre who feeds only while having sex or purely through sexual energy. In Medieval folklore, a Succubus was a female demon who appeared to people, often in dreams, and seduced them. Thirst: The craving, need, desire, urge to drink blood, experienced as an intense thirst-sensation or withdrawal. Turned: Refers to the "making" of a vampire, another role play term. Twilight: to maintain a consistant balance between the Dayside and the Nightside. Vampire: A much-disputed term with many meanings, depending upon who you're talking to. It can include psychic vampires, energy vampires, emotional vampires, sanguines, blood-fetishists, and the kind of vampire you find in fiction or on the Silver Screen. Here, it is used to encompass all of the above-listed groups into a general category, ie may refer to both real and non real vampires. Vampire bait: A poser or wannabe who is just screaming for a vampire to come after them. Vamping out: Experiencing an acute flare-up of the thirst, involves a change in the person's manner, breathing, pulse rate, thought
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patterns, etc. Vampiric Community: The community of people who identify with or have been identified with the label "vampire". Vampyre vs vampire: "Vampyre" is the older spelling of the word "vampire" used in the 17th & 18th centuries, thus "Vampyre" is used to refer to people who are really into the scene or lifestyle. The more modern "vampire" is most often used to refer to Hollywood, myth and fiction. Vampyrecrafte: In general, this is the magick practiced by vampyres. Many vampyres are pagan and follow the old ways, and the ways of magick are an integral part of their beliefs. Most vampyres practice numerous techniques associated with energy manipulation. Many also practice some form of magick, most often ritual magick or chaos magick. Vampyre lifestyler: Someone who incorporates fictional vampire imagery and trappings into his/her personal life, often cultivating a "Vampyric" physical appearance and forming alternative extended families and social structures modeled on the "covens" or "clans" of vampire fiction and role-playing games, and utilizing that terminology. Wannabe: Derogatory term for someone who wants to become a vampire, usually with unrealistic expectations of what it would be like, and usually without consideration of such practical matters as how one would find sources. White Swan: Someone who cannot tolerate the Vampyre lifestyle and proves antagonistic to the Scene. In general, White Swans are still a part of the Gothic or fetish scene, which often brings them into contact with the vampyre community despite their disgust of vampirism.
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Vampires: a history Author unknown The vampire in myth is always thought of as Count Dracula. Male, with fangs, and a suave manner. However, in different cultures around the world, the legend and the form of the vampire is as different as night and day. And it was not often in the form of a bat. It was as different as different ethnic groups and countries have representations of them in myths in their culture. For instance, in some Ancient Greek myths, the vampire is often a woman who has died, and is named Lamai/lamiai. She is a vampiric woman, being half woman, half serpent, and also lives in caves, where she gets sustenance from drinking the blood of children. However, she also isn't picky, sometimes she also transforms into a very beautiful maiden and seduces young men, for their blood, which she drinks. And the vampire itself is not sometimes a woman. In Africa, among members of the Ashanti tribe in Ghana, the vampire is known as an Asasabonsam. It was described as a humanoid monster, living in a forest, and was very rarely seen. It was also very dangerous, living in the forest, and was very rarely seen. It also happened to possess iron teeth, and survived by catching and destroying unwary passers-by by letting its hook shaped feet dangle from the treetops where it was sitting, and catching them with them. The vampire also did not necessarily live in a castle as well. In Malaysia the vampire creature itself was called a Maneden and it lived in a wild panadus plant. If a human attacked the plant, the creature, angry and retaliative, would strike by attaching itself to a man's elbow,
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(or a womans nipple), where it sucked the person's blood untill that person gave it a substitution item, such as a nut. The vampire legend was not unknown or lost to ancient Meso-American cultures, such as the Maya and Aztec. The vampire of the Maya, known as Camazotz, was a full fledged god, and was central for the Maya agriculture, but was not respected. Instead he was feared for his blood drinking tendencies, and very fearsome appearance, which included large teeth and claws. He also dwelled in caves, where he would attack people, his victims, for their blood as well. Among the Aztec people, the Cihuateteo was a vampire as well. This demi god and vampiric woman was often depicted like her kin in other parts of the world killing and surviving on the blood of infants. However, they also share some characteristics with the vampires of the west. They are said to meet at crossroads, and also to wander at night. They also can't stand the sunlight, as it will kill them. And among the gypses there are vampire myths as well. The gypsy vampire is reffered to as a mullo (one who is dead). This vampire is believed to return, do malicious things, and suck the blood of a person. It was often a relative that caused their death, or didn't observe burial ceremonies. They also would be attacked if they kept the deceased's possessions instead of destroying them. Female vampires were not to be kept in the coffin sometimes. They could return, lead a normal life, and also marry, but they would exhaust their husband. Among the Gypsies,if there was anyone who was missing a finger, had a hideous appearance, or even had animal appendages, etc. they were thought of being vampires. And there were cases in history where there were persons who were like vampires. Elizabeth Bathory was born in the year 1560. She was from a family that had lands throughout Transylvania, and was also one of the most powerful families in the country after she was married to a very powerful count.
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After sometime, she started to kill young girls in her area, so that she could preserve her youth and beauty by bathing in their blood. The rumored number that had been killed was 600. She however could not have done this alone at all. She and her cohorts were found, tried, and all but her were killed in various ways. She was sealed alive in a chamber and could only get food and water through a slot in the door. She died there as well. The vampire itself in myths sometimes didnt even require the sustenance of people. In Japan, the vampires (called Kappas) would dwell in water. They also attacked livestock such as cows and horses, dragging them into the water, and devouring them. So you see, even if the culture is somewhat different than the western one, there are myths that pertain to the Vampire in different cultures. And the vampire can be as different in one form, as well as another. Which may be rather odd, but the myths themselves are as different, as night and day. And are also very unique as well too.
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A Definition of the Chupacabra By Tito Armstrong 1996 For the non-Puerto Ricans among us, the Chupacabra is a creature that is currently rampaging through the island, relieving farm animals of their blood. As of yet, the Chupacabra, which translates into "goatsucker", has not attacked humans, although no one can say for certain that this will not happen in the future. The origin of its name comes from its earliest attacks, where goats were found with their blood drained and with two peculiar puncture marks on their necks. There have been reports alleging that particular organs were missing from some of the victim's bodies, without any visible way for those organs to have been removed. Sightings have increased as the months go by, fueling paranoia and fear. Speculation has placed the Chupacabra as a resident of another galaxy (see the truth behind the Chupacabra), or a half-man, half-beast vampire who roams the countryside terrorizing farm animals. Others say that the Chupacabra hops like a kangaroo and leaves a sulfur-like stench. Still others say that the Chupacabra is a panther-like creature with red eyes and a long snake-like tongue. I, for one, think that the truth may lie in the UFO area my theory being that the Chupacabra is actually the pet panther, which hops like a kangaroo, of some irresponsible aliens who let it wander around. Like obnoxious relatives who let their children rampage through the house, the aliens have overstayed their welcome in our island
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The Chupacabra becomes a recurring legend San Juan (Puerto Rico) Star 6 May 1996, by Robert Friedman WASHINGTON -- The goatsucker is on the go -- with new alleged victims reported in other Caribbean countries, Mexico, Central America and Dade County, Florida. Once strictly del pais, the chupacabras, as the supposed vampire-like killer of barnyard animals is known in Spanish, has recently been spotted in the Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, Mexico, and Miami. The monster -- reptilian body, oval head, bulging red eyes, fanged teeth and long, darting tongue -- has allegedly pulled off one of the more grisly animal slaughters of late: the one-night massacre of 69 goats, chickens, geese and ducks in the heavily Hispanic Sweetwater neighborhood of South Miami. Miami police and the local zoologist say that the killer was a large dog -- but Sweetwater residents insist that the deed was done by the blood-sucking beast first spotted in the central mountains of Puerto Rico [1994]. Whatever, the chupacabras phenomenon seems quick becoming part of Hispanic -- and possibly international -- bestial lore. The goatsucker
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already has been tagged the Bigfoot of the Caribbean by stateside journalists. The monster made its network TV debut last week via "Unsolved Mysteries." It was the talk of the popular Miami-based gabfest, "El Show de Cristina," which is transmitted throughout Latin America. That show featured Canovanas Mayor Jose "Chemo" Soto, known to townsfolk as "Chemo Jones" for his weekly chupacabra hunts through the surrounding hills, using a caged goat for bait. Soto offered this grim warning: "Whatever it is, it's highly intelligent. Today it is attacking animals, tomorrow it may be attacking people." Tee shirt sales are said to be booming, a video game reportedly is in the works, songs are sung to Ol' Red Eyes over South Florida radio stations (such as "Chupacabra-fragalisticexpialidotious," as in the song of a similar name from "Mary Poppins.") The beast is on the Internet, courtesy of some Puerto Rican students at Princeton University, who give tongue-in-cheek updates daily on the goatsucker's doings. So, what have we here? Among other things, a recurring legend, especially prevalent in Latin America, was according to anthropologists, Hispanic historians, and others. "There are a certain number of these legends of bloodsucking animals in South and Latin America," said Richard Grinker, an anthropology professor at George Washington University. "They are usually analyzed as anti-capitalist, an unconscious means of rebellion by country people who believe that capitalism is sucking dry the earth and their entire being. Fellow anthropologist Paul Brodwin acknowledged that blood-sucking l egends pre-date quasi-Marxist analyses, but said the legends often get reinterpreted "according to social circumstances." Take, for instance, the legend of the Loup Garou, which Brodwin has studied in the Haitian countryside. This sometime human-sometime animal being is related to the French werewolf legend, said Brodwin. But with a difference. The Loup Garou sucks the blood of its human victims.[???] The Haitian legend has been analyzed as a "collective fantasy," said the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor, of an unconscious suspicion and fear the poorer-than-poor have of their neighbors. Marvette Perez,curator of Hispanic history at the Smithsonian Institution's American History Museum, sees deja vu once more in the chupacabras tales. Perez, a native of Arecibo, recalled the similarities between the chupacabras and both the Moca vampire and the garadiablo of island lore. A couple of decade ago, the Moca monster
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was sucking blood of assorted animals around that small mountain town, while the garadiablo was a devilish looking creepy crawly from the lagoon seen in local swamplands. "This seems to be a very Caribbean phenomenon, especially of the Spanish- speaking islands," said Perez. "It's part of our folklore. It's inter- esting that the chupacabras has not been found on the English-speaking islands, but has migrated only in places where people speak Spanish. Pedro Vidal, professor of Spanish and Latin American Studies at American University, remembers hearing childhood tales in his native Venezuela of a beast sucking the blood not only of animals, but also of little children. Vidal, who has done research on vampires, noted that the hemispheric roots of such entities go way back, to the Mayans, who worshipped a "vampire figure deity long before the idea of Dracula." Bram Stoker's novel of the blood-thirsty count became a big hit in Victorian England in an age of anxiety over a syphilis epidemic, said Vidal. Now, another sexually transmitted epidemic has unsettled the populace. Puerto Rico, he noted, is among the areas in the hemisphere hardest hit by AIDS. It is entirely possible, he said, that the commotion over the chupacabras could be linked to the AIDS fear. Unbeknownst to many, there is a real live goatsucker in captivity in the Washington, D.C. zoo. In fact, ornithologists know all about goatsuckers -- which is the name given to a family of nocturnal birds. They are described as soft-feathered with long, pointed wings, short, weak legs and feet, a very small bill, but a wide, gaping mouth, and whose eyes reflect light at night. Some goatsuckers of note are night jars, whippoorwills and the Australian frog mouth, which is on display at the D.C. zoo. Could they be...? Most unlikely, said Bob Hoage of National Zoo. The winged Goatsuckers feed almost exclusively on insects, he noted. The Goatsucker tag comes from the Latin word, Caprimulgus. The birds are often found in the Mediterranean in places where goats graze. In a strange twist, bird-watcher-columnist Don Wilson reports in the Orlando Sun Sentinel that "the harmless whippoorwill was once viewed as a sinister creature. Superstitious country folk once believed the birds sucked the milk from goats' udders, causing them to dry up."
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VAMPIRE MYTHS compiled and posted by SARASVATI.. Please visit her site the SANGUINARIAN, you'll find lots of info there. •
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Sunlight: As the "good" on the earth and the life giving warmth of early cultures it was the anti-thesis of the vampire, and thuscould destroy the vampire. Often the "good triumphs over evil" type of moral. Possibly an exaduration of the lightsensitiveness that sanguinarians do exibit. (You know how bards are:) Also, in hte earliest myths, vampires didn't have any problems being out in the daylight... this, like fangs, is a more recent addition to the list of "traits". Also: "Many vampires aren't so much hurt by the sun touching them as looking at it, many Romanian and Irish vampires this applies to can be seen in the sunlight as long as the sunlight is filtered by such means as sunglasses even." {Thanks to Mr. Tiernen for the information addition :) } Crosses: These, along with holy water and the host, are again the "good conquers evil" background. The blessed would repel the cursed. Could also have arisin as a "focus" for holy power that repeled the evil.
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Mirrors: The ancient belief was that mirrors reflected the soul, what a person was. Vampires were believed to have no souls and thus could not have a reflection. Later, mirrors were believed to reflect the goodness in a person (though only superficial) since vampires had no goodness in them (superficial or otherwise) they still cast no reflection. Coffins: Probably dates back to the fact that vampires were believed to be "undead" or walking corpses. Since they were not truly alive the populus believed they had to return to the coffin during the day. Probably the same explaination applies to the "Natural Earth" myth. Beauty: In order to drink from there victims, they had to get close enough to grab them. This myth has only recently appeared and been nutured by contemporary artists. The older legends speak of ugly, corpsian vampires. Again, this probably is a result of the "walking dead" thinking. Another possible theory is that being very thin and pale was a mark of beauty in the 18th century, which is when many of the modern fiction vamps are coming from. (thanks to Micholena for this idea). Invitation: the person had to invite evil into the house, knowing that they are letting evil in. ie, one can't be tricked into evil, they have to consciously commit evil. --thanks to NightStalker Stakes: Vampires were believed to be immortal, unless you 1) put a stake through there heart, or 2) cut off there heads, stuffed garlic in there mouths, and cut off thre ears. obviously, 1 is the simpler of the two. My best theory as to why this myth arose is that the heart was believed to be the life and wood, as a part of nature, was abhorant to the vampire. Perhaps, too, the splinters lodging in the heart prevented the healing and caused permenant death. The second way to kill I don't know how it arose, except perhaps by all that mutilation combined with the garlic myth was belived that something in it had to work. Immortality: Since blood is linked to life, perhaps the drinking of blood is like the drinking of others life, prolonging the life of the vampire. (Thanks to mia for this connection)
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Running Water: Imagery is the water is the birth force and the vampire, wizard or witch was a negative "death" force. --thanks to Moonshadow Also, for some of the psi-vamps out there, it is said that running water pulls energy away from one, which causes weakness Garlic: Garlics' noxious smell was believed to be a deturent to vampires as well. This may have arisin from the theory that "like repells like" and that the increased sensitivity to smells made the garlic flower more repulsive to us. Also garlic has always had certain medicinal values that people may have believed repeled the "disease" of vampires. (Thanks to mia for the idea of garlics' uses in medicine) Silver: Though usually applied to werecreatures, I have heard it in application to vampires as well. The only reason I can think of is that silver was often used to make the crosses for priests and churches and that caused the crossover (slight pun intended :) An addition from Chrysanthia: I wears silver rings,pure sterling
silver and i wear a Sterling Silver ankh always paired with an ameyhst amulet (both helps increase psychic projection,as i am both sanguine/psyvamp). However one night i was reading something online,and i was toying with my ankh,and i was running it across my lips,for some odd reason,LOL I think i went to scratch an itch with the hand that was holding the ankh.well I felt a Power surge from it,so i was Curious "If I put it in my mouth,will i be able too feed off it like i would pranic-chi energy?" well,I Put it in my mouth,and I did feed off it,and It also Burnt my tongue and the roof of my mouth. I have been wearing the rings and necklaces since i was 19 and i am 21 now,and i never had a reaction to silver before like that. Well I was Curious would my rings burn too,because i was curious and skeptial it could have been a chemical reaction mixed with soap of some kind. Nope.I Tryed my rings as well,and They burnt my mouth too. It was not instant burning,smoke did not come out of my mouth and i did not have an ankh shaped mark on my tongue,but it felt as if it were literally burning into my tongue and the roof of my mouth. I was still skeptical,that it could have been a chemicial reaction of some sort,but i normally do not wear Perfume on my neck where my necklaces are,so a few months ago i tryed it again.
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Same Reactions... I have also heard that Gold itself is supposed to weaken vampyres in general,that it drains off their aura,and drains their energy making them weak. I do not know if this is true because i quit wearing gold.I know I have a distinct dislike to stay away form it and not wear it.
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Natural Earth: see Coffins Retractable Fangs: Fangs in general are a hollywood invention. The earliest myths had no mention of fangs. Salt: Mostly heard to repell the mythological witch...unsure of why it was applied to the vampire (blood is rather high salt anyway) An addition from Chrysanthia:Salt was believed to keep evil
spirits (ghosts,poltergiests,demons) From entering Sacred space in a church,holy altar,convents etc or any place deemed to be haunted,or possessed by evil spirits. The Christian Church,or more so the Christian Inqustion described all witches and those who drink blood,vampires to be these evil spirits,demons,and posessed bodies,so they believed sprinkling salt in the corners of their holy place,would keep the evil spirit from walking at Night. They also thought Vampires and witches were the same. However in todays wicca,wiccans/witches Use salt in their Circle casting,because Salt is seen as a Combo of the elments Earth/water/air. Salt is considered sacred in still creating sacred space.
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Host (Holy Communion Bread): see Crosses Thrall: More recient addition to the list, probably p robably has the same roots as the Beauty myth. The general populus could not see the vampire as having people willing to donate, and so the vampire must cast some sort of thrall or spell s pell over the victim to hold them. Super Powers: A broad myth ranging from strength to flight. Most probably came from the same reson as thrall and beauty, a way to entrap people. The flight probably was the explaination
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for quick travel and escape.
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Pictures: A myth that started after photographs became common was that Vampires would not appear in a photograph. I can only think this has something to do along al ong the same lines as Mirrors.
On the mythological origins of vampires: Contrary to popular mythology this planet didn't start out as a paradise, for untold millenia demons roamed the earth making it their home, their hell. Some dinosaurs are believed to be what was left of these. What ended their reign is still unsure we think that it was a meteor, did you ever see Mario Bros. the movie? The meteor hit the earth and with the impact and the burn created a paralleldimension into which all of the demons were sucked, one demon was supposed to hold the key between the two dimensions, he has not yet passed through. When a "normal" vampire is changed the human soul is torn out and sent to hell whilst the demon which you are assigned upon conception (a bti like a social security number) takes the human "carcass" and possesses it, thus inheriting the brain's memories and functions. Thanks to Tim Tiernan for this information :)
SLAYERS & HUNTERS By Sebastion HUNTERS Allow me to start by stating that there is an enormous difference between a hunter and a slayer. A person who calls himself or herself a hunter is usually hunting strictly vampyre or what they think is a vampyre. Most of the time they can only catch the posers and role players and never come anywhere close to discovering a true vampyre psi or sanguine. Usually these hunters are self proclaimed agents of god, Heavily into the Hollywood vision of vampires such as buffy the
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vampire slayer, and Angel. Normally they are harmless and never get pass mildly aggravating a few Goth kids. However I do say this treat all hunters as emotionally unstable and potentially armed and dangerous people. Hunters vary in age and run the entire spectrum from the confused teenager looking for the escape from reality to the middle aged mid life crisis and let us not forget the most dangerous of all the religious fanatics and emotionally disturbed. These people have found the insanity able to justify their despicable acts in a number of ways. The most common is that the real vampyre are the spawns of Satan and are here to prey on the good god fearing faithful. Temp them into losing their immortal souls, and bring about the inevitable end of the world but there are an immense amount of other reason and as individual as the hunter themselves. Spotting a hunter is not very difficult they are usually very inexperienced and stick out like a sore thumb. Normally wearing all black and a long coat constantly looking over their shoulder, sweating like a pig, and they reek of fear. Just picture a scene out of Blade or Buffy and you pretty much have hav e three quarters of the hunters out there. Fortunately most are not organized offline and the web sites are not updated regularly sometimes for months even years and the information in them is rants from people who wouldn’t know a real vampyre if they bit him in the ass! Now this is important if you remember nothing else from my articles remember this. THERE ARE REAL HUNTERS OUT THERE THOSE WHO HAVE SEEN REAL VAMPYRES AND DID NOT UNDERSTAND AND GAVE INTO THE IGNORACE OF FEAR. WHAT THEY DO IS ILLEGAL IN BOTH OURS AND THEIR WORLD AND SHOULD BE HANDLED WITH CAUTION!!! SLAYERS
Allow me to start this section with this SLAYERS ARE NOT HUNTERS!. This part may come under attack but is a necessary part to fully explain the whole concept of how there is some necessity to slayer/hunter organization. I am going to state a personal belief and theory. Vampyres are a part of nature it is said humans are at the top of the food chain and have no natural predator beside themselves. This has never before happened in nature and is certainly not true humans have predators and we are not the only ones who feed off them. As we try to keep their population down, they must also instinctively try to survive. While we are not out to exterminate the human race merely, sustain ourselves. I do not speak for all but I would like to see us restored to our former nobility nobi lity and honor. Now for the info on the slayers. These men and a nd women are dedicated and well
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trained to fight both physically and magicaklly. Only a few actually believe in the Christian god and fight for that reason. Most others are of eclectic faiths and magickal backgrounds It is important that you know they do not seek to eliminate any race merely keep the balance. They slay Demons, werepeople, cults, apocalypsians (those that would force the end of this world before its time), and yes even vampyres. Now realize all have a place and a role in the cosmos. c osmos. There are good and bad vampyres just as there are good and bad in anything else that exist and a balance of light and dark. Good and evil must always be maintained less we destroy all that has been created. The best of the Slayers are very organized, communicate, and meet frequently. There are Slayers of every race human, vampyre, demon, etc. Not all understand the need for balance for if they did the slayers would not exist. There is no prequalification to become a slayer but few become slayers if they are not chosen. It is a hard and dangerous existence, they rarely have friends other than other slayers, and it is very rare to find one with a family. Because of their work, they possess physical as well magickal abilities that surpass many of those who have trained for years. Slayers are a secretive community and DO NOT accept applications for membership but they do have a series of tests that you must pass in order to even be considered for membership the first one of course is to find a slayer! To my knowledge they have never been in the media in any way and not usually heard of. Due to their secretive nature they have a bad reputation and are unfortunately grouped in the same category as the insane hunters. A slayer will never refer to himself or herself as a hunter. There are no credible sites on the net right now and I do not think there will be simply because they do not want publicity or attention. Not all who know about slayers are slayers they do have friends and allies outside of their community but these are few and privileged. In closing to those that wish to become slayers think long and hard about what you are asking. It is a life altering decision and very dangerous work and you must be totally devoted to the cause that drives the slayers. If this is what you are set on the only thing I can say is work and train hard and maybe you will catch the attention of the right people but you are more likely to catch the attention of the wrong ones! Here's an interesting topic people. After many suggestions to do some research on the subject, we did. And the subject being...... Religious References of Vampirism
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Compiled by the membership of the Vampire Legacy Society..specifically, Crimson Angel, Ruby Stained Fangs, IndieVampire, Lord NightWalker, Tattunigma Please keep in mind, that the translation is all in the eye of the reader,ot everyone will see these references quite the same, but without doubt, the possibilities are there....... FROM THE CHRISTIAN HOLY BIBLE Revelation 16:6 for they have shed the blood of your saints and prophets, and you have given them blood to drink as they deserve." Revelation 17:6 I saw that the woman was drunk with the blood of the saints, the blood of those who bore testimony to Jesus. Leviticus 17:11 For the life of a creature is in the blood, and I have given it to you to make atonement for yourselves on the altar; it is the blood that makes atonement for one's life. Leviticus 17:14 because the life of every creature is its blood. That is why I have said to the Israelites, "You must not eat the blood of any creature, because the life of every creature is its blood; Deuteronomy 12:23 But be sure you do not eat the blood, because the blood is the life, and you must not eat the life with the meat. Proverbs 30:14 those whose teeth are swords and whose jaws are set with knives to devour the poor from the earth, the needy from among mankind. Job 29:17 I broke the fangs of the wicked and snatched the victims from their teeth. Zechariah 9:7 And I will take away his blood out of his mouth, and his abominations from between his teeth: but he that remaineth, even he, shall be for
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our God, and he shall be as a governor in Judah, and Ekron as a Jebusite. Micah 7:2 The good man is perished out of the earth: and there is none upright among men: they all lie in wait for blood; they hunt every man his brother with a net. Lamentations 4:14 They have wandered as blind men in the streets, they have polluted themselves with blood, so that men could not touch their garments. Colossians 1:20 And, having made peace through the blood of his cross, by him to reconcile all things unto himself; by him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven. Additions to Esther (Apocrypha) 16:5 Oftentimes also fair speech of those, that are put in trust to manage their friends' affairs, hath caused many that are in authority to be partakers of innocent blood, and hath enwrapped them in remediless calamities. Romans Chapter 3 13: Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their tongues they have used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips: 14: Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness: 15: Their feet are swift to shed blood: 16: Destruction and misery are in their ways: 17: And the way of peace have they not known: 18: There is no fear of God before their eyes. Wisdom of Solomon Chapter 12 3: For it was thy will to destroy by the hands of our fathers both those old inhabitants of thy holy land, 4: Whom thou hatedst for doing most odious works of witchcrafts, and wicked sacrifices; 5: And also those merciless murderers of children, and devourers of man's flesh, and the feasts of blood, 1 Chronicles 11:19 And said, My God forbid it me, that I should do this thing: shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy? for with
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the jeopardy of their lives they brought it. Therefore he would not drink it. These things did these three mightiest. 1 Maccabees (Apocrypha) 7:17 The flesh of thy saints have they cast out, and their blood have they shed round about Jerusalem, and there was none to bury them. Proverbs 1:11 If they say, Come with us, let us lay wait for blood, let us lurk privily for the innocent without cause: Proverbs 1:16 For their feet run to evil, and make haste to shed blood. Proverbs 1:18 And they lay wait for their own blood; they lurk privily for their own lives. Proverbs 6:17 A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, Proverbs 12:6 The words of the wicked are to lie in wait for blood: but the mouth of the upright shall deliver them. Proverbs 29:10 The bloodthirsty hate the upright: but the just seek his soul. Luke 11:50 That the blood of all the prophets, which was shed from the foundation of the world, may be required of this generation; Luke 11:51 From the blood of Abel unto the blood of Zacharias, which perished between the altar and the temple: verily I say unto you, It shall be required of this generation. 2 Esdras (Apocrypha) 15:58 They that be in the mountains shall die of hunger, and eat their own flesh, and drink their own blood, for very hunger of bread, and thirst of water. 1 Samuel 14:32
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And the people flew upon the spoil, and took sheep, and oxen, and calves, and slew them on the ground: and the people did eat them with the blood. 1 Samuel 14:33 Then they told Saul, saying, Behold, the people sin against the LORD, in that they eat with the blood. And he said, Ye have transgressed: roll a great stone unto me this day. Genesis 9:5 And surely your blood of your lives will I require; at the hand of every beast will I require it, and at the hand of man; at the hand of every man's brother will I require the life of man. Genesis 9:6 Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed: for in the image of God made he man. Genesis 42:22 And Reuben answered them, saying, Spake I not unto you, saying, Do not sin against the child; and ye would not hear? therefore, behold, also his blood is required. Revelation 18:24 And in her was found the blood of prophets, and of saints, and of all that were slain upon the earth. Psalms 9:12 When he maketh inquisition for blood, he remembereth them: he forgetteth not the cry of the humble. Psalms 16:4 Their sorrows shall be multiplied that hasten after another god: their drink offerings of blood will I not offer, nor take up their names into my lips. Pslams 51:14 Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation: and my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness. Hebrews 2:14 Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he
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might destroy him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; Numbers 11:33 And while the flesh was yet between their teeth, ere it was chewed, the wrath of the LORD was kindled against the people, and the LORD smote the people with a very great plague. Micah 3:5 Thus saith the LORD concerning the prophets that make my people err, that bite with their teeth, and cry, Peace; and he that putteth not into their mouths, they even prepare war against him. Mark 9:18 And wheresoever he taketh him, he teareth him: and he foameth, and gnasheth with his teeth, and pineth away: and I spake to thy disciples that they should cast him out; and they could not. Deuteronomy 32:24 They shall be burnt with hunger, and devoured with burning heat, and with bitter destruction: I will also send the teeth of beasts upon them, with the poison of serpents of the dust. Lamentations 2:16 All thine enemies have opened their mouth against thee: they hiss and gnash the teeth: they say, We have swallowed her up: certainly this is the day that we looked for; we have found, we have seen it. Daniel 7:5 And behold another beast, a second, like to a bear, and it raised up itself on one side, and it had three ribs in the mouth of it between the teeth of it: and they said thus unto it, Arise, devour much flesh. Daniel 7:7 After this I saw in the night visions, and behold a fourth beast, dreadful and terrible, and strong exceedingly; and it had great iron teeth: it devoured and brake in pieces, and stamped the residue with the feet of it: and it was diverse from all the beasts that were before it; and it had ten horns. Job 16:9 He teareth me in his wrath, who hateth me: he gnasheth upon me with his teeth; mine enemy sharpeneth his eyes upon me.
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Job 41:14 Who can open the doors of his face? his teeth are terrible round about.
Matthew 8:12 But the children of the kingdom shall be cast out into outer darkness: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Psalms 35:16 With hypocritical mockers in feasts, they gnashed upon me with their teeth. Psalms 37:12 The wicked plotteth against the just, and gnasheth upon him with his teeth. Psalms 57:4 My soul is among lions: and I lie even among them that are set on fire, even the sons of men, whose teeth are spears and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword.
"MAY THE GROUND NOT RECEIVE THEE" An Exploration of the Greek Vrykolakas and His Origins by Inanna Arthen (1998) In the field of vampirology, few cultures in the world have a vampire folklore tradition as long-standing, as rich and as carefully analyzed by scholars as Greece. Although the most famous mass panics recorded in seventeenth and eighteenth century annals occurred in Eastern Europe, and although Slavic countries in general and Romania in particular have a varied and creative tradition of vampire folklore, the persistence of the belief in Greece surpasses that of any other nation. For a scholar taking a broad perspective of the phenomenon, this raises an obvious question: why? What is peculiar to the Greek culture and society that has led to the maintenance of vampire beliefs and reported incidents right up to the first half of this century? Are there more reasonable explanations than the claim of older writers that the Greeks are overly superstitious, or the Occam's Razor solution that
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perhaps Greece simply has a lot of vampires? An examination of these beliefs, their ancient origins and the way in which the Greek Orthodox church has both encouraged and discouraged them may shed some light on the issue. Before diving into this question, it will be helpful to explain just exactly what is meant by the term "vampire" as applied by English speakers to anything related to Greece. The English word "vampire" is a Slavic borrowing and is found in almost identical (certainly homophonic) form in Russian, Polish, Serbian, Czechoslovakian and Bulgarian, along with similar related words. Its origin is uncertain, but the OED suggests that it may be related to the Turkish uber, "witch". "Vampire" entered the English language during the eighteenth century panics in Eastern Europe and is first cited by the OED in 1734. Modern vampirologists now sweep under the aegis of this term a wide variety of ancient myth, traditional folklore, "fairy-tales" and other crafted oral tradition, unexplained phenomena, sociology, and occult theory. Cogent to a discussion of Greek vampires are two particular types of being to which the term "vampire" is applied. The first, common to ancient myth worldwide, is the wholly inhuman, supernatural being that preys most especially upon infants, children, women in all stages of pregnancy and early motherhood, and young people on the cusp of sexual maturity and marriage. "Child-killing demons" often are included in this category, as well as sexually alluring creatures such as the lamia. The second type of being is a revenant, a human who has died and returned from the grave in physical form--whether literally in his own corpse or in some sort of materialized second body is open to interpretation--to perform actions that have physical effects on the living and their environment, including the begetting of children and the inflicting of death. Whether such revenants necessarily drink blood, as we will see, is not always clear. Blood-drinking perse is not a requirement for a "vampire". However, beings defined as "vampires" do, in some way or another, take sustenance or vitality from living creatures. In Greece, belief in the second type of vampire—the corporeal revenant that preyed upon or plagued the living--developed only after the arrival of Slavic immigrants beginning in 587. But although the various themes that coalesced into that most unquenchable of all folk vampires, the vrykolakas, are heavily influenced by foreign concepts, they found a rich soil in the traditions of ancient Greece. Three such traditions clearly play a role in developing later beliefs. First, the belief
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in supernatural creatures that drank blood and attacked human beings to obtain it; second, the belief that under certain conditions, bodily return from death was possible, although greatly feared; and third, that blood itself contained power sufficient to allow the dead to cross the gulf that separated them from the world of the living. The Mormo and the Empusas were child-killing demons who attended upon the Goddess Hecate (Summers 1929, 2-3). Stewart notes them in his glossary of exotica (Stewart, 251-252) only to mention that they have not survived into contemporary tradition except, in the case of the Mormo, as a "bogeyman" for threatening unruly children. Similar to them were the Gelloudes and the Stringla, female monsters that were said to specifically suck the blood of children and kill them (Stewart, 252-253). Almost every human culture has such a myth, a personification of the unknown (to this day, in the form of SIDS) killer of children in their cradles at night, or their mysterious "failure to thrive" and wasting away. Yet the horror of these monsters lay not in their inhumanity but in their perversion of the human. Child-killing demons are almost invariably female, the evil mother that kills instead of nurtures, devours instead of feeds. These demons often are also presented as seductresses, preying on young men as well as children. In other words, they are not only evil mothers, but evil wives--wanton, promiscuous and devouring. Summers cites the wellknown story from Philostratus' Life of Apollonius of Tyana (Summers 1929, 3-5), about Menippus, the eager suitor who is barely prevented from marrying an Empusa, or Lamia. She is forced to confess that she was "fattening up" Menippus, "because it was her pleasure to feed upon young and beautiful bodies, because their blood is pure and strong" (Summers 1929, 5). Stringles also were sometimes equated with the seductive Lamiae (Summers 1929, 8). But far more fearful than these exotica were the fates that might befall oneself during the passage from the state of life to the state of death. Lawson examines at great length the theme found in Greek tragedy of corporeal return to avenge blood-guilt--a hidden theme due to the conventions of the Greek stage, but nevertheless clearly discernable. A detailed look at Lawson's arguments is beyond the scope of this paper. However, Lawson reports that oaths are found in Greek literature binding both the speaker and others to being rejected by the earth, being turned out of Hades by Tantalus, and of remaining incorruptible after death. Euripides' Hippolytus, for example, says to his father, "in death may neither sea nor earth receive my flesh, if I have proved false" (Lawson, 418). Lawson proposes that, for example,
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Aeschylus in Choephori presents a true climax. As the victim is to be excluded in his lifetime from all intercourse with the living, so in his death, by the withholding of that dissolution without which there is no entrance to the lower world, he is to be cut off from communion with the dead. He is to die with none to honor him with them rites due to the dead, none to love him and shed the tears that are their just meed, but even in that last doom which consumes all others is damned to be withheld from corruption. (Lawson, 422-423). Even a modern reader almost shudders. The importance of proper burial rites in ancient Greece is well-known, and the greatest shame of all was to leave even one's enemies unburied, to "not even throw handfuls of earth upon their dead bodies" as Pausanias accused Lysander (Summers 1928, 83). Antigone suffered capital punishment for fulfilling this obligation to her kin against royal decree. But the precise consequences of ignoring this obligation are less well documented. Few ghosts or revenants haunt surviving Greek literature. Lawson argues at great length that the conventions of Greek drama permitted such return only to be hinted at. Outside of this sphere, the sole extant story of a corporeal Greek revenant is so famous that it is cited in nearly all of my books: the return of Philinnion, a young woman, for nightly liaisons with an unwitting guest of her bereaved parents (Lawson, 413-415, among others). Yet the reason for Philinnion's restlessness is never explained, she appears in no way horrific or demonic, and in fact her poor lover is so besotted by her that when she has been laid to final rest by cremation, he commits suicide. Lawson, however, argues that bodily return was tacitly expected and feared in the case of blood-guilt and vengence. He points out that in ancient times murderers frequently mutilated their victims by cutting off their hands and feet and tucking them under the corpse's armpits, or binding them to its chest with a band (Lawson, 435). One rationale for this action that suggests itself is that such mutilation prevents the murdered victim from returning bodily to avenge itself on the murderer--who would, in turn, become a revenant wandering cursed between life and death. In this discussion, Lawson presents the roots of two primary later vampire beliefs: that vampires are fierce marauders, and that their victims become vampires as well. He says, the character of these Avengers approximates very closely to that of the modern vrykolakes. True, there is one fundamental difference; the
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ancient Avenger directed his wrath solely against the author of his sufferings...the modern vrykolakas is unreasoning in his wrath and plagues indiscriminately all who fall in his way. (Lawson, 458). Lawson lists the qualities that Avengers and vrykolakes share: Modern stories there are in plenty, which tell how the vrykolakas springs upon his victim and rends him and drinks his blood; how sheer terror of his aspect has driven men mad; how, in order to escape him, whole families have been driven forth from their native island to wander in exile; how death has often been the issue of his assaults; and how those whom a vrykolakas has slain become themselves vrykolakes. (Lawson, 458-459) Lawson goes on to suggest that when Aeschylus makes the Erinyes such horrific, bloodthirsty pursuers of Orestes, when they should have been goddesses worthy of worship, he is casting a proxy role upon them. They are substitutes for the actual Avenger that could not be properly shown in Greek drama. Their qualities of blackness, ferocity, bloodthirstyness and horror are those of the vrykolakes. Lawson's close comparison of the characteristics of ancient Avengers and the Furies, or Erinyes, with the characteristics of modern vrykolakes may not be as revealing as he believes. He claims that these common themes indicate that both ancient writers and modern folklore derive from the same older tradition, while it might be argued that the modern folklore took its imagery directly from ancient literature and not from some common source. Nevertheless, the modern Greek vampire gains a rather respectable pedigree. Long before the Slavs and Greek Orthodoxy, the ancient Greeks recognized that with extraordinarily bad fortune, one might be trapped indefinitely in a liminal state in which one's soul could not become free from one's body, one's body could not dissolve and free itself from earth, and one was forever doomed to roam trapped, yearning or ravening, between life and death. The only release was the forced "dissolution" of cremation, as was done to Philinnion. To be left unburied was to be flung upon the surface of the cold earth, to be cursed as "incorruptible" (however obvious it was that unburied bodies rotted). To be left unmourned and without proper rites was to invite the soul to linger around its former home and possibly reanimate it. Lawson concludes a discussion of terminology for such restless dead, Thus then the problem of ancient nomenclature of revenants is solved,
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and the results are briefly these: all revenants were originally called, alastores, "Wanderers"; but subsequently that name was restricted only to the vengeful class of revenants, to which the names miastores and prostropaioi had always belonged; and for the more harmless and purely pitiable revenants no name remained, but men said of such an one simply, "He wanders." (Lawson, 484) Finally, the most well-known ancient text describing the power of fresh blood to revivify the dead occurs in the Iliad, when Odysseus fills a pit with sheeps' blood to feed the shade of the seer Tiresias. Once the ghost has drunk the blood, he is able to speak. After Odysseus has spoken with the seer, other ghosts also drink the blood and converse with him, but when he attempts to embrace one, the shade of his mother, she disappears (Summers 1929, 22). For the non-corporeal, even blood can only do so much. Nevertheless, the results it effects in returning some powers of life to the disembodied are profound. The word vrykolakas itself is a borrowing from Slavic and is derived from root words meaning "wolf" and hair or pelt (Lawson, 377). It originally appears to have meant "werewolf" or lycanthrope, and still carries this meaning in isolated local regions of Greece. The Greeks did not adopt the word "vampire" from the Slavs to indicate a revenant, although oddly, vompiras is occasionally found as a term of contempt. Lawson concludes from this that the Greeks already had an active tradition of a fierce type of revenant and applied the new word to that. If they had borrowed the entire concept of undead vampires from the Slavs, they would have borrowed the name for them as well. However, all the arguments in this area remain shakey. It is unclear why the Greeks replaced their own words for a fierce Avenger with a new word for werewolf, and whether or not this represented the introduction of a unique new folkloric tradition or the evolution of an old one. The point made by several writers that the transferral of the word occurred because of the documented Slavic belief that werewolves became vampires after death, also seems unsupported by any evidence in Greek tradition specifically. Occasionally, a child whose siblings died mysteriously would be (rather cruelly) named a "vrykolakas" by its mother (Summers 1929, 219), and there are a few stories of "living vrykolakes" that behaved as lycanthropes. But the etymological leap from werewolf to vampire is obscure. Moreover, there is certainly a broad gap in the evidential record between the ancient texts cited above, and the first descriptions of the Greek vrykolakas as a fullfledged and active belief. The earliest mention of the vrykolakas is made by Leo Allatius in 1645 (by coincidence, possibly, his work was published just as all of Eastern Europe was about to explode into a
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century of its own vampire panics). I would like to summarize some well-known, and less well-known, vrykolakas stories chronologically in order to bring out some of their significant aspects. Leo Allatius (Leone Allacci), De quorundam Graecorum Opinationibus, 1645: According to Allatius, the word vrykolakas derives from words meaning cesspool. The vyrkolakas is an evil and wicked person who may have been excommunicated by a bishop. Its body swells up so that all its limbs are distended, it is hard, and when tapped it thrums like a drum. For this reason it is called tympaniaois, "drumlike". The devil animates such bodies and causes them to roam about at any time of day or night. On Chios, residents will not answer until a caller has called their name twice, because the vrykolakas is believed to only be able to call once, and if it is answered, its victim will die within twenty-four hours. If seen during the day, the vrykolakas is so horrible that witnesses die of fright--unless they speak to the monster, which immediately disappears. If a village has an epidemic of deaths or llness, the inhabitants open graves searching for a body in the "drumlike" condition described. If one is found, it is cremated. Allatius claims to have witnessed the discovery of such a body in a tomb while a boy in Chios, but he does not say what was done with the body. (Cited by Summers 1928, 223-229) Father Francois Richard, Relation de l'Isle de Sant-erini, 1657: Richard argues that the devil keeps certain bodies incorrupt and animates them. Under his command they are able to wander around, enter houses, strike people mute with fear, and assault them, even killing them. When a village is beset by such a vrykolakas, Richard says, they huddle together all in one house for protection, and apply to their Bishop for permission to exhume the suspect. This is done on a Saturday, the only day when a vrykolakas may rest in its grave. If the body is found "fresh and gorged with new blood", it is "exorcised" with prayer until it dissolves before their eyes. If prayer is ineffective, the body is cremated. Richard tells the story of the gentle vrykolakas Alexander, in the village of Pyrgos, who had been a shoemaker. He returned from the grave to mend his children's shoes, carry water for the family and chop their firewood. Although his family's reaction to this is not noted, his neighbors were finally frightened enough to exhume and cremate his body, after which his visits ceased. Other vrykolakes were reported
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on Amorgos roaming fields in broad daylight, eating green beans. A much fiercer vrykolakas was Patino, a merchant from Patmos who died on a buying trip to Natolia and revived in his coffin while being shipped home. His wife had him buried with full honors, and he then began appearing in houses in the area, violently assaulting people and causing damage. Prayers and exorcisms were fruitless in stopping the haunting. Patino's body was ordered sent back to Natolia, but the thoroughly spooked sailors charged with its transport stopped on the first island they passed and burned it, which ended the phenomena. Richard notes elsewhere that vrykolakes were commonly thought to be unable to cross salt water, and they were often dispatched on uninhabited islands. Richard's final story is very similar to that of de Tournefort [see below] in a number of interesting respects. A "usurer" of Santorini named Ianettis reformed in the last year of his life, and died asking his wife to pay his remaining debts, which she did not do. Ianettis began haunting his village with very similar poltergeist-like activity as the Mycone vrykolakas: yanking the bedclothes off of sleeping people, waking up the priests for matins, emptying wine kegs, and generally abusing and terrorizing people. He visited the Mother Prioress of a Dominican convent, awakened her by rolling her rosary on the floor, jeered at her prayers and as a parting joke, threw her shoes into the water cistern. His body was finally exhumed, and Richard examined it and reported that it displayed no signs of unusual incorruption, but was badly decayed. The body was exorcised for a full day and then dismembered and reinterred, but the vrykolakas' activity did not stop until his wife made good his debts. (translated and cited by Summers 1929, 229-240)
"The Animistic Vampire in New England" By George R. Stetson from The American Anthropologist, Vol. IX, No. 1, January, 1896
The belief in the vampire and the whole family of demons has its origin
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in the animism, spiritism, or personification of the barbarian, who, unable to distinguish the objective from the subjective, ascribes good and evil influences and all natural phenomena to good and evil spirits. Mr. Conway remarks of this vampire belief that "it is, perhaps, the most formidable survival of demonic superstition now existing in the world." Under the names of vampire, were-wolf, man-wolf, night-mare, nightdemon--in the Illyrian tongue oupires, or leeches; in modern Greek broucolaques, and in our common tongue ghosts, each country having its own peculiar designation--the superstitious of the ancient and modern world, of Chaldea and Babylon, Persia, Egypt, and Syria, of Illyria, Poland, Turkey, Servia, Germany, England, Central Africa, New England, and the islands of the Malay and Polynesian archipelagoes, designate the spirits which leave the tomb, generally in the night, to torment the living. The character, purpose, and manner of the vampire manifestations depend, like its designation, upon environment and the plane of culture. All primitive peoples have believed in the existence of good and evil spirits holding a middle place between men and gods. Calmet lays down in most explicit terms, as he was bound to do by the canons of his church, the doctrine of angels and demons as a matter of dogmatic theology. The early Christians were possessed, or obsessed, by demons, and the so-called demoniacal possession of idiots, lunatics, and hysterical persons is still common in Japan, China, India, and Africa, and instances are noted in Western Europe, all yielding to the methods of Christian and pagan exorcists as practiced in New Testament times. The Hebrew synonym of demon was serpent; the Greek, diabolus, a calumniator, or impure spirit. The Rabbins were divided in opinion, some believing they were entirely spiritual, others that they were corporeal, capable of generation and subject to death. As before suggested, it was the general belief that the vampire is a spirit which leaves its dead body in the grave to visit and torment the living. The modern Greeks are persuaded that the bodies of the excommunicated do not putrefy in their tombs, but appear in the night
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as in the day, and that to encounter them is dangerous. Instances are cited by Calmet, in Christian antiquity, of excommunicated persons visibly arising from their tombs and leaving the churches when the deacon commanded the excommunicated and those who did not partake of the communion to retire. The same writer states that "it was an opinion widely circulated in Germany that certain dead ate in their tombs and devoured all they could find around them, including their own flesh, accompanied by a certain piercing shriek and a sound of munching and groaning." A German author has thought it worth while to write a work entitled "De Masticatione mortuorum in tumulis." In many parts of England a person who is ill is said to be "wisht" or "overlooked." The superstition of the "evil eye" originated and exists in the same degree ofculture; the evil eye "which kills snakes, scares wolves, hatches ostrich eggs, and breeds leprosy." The Polynesians believed that the vampires were the departed souls, which quitted the grave, and grave idols, to creep by night into the houses and devour the heart and entrails of the sleepers, who afterward died.1 The Karems tell of the Kephu, which devours the souls of men who die. The mintira of the Malay peninsula have their water demon, who sucks blood from men's toes and thumbs. "The first theory of the vampire superstitions," remarks Tyler2, "is that the soul of the living man, often a sorcerer, leaves its proper body asleep and goes forth, perhaps in visible form of a straw or a fluff of down, slips through the keyhole, and attacks a living victim. Some say these Mauri come by night to men, sit upon their breasts, and suck their blood, while others think children alone are attacked, while to men they are nightmares. "The second theory is that the soul of a dead man goes out from its buried body and sucks the blood of living men; the victim becomes thin, languid, bloodless, and, falling into a rapid decline, dies." The belief in the Obi of Jamaica and the Vaudoux or Vodun of the West African coast, Jamaica and Haiti is essentially the same as that of the vampire, and its worship and superstitions, which in Africa include child-murder, still survive in these parts, as well as in several districts among the Negro population of our southern states. The negro laid under the ban of the Obi or who is vaudouxed or, in the vernacular,
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"hoodooed" slowly pines to death. In New England the vampire superstition is unknown by its proper name. It is there believed that consumption is not a physical but a spiritual disease, obsession, or visitation; that as long as the body of a dead consumptive relative has blood in its heart it is proof that an occult influence steals from it for death and is at work draining the blood of the living into the heart of the dead and causing his rapid decline. It is a common belief in primitive races of low culture that disease is caused by the revengeful spirits of man or other animals--notably among the tribes of North American Indians as well as of African negroes. Russian superstition supposes nine sisters who plague mankind with fever. They lie chained up in caverns, and when let loose pounce upon man without pity.3 As in the financial and political, the psychologic world has its periods of exultation and depression, of confidence and alarm. In the eighteenth century a vampire panic beginning in Servia and Hungary spread thence into northern and western Europe, acquiring its new life and impetus from the horrors attending the prevalence of the plague and other distressing epidemics in an age of great public moral depravity and illiteracy. Calmet, a learned Benedictine monk and abbé of Sénones, seized this opportunity to write a popular treatise on the vampire, which in a short time passed through many editions. It was my good fortune not long since to find in the Boston Athenaeum library an original copy of his work. Its title page reads as follows: "Traité sur les apparitions des esprits et sur les vampires ou les revenans de Hongrie, de Moravie, etc. Par le R. P. Dom Augustine Calmet, abbé de Sénones. Nouvelle edition, revisée, corrigie, at augmentie par l'auteur, avec une lettre de Mons le Marquis Maffei, sur le magie. A Paris; Chez debure l'aine quay des Augustins à l'image S. Paul. MDCCLI. Avec approb et priv du roi." Calmet was born in Lorraine, near Commercy, in 1672, and his chief works were a commentary and history of the Bible. He died as the abbé de Sénones, in the department of the Vosges. This curious treatise has evidently proved a mine of wealth to all modern encyclopedists and demonologists. It impresses one as the
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work of a man whose mental convictions do not entirely conform to the traditions and dogmas of his church, and his style at timesm appears somewhat apologetic. Calmet declares his belief to be that the vampires of Europe and the broucolaques of Greece are the excommunicated which the grave rejects. They are the dead of a longer or shorter time who leave their tombs to torment the living, sucking their blood and announcing their appearance by rattling of doors and windows. The name vampire, or d'oupires, signifies in the Slavonic tongue a bloodsucker. He formulates the three theories then existing as to the cause of these appearances: First: That the persons were buried alive and naturally leave their tombs. Second: That they are dead, but that by God's permission or particular command they return to their bodies for a time, as when they are exhumed their bodies are found entire, the blood red and fluid, and their members soft and pliable. Third: That it is the devil who makes these apparitions appear and by their means causes all the evil done to men and animals. In some places the spectre appears as in the flesh, walks, talks, infests villages, ill uses both men and beasts, sucks the blood of their near relations, makes them ill, and finally causes their death. The late Monsieur de Vassimont, counselor of the chamber of the courts of Bar, was informed by public report in Monravia that it was common enough in that country to see men who had died some time before "present themselves at a party and sit down to table with persons of their acquaintance without saying a word and nodding to one of the party, the one indicated would infallibly die some days after."4 About 1735 on the frontier of Hungary a dead person appeared after ten years' burial and caused the death of his father. In 1730 in Turkish Servia it was believed that those who had been passive vampires during life became active after death; in Russia, that the vampire does not stop his unwelcome visits at a single member of a family, but extends his visits to the last member, which is the Rhode Island belief. The captain of grenadiers in the Regiment of Monsieur le Baron Trenck, cited by Calmet, declares "that it is only in their family and
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among their own relations that the vampires delight in destroying their own species." The inhabitants of the island of Chio do not answer unless called twice, being persuaded that the broucolaques do not call but once, and when so called the vampire disappears, and the person called dies in a few days. The classic writers from Socrates to Shakespeare and from Shakespeare to our own time have recognized the superstition. Mr. Conway quotes from the legend of Ishtar descending to Hades to seek some beloved one. She threatens if the door is not opened-"I will raise the dead to be devourers of the living; Upon the living shall the dead prey."5 Singularly, in his discourse on modern superstitions De Quincey, to whom crude superstitions clung and who had faith in dreams as portents, does not allude to the vampire; but his contemporary, Lord Byron, in his lines on the opening of the royal romb at Windsor, recognizes this belief in the transformation of the dead: "Justice and death have mixed their dust in vain, Each royal vampire wakes to life again." William of Malmsbury says that "in England they>believed that the wicked came back after death by the will of the devil," and it was not an unusual beliefm that those whose death had been caused in this manner, at their death pursued the same evil calling. Naturally under such an uncomfortable and inconvenient infliction some avenue of escape must, if possible, be found. It was first necessary to locate the vampire. If on opening the grave of a "suspect" the body was found to be of a rose color, the beard, hair and nails renewed, and the veins filled, the evidence of its being the abode of a vampire was conclusive. A voyager in the Levant in the seventeenth century is quoted as relating that an excommunicated person was exhumed and the body found full, healthy, and well disposed and the veins filled with the blood the vampire had taken from the living. In a certain Turkish village, of forty persons exhumed seventeen gave evidence of vampirism. In Hungary, one dead thirty years was found in a natural state. In 1727 the bodies of five religieuse were discovered in a tomb near the hospital of Quebec, that had been buried twenty years, covered with flesh and suffused with
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blood.6 The methods of relief from or disposition of the vampire's dwelling place are not numerous, but extremely sanguinary and ghastly. In Servia a relief is found in eating of the earth of his grave and rubbing the person with his blood. This prescription, was, however, valueless if after forty days the body was exhumed and all the evidences of an archivampire were not found. A more common and almost universal method of relief, especially in the Turkish provinces and in the Greek islands, was to burn the body and scatter the ashes to the winds. Some old writers are of the opinion that the souls of the dead cannot be quiet until the entire body has been consumed. Exceptions are noted in the Levant, where the body is cut in pieces and boiled in wine, and where, according to Voltaire, the heart is torn out and burned. In Hungary and Servia, to destroy the demon it was considered necessary to exhume the body, insert in the heart and other parts of the defunct, or pierce it through with a sharp instrument, as in the case of suicides, upon which it utters a dreadful cry, as if alive; it is then decapitated and the body burned. In New England the body is exhumed, the heart burned, and the ashes scattered. The discovery of the vampire's resting-place was itself an art. In Hungary and in Russia they choose a boy young enough to be certain that he is innocent of any impurity, put him on the back of a horse which has never stumbled and is absolutely black, and make him ride over all the graves in the cemetery. The grave over which the horse refuses to pass is reputed to be that of a vampire. Gilbert Stuart, the distinguished American painter, when asked by a London friend where he was born, replied: "Six miles from Pottawoone, ten miles from Poppasquash, four miles from Conanicut, and not far from the spot where the famous battle with the warlike Pequots was fought." In plainer language, Stuart was born in the old snuff mill belonging to his father and Dr. Moffat, at the head of the Petaquamscott pond, six miles from Newport, across the bay, and about the same distance from Narragansett Pier, in the state of Rhode Island. By some mysterious survival, occult transmission, or remarkable atavisim, this region, including within its radius the towns of Exeter, Foster, Kingstown, East Greenwich, and others, with their scattered
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hamlets and more pretentious villages, is distinguished by the prevalence of this remarkable superstition--a survival of the days of Sardanapalus, of Nebuchadnezzar, and of New Testament history in the closing years of what we are pleased to call the enlightened nineteenth century. It is an extraordinary instance of a barbaric superstition outcropping in and coexisting with a high general culture, of which Max Müller and others have spoken, and which is not so uncommon, if rarely so extremely aggravated, crude, and painful. The region referred to, where agriculture is in a depressed condition and abandoned farms are numerous, is the tramping ground of the book agent, the chromo peddler, the patent-medicine man and the home of the erotic and neurotic modern novel. The social isolation away from the larger villages is as complete as a century and a half ago, when the boy Gilbert Stuart tramped the woods, fished the streams, and was developing and absorbing his artistic inspirations, while the agricultural and economic conditions are very much worse.7 Farm houses deserted and ruinous are frequent, and the once productive lands, neglected and overgrown with scrubby oak, speak forcefully and mournfully of the migration of the youthful farmers from country to town. In short, the region furnishes an object-lesson in the decline of of wealth consequent upon the prevalence of a too common heresy in the district that land will take care of itself, or that it can be robbed from generation to generation without injury, and suggests the almost criminal neglect of the conservators of public education to give instruction to our farming youth in a more scientific and more practical agriculture. It has well been said by a banker of well-known name in an agricultural district in the midlands of England that "the depression of agriculture is a depression of brains." Naturally, in such isolated conditions the superstitions of a much lower culture have maintained their place and are likely to keep it and perpetuate it, despite the church, the public school, and the weekly newspaper. Here Cotton Mather, Justice Sewall, and the host of medical, clerical and lay believers in the uncanny superstitions of bygone centuries could still hold high carnival.
The first visit in this farming community of native-born New Englanders was made to ------, a small seashore village possessing a summer hotel and a few cottages of summer residents not far from Newport--that Mecca of wealth, fashion, and nineteenth-century
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culture. The ------ family is among its well-to-do and most intelligent inhabitants. One member of this family had some years since lost children by consumption, and by common report claimed to have saved those surviving by exhumation and cremation of the dead. In the same village resides Mr. ------, an intelligent man, by trade a mason, who is a living witness of the superstition and of the efficacy of the treatment of the dead which it prescribes. He informed me that he had lost two brothers by consumption. Upon the attack of the second brother his father was advised by Mr. ------, the head of the family before mentioned, to take up the first body and burn its heart, but the brother attacked objected to the sacrilege and in consequence subsequently died. When he was attacked by the disease in his turn, ------'s advice prevailed, and the body of the brother last dead was exhumed, and "living" blood being found in the heart and in circulation, it was cremated, and the sufferer began immediately to mend and stood before me and hale, hearty, and vigorous man of fifty years. When questioned as to his understanding of the miraculous influence, he could suggest nothing and did not recognize the superstition even by name. He remembered that the doctors did not believe in its efficacy, but he and many others did. His father saw the brother's body and the arterial blood. The attitude of several other persons in regard to the practice was agnostic, either from fear of public opinion or other reasons, and their replies to my inquiries were in the same temper of mind as that of the blind man in the Gospel of Saint John (9:25), who did not dare to express his belief, but "answered and said, Whether he was a sinner or no, I know not; one thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see." At ------, a small isolated village of scattered houses in a farming population, distant fifteen or twenty miles from Newport and eight or ten from Stuart's birthplace, there have been made within fifty years a half dozen or more exhumations. The most recent was made within two years, in the family of ------. The mother and four children had already succumbed to consumption, and the child most recently deceased (within six months) was, in obedience to the superstition, exhumed and the heart burned. Dr. ------, who made the autopsy, stated that he found the body in the usual condition after an interment of that length of time. I learned that others of the family have since died, and one is now very low with the dreaded disease. The doctor remarked that he consented to the autopsy only after the pressing solicitation of the surviving children, who were patients of his, the father first objecting, but finally, under continued pressure, yielding.
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Dr. ------ declares the superstition to be prevalent in all the isolated districts of southern Rhode Island, and that many instances of its survival can be found in the large centers of population. In the village now being considered known exhumations have been made in five families, and in two adjoining villages in two families. In 1875 an instance was reported in Chicago, and in a New York journal of recent date I read the following: "At Peukuhl, a small village in Prussia, a farmer died last March. Since then one of his sons has been sickly, and believing that the dead man would not eat until he had drawn to himself the nine surviving members of the family, the sickly son, armed with a spade, exhumed his father and cut off his head." It does not by any means absolutely follow that this barbarous superstition has a stronger hold in Rhode Island than in any other part of the country. Peculiar conditions have caused its manifestation and survival there, and similar ones are likely to produce it elsewhere. The singular feature is that it should appear and flourish in a native population which from its infancy has had the ordinary New England educational advantages; in a State having a larger population to the square mile than any in the Union, and in an environment of remarkable literacy and culture when compared to some other sections of the country. It is perhaps fortunate that the isolation of which this is probably the product, an isolation common in sparsely settled regions, where thought stagnates and insanity and superstition are prevalent, has produced nothing worse. In neighboring Connecticut, within a few miles of its university town of New Haven, there are rural farming populations, fairly prosperous, of average intelligence, and furnished with churches and schools, which have made themselves notorious by murder, suicides, and numerous instances of melancholia and insanity. Other abundant evidence is at hand pointing to the conclusion that the vampire superstition still retains its hold in its original habitat--an illustration of the remarkable tenacity and continuity of a superstition through centuries of intellectual progress from a lower to a higher culture, and of the impotency of the latter to entirely eradicate from itself the traditional beliefs, customs, habits, observances, and impressions of the former. It is apparent that our increased and increasing culture, our appreciation of the principles of natural, mental, and moral philosophy and knowledge of natural laws has no complete correlation in the decline of primitive and crude superstitions or increased control of the
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emotions or the imagination, and that to force a higher culture upon a lower, or to metamorphose or to perfectly control its emotional nature through education of the intellect, is equally impossible. The two cultures may, however, coexist, intermingling and in a limited degree absorbing from and retroacting favorably or unfavorably upon each other--trifling aberrations in the inexorable law which binds each to its own place. The most enlightened and philosophic have, either apparent or secreted in their innermost consciousness, superstitious weaknesses-negative, involuntary, more or less barbaric, and under greater or lesser control in correspondence with their education, their present environment, and the degree of their development—in the control of the imagination and emotions. These in various degrees predominate over the understanding where reason is silent or its authority weakens. Sónya Kovalévsky (1850-1890), one of the most brilliant mathematicians of the century, who obtained the Prix-Bordin from the French academy, "the greatest scientific honor ever gained by a woman," "whose love for mathematical and psychological problems amounted to a passion," and whose intellect would accept no proposition incapable of a mathematical demonstration, all her life maintained a firm belief in apparitions and in dreams as portents. She was so influenced by disagreeable dreams and the apparition of a demon as to be for some time thereafter obviously depressed and low-spirited. A well-known and highly cultured American mathematician recently said to me that his servant had seven years ago nailed a horseshoe over a house door, and that he had never had the courage to remove it. There is in the Chemnitzer-Rocken Philosophie, cited by Grimm, a register of eleven or twelve hundred crude superstitions surviving in highly educated Germany. Buckle declared that "superstition was the curse of Scotland," and in this regard neither Germany nor Scotland are singular. Of the origin of this superstition in Rhode Island or in other parts of the United States we are ignorant; it is in all probability an exotic like ourselves, originating in the mythographic period of the Aryan and Semitic peoples, although legends and superstitions of a
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somewhat similar character may be found among the American Indians. The Ojibwas have, it is said, a legend of a ghostly man-eater. Mr. Mooney, in a personal note, says he has not met with any close parallel of the vampire myth among the tribes with which he is familiar. The Cherokees have, however, something analogous. There are in that tribe quite a number of old witches and wizards who thrive and fatten upon the livers of murdered victims. When some one is dangerously sick these witches gather invisibly about his bedside and torment him, even lifting him up and dashing him down again upon the ground until life is extinct. After he is buried they dig up his body and take out the liver to feast upon. They thus lengthen their own lives by as many days as they have taken from his. In this way they get to be very aged, which renders them objects of suspicion. It is not, therefore, well to grow old among the Cherokees. If discovered and recognized during the feast, when they are again visible, they die within seven days. I have personal experience of a case in which a reputed medicine-man was left to die alone because his friends were afraid to come into the house on account of the presence of invisible witches. Jacob Grimm8 defines superstition as a persistence of individual men in views which the common sense or culture of the majority has caused them to abandon, a definition which, while within its limits sufficiently accurate, does not recognize or take account of the subtile, universal, ineradicable fear of or reverence for the supernatural, the mysterious, and unknown. De Quincey has more comprehensively remarked that "superstition or sympathy with the invisible is the great test of man's nature as an earthly combining with a celestial. In superstition is the possibility of religion, and though superstition is often injurious, degrading and demoralizing, it is so, not as a form of corruption or degradation, but as a form of non-development." In reviewing these cases of psychologic pre-Raphaelitism they seem, from an economic point of view, to form one of the strongest as well as the weirdest arguments in favor of a general cremation of the dead that it is possible to present. They also remind us of the boutade of the Saturday Review, "that to be really Medieval, one should have no body; to be really modern, one should have no soul;"