Vampires have fascinated the human imagination for generations.
They walk the line between life and death, charm and horror, seduction and destruction.
Their stories appear in cultures across the globe, but Europe is where the modern idea of the vampire truly began to take shape.
Whether whispered through folklore or carved into literature, vampires have continued to evolve while holding fast to our darkest fears about mortality, disease, and the unknown.
Blood-Drinking Spirits in the Ancient World
Long before the term “vampire” was spoken, civilizations feared beings who returned from the dead to harm the living. In ancient Mesopotamia, stories were told of female demons like Lilitu and Lamashtu, who preyed on the vulnerable and drank the blood of children. These entities were often blamed for stillbirths and unexplained illness.
The Greeks and Romans believed in restless dead as well. They told of lamiae, creatures who seduced men before devouring them, and empusae, shape-shifting demons with flaming hair who fed on the life essence of humans. These early myths reflected the fear that the grave might not be the final resting place.
Eastern Europe: The Cradle of Vampire Lore
If vampire stories have a true home, it's in Eastern European countries like Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania. All of the above carry some of the most detailed and feared vampire traditions in Europe. The word “vampire” itself even entered the English language in the early 18th century from Slavic sources.
Vampires in these areas were not handsome or refined. They were described as bloated, purple or red from feeding on blood, with long nails and animal-like strength. Communities often blamed mysterious deaths or disease outbreaks on vampires. In many cases, villagers exhumed corpses to perform rituals meant to stop the supposed undead from rising again. These rituals could include staking the corpse, decapitating it, burning it, or sprinkling poppy seeds over the grave so the vampire would be distracted trying to count them.
Official records exist of such exhumations and trials. The fear was real enough that it even caught the attention of rulers and church leaders.
The Vampire Crosses the Atlantic
Vampire stories made their way to France and England during the 18th century, carried by travelers and soldiers returning from Eastern Europe. These reports often described villagers digging up bodies, burning them, or driving stakes into their hearts.
The educated elite of France and England began to explore these stories through literature. By the 19th century, vampires became a popular subject for Gothic fiction. John Polidori’s The Vampyre (1819) introduced a noble and refined bloodsucker, a major departure from the monstrous versions seen in Eastern Europe. Later, Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla (1872) told the story of a female vampire with romantic overtones.
As immigrants came to America, they brought their beliefs with them. In New England, vampire hysteria reached a peak in the 19th century. The most famous case was that of Mercy Brown in Rhode Island. After several family members died of tuberculosis, locals believed Mercy was returning from the grave to drain the life from her relatives. Her body was exhumed, found to be unusually well-preserved, and her heart was burned in an attempt to stop the curse.
Though these events were tied more to disease than actual supernatural sightings, they show how deeply vampire legends had become embedded in rural fear and folklore.
Shapers of the vampire image
Why do we imagine a specific image when we think of vampires? Well it's all because of people who have marked the vampire culture and inspired us.
The Székely-Hungarian Origins of Stoker's Dracula
In the British Bram Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula, Count Dracula is not described as Romanian, but rather as a Székely, a possibly Turkic subgroup of Hungarians who presently live in the eastern part of Transylvania. This detail is more than just a passing mention since it frames the fictional Dracula as the embodiment of some of the most intricate ethnic lore found in the Carpathian basin.
According to Stoker's narrative, the Count descends from a warrior race, one of the oldest and most feared peoples in Eastern Europe. The Székelys were known historically as fierce border defenders of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary. According to medieval Hungarian chronicles, the Székely people predate the Hungarian arrival to the region because the former are descended from Atilla’s Huns who hid in the Transylvanian mountains until the arrival of their “kindred” peoples (the Magyars) who they then joined in the conquest of the Carpathians.
Bram Stoker writes in his 1897 novel where Count Dracula speaks of his Hunnic ancestry:
“We Szekelys have a right to be proud, for in our veins flows the blood of many brave races who fought as the lion fights, for lordship. Here, in the whirlpool of European races, the Ugric tribe bore down from Iceland the fighting spirit which Thor and Wodin gave them — which their Berserkers displayed to such fell intent on the seaboards of Europe, aye, and of Asia and Africa too, till the peoples thought that the werewolves themselves had come.”
“Later, when the Magyars came, the Huns and the Lombards and the Avars were all absorbed; but their spirit must have moved with the blood that we Szekelys have received from our ancestors. What devil or what witch was ever so great as Attila, whose blood is in these veins?”
Stoker also writes that Dracula's ancestors had dealings with the devil, practiced dark arts, and were unmatched in cruelty and cunning. These references added an air of mystery and danger to the vampire by associating him with a real ethnic group known for its independence, martial prowess, and survival on the edges of empires.
Bela Lugosi and the Birth of the Modern Vampire's Speech and Style
When most people imagine a vampire speaking, they often hear a slow, dramatic voice with a heavy, mysterious accent saying something like, “I vant to suck your blood.” This now-iconic vampire voice can be traced directly to one man: Bela Lugosi, the Hungarian-American actor who played Count Dracula in the 1931 Universal Pictures film adaptation of Dracula.
Lugosi was born in Lugos, Hungary (then part of Austria-Hungary) in 1882, not far from the region of Transylvania. A classically trained stage actor, he brought a deep theatrical presence and natural Hungarian accent to the role. When he was cast as Dracula, first on Broadway in 1927, then in the film, he spoke his lines with careful, deliberate enunciation that reflected his real-life struggles with English thanks to a thick Hungarian accent. The result was a haunting, unfamiliar cadence that sounded foreign to American ears and added to the Count’s eerie, seductive quality.
Though Lugosi never said “I vant to suck your blood” in the film, the unique sound of his voice left a lasting impression. His rolling r’s, elongated vowels, and dramatic pauses became part of how people imagined vampires should speak. Over time, this exaggerated version of a Hungarian accent evolved into the standard "vampire accent" in pop culture.
Lugosi's portrayal shaped the image of vampires for generations. His Dracula wore a tuxedo and cape, moved with grace, and spoke with hypnotic charm. The accent gave the character an exotic and aristocratic air, reinforcing the idea that vampires came from a dark, distant, and ancient world, especially when compared with the heavily industrialized American uniformity.
During the last decades of the 20th century, there was a splitting up of vampire images into several aesthetic branches. Anne Rice’s Interview with the Vampire and its film version in 1994 introduced rock-star vampires in flowing white shirts and melancholy beauty, even as conceptual artists were employing vampire imagery to explore ideas of capitalism, consumption, and emotional parasitism in their work. Contemporary fine artists like Michael Hussar blend traditional techniques with a modern sensibility to create vampire figures of haunting beauty and deep alienation; from his paintings, these light and blood-stained subjects evoke Renaissance portraiture but then subvert it by suggesting a more modern psychological understanding of the human experience.
Digital artist Abigail Larson’s vampire imagery—fusing Victorian aesthetics with contemporary animation influences—poised to reach wider audiences through the Internet and forge new vampire traditions. Larson’s work demonstrates how some vampire visuals complete a cycle:anything retained from the previous generation will be reinvented once again.
“The vampire is the finest subject of art since it is ever changing but nonetheless retains its key characteristics,” explains exhibition curator Vincent Mortensen. “Each time, a new age projects fears and desires onto the vampire, repainting it without ever really effacing its forebears.”
Beyond the Frame
Modern-day vampire artworks go beyond the canvas or photograph. Digital sculpture, interactive installations, and AI-generated imagery are continuing this metamorphosis of the vampire-via-visual-means. Game art directors have lately conjured new vampire aesthetics for a host of titles, including Vampire: The Masquerade and Castlevania, that directly reference several age-old tropes from vampire mythology. Fashion photographers frequently put vampires into play in their editorial spreads.
From a crude warning against sin, it has since evolved to become a more sophisticated visual language through which immortality, seduction, and power are explored. From block prints to formal art, through digital art, the vampire’s passage through visual culture is inextricably linked to humanity’s changing attitudes toward mortality and the seductive allure of existence beyond death’s reach—an eternal hunger for revenge and constant transformation.
Written by one of the source of our knowledge
Real Vampires
Although modern science has silenced the vampire fears of the past, people who call themselves vampires do exist. They’re normal-seeming people who drink small amounts of blood in a (perhaps misguided) effort to stay healthy.
Communities of self-identified vampires can be found on the Internet and in cities and towns around the world.To avoid rekindling vampire superstitions, most modern vampires keep to themselves and typically conduct their “feeding” rituals—which include drinking the blood of willing donors—in private.
Some vampires don’t ingest human blood but claim to feed off the energy of others. Many state that if they don’t feed regularly, they become agitated or depressed.
Vampires became mainstream after Dracula was published. Since then, Count Dracula’s legendary persona has been the topic of many films, books and television shows. Given the fascination people have with all things horror, vampires—real or imagined—are likely to continue to inhabit the earth for years to come.
Medveđa, Serbia. Jan. 1732 -- The Carpathian mountains loomed ominously to the east, as if nature herself was conspiring with evil. In the valley below a shadow had been draped over the corpses that now littered the quiet cemetery. Of the forty villagers exhumed that morning, a total of thirteen had been identified as vampires. Fresh blood seeped from their mouth, nose, or the gaping wounds in their chest where the stake had been pounded in. The gore was clear evidence of their demonic guilt.
Dr. Johannes Flückinger, regiment medical officer dispatched by the Honorable Supreme Command, surveyed the ghastly scene. He was clearly uneasy about being sent to this small village on the remote edge of the Habsburg Empire. His disgust for the local haiduks was evident as he gazed upon a newborn child, who, “because of a careless burial had been half eaten by dogs."
The young doctor hunched over what had once been the child's mother, a 20-year-old peasant woman named Stana, and proceeded with his dissection. He noted that she was “quite complete and undecayed” despite having died in childbirth two months earlier. Like the others, her blood had not coagulated and after prying open her rib cage he documented that her lungs, liver, and spleen were all still fresh. The woman's skin was described as "fresh and vivid" and she had a pool of extravascular blood in her stomach and chest cavity. The only interpretation could be that, after being turned into a vampire, she had risen from her grave to feast on the blood of the living.
"After the examination had taken place," Flückinger wrote in his official report, "the heads of the vampires were cut off by the local gypsies and then burned along with the bodies, and then the ashes were thrown into the river Morava."
The first to be transformed, Flückinger learned from the Serbian villagers, was a former soldier by the name of Arnod Paole who had fled his post in Turkey after being "troubled" by a vampire there. However, after settling in the village and being betrothed to his neighbor's daughter, Paole met with a sudden and unexpected death. Not long after, people began to report seeing Paole wandering through the village after night-fall. Some swore that he had even attacked them or that he was observed taking the shape of a black dog, as though hunting for prey. More than twenty people had mysteriously died in the village since Paole met his untimely end, and most within a few months of each other.
"Paole attacked not only the people," Flückinger reported, "but also the cattle, and sucked out their blood." These were the two ways by which vampirism had then spread throughout Medveđa: some were bitten directly while others had eaten the infected meat and become vampires as well. Apparently, once they were turned, vampires not only behaved as though possessed by wild beasts, they could also adopt a beastly shape, or transmit their vampirism through animals to an unsuspecting human victim. In order to end Arnod Paole's reign of terror, the villagers of Medveđa "drove a stake through his heart, according to their custom, whereby he gave an audible groan and bled copiously."
Vampires were almost entirely unknown to the European imagination prior to 1730 and Johannes Flückinger's strange report would become known as the most thoroughly documented--as well as the most widely circulated--vampire narrative in the world. Following the Treaty of Passarowitz in 1718, much of the region now known as the Balkans was ceded to the Habsburg Monarchy by the Ottoman Empire. Along with it came a rich folkloric tradition which quickly merged with European ideas of witchcraft that had gripped the continent for the past three centuries. These stories would be widely reproduced in French, German and, later, in English, to eventually find their way into the hands of an obscure Irish writer and theater manager by the name of Bram Stoker.
The storyline of Stoker's 1897 novel Dracula about a Transylvanian Count and his invasion of English virtue would be almost entirely original. However, key attributes of the vampire itself would draw directly from Slavic folklore, particularly where there was an overlap with European witchcraft. While Bram Stoker's Dracula was an elegant and seductive aristocrat, the Slavic vampires were typically rural villagers that had become possessed. In appearance and mannerism they would have shared more in common with Max Schreck's animalistic performance in the German silent classic Nosferatu than with Bela Lugosi's theatrical mesmerism as the Hungarian Count. However, the depiction of the vampire as a savage beast of prey, the infection of new vampires through bites or contaminated blood, their ability to transform into specific animal "familiars" (especially wolves and bats), and the method of dispatching the undead by murdering them in their coffins while they slept, would all be borrowed directly from Slavic folklore.
What the Slavic and European vampire mythologies both have in common however is that they tell an important story about how people understood natural events such as death, decomposition, and the transmission of disease prior to the advent of scientific medicine. They also serve as an illustration of the anxiety present in many Christian societies over the delicate line that seemed to separate human from animal.
"Far from being merely fanciful horror stories," writes UCLA historian Paul Barber in the Journal of Folklore Research, "the vampire stories prove to be an ingenious and elaborate folk-hypothesis that seeks to explain otherwise puzzling phenomena associated with death and decomposition." In nearly all cases, individuals would be identified as vampires after they were exhumed and irregularities found with the condition of their bodies. The most common reasons were lack of decomposition or because liquid blood was found around their mouth and nose.
Decomposition is largely misunderstood even today and is not the rapid or complete process commonly assumed. As Barber notes, putrefaction begins at about 50°F and occurs most rapidly at temperatures ranging between 70° and 100°. However, the temperature even just a few feet below ground is usually much lower and decomposition occurs on average eight times more slowly than on the surface. In the case of the Medveđa village cemetery, it would therefore be unsurprising for bodies that were exhumed in January (with average surface temperatures at just above freezing) to remain relatively intact for weeks or even months.
Furthermore, because the bacteria that cause decomposition feed on the protein-rich content of the blood, if there had been significant haemorrhage (as would occur in a violent death or sudden accident) the process would be significantly slower. This fact may have only reinforced these folk traditions, since it would be expected that violent or rapid deaths were somehow unnatural to begin with. However, the most common way that vampires were identified was when liquid blood was seen around the corpse's mouth, nose, or ears. It was commonly believed that vampires would so gorge themselves on blood that it would leak out after they'd returned to their grave.
"[Vampires] suck the blood of living people and animals in such great abundance," stated one early Slavic account, "that sometimes it comes out of their mouths, their noses, and especially, their ears, and that sometimes the body swims in its blood which has spilled out into its coffin."
What is more likely, Barber argues, is that local populations simply filled the gaps in their knowledge about the process of decomposition with folktales that could explain what they had observed. In actuality, during the normal process of decomposition the lungs become loaded with a dark red sanguinous fluid and the brain liquifies. Depending on the orientation of the body, this liquid would have leaked out as it was acted on by the pull of gravity. Ironically, individuals suspected of being vampires at the time of burial would usually be placed face down to make it harder for them to find their way to the surface. When these individuals were later exhumed, the red fluid in and around their mouth or nose would only confirm the original assumption. Add to this the eruption of sanguinous fluid when a stake is hammered into their lungs (an event that can emit sounds from a low groan to a high pitched scream as gases are forced outwards) and the misinterpretation would be complete.
In addition to flawed assumptions regarding death and decomposition, certain diseases (particularly ones that result in extreme psychological and behavioral changes) would only add to folk-hypotheses seeking to explain such unusual events.
While both schizophrenia and tuberculosis have been proposed as potential natural influences on the folk tradition of vampirism, a study by Juan Gomez-Alonso of the Servicio de Neurologia, Hospital Xeral in Vigo, Spain argues that many of the primary attributes of vampires show remarkable similarities to the physical symptoms associated with rabies.
"In certain cases, rabies appears similar to vampirism," says Gomez-Alonso, "The rabid patient rushes at those who approach him, biting and tearing them as if he was a wild beast." In both cases, the method of transmission is identical since rabies infections are caused through animal bites or blood to blood contact. While dogs are the most common animal associated with rabies today, rural villagers have historically had much greater interaction with wolves and these animals were a significant threat both to themselves and their livestock. There have also been many documented cases of rabies infection from bats both in Europe and the United States. "Consequently," says Gomez-Alonso, "it would be imaginable that men and beasts with identical ferocious and bizarre behavior might have been seen, by a primitive witness, as similar malign beings." It is notable that in the early Slavic accounts there was no distinction between vampires and what we would now call werewolves; in some versions a vampire was simply what a werewolf became after they died.
There are many additional characteristics that appear to connect vampirism and rabies. In terms of pathology, for example, humans that have contracted rabies typically die of suffocation or cardiorespiratory arrest. These types of deaths, according to Gomez-Alonso, result in post-mortem features consistent with those used to identify a vampire: blood is less likely to coagulate after death and hemorrhage is common, resulting in slower decomposition. Humans can also contract rabies by drinking unpasteurized milk or eating undercooked meat from a rabid cow (or through oral exposure to their blood or saliva during preparation). In this way, knowledge of how the rabies virus can spread might have been contained in these folk traditions, even if the actual mechanism remained mysterious.
Finally, Gomez-Alonso points out the historical coincidence that during the period when dramatic tales of vampires were first emerging from Eastern Europe, a major epidemic of rabies in dogs, wolves, and other wild animals was recorded in the same region between 1721-1728. This coincidence may have even been identified as early as 1733 when an anonymous physician argued that vampirism "is a contagious illness more or less of the same nature as that which comes from the bite of a rabid dog." While it is likely that multiple natural factors would have influenced the folk tradition of vampirism, it is remarkable that rabies has the potential to connect such seemingly unrelated elements as transmission, behavior, and post-mortem pathology.
"Among the European peasantry wolves were dreaded because of the physical threat they represented," says Jessica Wang, professor of history at University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada "but also because they could transmit the symptoms that we now understand are caused by the rabies virus." Wang is currently engaged in research documenting the social history of rabies, in which she has identified the common theme of animal possession as a folk-hypothesis to explain the transfer of symptoms from animals to humans. "People associated witchcraft and occult forces with animals," she says, "as well as the crossing of the line between animals and humans. I think a lot of the fear was based on the fact that humans are animals and what happens if people concede that line rather than try and preserve it."
In one newspaper account Wang identified from Prussia in the nineteenth century, a farmer was "seized with rabies" only to run amok through the village as though possessed. "He finally took refuge in his own house," she related, "where he attacked his wife, a young woman to whom he had recently been married. He literally tore her to pieces." After committing the horrible deed he was then seized with another convulsion and inflicted wounds upon himself from which he died. When neighbors entered the house both dead bodies were found on the floor "frightfully mangled and still warm." The newspaper account didn't specify whether or not he had been buried face down.
Just as the vampire myth has its origin in historical events, the cultural tradition that gave rise to it may also have had a natural basis. While these early vampire stories share little with the modern myths about such creatures, the folk tradition that spawned them does contain many of the same inherent fears. "What happens when people do, in a sense, become animals and lose control of their physical bodies through the display of uncontrolled aggression?" Wang asks. "I think a lot of these rabies narratives reflected these kinds of fears. They're ultimately about the line between animal and human and the ease with which it can be breached."