Jump to content

Vrykolakas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Quuxplusone (talk | contribs) at 15:53, 14 July 2024 (reorganize, give real citations for some of the books mentioned). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

An 1897 image of a beautiful young female vampiress salivating over a seemingly deceased man

A vrykolakas (Greek βρυκόλακας, pronounced [vriˈkolakas]), also called vorvolakas or vourdoulakas, is a harmful undead creature in Greek folklore. It shares similarities with numerous other legendary creatures, but is generally equated with the vampire of the folklore of the neighbouring Slavic countries. While the two are very similar, a vrykolakas eats flesh, particularly livers, rather than drinking blood, which combined with other factors such as its appearance bring it more in line with the modern concept of a zombie or ghoul.

Etymology

The word vrykolakas is derived from the Bulgarian word vǎrkolak. The term is attested in other Slavic languages such as Slovak vlkolak, Serbian vukodlak, ultimately derived from Proto-Slavic vьlkolakъ and cognates can be found in other languages such as Lithuanian vilkolakis and Romanian vârcolac. The term is a compound word derived from Slovak vlk, Bulgarian вълк (vâlk)/Serbian вук (vuk), meaning "wolf" and dlaka, meaning "(strand of) hair" (i.e. having the hair, or fur, of a wolf), and originally meant "werewolf"; it still has that meaning in the modern Slavic languages, and a similar one in Romanian. However, the same word (in the form vukodlak) has come to be used in the sense of "vampire" in the folklore of Croatia and Montenegro while the term "vampir" is more common in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Bulgaria. Apparently, the two concepts have become somewhat mixed.[1] Even in Bulgaria, original folklore generally describes the vârkolak as a sub-species of the vampire without any wolflike features.[2]

Features

The Greeks traditionally believed that a person could become a vrykolakas after death due to a sacrilegious way of life, an excommunication, a burial in unconsecrated ground, or eating the meat of a sheep which had been wounded by a wolf or a werewolf. Some believed that a werewolf itself could become a powerful vampire after being killed, and would retain the wolflike fangs, hairy palms, and glowing eyes it formerly possessed.[3]

The bodies of vrykolakas have the same distinctive characteristics as the bodies of vampires in Balkan folklore. They do not decay; instead, they swell and may even attain a "drumlike" form, being very large, have a ruddy complexion, and are, according to one account, "fresh and gorged with new blood". People with red hair and gray eyes at this time in history were thought to be vampires according to accounts near the region of modern Serbia. The activities of the vrykolakas are nearly always harmful, ranging from merely leaving their grave and "roaming about", through engaging in poltergeist-styled activity, and up to causing epidemics in the community. Among other things, the creature is believed to knock on the doors of houses and call out the name of the residents. If it gets no reply the first time, it will pass without causing any harm. If someone does answer the door, he or she will die a few days later and become another vrykolakas. For this reason, there is a superstition present in certain Greek villages that one should not answer a door until the second knock. Legends also say that the vrykolakas crushes or suffocates the sleeping by sitting on them, much like a mare or incubus (cf. sleep paralysis) — as does a vampire in Bulgarian folklore.[4][5] Unlike vampires, in Greek folklore, the vrykolakas are described more as cannibals than bloodsuckers with a taste in particular for human livers.[6]

Since the vrykolakas becomes more and more powerful if left alone, legends state that one should destroy its body. According to some accounts, this can only be done on Saturday, which is the only day when the vrykolakas rests in its grave (the same as with Bulgarian vampire legend).[7] This may be done in various ways, the most common being exorcising, impaling, beheading, cutting into pieces, and especially cremating the suspected corpse, so that it may be freed from living death and its victims may be safe.

Belief in the vrykolakas was still common in Greece in World War II, especially in rural areas. During the Great Famine in 1941-42 where about 300,000 Greeks starved to death, the graveyards were so overfilled that many families were forced to bury their loved ones outside of the cemeteries.[8] So many people starved to death during the Great Famine that officials of the collaborationist Hellenic State took to gathering up the corpses and dumping them in mass graves.[8] Since those buried in unconsecrated ground were believed to come back to haunt the living as vrykolakas, this possibility caused much distress for those families who were unable to bury their dead in the church cemeteries, and some families took preemptive steps to prevent their loved ones from becoming vrykolakas such as beheading their corpses.[8]

Ancient Greece

Ancient Greeks believed that the dead are able to reanimate and exist in a state that is neither living nor dead, but rather a state inbetween: "undead". Burials of suspected revenants have been discovered throughout the ancient Greek world. The earliest examples are from Cyprus and date to the Neolithic period (ca. 4500–3900/3800 BC). At Khirokitia, flexed bodies buried in pit graves were pinned by millstones that were placed on either their heads or chests in order to trap the body in its grave. Similar burials were found at Argolid. In the necropolis of the city of Kamarina, two burials were found which were different from the rest: the first contains an adult of indeterminate sex and stature. The head and feet of the individual are completely covered by large amphora fragments. The heavy amphora fragments found were presumably intended to pin the individual to the grave and prevent it from seeing or rising. The second burial contains a child approximately 8 to 13 years old, also of indeterminate sex and stature. Five large stones were placed on top of the child's body. These stones were used to trap the body in its grave.[9]

Byzantine Greece

In Attica, a limekiln was found that served as a gravesite for two dismembered individuals. The first body belonged to a woman who was cut horizontally in half, with both halves placed parallel to one another in the prone position. Buried with her was a small jar containing a single coin from the reign of Emperor Constantine and a portion of the dismembered left leg of an adult male. After deposition, the skeletons were deliberately sealed in the limekiln by large rocks.[9]

Ottoman and modern Greece

At Lesbos, a Turkish cemetery from the Ottoman period contained an isolated tomb of an adult who was pinned at the neck, pelvis and both feet with 20 cm nails. Another burial from the same island dating to the same period contained a man over the age of 60. He was found in a cist grave and had three bent 16cm spikes mixed in with his bones.[9]

Archaeological excavations on Lesbos at its capital Mytilene have uncovered two vrykolakas burials in early cemeteries. Both were middle-aged men buried in special crypts with 20 cm spikes through the neck, groin and ankles, a typical Balkan method of dealing with a suspected revenant. The British vice-consul, Charles Thomas Newton, in his Travels and Discoveries in the Levant (1865), mentions an island off the coast of Lesbos on which the Greeks of his time (1850s) buried their vrykolakadhes.[10]

Apotropaics

Apotropaics are objects or practices that were intended to prevent a recently-deceased loved one from turning into a revenant, or to distract a revenant so that he will not harm the living. Burying a corpse upside-down was widespread, as was placing earthly objects, such as scythes or sickles,[11] near the grave to satisfy any demons entering the body or to appease the dead so that it would not wish to arise from its coffin. This method resembles the Ancient Greek practice of placing an obolus in the corpse's mouth to pay the toll to cross the River Styx in the underworld; it has been argued that instead, the coin was intended to ward off any evil spirits from entering the body, and this may have influenced later vampire folklore. This tradition persisted in modern Greek folklore about the vrykolakas, in which a wax cross and a piece of pottery with the inscription "Jesus Christ conquers" might be placed on the corpse to prevent the body from becoming a vampire.[12] Other methods commonly practised in Europe included severing the tendons at the knees or placing poppy seeds, millet, or sand on the ground at the grave site of a presumed vampire; this was intended to keep the vampire occupied by counting the fallen grains at the rate of one grain per year,[13] indicating an association of vampires with arithmomania. Similar Chinese narratives state that if a vampiric being came across a sack of rice, it would have to count every grain; this is a theme encountered in myths from the Indian subcontinent, as well as in South American tales of witches and other sorts of evil or mischievous spirits or beings.[14]

Vrykolakas and the West

The first Western accounts of belief in vrykolakas are from the mid-17th century, in compositions by authors such as the Greek librarian of the Vatican Leo Allatius (De quorundam Graecorum Opinationibus, 1645), and Father François Richard (Relation de l'Isle de Sant-erini, 1657), who tend to confirm the stories. The 1718 account of French traveller Joseph Pitton de Tournefort, who witnessed the exhumation and "slaying" of a suspected vrykolakas on the Greek island of Mykonos in 1701, became better known.[15][16][17] The Greek vrykolakas was identified as the equivalent of the Slavic vampire during the 18th-century vampire controversy, as exemplified in Johann Heinrich Zedler's Grosses vollständiges Universal-Lexicon (1732–1754). The Spanish scholar Álvaro García Marín wrote in 2016 "that if we were to judge from the standpoint of a Western European of 1730 or 1820, Dracula without any doubt should have been Greek ... At the beginning of the eighteenth century when the Slavic vampire was still unknown in the West, the Greek vyrkolakas had been recurring in theological treatises, travel accounts and books on occultism from the beginning of the sixteenth century".[18]

Henry Fanshawe Tozer in 1869 wrote: "The principal causes which change persons into vrykolakas after death are excommunication, heinous sins, the curse of parents, and tampering with magic arts. The first of these is the most common and most important and dates from very early times."[19]

It has become normal, in translating vampire movies and the like into Greek, to translate "vampire" as "vrykolakas". Modern Greeks raised on Hollywood vampire movies would be just as likely, if not more so, to think of Dracula, instead of the traditional Greek monster, when a vrykolakas is mentioned.[citation needed]

One of the few instances of the vrykolakas or vorvolaka being used in popular art and media is in the film Isle of the Dead (1945). Directed by Mark Robson, the film centers around a group of people on a small island, whose lives are threatened by a force that some believe to be the plague, and others believe to be the work of a vorvolaka.

Several books and novels have been written involving vrykolakas:

  • Adventures in Death and Romance: Vrykolakas Tales,[20] authored by historian Monette Bebow-Reinhard[21]
  • Superposition by David Walton (Pyr Books, 2015).
  • Dimitris Lyacos's postmodern play With the People from the Bridge handles the theme of Vrykolakas in the context of Greek folklore and tradition. Characteristically, the vampiress character is apotropaically handled on a Saturday.[22]
  • Glen Cook's novel The Black Company (1984) features the "forvalaka," a wereleopard whose name is phonetically derived from "vorvolaka."

See also

Sources

References

  1. ^ "Петровић, Сретен. Српска митологиjа". Archived from the original on March 31, 2009.
  2. ^ Иваничка Димитрова. Българска народна митология. С.1983.стр. 163-164 Archived 2016-02-27 at the Wayback Machine. Compare alsohey the description in Naiden Gerov's Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language ("Речник на блъгарский язик“) (1895–1904)
  3. ^ Summers, Montague (2001). The Vampire in Lore and Legend. Courier Dover Publications. p. xiv. ISBN 978-0-486-41942-8.
  4. ^ "Български Фолклор и Традиции - Статии: Вампир (вампирин, плътеник, въпер, лепир, вапир, дракос)". www.bulgarian-folklore.com.
  5. ^ http://www.imir-bg.org/imir/books/myusyulmani-Teteven.pdf Archived 2007-06-29 at the Wayback Machine Кюркчиева, Ива. 2004. Светът на българите-мюсюлмани от Тетевенско - преход към модерност
  6. ^ Demetracopoulou Lee, D. "Folklore of the Greeks in America" pages 294-310 from Folklore, Volume 47, No. 3, September 1936 page 303
  7. ^ "Иваничка Димитрова. Българска народна митология. С.1983.стр. 153- 159". Archived from the original on October 24, 2007.
  8. ^ a b c Mazower, Mark (1995). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941-44. Yale University Press. p. 41. ISBN 0300065523.
  9. ^ a b c "Walking Dead and Vengeful Spirits". popular-archaeology.com. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  10. ^ Sir Charles Thomas Newton; Sir Dominic Ellis Colnaghi (1865). Travels and Discoveries in the Levant. Day & Son, Limited. pp. 212–13.
  11. ^ Barber, Vampires, Burial and Death, pp. 50–51.
  12. ^ Lawson, John Cuthbert (1910). Modern Greek Folklore and Ancient Greek Religion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 405–06.
  13. ^ Barber, Vampires, Burial and Death, p. 49.
  14. ^ (Spanish) Jaramillo Londoño, Agustín (1986) [1967]. Testamento del paisa (7th ed.). Medellín: Susaeta Ediciones.
  15. ^ "Excerpted from A Voyage into the Levant (etc) by Joseph Pitton de Tournefort". By Light Unseen. Archived from the original on 2007-01-07. Retrieved 2007-06-20.
  16. ^ Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (1741). A Voyage into the Levant. Vol. 1. Translated by John Ozell. London: D. Midwinter et al. p. 142–148.
  17. ^ Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (1717). Relation d'un voyage du Levant (in French). Vol. 1. Lyon: Anisson et Poseul. p. 158–164. Nous vîmes une scene bien différente...
  18. ^ Marius-Mircea Crișan (2017). "'Welcome to my house: enter freely of your own will': Dracula in international contexts". Dracula: An International Perspective. New York: Springer. p. 4.
  19. ^ Henry Fanshawe Tozer (1869). "The vrykolaka, or eastern vampire". Researches in the Highlands of Turkey. London: John Murray. p. 86.
  20. ^ "Archived copy". Amazon. Archived from the original on 2016-09-19. Retrieved 2017-09-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  21. ^ "Monette L. Bebow-Reinhard". Amazon.
  22. ^ "A Column of Cloud and a Column of Fire: Dimitris Lyacos' Poena Damni, by Robert Zaller – Journal of Poetics Research". poeticsresearch.com. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019.