1 00:00:05,542 --> 00:00:08,313 How did Dracula become the world's most famous vampire? 2 00:00:08,313 --> 00:00:12,473 More than 100 years after his creator was laid to rest, 3 00:00:12,473 --> 00:00:18,173 Dracula lives on as the most famous vampire in history. 4 00:00:18,173 --> 00:00:20,174 But this Transylvanian noble, 5 00:00:20,174 --> 00:00:24,524 neither the first fictional vampire nor the most popular of his time, 6 00:00:24,524 --> 00:00:30,204 may have remained buried in obscurity if not for a twist of fate. 7 00:00:30,204 --> 00:00:35,944 Dracula's first appearance was in Bram Stoker's 1897 novel of the same name. 8 00:00:35,944 --> 00:00:39,315 But that was far from the beginning of vampire myths. 9 00:00:39,315 --> 00:00:44,484 Blood-sucking monsters had already been part of folklore for at least 800 years. 10 00:00:44,484 --> 00:00:47,984 It was Slavic folklore that gave us the word vampire, 11 00:00:47,984 --> 00:00:50,605 or "upir" in Old Russian. 12 00:00:50,605 --> 00:00:54,735 The term's first known written mention comes from the 11th century. 13 00:00:54,735 --> 00:00:58,075 Vampire lore in the region predated Christianity's arrival 14 00:00:58,075 --> 00:01:02,804 and persisted despite the church's efforts to eliminate pagan beliefs. 15 00:01:02,804 --> 00:01:07,755 Stories of vampires originated from misinterpretations of diseases, 16 00:01:07,755 --> 00:01:08,846 such as rabies, 17 00:01:08,846 --> 00:01:10,106 and pellagra, 18 00:01:10,106 --> 00:01:12,045 and decomposition. 19 00:01:12,045 --> 00:01:16,865 In the case of the latter, gasses swelling the body and blood oozing from the mouth 20 00:01:16,865 --> 00:01:21,557 could make a corpse look like it had recently been alive and feeding. 21 00:01:21,557 --> 00:01:26,136 Vampires were describe as bloated with overgrown teeth and nails. 22 00:01:26,136 --> 00:01:30,557 This gave rise to many rituals intended to prevent the dead from rising, 23 00:01:30,557 --> 00:01:33,666 such as burying bodies with garlic or poppyseeds, 24 00:01:33,666 --> 00:01:35,325 as well as having them staked, 25 00:01:35,325 --> 00:01:36,227 burned, 26 00:01:36,227 --> 00:01:38,056 or mutilated. 27 00:01:38,056 --> 00:01:42,086 Vampire lore remained a local phenomenon until the 18th century 28 00:01:42,086 --> 00:01:45,987 when Serbia was caught in the struggle between two great powers, 29 00:01:45,987 --> 00:01:47,477 the Habsburg Monarchy 30 00:01:47,477 --> 00:01:49,777 and Ottoman Empire. 31 00:01:49,777 --> 00:01:53,217 Austrian soldiers and government officials observed and documented 32 00:01:53,217 --> 00:01:55,988 the strange local burial rituals, 33 00:01:55,988 --> 00:01:58,976 and their reports became widely publicized. 34 00:01:58,976 --> 00:02:04,007 The resulting vampire hysteria got so out of hand that in 1755, 35 00:02:04,007 --> 00:02:08,258 the Austrian Empress was forced to dispatch her personal physician. 36 00:02:08,258 --> 00:02:11,038 He investigated and put an end to the rumors 37 00:02:11,038 --> 00:02:14,007 by publishing a thorough, scientific refutation. 38 00:02:14,007 --> 00:02:17,549 The panic subsided, but the vampire had already taken root 39 00:02:17,549 --> 00:02:19,768 in Western Europe's imagination, 40 00:02:19,768 --> 00:02:22,858 spawning works like "The Vampyre" in 1819, 41 00:02:22,858 --> 00:02:29,168 and Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu's "Carmilla" in 1872. 42 00:02:29,168 --> 00:02:34,817 This book would greatly influence a young Irish drama critic named Bram Stoker. 43 00:02:34,817 --> 00:02:37,976 Stoker, who was born in Dublin in 1847, 44 00:02:37,976 --> 00:02:43,439 was famously bedridden with an unknown illness until the age of seven. 45 00:02:43,439 --> 00:02:46,210 During that time, his mother told him folktales 46 00:02:46,210 --> 00:02:48,208 and true tales of horror, 47 00:02:48,208 --> 00:02:54,263 including her experiences during an outbreak of cholera in 1832. 48 00:02:54,263 --> 00:02:59,099 There, she described victims buried alive in mass graves. 49 00:02:59,099 --> 00:03:04,179 Later in his life, Stoker went on to write fantasy, romance, adventure stories, 50 00:03:04,179 --> 00:03:08,671 and, in 1897, "Dracula." 51 00:03:08,671 --> 00:03:10,880 Although the book's main villain and namesake 52 00:03:10,880 --> 00:03:15,520 is thought to be based on the historical figure of Vlad III Dracula, 53 00:03:15,520 --> 00:03:17,480 or Vlad the Impaler, 54 00:03:17,480 --> 00:03:21,090 the association is mostly just that they share a name. 55 00:03:21,090 --> 00:03:24,950 Other elements and characters were inspired directly and indirectly 56 00:03:24,950 --> 00:03:28,100 by various works in the Victorian Era, 57 00:03:28,100 --> 00:03:30,382 such as "The Mysterious Stranger." 58 00:03:30,382 --> 00:03:34,510 The novel, upon release, was only a moderate success in its day, 59 00:03:34,510 --> 00:03:37,842 nor was it even Stoker's most well-known work, 60 00:03:37,842 --> 00:03:42,510 mentioned only briefly in a 1912 obituary. 61 00:03:42,510 --> 00:03:46,899 But a critical copyright battle would completely change Dracula's fate, 62 00:03:46,899 --> 00:03:50,571 and catapult the character into literary renown. 63 00:03:50,571 --> 00:03:57,491 In 1922, a German studio adapted the novel into the now classic silent film "Nosferatu" 64 00:03:57,491 --> 00:03:59,451 without paying royalties. 65 00:03:59,451 --> 00:04:03,052 Despite changes in character names and minor plot points, 66 00:04:03,052 --> 00:04:07,782 the parallels were obvious, and the studio was sued into bankruptcy. 67 00:04:07,782 --> 00:04:09,645 To prevent more plagiarism attempts, 68 00:04:09,645 --> 00:04:12,702 Stoker's widow decided to establish copyright 69 00:04:12,702 --> 00:04:14,912 over the stage version of "Dracula" 70 00:04:14,912 --> 00:04:19,460 by approving a production by family-friend Hamilton Deane. 71 00:04:19,460 --> 00:04:22,753 Although Deane's adaptation made drastic cuts to the story, 72 00:04:22,753 --> 00:04:24,954 it became a classic, 73 00:04:24,954 --> 00:04:29,173 thanks largely to Bela Lugosi's performance on Broadway. 74 00:04:29,173 --> 00:04:33,853 Lugosi would go on to star in the 1931 film version by Universal, 75 00:04:33,853 --> 00:04:37,512 lending the character many of his signature characteristics. 76 00:04:37,512 --> 00:04:41,933 And since then, Dracula has risen again in countless adaptations, 77 00:04:41,933 --> 00:04:46,943 finding eternal life far beyond the humble pages of his birth.