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@  Admin : (24 May 2013 - 07:45 PM) @supersid, hey you get what you pay for! :lol:
@  Admin : (24 May 2013 - 07:44 PM) @Logan, did the earth move for you today??  :P
@  supersid : (24 May 2013 - 04:57 PM) Who tied you up ?????????
@  Loganinkosovo : (23 May 2013 - 06:52 PM) @Chris that's spelled "Awesome", not assume..... and "tied up is even better!
@  Admin : (23 May 2013 - 01:22 PM) @Logan, that would be a menage a trois I assume? :rolleyes:
@  Admin : (23 May 2013 - 01:20 PM) Just been kinda tied up with other stuff this past week or so but I'm back now  :D
@  Admin : (23 May 2013 - 01:16 PM) Because I say it's me, it's me OK????
@  supersid : (23 May 2013 - 09:15 AM) How do we know you are Chris?? felt bad ! Did you not ! Mmmmmmmm    B)
@  Loganinkosovo : (22 May 2013 - 08:36 PM) :)
@  Loganinkosovo : (22 May 2013 - 08:21 PM) Manage a ........ uh, never mind.
@  Admin : (22 May 2013 - 04:32 PM) Make that 3  :P  :lol:
@  supersid : (22 May 2013 - 06:56 AM) Logan ! I think everyone has left - it is just the 2 of us :unsure:
@  supersid : (18 May 2013 - 07:22 AM) Is there anybody there ?? Raining for Africa in Cullercoats !!   :wub:
@  Admin : (02 May 2013 - 07:56 PM) Too late! somebody turned the sun on today  :D
@  supersid : (02 May 2013 - 06:23 AM) It will cost you !
@  Admin : (01 May 2013 - 12:21 PM) Swap you for some rain???
@  supersid : (01 May 2013 - 05:47 AM) Good Day All - Sunshining off the Cullercoats shore !     B)
@  Evil Dolly : (29 April 2013 - 04:35 PM) peeks in
@  Admin : (22 April 2013 - 02:05 PM) Seems your leader couldn't give a damn either
@  Slaphappy : (22 April 2013 - 01:07 AM) God bless Texas, more people were injured and killed in that small town explosion than Boston,. funny how the news media picks and chooses whats more important.

The Real Science and History of Vampires


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#1 Mystical

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Posted 03 December 2009 - 01:35 PM

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Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart star in "New Moon," the latest production to take advantage of the eternal fascination with vampires. Credit: Summit Entertainment Vampires are everywhere these days. Last weekend, the new vampire film "The Twilight Saga: New Moon" broke box office records, taking in over $70 million and may end up being one of the largest openings in history. The film is based on the best-selling "Twilight" series, which of course joins a long list of other vampire-themed best-sellers dating back decades.

The public's thirst for vampires seems as endless as vampires' thirst for blood.

Modern writers of vampire fiction, including Stephenie Meyer, Anne Rice, Stephen King and countless others, have a rich vein of vampire lore to draw from. But where did the modern idea of vampires come from? The answer lies in the gap between science and superstition.

Impaling enemies

Some sources incorrectly trace vampires back to Romanian prince Vlad Tepes (1431-1476), who fought for independence against the Ottoman Empire. Though by most accounts his methods were brutal and sadistic (for example, slowly impaling his enemies on stakes, drawing and quartering them, burning them to death, etc.), in reality they were not particularly cruel or unusual for the time. Similar techniques were used by the Catholic Church and other powerful entities and rulers during the Middle Ages to torture and kill enemies.

Bram Stoker is said to have modeled some aspects of his Count Dracula character on Vlad Tepes.

While Tepes (partly) inspired fictional modern vampires, the roots of "real" vampires have very different origins. As a cultural entity, vampires are a worldwide phenomenon. According to anthropologist Paul Barber, author of "Vampires, Burial, and Death," stories from nearly every culture have some localized version of the vampire, and "bear a surprising resemblance to the European vampire."

The belief in real vampires stems from superstition and mistaken assumptions about post-mortem decay.

The first recorded accounts of vampires circulated in Europe in the Middle Ages. The stories follow a consistent pattern: Some unexplained misfortune would befall a person, family, or town—perhaps a drought dried up crops, or an infectious disease struck.

Before science could explain weather patterns and germ theory, any bad event for which there was not an obvious cause might be blamed on a vampire. Vampires were one easy answer to the age-old question of why bad things happen to good people.

Dead but not decomposed

Villagers combined their belief that something had cursed them with their fear of the dead, and concluded that perhaps recently- buried people might be responsible, having come back from the graves with evil intent.

Graves were unearthed, and surprised villagers often mistook ordinary decomposition processes for supernatural phenomenon.

For example, though laypeople might assume that a body would decompose immediately, if the coffin is well sealed and buried in winter, putrefaction might be delayed by weeks or months; intestinal decomposition creates bloating which can force blood up into the mouth, making it look like a dead body has recently sucked blood. These processes are well understood by modern doctors and morticians, but in Medieval Europe were taken as unmistakable signs that vampires were real and existed among them.

Though the "original" vampires are long since gone, their legacy remains and vampires continue to fascinate the world. It seems likely that neither science nor wooden stakes will ever kill vampires.

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