Search This Blog

Friday, October 13, 2017

Medieval Vampires and a Dark Maiden

Medieval people believed in ghosts and in evil necromancers, using devilish arts to re-animate the dead or to control demons. They believed in witchcraft and charms and magic. They believed in succubii and incubii. Vampires, however, do not really make an appearance until the fourteenth century. Why then?

In 1348 the Black Death struck Europe. Thousands died and thousands of rotting corpses had to be buried, often in mass graves. Sights of these bodies was often grisly and bloody, and so the idea of the vampire, feeding on the blood of the living, came into force.

Recently a body in a medieval Italian mass grave on the Venetian island of Lazzaretto Nuovo was found with a slab of rock slammed between its jaws – a crude anti-vampire measure. The dead woman was suspected by the grave-diggers of being a vampire, possibly because of gruesome sights around her decomposing body when they had re-opened the mass grave to bury more plague victims. So the frightened grave-diggers put a brick in her mouth to stop her chewing through her shroud and escaping the grave to infect others. A very grisly measure!



I touch on vampires in my medieval historical romance, Dark Maiden. My heroine, Yolande, spends a lot of time persuading others that the spirits or supernatural creatures they are dealing with are not vampires, mainly because she knows they are not and because the ways of dealing with vampires is very violent and would be distressing to bereaved families. I do have her fighting vampires however, if only in her dreams, and then she shows what a medieval exorcist would have to do.



Read Chapter One

[Vampire image published Paris, 1820. Sourced from Wikimedia Commons.]

Lindsay Townsend

3 comments:

  1. I've started the book and am enjoying it. With work it has taken longer to read, but now...*Smile*

    I am fascinated by history and Medieval history is so full of unique folk lore. Thanks for an insight into yet another piece of hisory. Doris

    ReplyDelete
  2. Lindsay, I was enthralled with this story. SO different, and it really held my interest from start to finish.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you so much, Doris and Cheryl! I'm delighted you both enjoyed it. Darm Maiden is one of my own personal favourites.

    ReplyDelete