Red-eyed monster with green or pink hair in China, vampire foxes in Japan, gaunt and pale vampires from the Eastern Europe with blood seeping from the mouth and nose. It is difficult to make a definitive description of a vampire. Vampires found in Bulgarian tales had one nostril, Brazilian had furry feet, and Albanian vampires wore high heels.
The universal feature about vampires is the fear of death and the desire for immortality. Vampires are fascinating, and it is easy to understand why people become a little obsessed with them.
- The sophisticated and captivating vampire was popularized in the early 18 century. The Eastern European myths created the gaunt and thin vampires drinking blood, preying on humans at night and returning from death. Vampires wearing evening clothes, capes with tall collars, and turning into bats are inventions that are more recent.
- A vampire overcomes death by sucking the blood of humans, and vampires are sometimes described as plump, purplish, or dark in colour due to the recent drinking of blood. It is believed that people tried to explain the mysteries of death by creating the vampire. Corpses swell and the skin gets darker by decomposition.
- Vampires are revenants of evil beings, witches, or suicide victims. A spirit possessing a corpse can also create vampires. Being bitten by a vampire is dangerous because it might turn you into vampire. Mass hysteria and even public executions of people believed to be vampires have taken place because of this belief. Myths may also portray a vampire as a dead person who rises from the grave at night to search for his victim
- The word vampire first appeared in English in 1734, and there are several theories of the word's origin. The English term may have come from the German Vampir, possible via French vampyre, which might have come from Serbian or Hungarian vampir.
- There are many ways to identify a vampire. Leading a virgin boy through a graveyard or church ground on a stallion was one method used. The horse would balk at the vampire's grave. Holes in the earth over a grave were taken as a sign of vampirism. Suspected graves were opened and the corpses thought to be vampires showed little or no signs or decomposition, and the corpses might have fresh blood of a victim in its face. Folkloric vampires might be involved in minor activities such as hurling stones on roof and moving household objects.
- The vampire of modern fiction was born in 1819 with the publication of "The Vampire" by John Polidori; however, the novel "Dracula" by Bram Stoker provided the basis of the modern vampire. The Dracula legend was based on Vlad Dracul a historical figure who killed people by impaling them on spikes. The famous clock appeared in stage productions of the 1820s to help Dracula mysteriously "vanish" on stage.
- Vampires were often portrayed as evil predators, but the book "Loving Lady Death" by Theophile Gautier tells the story about a young priest who falls in love with a beautiful female vampire. This vampire did not feed on large amounts of blood, in contrast to the vampires who are trying to destroy their victims.
- The vampire has become popular in films in the 21 st century and many variations has been created; the ability to fly (a vampire bat), lust for beautiful women as victims, fear of the symbol of the Christian cross, the repelling power of garlic or garlic flowers, and death by sunlight. The popular American film and later TV series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" focused on vampire hunting.
- Vampires will rejuvenate when he gets fresh blood, and vampires do not age. If a vampire have been deprived of blood for an extended period they will age.
- Murderers have performed vampire rituals upon their victims. Due to the circumstances of the victim's death, an unsolved murder case in Sweden was nicked named the "Vampire murder". A Hungarian countess and mass murder Elizabeth B á thory (1560-1614) was later depicted bathing in her victims' blood. Bathing in the blood was supposed to retain her beauty and youth.
- Most vampires are naturally nocturnal. Vampires are often portrayed as sensitive to sunlight and have varying degrees of discomfort when exposed to it. Modern vampires dehydrate and burst into fames or crumble into dust when they are exposed to the direct rays of the sun.
- No image of a vampire appears on film, and they do not reflect in mirrors. Vampires have lost their souls and they cast no reflection. However, the Greek vrykolakas/tympanios was capable of both reflection and shadow, and this was used in Dracula. In Europe, all mirrors that are in the same room as a corpse should be draped. The spirit of the dead person might otherwise become trapped in the mirror.
- Vampires might have better night vision than the average person, they develop empathic and psi abilities. Vampires sometimes have sharp, unusual canines that may resemble fangs. However, vampires do not usually bite the victim to get blood.
- Folkloric vampirism has been associated with deaths due to unidentifiable or mysterious illnesses such as tuberculosis, the pneumonic form of bubonic plague, rabies, disturbances in sleep pattern, hyper sexuality, and the rare blood disorder porphyria.
- Vampire bats have recently become part of the vampire myths. Bats and owls, have long been associated with the supernatural, and in modern English heraldic tradition, a bat means "Awareness of the powers of darkness and chaos". There are three species of vampire bats in the world, all endemic to Latin America. The Spanish conquistadors noticed the similarity between the vampires feeding habits and the bats. The bat leaves two-prong bite mark on its victims' skin, and they became associated with the vampire myths. In Europe, bats and owls were long associated with the supernatural, mainly because they were night creatures.
- Sacred items to ward off revenants vary from region to region. Garlic has been used to protect houses and people from vampire attacks. A branch of wild rose or hawthorn, mustard seeds, crucifix, rosary or holy water are also said to keep vampires away. In some parts of Germany, a lemon was placed in the mouth of suspected vampires. Placing millet or poppy seed at the gravesite was believed to keep the vampire occupied all night. The vampires counted the seeds rather than looked for victims.
- Gypsies frequently feature in vampire fiction and film. The Szgany gypsies served Dracula, carrying his boxes of earth and guarding him. Gypsies arrived in Romania a short time before Vlad Dracula was born in 1431.
The tender kiss from a vampire is deadly; the exchange of blood makes a human into a vampire. However, some believe that it is not possible to turn into a vampire.
and try researching Elizabeth Bathory she was hungarian and as some people would put it a she was \"the blood countess\"