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Vampires
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Vampires, along with witches, were believed to be most active on the Eve of St George's Day April 22 of the Julian calendar, May 4 of the Gregorian calendar, the night when all forms of evil were supposed to be abroad. St George's Day is still celebrated in Europe. A vampire in the grave could be told by holes in the earth, an undecomposed corpse with a red face, or having one foot in the corner of the coffin. Living vampires were found by distributing garlic in church and seeing who did not eat it. Graves were often opened three years after death of a child, five years after the death of a young person, or seven years after the death of an adult to check for vampirism. Measures to prevent a person becoming a vampire included, removing the caul from a newborn and destroying it before the baby could eat any of it, careful preparation of dead bodies, including preventing animals from passing over the corpse, placing a thorny branch of wild rose in the grave, and placing garlic on windows and rubbing it on cattle, especially on St George's & St Andrew's days. To destroy a vampire, a stake was driven through the body followed by decapitation and placing garlic in the mouth.
Vampires are mythical creatures of the night who feed off of the blood of unsuspecting humans and sometimes animals. Early references in folklore of vampire type demons date back as far the ancient Egyptians and Romans. Vampires are generally thought to live eternally unless killed in a certain way and those who they bite become vampires as well. The most common ways of killing a vampire are chopping off its head, burning the corpse, or driving a wooden stake into its heart. Hollywood has long embraced Vampires in movie culture. Nosteratu (1922), Bram Stokers Dracula, Near Dark, The Lost Boys and Underworld (2006) are just a few examples of popular Vampire movies.
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Vampires have many secrets. For example, the exact method used to sustain Mina Harker’s life without turning her into a vampire. On a more prosaic level, a vampire acquaintance of Elemental-Wizard Jacob Livingston has a recipe for pig-blood cocktails that can effectively sustain a vampire’s unlife.
Guess which one is the vampire... Vampires have no reflection in a mirror. If one is used, the vampire will react and their comfort bar will drop. Occasionally vampires will hiss or go 'bleh' if no other action is currently underway.
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Vampires tend to fall into one of three groupings. The first are vampires who live in solitude forsaking their brethren, often living alone in seclusion with their servants or often completely alone they feed on whoever strolls into their vicinity and have few friends or contacts. The second type are known as vampire cabals, these groups tend to be like extended families that can trace their line to a living ancestor a powerful vampire lord. Or lady who is the parent of them all leading with the other elders or often alone with an iron fist. Vampire cabals often have a territory they claim as their own which often includes willing and unwilling subjects from which they can feed. Vampire cabals defend their territory and work together but often these cabals operate on the principle that “Might is right” and the strongest tend to have the most influence.
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The Vampire, by Philip Burne-Jones, 1897 Vampires are mythological or folkloric revenants, who subsist by feeding on the blood of the living. In folkloric tales, the undead vampires often visited loved ones and caused mischief or deaths in the neighbourhoods they inhabited when they were alive. They wore shrouds and were often described as bloated and of ruddy or dark countenance, markedly different from today's gaunt, pale vampire which dates from the early 1800s. Although vampiric entities have been recorded in most cultures, the term [V]ampire was not popularised until the early 18th century, after an influx of vampire superstition into Western Europe from areas where vampire legends were frequent, such as the Balkans and Eastern Europe,[1] although local variants were ... known by different names, such as vrykolakas in Greece and strigoi in Romania. This increased level of vampire superstition in Europe led to what can only be called mass hysteria and in some cases resulted in corpses actually being staked and people being accused of vampirism.
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