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Vampire |
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vampire, in folklore, animated corpse that sucks the blood of humans. Belief in vampires has existed from the earliest times and has given rise to an amalgam of legends and superstitions. They were most commonly thought of as spirits or demons that left their graves at night to seek and enslave their victims; it was thought that the victims themselves became vampires. The vampire could be warded off with a variety of charms, amulets, and herbs and could finally be killed by driving a stake through its heart or by cremation. Sometimes the vampire assumed a nonhuman shape, such as that of a bat or wolf (see lycanthropy lycanthropy , in folklore, assumption by a human of the appearance and characteristics of an animal. Ancient belief in lycanthropy was widespread, and it still exists in parts of the world.
..... Click the link for more information. ). Probably the most famous vampire in literature is Count Dracula in the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker Stoker, Bram (Abraham Stoker), 1847–1912, English novelist, b. Ireland. He is best remembered as the author of Dracula (1897), a horror story recounting the adventures of the vampire Count Dracula. ..... Click the link for more information. . BibliographySee A. Masters, The Natural History of the Vampire (1972); N. Auerbach, Our Vampires, Ourselves (1995). vampireIn popular legend, a bloodsucking creature that rises from its burial place at night, sometimes in the form of a bat, to drink the blood of humans. By daybreak it must return to its grave or to a coffin filled with its native earth. Tales of vampires are part of the world's folklore, most notably in Hungary and the Balkan Peninsula. The disinterment in Serbia in 1725 and 1732 of several fluid-filled corpses that villagers claimed were behind a plague of vampirism led to widespread interest and imaginative treatment of vampirism throughout western Europe. Vampires are supposedly dead humans (originally suicides, heretics, or criminals) who maintain a kind of life by biting the necks of living humans and sucking their blood; their victims also become vampires after death. These “undead” creatures cast no shadow and are not reflected in mirrors. They can be warded off by crucifixes or wreaths of garlic and can be killed by exposure to the sun or by an oak stake driven through the heart. The most famous vampire is Count Dracula from Bram Stoker's novel Dracula (1897). vampire 1. (in European folklore) a corpse that rises nightly from its grave to drink the blood of the living 2. See vampire bat 3. Theatre a trapdoor on a stage vampire [′vam‚pīr] (vertebrate zoology) The common name for bats making up the family Desmodontidae which have teeth specialized for cutting and which subsist on a blood diet. Vampire in Slavic folk beliefs, a corpse that comes out of the grave to harm people—to suck their blood. The vampire is known in the superstitions of the Russians (upyr’), Ukrainians (upyr vampir), Byelorussians (vupar), Poles (upiór, upierzica), Czechs (upir), Serbs (in the 15—16th centuries, upir; later, vampir), and Bulgarians (vapir, vupir). A cult that offered sacrifices to vampires (to oupir) existed among the ancient Slavs. In a figurative sense, “vampire” is also used to refer to an extortionist, a cruel person, or an exploiter. Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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No references found | John Polidori's 1819 The Vampyre was an early tale of the monster based on a fragment of a story by Lord Byron. 1972 (1972), Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979) as a legacy of romanticism, modernity as crisis and vampires in Hong Kong cinema, and hybridity and the "CyberZen Goth(ic)" in Vampire Hunter D (1985). Fledgeling vampyres attend the House of Night, a finishing school for vampyres. |
Vampyre |
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