The History of Vampires

2024 ж. 12 Мам.
61 375 Рет қаралды

Dive into the captivating world of vampire lore as we unravel the centuries-old history of these immortal creatures. From ancient myths to modern pop culture, join us on a mesmerizing journey through the evolution of vampire legends. Discover the origins, folklore, and enduring fascination surrounding these mythical beings & their influence on culture, religion & philosophy.
Check out ESOTERICA's video here: • The First Vampires - H...
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Music by:
Jay Varton
Spectacles Wallet and Watch
Farell Wooten
Ethan Sloan
Experia
Sources/Recomended Reading:
Adams, Paul (2014). "Written in Blood: A Cultural History of the British Vampire". The History Press.
Barber, Paul (2010). "Vampires, Burial, and Death". Yale University Press.
Groom, Nick (2020). "The Vampire: A New History". Yale University Press.
Chapters:
00:00 Intro
01:45 Pre-modern (ancient?) Vampires
05:53 The Origins of the (Modern) Vampire
10:31 Peter Plogojowitz
11:42 Arnold Paole
13:06 Vampires, Religion & The Enlightenment
17:48 Early vampire literature
18:29 The Vampire & Western European Literature
22:45 Dracula
26:14 The Legacy of Dracula
28:25 Conclusions
#vampire #halloween #dracula

Пікірлер
  • Greetings from Serbia, so happy you covered some of our vampire stories, it's always frustrating when we are almost never mentioned in association with vampires in any way. EDIT: mostly referring to media/pop culture, thank you to a couple of people who pointed that they've encountered this in their education.

    @ridleyroid9060@ridleyroid90606 ай бұрын
    • I have a friend in Sarajevo whose grandfather was a vampire hunter.

      @christopherellis2663@christopherellis26636 ай бұрын
    • Slobodan Milosevic was a notorious bloodsucker.

      @tumslucks9781@tumslucks97816 ай бұрын
    • @@tumslucks9781 Don't know how much he drank but he spilled enough of it.

      @Shadowman4710@Shadowman47106 ай бұрын
    • Peter Plogojowitz and Alnold Paole appear in basically every English language book on the topic I've ever read so they don't feel obscure to me. They're not in movies or TV but even the low brow myths and legends books from gift shops will at least make some note of them unless they're more specific like 'Irish Vampires' or whatever.

      @AC-dk4fp@AC-dk4fp6 ай бұрын
    • ​​@@AC-dk4fpI'm happy to hear that. Also Im confused at the Plogojowitz spelling, I thought it was Blagojević (more natural in native Serbian) but I could be wrong lol. It is definitely a matter of perspective, as I am not a college educated person, my main window is pop culture, which of course is also limited to what I was exposed to in video games and movies.

      @ridleyroid9060@ridleyroid90606 ай бұрын
  • In 1816, John Polidori was the personal physician to the poet Lord Byron, who spent that summer on in a chateau on the shores of Lake Geneva with Percy and Mary Shelley. After a night of reading ghost stories aloud, the group decided to try writing their own. Polidori came up with The Vampyre and Mary Shelley eventually wrote Frankenstein

    @christopherdrago@christopherdrago6 ай бұрын
    • that was the year without a summer

      @bayou_babette@bayou_babette5 ай бұрын
  • Yep, lol. As a New Orleanian, I remember in the 90s when the French Quarter was full of goth teens in Victorian garb with filed-down teeth or fake fangs, living the vampire dream. Of course, vampire stories in New Orleans started with Anne Rice, before then it was pretty much ghost stories. They're certainly part of local folklore now though.

    @imagographics5096@imagographics50962 ай бұрын
    • *Yep☝🏾!!!* #UptownGirl🎭

      @zeepickens9049@zeepickens904921 күн бұрын
  • I didn't realise that you and @Esoteric were combining to make two stand alone videos. On a Friday this brings me an unspeakable happiness 👍🏽

    @Cross-Carrier@Cross-Carrier6 ай бұрын
    • Same!!

      @Imagination_Now@Imagination_Now6 ай бұрын
    • @Cross-Carrier You spoke the "unspeakeable" happiness! 😉👍

      @thekeysman6760@thekeysman67606 ай бұрын
    • The way Dr. Sledge described it sounds like the both independently decided to do vampire videos and just coordinated the release when they were talking to each other and realized that. (this whole sphere of youtube seems to be friends with each other, I love it)

      @randomchannel-px6ho@randomchannel-px6ho6 ай бұрын
  • As a Serb, I appreciate you letting everyone know how Serbian folklore significantly contributed to the vampire meme P.S. Peter Plogojowitz is I believe a German attempt to spell the name Petar Blagojević. We wouldn't spell it that way. Also I'm surprised you didn't mention Sava Savanović, his story is the most famous vampire story in Serbia. His story was even made into a movie in 1973, called Leptirica (The She-Butterfly), you can find it on KZhead with english subtitles for free

    @emZee1994@emZee19946 ай бұрын
    • Is that the actual translated film title in English? I'd like to research it. It should translate to moth not female butterfly. How true to the history is the film?

      @joannageorge7305@joannageorge73055 ай бұрын
    • @@joannageorge7305 I don't think it was ever actually distributed in the English, hence no official translation, but you can find it easily on youtube and imdb. Script for the movie is based on Milovan Glisic's (19. century Serbian writer) short story, which in turn is closely inspired by actual folk believes and folklore. As an anthropologist I can testify that most of these motifs are still very much alive (or rather undead) in contemporary rural folklore in Serbia and Balkans in general.

      @CirKhan@CirKhan5 ай бұрын
  • There was a Vampire craze in the English colonies in North America during the 19th century called the Great New England Vampire Panic that contributed to the popularity of vampires in popular American culture.

    @NameLess-bm8jp@NameLess-bm8jp6 ай бұрын
    • Some gross stories on how they ended the outbreak. Sounds like it was tuberculosis that caused the deaths.

      @Bildgesmythe@Bildgesmythe6 ай бұрын
    • That is actually somewhat of a misnomer. People believed an immaterial spirit was taking refuge in dead bodies and draining the life of the deceased’s close ones, but I believe it was specifically an immaterial creature they feared, and it didn’t supposedly drink blood as a classic vampire would. There are still similarities.

      @samrevlej9331@samrevlej93316 ай бұрын
    • ​@@samrevlej9331In reality, a vampire in folklore has always been a ghost (or demon) who possesses a corpse and steals the life force of the living (sometimes by hanging them and sometimes by drinking their blood). In the Romanian strigoi the barrier between a vampire and a ghost was almost zero because it could appear invisibly and break things like a poltergeist.

      @TuxDroid@TuxDroid4 ай бұрын
  • Happy Halloween from New Orleans, where the vampire industry is in full swing. Of course, there were no vampire stories in New Orleans folklore prior to Anne Rice (lots of ghost stories though), but because of her, they're certainly part of New Orleans folklore now.

    @valmarsiglia@valmarsiglia6 ай бұрын
    • Honestly upset she wasn’t mentioned in this and fucking Twilight was

      @geminihexx9858@geminihexx98586 ай бұрын
    • That’s not true. Anne Rice was influenced by several New Orleans and Louisiana Vampire Lore and Legends and werewolf folklore and mythology that inspired her writing. LeStat is based on or off of Count Saint Germaine.

      @michaelwall3393@michaelwall3393Ай бұрын
    • ​@@michaelwall3393 OK, could you name some of these older Louisiana vampire and werewolf stories or some of their authors? Because I sure haven't seen any in any of the various collections of 19th- and early 20th-century Louisiana stories and folklore. As to the Count of St Germain (not Germaine), are you referring to the 18th-century French figure? If so, he never left Europe. If you're referring to the supposed New Orleans resident of the same name, he was completely invented in the late 20th century by unethical French Quarter tour guides. There is no record anywhere of a Count of St Germain or Jacques de St Germain living in New Orleans during any period whatsoever (and honestly, calling him "Jacques de St Germain" is about as subtle as naming a fictional Englishman Godfrey, Duke of London; that name is a huge red flag, lol). Find an actual source from the period in question corroborating his existence, then we'll talk.

      @valmarsiglia@valmarsigliaАй бұрын
  • Just finished listening to Dr Sledge's opening and now, Your Turn! Having taken his advice about your show before, I knew I would be in Good Hands! Non-Theist myself but, just love listening to someone like you who doesn't throw flowery language or gloom and doom... just the Fascinating Facts! Thank You, Sir and Happy Halloween 👻

    @edwardspencer3906@edwardspencer39066 ай бұрын
  • Dracula was actually killed in 1999 by Julius Belmont, and his castle was trapped in a solar eclipse. But in a few years he'll try to reincarnate as Soma Cruz.

    @smez@smez6 ай бұрын
  • Fun fact. The scholar Elizabeth Miller disproved the assumption that Bram Stoker based Dracula on Vlad Tepes. When Professor Miller edited "Bram Stoker's Notes for Dracula: A Facsimile Edition". she found he had never read far enough into the history of Romania to reach Vlad Tepes - the name Dracula (little dragon) had was a nickname of Vlad's father.

    @davidcheater4239@davidcheater42396 ай бұрын
    • Dracul was Vlad the Impaler's father's nickname. Dracula was Vlad the Impaler's nickname. Bram Stoker must have known of the name.

      @sticlavoda5632@sticlavoda56326 ай бұрын
  • Enormously happy you mentioned my girl Carmilla! 😈Great video!

    @the_Maenad@the_Maenad6 ай бұрын
  • Nosferatu is, for me, the scariest vampire movie.

    @rogerhinman5427@rogerhinman54276 ай бұрын
  • I absolutely adore your channel. Thanks for all the knowledge that you share with us :)

    @2kesayota942@2kesayota9426 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this very fascinating video. But I had hoped, as a swede you would probably mention my most beloved vampire of all times Eli. She is the main character of the Swedish movie "Låt den rätte komma in", the by far best vampire-movie of all times according to my taste. If you should not have watched it yet, please do - it is absolutely great. And also I wonder how can someone do a lecture on vampirism without mentioning BUFFY, THE VAMPIRE SLAYER 🙂😀 Have a great time and thank's a lot for this video and all the others you produced so far. Please continue.

    @swensandor@swensandor6 ай бұрын
    • "thanks", not "thank's/thank is" as you said. 👍

      @thekeysman6760@thekeysman67606 ай бұрын
    • Yes. Let the right one in. Great movie. I prefer the original one, not the remake. 🧛🏻‍♀️

      @alex.r.g@alex.r.g6 ай бұрын
    • @@alex.r.g great movie spoopy -- i just ignore it was remade

      @meesalikeu@meesalikeu2 ай бұрын
  • Back in old times people were constantly judged dead and then buried so OF COURSE they would awaken in their tombs scared shtless starving and would eat their clothes or themselves before dying, screaming making noises people ear and let them die thinking monsters were there. That is the horror fright

    @klyanadkmorr@klyanadkmorr6 ай бұрын
  • I LOVED this collaboration! 👏👏👏

    @ahobimo732@ahobimo7326 ай бұрын
    • Me too!

      @LetsTalkReligion@LetsTalkReligion6 ай бұрын
  • Love the artwork you've used! Thank you.

    @Bildgesmythe@Bildgesmythe6 ай бұрын
  • The excitement has me in a grip of suspense. I thought this was premiering now and convinced myself that the notification was just not coming through 😅 I await!

    @mahmoudahmedshalabi@mahmoudahmedshalabi6 ай бұрын
  • Utterly fascinating documentary!! Keep up the great work!!

    @dobees8183@dobees81835 ай бұрын
  • I love when you and Dr. Justin Sledge collaborate. Thanks for this spooky study!

    @gvillxtine2773@gvillxtine27736 ай бұрын
  • I love your channel as much as I like Esoterica. Awesome content and scholarly, which is much appreciated.

    @Angayasse@Angayasse6 ай бұрын
  • Aww, I was sad to see it's only a 33 min video 😢 but glad you did this one! Love your content as always❤

    @CrimsonFrost@CrimsonFrost6 ай бұрын
  • So excited for this !

    @margotbigorgne4683@margotbigorgne46836 ай бұрын
  • Great video as always. lol @27:37 It sounded like you almost started cracking up.

    @traviswork7143@traviswork71436 ай бұрын
  • As always, great video. Thank you for the great content. I’ll add that Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles also strongly influenced my thoughts around the Vampire myth.

    @1atWill@1atWill6 ай бұрын
  • 19:34 really spooked me out when I saw the demon from exocist behind you

    @tomwoods1143@tomwoods11436 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video. Great job!

    @robmch8940@robmch89406 ай бұрын
  • What a wonderful channel! Fine work mister :)

    @Kane.JimLahey.@Kane.JimLahey.6 ай бұрын
  • ❤❤great work as always

    @giventaken1984@giventaken19846 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the research and great video. Happy Halloween.

    @onefeather2@onefeather26 ай бұрын
  • Good extra spooky addition of Captain Howdy/Pazuzu in the doorway. Gave me the tingles a bit.

    @marcblur9055@marcblur90556 ай бұрын
  • I've been reading the Dracula original novel, I have to say this video has perfect timing

    @butteredbananas1394@butteredbananas13946 ай бұрын
    • Do you like it?

      @LetsTalkReligion@LetsTalkReligion6 ай бұрын
  • Oh man, my perfect sought after milieu of vampire lore, myth, historic superstition, and legend from ancient times as well!! Only few minutes in, this is already enthralling, Filip!!

    @genghisgalahad8465@genghisgalahad84656 ай бұрын
    • Yay!

      @LetsTalkReligion@LetsTalkReligion6 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video! I love your work.

    @JamesHazlerig@JamesHazlerig4 ай бұрын
  • Awesome video, I’m going to go rewatch Midnight Mass right now :)

    @GoblinWife@GoblinWife6 ай бұрын
  • The video very nicely spans so much time, and shows us how our modern monsters trace from way back.

    @rogerburgner6325@rogerburgner63256 ай бұрын
  • This really made my day.

    @janellemccoy09@janellemccoy096 ай бұрын
  • Awesome as always thanks

    @mecahhannah@mecahhannah6 ай бұрын
  • This is going to be very interesting

    @Klaus.anal.Schwab@Klaus.anal.Schwab6 ай бұрын
  • Please do more myth topics, not just for Spooktober. Thanks for all your hard work bro ❤🙏

    @DomoArigoato@DomoArigoato6 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this good video.

    @madonnacicone4944@madonnacicone4944Ай бұрын
  • İ thoroughly enjoyed the video❤ i appreciate your work man! ( I wish we had more written data from the middle Asian folklore and mythologies. I'm sure we would find similar concept to vampirism there too.We hear so little about them 😢)

    @dogukan7406@dogukan74066 ай бұрын
  • YOU ARE COVERING MY FAVOURITE CREATURES OF ALL TIME

    @cherrysanguine1995@cherrysanguine19956 ай бұрын
  • Great essay

    @finisterfoul@finisterfoul6 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Just want to add that Dracula is also an Irish novel, not just Carmilla

    @octagonseventynine1253@octagonseventynine12536 ай бұрын
    • Bram Stoker was a very...interesting Irishman.

      @MrGksarathy@MrGksarathy6 ай бұрын
  • I love your videos, buddy.

    @NeilEvans-xq8ik@NeilEvans-xq8ik6 ай бұрын
  • Great video, and great timing since I'm gonna watch Nosferatu with my best friend tonight! Happy Halloween

    @ladylongsleeves3175@ladylongsleeves31756 ай бұрын
  • Really greeat video, enjoyed both your and Esoterica video on theme on vampirism, greetings from the land of original vampire tales, Serbia :)

    @Sarke2@Sarke26 ай бұрын
  • Please do a similar video on werewolves

    @elizabethdavis1696@elizabethdavis16966 ай бұрын
  • The photos in this 🎥 are beautiful. Happy🎃

    @7_BeAtree@7_BeAtree6 ай бұрын
  • Justin's video led me here. Great stuff.

    @johnsteiner3417@johnsteiner34176 ай бұрын
  • Great analysis of the history of Vampire folklore. I always find your video's engaging and thought provoking. The channel Atun-Shei Films did an in-depth cultural/historical analysis of Bram Stoker's Dracula a few years back that viewers may find interesting, if they enjoyed this video.

    @haroldoftherock8973@haroldoftherock89736 ай бұрын
  • Love Dr. Sledge's stuff. He has great colabs also, Mr. Zevi (sp?) & Dr. Puca

    @oddevents8395@oddevents83956 ай бұрын
  • Talking about Petar Blagojević is an instant like from me

    @bobmcbob9856@bobmcbob98566 ай бұрын
  • Thank you very much!

    Ай бұрын
  • I'm actually writing a novel about Vampires. I always wanted to write one, but didn't know how to at first, until I discovered the Necroscope books by Brian Lumley which gave me inspiration. His Vampires were not romantic and were the scariest kind that I ever read. It was there I found inspiration and decided to craft a story set in a post-apocalyptic future where Vampires and Lovecraftian Cosmic Horrors exist. I was also heavily inspired by religion, mysticism, and the occult, and religion does play a big part in this story that I am currently writing It has gotten so large in scale and vision that I could classify this as an Epic Horror. My aim is to merge gothic horror with cosmic horror, apocalyptic horror found in religious eschatology and exorcist movies, and other genres of horror and blend them all together I was also inspired by a lot of heavy metal records and music from so many bands, and a lot of books, movies, video games, and other media that I liked growing up in the 90s. The Vampires that I have crafted are what I describe as the wolves not caring about the opinions of the sheep. They are evil, visceral, and very in your face. They are also quite twisted and sadistic in their methods. After being disappointed by Hollywood for so long and bad writers who just want to copy Blade and Anne Rice, it felt good to write a story where Vampires are just monsters. One thing that is unique about them is they come in various clans with their own unique looks, styles, cultures, and even languages, like nations of people. In fact, I have written Vampire language to be so otherworldly that it is impossible for Humans to even make the correct vocabulary sounds from vocal chords let alone even understand.

    @user-lc4xh7ts7h@user-lc4xh7ts7h6 ай бұрын
    • When you say "impossible for humans" (lower-case h, please! 😉) don't you mean 'non-vampires'? As vampires are also human but with a difference. Or not, with your vampires?

      @thekeysman6760@thekeysman67606 ай бұрын
    • Btw, there is no such sub genre as " Horror", it's just a superlative for when describing something that is subjectively epic in your opinion.

      @thekeysman6760@thekeysman67606 ай бұрын
    • @@thekeysman6760 You have no friends do you.

      @user-lc4xh7ts7h@user-lc4xh7ts7h6 ай бұрын
    • Send me your draft. I'd love to proofread it.

      @nesicus@nesicus6 ай бұрын
    • @@StarryRamen Imagine you made all that baseless comment up, without realising that language & spell-ings are how we are divided, controlled, and misled 💉. And then let me do me. I have my reasons for helping people.

      @thekeysman6760@thekeysman67604 ай бұрын
  • Tomorrow's lunch gonna be 🔥

    @brandonwinstead7137@brandonwinstead71376 ай бұрын
  • I can't believe you didn't mention Jure Grando, I'm glad you investigated and mentioned the case of my Serbian brothers, but the first documented case in the world is my Croatian Jure Grando. Don't think that I criticized you, you have a good channel, keep up the good work 👍

    @bojanhasan408@bojanhasan4086 ай бұрын
  • I found the parts about fitting through locked doors, barred windows and tiny holes in walls to attack people in their sleep because it's the opposite of the common feature of vampires only being able to enter a property with explicit permission. I wonder where the latter comes from.

    @RosaLuxembae@RosaLuxembae3 ай бұрын
  • Is there any mention of dracula or vampire in Islamic myth? BTW I love ur videos ❤

    @d-au-d7696@d-au-d76966 ай бұрын
  • Strigoi is not a vampire. I'm from south of Romania, here, in Bulgaria and Serbia it's the same culture, based on the immortal Dacians. Strigoi are normal people, only that when they die their body is still warm after 3 days. And when this happens, you just have to put a pike in their heart before burial. it's pretty common. If this is not done the dead will somehow appear from time to time, sometimes to chat, do stuff like throwing the corn out of the barn or even serious harm. Until you spike their heart, no other drama is needed.

    @nick-beukan@nick-beukan6 ай бұрын
  • I just want to point to 2 things I think you missed in all other aspects great video. First one is that first historical writings about case of vampirism you can find is in now day Croatia, is is case of man named Jure Grando, his case is not become wildly known outside the area he lived, but it is officially oldest recorded case. Second, Serbian author and writer Milovan Glisic, one decade before Bram Stocker, wrote down one of the best short novels, called “butterfly girl” or “Leptirica” in Serbian, where he explored and explained vampirism strictly from folklore point of view, and he wrote inspired with case that was been known in one village around Belgrade in Serbia, decade before . It is opinion that he wrote that, cause he was annoyed with rise of Gothic vampirism in popular literature of 19th century and he wanted to wrote something that is closer to original belief. Unfortunately his masterpiece was little known in west Europe, where gothic horror fiction of Vampire, even more exploded after Stocker’s Dracula. BTW Dracul is Dragon, not a Vampire, and reason why Tepes family had those nick names is the fact that they were Knights of Dragon Order, same as lot of Serbian and Hungarian nobility of that time, but history of Dragon Order is topic for some other time.

    @buca505@buca5054 ай бұрын
  • Interesting.

    @bigsarge2085@bigsarge20856 ай бұрын
  • Loved the video. Only a little addendum: the name Lugosi Béla is pronounced like it is written (he was Hungarian).

    @Matthiastalks@Matthiastalks6 ай бұрын
  • Bitara, Eliza, and many other fictional vampires are amazing.

    @Angie2343@Angie23436 ай бұрын
  • 19:30 Oh hey Pazuzu

    @moongirl786@moongirl7863 ай бұрын
  • Hi Filip, I was wondering if you can do video about some of the similarities between Dune and Islamic references such Lisen Al-Ghaib,The Mahdi etc… I was watching the movies recently and heard many fimilar words that caught my attention. Thank you

    @Batcountryrat1227@Batcountryrat12276 ай бұрын
    • You'll want to google the "Orange Catholic Bible" which is where those words come from.

      @Duiker36@Duiker366 ай бұрын
  • Béla Lugosi ( Blaskó) was born in Lugoj ( Lugozs) the next town down the line from here, Timișoara ( Temesvár). Moroi are the Undead.. This is the Danube Valley, it's 𝕸𝖎𝖙𝖙𝖊𝖑𝖊𝖚𝖗𝖔𝖕𝖊. Not the Don and Volga Vlad Țepeş.

    @christopherellis2663@christopherellis26636 ай бұрын
  • Oh, I thought my purrrrfect ginger baby was the first vampire. But, thanks for clearing the mist of my lack of knowledge.

    @UndoEverything@UndoEverything6 ай бұрын
  • I am from a village in Romania. In a neighboring village there are traditions like stabbing a dead body with a stake before burying it or after a few years taking the coffin out of the ground, checking it and burying it in another place. In my village (only 8km away) no such things were present

    @ioan_jivan@ioan_jivan5 ай бұрын
  • When describing narcissistic personality disorder, people often refer to energy vampires... Basically as a metaphor to describe a human, living from the life force of another person...

    @lionspirit360@lionspirit3604 ай бұрын
  • I just dressed up as a vampire and now I find this video!

    @darkstarr984@darkstarr9846 ай бұрын
  • Midnight Mass is great!

    @thescoobymike@thescoobymike6 ай бұрын
  • Midnight Mass is wonderful. I'm sad that Buffy didn't get a look in.

    @mikeharrison1868@mikeharrison18686 ай бұрын
  • 4:30 this is the craziest medical advice I’ve ever heard

    @thescoobymike@thescoobymike6 ай бұрын
  • Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things also have to thank Mohammed Al Fatih aka mehmed II why vampires are billion dollar business as he beat the original Vlad Dracula 😁👍.

    @Uzair_Of_Babylon465@Uzair_Of_Babylon4656 ай бұрын
    • Lol

      @lightbeings6243@lightbeings62436 ай бұрын
  • 5:04 Skyrim 🤗🥰

    @stephanieparker1250@stephanieparker12506 ай бұрын
  • Happy All Hallow's Eve!

    @MichaelYoder1961@MichaelYoder19616 ай бұрын
  • Some of the qualities we associate with Vampires today were taken from other mythological creatures, I think I can name at least two sources. The lack of a reflection or shadow is commonly found in ghost lore, the inability to cross running water unaided is from witch lore, as is the need to be invited into a dwelling.

    @thefurrybastard1964@thefurrybastard1964Ай бұрын
  • Surprised that there was no discussion of Anne Rice's novels and their translation to cinema.

    @carolineaustin4138@carolineaustin41386 ай бұрын
  • in poland it was common to call serial killers a 'vampire'. like karol kot. whose psychiatrist was an infamous fundamentalist (co-esponsible for creating the 'conscience clause' aka doctor can refuse performing life saving abortion on grounds of faith) and she didn't diagnose him with anything, only prescibed vitamin B complex for "help" with his "masturbation problem". not long after he killed a boy. oh and the psychiatrist was john paul ii's best friend

    @migoreng7789@migoreng77896 ай бұрын
  • Vampires are a combination of fear, myth, legend, awe, and our dark desires. In my opinion the best Dracula movies I've seen will be a tie between Luke Evans and Gary Oldman

    @Friezadragonballz@Friezadragonballz2 ай бұрын
  • While Stoker borrowed Dracula's name, there is no evidence of the character having had been influenced by the real life eponym

    @Svartalf14@Svartalf146 ай бұрын
  • 30 Days of Night and Låt den rätte komma in were great modern vampire movies.

    @BlondeManNoName@BlondeManNoName6 ай бұрын
  • Dragon sounds to me like something from Elder Ring

    @danielschannel4966@danielschannel49663 ай бұрын
  • This was fantastic in every way! Maybe you should consider making a video about asian mythology, ex yokai creatures

    @Zorezore1111@Zorezore11114 ай бұрын
  • There's an interesting trend I've noticed in modern vampire fiction, and that's the linking of traditional European-style vampires with Mesoamerican, especially Aztec, sacrifice rituals. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure did it first, probably, but even Castlevania: Nocturne has connected the two via the character of Olrox. How old is this connection, and what forms has it taken in popular culture?

    @MrGksarathy@MrGksarathy6 ай бұрын
  • ty

    @omarmaxwell6971@omarmaxwell69713 ай бұрын
  • I may be wrong, but I seem to recall the makers of Nosferatu were successfully sued by Stoker's widow for breach of copyright.

    @thefurrybastard1964@thefurrybastard1964Ай бұрын
  • My God... Now we know Peter Thiel *does* have a patron saint! Marsilio Ficino specifically...

    @user-gr7wd4kg3e@user-gr7wd4kg3e6 ай бұрын
  • vampire joined us around 19:33

    @Mousction01@Mousction016 ай бұрын
  • Colin Robinson is my vampire crush

    @Lauraleighnjg@Lauraleighnjg6 ай бұрын
    • Mine is DIO!!! ZA WARUDO!!! And he’s confirmed bisexual like me.

      @whinfpproductions94@whinfpproductions946 ай бұрын
  • Looking for a great vampire movie this Halloween? Check out "Boys from County Hell" if im remembering the name correctly. Good humor and frightening depiction of a vampire's powers

    @seanrush3723@seanrush37236 ай бұрын
  • "Various" already 28:56 means "different." Love the channel! Great work, thank you!!

    @asprywrites6327@asprywrites63276 ай бұрын
  • Careful there's Dracula behind you at 19.32

    @silentkilla14@silentkilla146 ай бұрын
  • 17th century Evliya Celebi also wrote about blood sucking vampire witches

    @sanctuserenus@sanctuserenus6 ай бұрын
    • Oh i didn't know about that

      @dogukan7406@dogukan74066 ай бұрын
  • Vampire 🧛‍♂️ Lives Matter! Damn it! 😶

    @alphaomega1351@alphaomega13516 ай бұрын
  • I'm him, I've been him, I will continue to be him

    @crabofchaos7881@crabofchaos78816 ай бұрын
  • Claudia sent me here, hermeneutics and all that

    @tracyking4518@tracyking45186 ай бұрын
  • 28:10

    @42tomasz@42tomasz4 ай бұрын
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