Vampire
Vampire
Vampire has evolved into a catch-all phrase that encompasses a tremendous variety of spirits and creatures, some based on ancient traditions, others on modern imagination. What vampires have in common is that they drain life-essence from others, one way or another.
Contrary to popular Hollywood movies, blood-sucking vampires tend to be an aberration. Although they did exist prior to Bram Stokerâs incredibly influential best-selling 1897 novel, Dracula, they were rare and are very much a product of Gothic fiction. (Fifty years before Dracula, there was James Malcolm Rymerâs penny-dreadful opus, Varney the Vampire; or, the Feast of Blood.)
Traditional folkloric vampires have comparatively little to do with many literary or movie vampires. Vampire traditions exist throughout virtually all of Eastern and Central Europe. Similar sounding words exist in Slavic, Finno-Ugric, and Romance languages. Variations include upir, wampir, vampyr, and upior as well as vampire. (They may all derive from ubir, a Turkic word for âwitch.â)
Traditionally speaking, vampires are understood as revenants, living corpses of witches/sorcerers/shamans/magical practitioners who, for one reason or another, rise from the grave. At their most neutral, they are harmful merely because they are not obeying natural laws; at their worst, they rise with the deliberate intent to cause harm. (Italian director Mario Bavaâs horror movie classic Black Sunday features a reasonably traditional vampire-witch out for revenge.)
Another interpretation suggests that a vampire may not not be dead at all but a living sorcerer able to send out his or her shadow soul (and recall it when desired) and that this soul is interpreted by others as a vampire
Although little or no notion of blood-sucking exists in the original conception, that doesnât mean a vampire isnât potentially dangerous. Because vampires may be in a liminal state, between death and life, they require life-energy (chi; the aura), which is easiest absorbed from the living. However this life force is more likely to be absorbed via sexual energy or siphoning off chi than sucking blood. From this perspective, Fox Spirits who sexually drain men to the point of death are considered vampiric.
Traditional antidotes to vampires include bells, sunlight, bright light, a roosterâs crow, garlic, peppermint, onions, silver bullets, and bullets melted down from old bell metal.
Various spells and charms intended to protect against vampires may be found in Judika Illesâ The Encyclopedia of 5000 Spells.
BANISHING Vampires
Surprisingly perhaps, the puppet Count von Count of Sesame Street is a fairly accurate folkloric vampire, compelled to count whenever confronted with anything capable of being counted. Many vampires, like so many ghosts and low-level Demons, are afflicted with obsessive-compulsive syndrome:
⢠Place fishing nets over any entrances youâd like to protect: allegedly the vampire will be forced to count all the holes or knots and will never make it indoors to bother you.
⢠Alternatively spill poppy, millet, or some other tiny seeds: the vampire may feel compelled to stop and count or pick up those seeds.
SEE ALSO:
Fox Spirits; Hone-Onna; Kumiho; Lamiae; Langsuir; Menthe; Vampire Mermaids; Vampire Pumpkin; Vampiri
SOURCE:
Encyclopedia of Spirits: The Ultimate Guide to the Magic of Fairies, Genies, Demons, Ghosts, Gods & Goddesses – Written by : Judika Illes Copyright Š 2009 by Judika Illes.