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Vampires: Folklore, fantasy and fact - Michael Molina

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    Good evening!
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    What's the matter?
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    Are you afraid of vampires?
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    He he, no need to worry,
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    I'm not staying for dinner.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm here to guide you
    through a brief history of vampires,
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    illustrating how our image has changed
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    from a shambling corpse
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    to the dapper gentleman
    you see before you.
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    Vampires are nearly as old as you humans.
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    Stories about us, revenants,
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    appear in cultures extending
    as far back as prehistoric times.
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    But we weren't called vampires back then
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    and most of us did not look the way
    we imagine vampires today.
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    Ha, far from it!
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    For example, the Mesopotamian Lamashtu
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    was a creature with the head of a lion
    and the body of the donkey,
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    and the ancient Greek striges
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    were simply described
    as bloodthirsty birds.
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    Others were even stranger.
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    The Philippine manananggal
    would sever her upper torso
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    and sprout huge, bat-like wings to fly.
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    The Malaysian penanggalan
    was a flying female head
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    with dangling entrails.
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    (Laughter)
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    And the Australian Yara-ma-yha-who
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    was a little red guy with a big head,
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    a large mouth,
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    and bloodsuckers on his hands and feet.
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    Oh, and let's not forget
    the Caribbean's soucouyant,
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    the West African obayifo,
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    and the Mexican Tlahuelpuchi.
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    (Laughter)
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    Charming, aren't they?
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    Though they may look vastly different,
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    all of these beings have
    one common characteristic:
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    They sustain themselves by consuming
    the life force of a living creature.
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    This shared trait
    is what defines a vampire --
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    all the other attributes
    change with the tides.
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    So, how do we arrive
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    at the reanimated fellow
    you see before you?
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    Our modern ideal emerges
    in 18th-century Eastern Europe.
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    With the dramatic increase
    of vampire superstitions,
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    stories of bloodsucking, shadowy creatures
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    become nightly bedside terrors.
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    And popular folklore,
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    like the moroi among the Romani people
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    and the lugat in Albania,
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    provide the most common
    vampire traits known today,
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    such as vampires being undead
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    and nocturnal and shape-shifting.
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    You see, Eastern Europe
    in the 18th century
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    was a pretty grim place
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    with many deaths occurring
    from unknown diseases and plagues.
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    Without medical explanations,
    people searched for supernatural causes
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    and found what looked like evidence
    in the corpses of the victims.
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    When villagers dug up bodies
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    to discern the cause
    of the mysterious deaths,
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    they would often find the cadavers
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    looking very much alive --
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    longer hair and fingernails,
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    bloated bellies,
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    and blood at the corners of mouths.
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    (Laughter)
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    Clearly, these people
    were not really dead.
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    Heh, they were vampires!
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    And they had been leaving their graves
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    to feast on the living.
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    (Grunt)
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    The terrified villagers
    would quickly enact
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    a ritual to kill the undead.
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    The practices varied across the region,
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    but usually included beheadings,
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    burnings, and staking
    the body to the coffin
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    to prevent it from getting up.
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    (Laughter)
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    Grizzly stuff!
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    But what the villagers interpreted
    as unholy reanimation
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    were actually normal symptoms of death.
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    When a body decomposes,
    the skin dehydrates,
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    causing the hair
    and fingernails to extend.
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    Bacteria in the stomach creates gases
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    that fill the belly,
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    which force out blood
    and matter through the mouth.
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    Unfortunately, this science
    was not yet known,
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    so the villagers kept digging.
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    In fact, so many bodies were dug up
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    that the Empress of Austria
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    sent her physician around
    to disprove the vampire stories,
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    and she even established a law
    prohibiting grave tampering.
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    Still, even after the vampire
    hunts had died down,
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    the stories of legends survived
    in local superstition.
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    This led to works of literature,
    such as Polidori's "The Vampyre,"
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    the Gothic novel "Carmilla,"
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    and, most famously,
    Bram Stoker's "Dracula."
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    Although Stoker incorporated
    historical material,
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    like Elizabeth Báthory's
    virgin blood baths
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    and the brutal executions of Vlad Dracul,
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    it was these local myths
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    that inspired the main
    elements of his story:
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    the Transylvanian setting,
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    using garlic to defend oneself,
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    and the staking of the heart.
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    While these attributes
    are certainly familiar to us,
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    elements he invented himself
    have also lasted over the years:
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    fear of crucifixes,
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    weakness in sunlight,
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    and the vampire's inability
    to see their reflection.
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    By inventing new traits,
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    Stoker perfectly enacted
    the age-old tradition
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    of elaborating upon and expanding
    the myth of vampires.
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    As we saw, maybe you met my relatives,
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    a huge of variety of creatures
    stalked the night before Dracula,
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    and many more will continue
    to creep through our nightmares.
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    Yet, so long as they subsist
    off a living being's life force,
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    they are part of my tribe.
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    Even sparkling vampires can be included.
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    After all, it's the continued storytelling
    and reimagining of the vampire legend
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    that allows us to truly live
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    forever.
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    (Ominous laughter)
Title:
Vampires: Folklore, fantasy and fact - Michael Molina
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/vampires-folklore-fantasy-and-fact-michael-molina

The myth of the bloodsucking vampire has stalked humans from ancient Mesopotamia to 18th-century Eastern Europe, but it has differed in the terrifying details. So, how did we arrive at the popular image we know, love and fear today? And what truly makes a vampire ... a vampire? Michael Molina digs up the science and the superstition.

Lesson by Michael Molina, animation by The Moving Company Animation Studio.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
06:57

English subtitles

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