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Vampire: A dead person who returns in spirit or physical form from the grave for the
purpose of destroying and sucking the blood of living persons. The
conception of the vampire is rifest among Slavonic peoples, and especially in
the Balkan countries, and in Hungary, Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia, and in
these territories from 1730-35 there was a well-marked epidemic of vampirism,
but it is by no means confined to them. In White Russia and the Ukraine it is
believed that vampires are generally wizards or sorcerers, but in Bulgaria and
Serbia it is thought that any corpse over which a cat or dog jumps or over which
a bird has flown is liable to become a vampire. In Greece a vampire is known as a broncolaia or bourkabakos, which has been identified with the Slavonic name for
werewolf. The vampire, too, is often supposed to steal the heart of his victim
and to roast it over a slow fire, thus causing interminable amorous longings.
Marks of Vampirism - Vampirism is epidemic in character. Where one instance
is discovered it is almost invariably followed by several others. This is
accounted for by the circumstances that it is believed that the victim of a
vampire pines and dies and becomes in turn a vampire himself after death, and so
duly infects others. On the disinterment of a suspected vampire various
well-known signs are looked for by experienced persons. Thus, if several holes
about the breadth of a man's finger are observed in the soil above the grave the
vampire character of its occupant may be suspected. On unearthing the corpse it
is usually found with wide-open eyes, ruddy and life-like complexion and lips
and a general appearance of freshness, and showing no signs of corruption. It
may also be found that the hair and nails have grown as in life. On the throat
two small livid marks may be looked for. The coffin is also very often full of
blood, the body has a swollen and gorged appearance, and the shroud is
frequently half-devoured. The blood contained in the veins of the corpse is
found on examination to be in a fluid condition as in life, and the limbs are
pliant and flexible and have none of the rigidity of death.
Examples of Vampirism - Many well-authenticated examples of vampires exist.
Charles Ferdinand de Schertz in his work Magia Posthuma which was printed at
Olmutz in 1706, relates several stories of apparitions of this sort, and tells
of the mischief done by them. One, among others, is of a herdsman of the village
of Blow near the town of Kadam in Bohemia, who appeared for a considerable
length of time, and visited several persons, who all died within eight days. At
last, the inhabitants of Blow dug up the herdsman's body, and fixed it in the
ground with a stake driven through it. The man, even in his condition, laughed
at the people that were employed about him, and told them they were very
obliging to furnish him with a stick with which to defend himself from the dogs.
The same night he extricated himself from the stake, frightened several persons
by appearing to them, and occasioned he death of many more than he had hitherto
done. He was then delivered into the hands of the hangman, who put him in a
cart, in order to burn him throughout the town. As they went along, the carcass
shrieked in the most hideous manner, and threw about its arms and legs, as if it
had been alive; and upon being again run through with a stake, it gave a loud
cry, and a great quantity of fresh, florid blood issued from the wound. At last,
the body was burned to ashes, and this execution put a final stop to the
vampire's appearances in the village.
Calmet in his Dissertation on Vampires appended to his Dissertation
upon Apparitions (English translation, 1759), gives several well
authenticated instances of vampiricism as follows: TO BE FINISHED.....
"It has now about fifteen years since a soldier, who was quartered in the
house of a Haidamack peasant, upon the frontiers of Hungary, saw, as he was at
the table
Methods of Extirpation - The commonest methods of the extirpation of vampires
are -- (a) beheading the suspected corpse; (b) taking out the heart; (c)
impaling the corpse with a white-thorn stake (in Russia as Aspen), and (d)
burning it. Sometimes more than one or all of these precautions is taken.
Instances are on record where the graves of as many as thirty or forty persons
have been disturbed during the course of an epidemic of vampirism and their
occupants impaled or beheaded. Persons who fear the visits or attacks of a
vampire sleep with a wreath made of garlic round the neck, as that esculent is
supposed to be especially obnoxious to vampires. When impaled the vampire is
usually said to emit a dreadful cry, but it has been pointed out that the gas
from the intestines may be forced through the throat by the entry of the stake
into the body and that this may account for the sound.
The method of discovering the vampire's grave in Siberia is to place a virgin
boy upon a coal-black stallion which has never served a mare ad marking the spot
where he will not pass.
Scientific Theories of Vampirism - The English custom of piercing suicide's
bodies with a stake would appear to be a survival of the belief in vampirism.
Such demons are also said to be seen in the Polynesian tii, the Malayan
hanlu penyardin, a dog-headed water-demon, and the kephn of the
Karens, which under the form of a wizard's head and stomach devours human souls.
Tylor considers vampires to be "causes conceived in spiritual form to account
for the specific facts of wasting disease."
Von Daniken, Eric: UFO researcher and author of
the book "Chariots of the Gods." Von Daniken claims that
ETs (or ancient astronauts) visited the earth in ancient
history.
Van Praagh, James: Best selling author,
who describes himself as a medium with the ability to
communicate with spirits of the dead. Van Praagh has
written several books dealing with the subject of
parapsychology. From 2002 to 2003, he hosted a syndicated
daytime talk show entitled "Beyond With James Van Praagh."
He subsequently partnered with CBS to produce several tv-movies
and mini-series based on his books, including "Living With
The Dead" and "The Dead Will Tell." He is currently the
co-Executive Producer of the television series Ghost
Whisperer on CBS.
Vassago: The spirit of the crystal, who is invoked by the crystal-gazer for the
purposes of his art.
Vedanta: (Sans.) Meaning literally, the "end of all knowledge." Among the six Darshanas or the schools of philosophy, it is also called Uttara Mimansa , or the "later" Mimansa. There are those who, unable to understand its esotericism, consider it atheistical; but this is not so, as Shankaracharya, the great apostle of this school, and its popularizer, was one of the greatest mystics and adepts of India.
Verdelet: A demon of the second order, master of ceremonies at the infernal court. He
is charged with the transport of witches to the Sabbath. He takes the names of
Master, Persil, Sante-Buisson, and other names of a peasant sound, so as to
entice women into his snares.
Vidya: in Theosophy is the knowledge by which man on the Path can discern by means
of the mental faculties which he has learnt to use. It is the antithesis of
Avidya. See Path, Avidya, and Theosophy.
Vimanas: UFOs in ancient Indian myths. There are
several myths which talk about ancient Indian leaders
flying in the sky in disk-shaped craft and engaging in war
with other craft.
Virgo:
The sixth sign of the zodiac. A mutable earthy sign. Exact, methodical, industrious, discriminating,
intelligent, chaste.
[See
Virgo]
Vitality: according to theosophists, comes from the sun. When a physical atom is
transfused with vitality, it draws to itself six other atoms and thus makes an
etheric element. The sum of their vitality is then divided among each of of the
atoms and in this state the element enters the physical body by means of one of
the sense organs or chaksams of the etheric double - that situated opposite the
spleen. Here the element is divided into its component parts and these are
conveyed to the various parts of the physical body. It is on vitality that the
latter depends, not only for life but for its well-being in life.
Voodoo: hhhhh
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