EIGHTEENTH CENTURY VAMPIRE CONTROVERSY: 
Today everyone is familiar with vampires, but in Britain very  little was 
known of vampires prior to the 18th century. What brought the  vampire to the 
attention of the general public? During the 18th century  there was a major 
vampire scare in Eastern Europe. Even government  officials frequently got 
dragged 
into the hunting and staking of vampires.   
This controversy was directly responsible for  England's current vampire 
myths. In fact, the word Vampire only came into  English language in 1732 via 
an 
English translation of a German report of  the much publicized Arnold Paole 
vampire staking in Serbia.   
Western scholars seriously considered the  existence of vampires for the 
first time rather than just brushing them  off as superstition. It all started 
with an outbreak of vampire attacks in  East Prussia in 1721 and in the 
Austro-Hungarian empire from 1725-1734.   
Two famous cases involved Peter Plogojowitz and  Arnold Paole. Plogojowitz 
died at the age of 62, but came back a couple of  times after his death asking 
his son for food. When the son refused, he  was found dead the next day. Soon 
Plogojowitz returned and attacked some  neighbours who died from loss of blood. 
 
In the other famous case Arnold Paole, an  ex-soldier turned farmer who had 
been attacked by a vampire years before,  died while haying. After death people 
began to die and it was believed by  everyone that Paole had returned to prey 
on the neighbours.   
These two incidents were extremely well  documented. Government officials 
examined the cases and the bodies, wrote  them up in reports, and books were 
published afterwards of the Paole case  and distributed around Europe. The 
controversy raged for a generation. The  problem was exacerbated by rural 
people 
having an epidemic of vampire  attacks and digging up bodies all over the 
place. 
Many scholars said  vampires didn't exist - they attributed reports to 
premature burial, or  rabies which causes thirst.  
However, Dom Augustine Calmet, a well respected  French theologian and 
scholar, put together a carefully thought out  treatise in 1746 which said 
vampires 
did  exist.


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