Vampires
When did vampires begin? As with many legends, the exact date of origin is
unknown; but evidence of the vampire tale can be found with the ancient
Chaldeans in Mesopotamia, near the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers, and with
Assyrian writings on clay or stone tablets. The land of the Chaldeans is also
called the "Ur of the Chaldeans," which was the original home of Abraham from
the Bible.
"Lilith" was a possible vampire from the ancient Hebrew Bible and its
interpretations. Although she is described in the book of Isaiah, her roots are
more likely in Babylonian demonology. Lilith was a monster who roamed at night
taking on the appearance of an owl. She would hunt, seeking to kill newborn
children and pregnant women. Lilith was the wife of Adam before there was Adam
and Eve, according to tradition; but she was demonized because she refused to
obey Adam. (Or to see it from a more liberated viewpoint, she demanded equal
rights with Adam). Naturally, she was considered evil for such "radical" desires
and became a vampire who eventually attacked the children of Adam and Eve --
namely, all human descendants.
References to vampires can be found in many lands, and some scholars believe
this indicates that the vampire story developed independently in these various
lands and was not passed from one to the other. Such an independently occurring
folktale is curious indeed.
References to vampires can be found among the ancient civilizations of the
Mediterranean such as Egypt, Greece and Rome. The ancient Greeks believed in the
strigoe or lamiae, who were monsters who ate children and drank their blood.
Lamia, as the mythology goes, was the lover of Zeus; but Zeus' wife, Hera,
fought against her. Lamia was driven insane, and she killed her own offspring.
At night, it was said, she hunted other human children to kill as well.
One tale known by both the Greeks and Romans, for example, concerns the wedding
of a young man named Menippus. At the wedding a guest, who was a noted
philosopher called Apollonius of Tyana, carefully observed the bride, who was
said to be beautiful. Apollonius finally accused the wife of being a vampire,
and according to the story (as it was later told by a scholar named Philostratus
in the first century A.D.) the wife confessed to vampirism. Allegedly she was
planning to marry Menippus merely to have him handy as a source of fresh blood
to drink.
Vampire tales occurred in ancient China, where the monsters were called kiang
shi. In ancient India and Nepal, as well, vampires may have existed -- at least
in legend. Ancient paintings on the walls of caves depict blood drinking
creatures; the Nepalese "Lord of Death" is depicted holding a blood-filled
goblet in the form of a human skull standing in a pool of blood. Some of these
wall paintings are as old as 3000 B.C., it is believed. Rakshasas are described
in the ancient Indian holy writings called the Vedas. These writings (circa 1500
B.C.) depict the Rakshasas (or destroyers) as vampires. There is also a monster
in ancient India's lore which hangs from a tree upside-down, not unlike a bat,
and is devoid of its own blood. This creature, called Baital, is in legend a
vampire.
Other ancient Asians, such as the Malayans, believed in a type of vampire called
the "Penanggalen." This creature consisted of a human head with entrails that
left its body and searched for the blood of others, especially of infants. The
creature lived by drinking the victims' blood.
It is also said that the vampire may have lived in Mexico prior to the arrival
of Spanish Conquistadors, according to the renown vampire author Montague
Summers whose 1928 book The Vampire -- His Kith and Kin is a classic. He further
wrote that Arabia knew of the vampire as well. Vampire-like beings appeared in
the "Tales of the Arabian Nights" called algul; this was a ghoul which consumed
human flesh.
Africa, with its spirit-based religions, may be seen as having legends of
vampire-like beings as well. One tribe, the Caffre, held the belief that the
dead could return and survive on the blood of the living.
In ancient Peru there were also vampire legends; the canchus were believed to be
devil worshipers who sucked the blood of the young.
Thus from ancient times and from a bounty of exotic lands came forth the
vampires. It is from these ancient fears about death and the magical,
life-sustaining powers of blood that the vampires as we know them today have
evolved.
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