Enticing Vampires - Vampire beliefs from the old world

Enticing Vampires -  Vampire beliefs from the old  world     
 The prevailing belief in European countries was that vampires were  the 
ghosts of suicides or others who had died violent deaths and  were forced by 
the 
devil to leave their graves at night and feed on  the blood of men and women, 
and any who died at the hands of these  dreadful creatures also became 
vampires. In this way beautiful women  became vampires and enticed young men 
and fed 
on their blood and  flesh. It was believed that they had power to assume any 
shape or  form desired between sunset and sunrise and that they committed most  
of their awful deeds at midnight. They were powerless in the daytime  and were 
generally in a torpid state. Garlic and wild rosebushes  were guards against 
them, and crucifixes were feared by them. To  prevent suicides from becoming 
vampires they were buried with n  stake driven through their hearts, and the 
straw they had slept on  was burned. All the dogs and cats in the village were 
locked up, for  if a dog or cat jumped over a corpse it was sure to become the 
home  of a vampire. -- Chicago Tribune, 1903.  
This story appeared in The Zanesville Signal on November 20,  1927 under the 
title "New Facts about Vampires: Winged and  Human."  


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