I have always enjoyed vampires and reading about them.I made this page to host a few vampire sites as well
as other things,so enjoy.
Lilith
Queen of the demons is Lilith, long-haired and winged. She is supposed to have been the first wife of Adam.
She had been one of the wives of Sammael, but of a wild, heroic and passionate nature she left her spouse and joined Adam.
From their union issued the demons or Shedim, who rode about in the world as wicked spirits, persecute and plague men, and
bring upon them illness, disease, and other sufferings.
Lilith, like Adam, had been created from the dust (Adamah) of the earth. But as soon as she had joined Adam
they began to quarrel, each refusing to be subservient and Submissive to the other. "I am your lord and master," spoke Adam,
"and it is your duty to obey me." But Lilith replied: "We are both equal, for we are both issued from dust (Adamah), and I
will not be submissive to you." And thus they quarrelled and none would give in. And when Lilith saw this she spoke the Ineffable
Name of the Creator and soared up into the air. Thereupon Adam stood in prayer before the Creator and thus he spake: " O Lord
of the Universe, the woman Thou hast given me has fled from me."
And the Holy One, blessed be His name, sent at once three angels whose names were Senoi, Sansenoi, and Sammangelof,
to fetch and bring Lilith back to Adam. He ordered them to tell her to return, and if he refused to obey then a hundred of
her offspring would die daily. The three afore-mentioned angels followed Lilith, and they found her in the midst of the sea,
on the mighty waves (which were once to drown the Egyptians).
They communicated to her the command of the Eternal, but she refused to return. And the angels spake to this
rebel, this she-demon: "We will drown thee in the sea." But she made answer: "Know ye not that I have been created for the
purpose of weakening and punishing little children, infants and babes. I have power over them from the day they are born until
they are eight days old if they are boys, and until the twentieth day if they are girls." And when the three angels heard
her speech they wished to drown her by force, but she begged them to let her live, and they gave in. She swore to them in
the name of the living God that whenever she came and saw the names or images or faces of these three angels, Senoi, Sansenoi,
and Sammangelof, upon an amulet or cameo in the room where there was an infant, she would not touch it. But because she did
not return to Adam, every day a hundred of her own children or spirits and demons die.
The legend of Lilith and the message of the three angels is found in several sources of Rabbinical lore in
some of which it is quoted from the Alphabetum Siracidis.
The book known as the Sefer Rasiel describes the formula to be written upon amulets or cameos and to
be placed in the rooms where there are new-born babes. It refers to Lilith as the first Eve, and conjurers her in the
name of the three angels and the angel of the sea to whom she had sworn not to harm the babes in whose rooms she found written
on paper the names of the three angels.
Lilith is thus a female night demon, and is also known under the name of Meyalleleth or the howling
one.
The she-demon Makhlath (the dancer) and her daughter Agrath are two female demons who live in
strife with Lilith. Lilith is accompanied by four hundred and eighty hosts of evil spirits and destroying angels, and she
is constantly howling. Makhlath is accompanied by four hundred and seventy-eight hosts of evil spirits. She and her daughter
Agrath, from the Zend word Agra = beating, are in constant enmity with Lilith.
Lilith According to the midrash with which I am most familiar, Adam insisted that Lilith always "lie below
him" -- that is, always be on the bottom during sex. When Lilith complained and got no sympathy from Adam or help from God,
she "called the Holy Name of the Creator" and flew away. She was transformed into a demon of the air, who is responsible for
killing infants in their cradles (because her children are condenmned to death by the thousands) and for provoking erotic
dreams and nocturnal emissions in men. Actually, when she fled the Garden, God sent three angels to bring her back. She did
not want to go back, so the Angels killed 100 of her children per day. This accounts for the fact that she kill/steals
children in their sleep. During the first weeks of their birth, children could be killed by Lilith. (Explanation for cradle
death). She also seduced men in their sleep, forcing them into sex. She needed the semen to give birth to more demons. This
is how they explained the male wet dream. In the bible, she is referred to as NightDemon or Night Rider in Isaiah 34:14. In
later myths, she became the wife of Lucifer. She also has ties with the Greek Lamiai.
Vlad Dracula
Vlad Tepes was born in November or December 1431, in the fortress of Sighisoara, Romania. His father, Vlad
Dracul, at that time appointed military governor of Transylvania by the emperor Sigismund, had been inducted into the Order
of the Dragon about one year before. The order - which could be compared to the Knights of the Hospital of St. John or even
to the Teutonic Order of Knights - was a semimilitary and religious society, originally created in 1387 by the Holy Roman
Emperor and his second wife, Barbara Cilli. The main goals of such a secret fraternal order of knights was mainly to protect
the interests of Catholicism, and to crusade against the Turks. There are different reasons why this society is so important
to us. First, it provides an explanation for the name "Dracula;" "Dracul," in Romanian language, means "Dragon", and the boyars
of Romania, who knew of Vlad Tepes' father induction into the Order of the Dragon, decided to call him "Dracul." "Dracula,"
a diminutive which means "the son of Dracul," was a surname to be used ultimately by Vlad Tepes. A second major role of this
Order as a source of inspiration for Stoker's evil character is the Order's official dress - a black cape over a red garment
- to be worn only on Fridays or during the commemoration of Christ's Passion.
In the winter of 1436-1437, Dracul became prince of Wallachia (one of the three Romanian provinces) and took
up residence at the palace of Tirgoviste, the princely capital. Vlad Tepes followed his father and lived six years at the
princely court. In 1442, for political reasons, Dracula and his younger brother Radu were taken hostage by the Sultan Murad
II; Dracula was held in Turkey until 1448, while his brother Radu decided to stay there until 1462. This Turkish captivity
surely played an important role in Dracula's upbringing; it must be at this period that he adopted a very pessimistic view
of life. Indeed, the Turks set him free after informing him of his father's assassination in 1447 - organized by Vladislav
II. He also learned about his older brother's death - Mircea was the eldest legitimate son of Dracul - and how he had been
tortured and buried alive by the boyars of Tirgoviste.
At 17 years old, Vlad Tepes Dracula, supported by a force of Turkish cavalry and a contingent of troops lent
to him by pasha Mustafa Hassan, made his first major move toward seizing the Wallachian throne. But another claimant, no other
than Vladislav II himself, defeated him only two months later. In order to secure his second and major reign over Wallachia,
Dracula had to wait until July of 1456, when he had the satisfaction of killing his mortal enemy and his father's assassin.
Vlad then began his longest reign - 6 years - during which he committed many cruelties, and hence established his controversed
reputation.
His first major act of revenge was aimed at the boyars of Tirgoviste for the killing of his father and his
brother Mircea. On Easter Sunday of what we believe to be 1459, he arrested all the boyar families who had participated to
the princely feast. He impaled the older ones on stakes while forcing the others to march from the capital to the town of
Poenari. This fifty-mile trek was quite grueling, and those who survived were not permitted to rest until they reached destination.
Dracula then ordered them to build him a fortress on the ruins of an older outpost overlooking the Arges river. Many died
in the process, and Dracula therefore succeeded in creating a new nobility and obtaining a fortress for future emergencies.
Vlad became quite known for his brutal punishment techniques; he often ordered people to be skinned, boiled,
decapitated, blinded, strangled, hanged, burned, roasted, hacked, nailed, buried alive, stabbed, etc. He also liked to cut
off noses, ears, sexual organs and limbs. But his favorite method was impalement on stakes, hence the surname "Tepes" which
means "The Impaler" in the Romanian language. Even the Turks referred to him as "Kaziglu Bey," meaning "The Impaler Prince."
It is this technique he used in 1457, 1459 and 1460 against Transylvanian merchants who had ignored his trade laws. The raids
he led against the German Saxons of Transylvania were also acts of proto-nationalism in order to protect and favour the Wallachian
commerce activities.
There are many anecdotes about the philosophy of Vlad Tepes Dracula. He was for instance particularly known
throughout his land for his fierce insistence on honesty and order. Almost any crime, from lying and stealing to killing,
could be punished by impalement. Being so confident in the effectiveness of his law, Dracula placed a golden cup on display
in the central square of Tirgoviste. The cup could be used by thirsty travelers, but had to remain on the square. According
to the available historic sources, it was never stolen and remained entirely unmolested throughout Vlad's reign. Dracula was
also very concerned that all his subjects work and be productive to the community. He looked upon the poor, vagrants and beggars
as thieves. Consequently, he invited all the poor and sick of Wallachia to his princely court in Tirgoviste for a great feast.
After the guests ate and drank, Dracula ordered the hall boarded up and set on fire. No one survived.
In the beginning of 1462, Vlad launched a campaign against the Turks along the Danube river. It was quite
risky, the military force of Sultan Mehmed II being by far more powerful than the Wallachian army. However, during the winter
of 1462, Vlad was very successful and managed to gain many victories. To punish Dracula, the Sultan decided to launch a full-scale
invasion of Wallachia. Of course, his other goal was to transform this land into a Turkish province and he entered Wallachia
with an army three times larger than Dracula's. Finding himself without allies, Vlad, forced to retreat towards Tirgoviste,
burned his own villages and poisoned the wells along the way, so that the Turkish army would find nothing to eat or drink.
Moreover, when the Sultan, exhausted, finally reached the capital city, he was confronted by a most gruesome sight: thousands
of stakes held the remaining carcasses of some 20,000 Turkish captives, a horror scene which was ultimately nicknamed the
"Forest of the Impaled." This terror tactic deliberately stage-managed by Dracula was definitely successful; the scene had
a strong effect on Mehmed's most stout-hearted officers, and the Sultan, tired and hungry, admitted defeat (it is worth mentioning
that even Victor Hugo, in his Legende des Siecles, recalls this particular incident). Nevertheless, following his retreat
from Wallachian territory, Mehmed left the next phase of the battle to Vlad's younger brother Radu, the Turkish favorite for
the Wallachian throne. At the head of a Turkish army and joined by Vlad's detractors, Radu pursued his brother to Poenari
castle on the Arges river.
According to the legend, this is when Dracula's wife, in order to escape Turkish capture, committed suicide
by hurling herself from the upper battlements, her body falling down the precipice into the river below - a scene exploited
by Francis Ford Coppola's production. Vlad, who was definitely not the kind of man to kill himself, managed to escape the
siege of his fortress by using a secret passage into the mountain. Helped by some peasants of the Arefu village, he was able
to reach Transylvania where he met the new king of Hungary, Matthias Corvinus. However, instead of providing some help, Matthias
arrested Dracula and imprisoned him at the Hungarian capital of Visegrad. It was not until 1475 that Vlad was again recognized
as the prince of Wallachia, enjoying a very short third reign. In fact, he was assassinated toward the end of December 1476.
ERZSÉBET (ELIZABETH) BÁTHORY(The Blood countess)
Countess of Transylvania, vampire: Born 1560/61; died, August 21, 1614.
In order to improve her complexion and also to maintain her failing grasp
on her youth and vitality, she slaughtered six hundred innocent young women from her tiny mountain principality...
The noble Báthory family stemmed from the Hun Gutkeled clan which held power
in broad areas of east central Europe (in those places now known as Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Romania), and had emerged
to assume a role of relative eminence by the first half of the 13th century. Abandoning their tribal roots, they assumed the
name of one of their estates (Bátor meaning 'valiant') as a family name. Their power rose to reach a zenith by the mid 16th
century, but declined and faded to die out completely by 1658. Great kings, princes, members of the judiciary, as well as
holders of ecclesiastical and civil posts were among the ranks of the Báthorys.
Adopting an exalted name did not alter some basic familial preferences among
lesser lights however, and in order to consolidate more tenuous clingings to influence there was considerable intermarriage
amongst the Báthory family, with some of the usual problems of this practice produced as a result. Unfortunately, beyond the
'usual problems' some extraordinary difficulties arose (namely hideous psychoses) and several "evil geniuses" appeared, the
notorious and sadistic Erzsébet the most prominent of them.
Truly, she was evil enough to be recognized as one of the original "vampires"
who later inspired Bram Stoker to write the legend of Dracula -- but unlike Stoker's story, she was real.
Unusual for one of her social status, she was a fit and active child. Raised
as Magyar royalty, as a young maid she was quite beautiful; delicate in her features, slender of build, tall for the time,
but her personality did not attain the same measure of fortuitous development. In her own opinion her most outstanding feature
was her often commented upon gloriously creamy complexion. Although others were not really so equally impressed with the quality
of her rather ordinary skin, they offered copious praise if they knew what was good for them, as Erzsébet did not accept unenthusiastic
half-measures of adulation; and she was vindictive.
She was only 15 when she was 'married off' for political gain and position
to a rough soldier of (nevertheless) aristocratic stock and manner. By reason of the marriage, she became the lady of the
Castle of Csejthe, his home, situated deep in the Carpathian mountains of what is now central Romania, but which then was
known only as Transylvania. Located near no exciting urban center, the castle was surrounded by a village of simple peasants
and rolling agricultural lands, interspersed with the jagged outcroppings of the frozen Carpathians.
While the picturesque setting embraced a bucolic tapestry of ideal small fields,
meandering stone walls, quaint cottages, a few satisfied brown cows, and goats with tinkling bells about their necks scampering
amongst the chickens, life here was uneventful. The castle was typical for its day and place: cold, dun, gloomy, damp, dark;
unlike the cozy thatched houses of the peasants below.
While her husband was pursuing his passion, the soldier business, and off
on various campaigns, for Elizabeth -- who did not wish to amuse herself in the out-of-doors where those loutish peons were
grubbing in the mud -- life became poundingly boring in very short order. Being an energetic teenager, although one with a
view and experience of life which was 'special,' she set about finding novel amusements to occupy her days.
Her tastes were of a certain slant, and consequently she began to gather about
herself (as her ample financial resources readily accommodated) persons of peculiar and sinister arts. These she welcomed
into her presence, affording them commodious lodging and lavish attention to each of their most singular needs and interests.
Among them were those who claimed to be witches, sorcerers, seers, wizards, alchemists, and others who practiced the most
depraved deeds in league with the Devil and too painful to mention even in a story such as this. They taught her their crafts
in intimate detail and she was enthralled. But learning such unspeakable things was not enough.
War in the 16th century was a brutal affair. While fashionably fighting the
Turks and attempting to gain information from prisoners captured, her husband employed a horrid device of torture: clever
articulated claw-like pincers, fashioned of hardened silver; which, when fastened to a stout whip would tear and rip the flesh
to such an obscene degree that even he, a cruel man, abandoned the apparatus in disgust and left it at the castle as he departed
on yet another heroic foray.
Elizabeth was not alone in her 'unusual' interests. Aware of Elizabeth's complex
preoccupations, and amused by them, her aunt had introduced her also to the pleasures of flagellation (enacted upon desolate
others of course), a taste Elizabeth quickly acquired. Equipped with her husband's heinous silver claws, she generously indulged
herself, whiling away many lonely hours at the expense of forlorn Slav debtors from her own dungeons. The more shrill their
screams and the more copious the blood, the more exquisite and orgasmic her amusement. She preferred to whip her 'subjects'
on the front of their nude bodies rather than their backs, not only for the increased damage potential, but so that she could
gleefully watch their faces contort in horror at their most grim and burning fate.
Her husband died in 1604 (some say 1602) of stab wounds imposed on him by
a harlot in Bucharest whom he had not paid, and Elizabeth immediately dreamed of a lover to replace him, since she never cared
for him in the first place -- so much for her mourning. However, the mirror showed her that her prurient indulgences, as well
as time, had taken their toll on her appearance. Her 'angelic' complexion had long since faded to something less than perfection;
she had reached 43. Her desire for a lover did not fade; she raged deep within, cursing time.
Such a simple interest as a new husband was not to rule the day, it was merely
a detail. With the demise of her husband, prowling highly placed men began to smell a ripe opportunity to seize the power
and influence encapsulated in the Báthory name; likely by acquiring her and then eliminating her. As well, she was next in
line to become King of Poland, and she wanted the job. This seeming anomaly was possible within the governing constructs of
the time, and the office of queen held no political weight. At the same time, she was educated beyond all those around her,
reading and writing four languages while the prince of Transylvania was an illiterate boor (who bathed regularly -- every
year on his birthday).
Maintaining her youth and vitality became central to this developing plot;
the absolute divine right to power she understood was hers to keep and protect would be essential to the attainment of all
that she sought. Vanity, sexual desire, drive for political power all were seamlessly blended into a central primordial passion.
If she lost her youth, she could forfeit all.
Her mood deteriorated markedly and one day, as she viciously struck a servant
girl for a minor oversight, she drew blood when her pointed nails raked the girl's cheek. The wound was serious enough that
some of the blood got onto Elizabeth's skin. Later, Elizabeth was quite sure that that part of her own body - where the girl's
blood had dropped - looked fresher somehow; younger, brighter and more pliant.
Immediately she consulted her alchemists for their opinion on the phenomenon.
They, of course, were enjoying her hospitality and did not wish to disappoint, so, fortunately, they did recall a case many
many years before and in a distant place where the blood of a young virgin had caused a similar effect on an aged (but generous)
personage of nobility and good grace.
With such clear evidence at hand, Elizabeth was convinced that here was a
brilliant discovery; a method to restore and preserve her youthful glow forever, or at least until she got what she wanted.
The advice of her 'beauty consultant,' a woman named Katarina, concurred that her clever realization was most surely sound.
Elizabeth reasoned that if a little was good, then a lot would be better:
she firmly believed that if she bathed in the blood of young virgins -- and in the case of especially pretty ones, drank it
-- she would be gloriously beautiful and strong once again.
For years, Elizabeth's trusted helper in her various secret pleasures had
been Dorotta Szentes. Now with her, and other 'witches' to help carry the load, Elizabeth roamed the countryside by night,
hunting for suitable virginal girls as raw material for her difficult quest.
When back in the castle, each batch of young girls would be hung, alive and
naked, upside-down by chains wrapped around their ankles. Their throats would be slit and all of their blood drained for Elizabeth's
bath, to be taken while the heat of their young bodies still remained in the thickening and sticky crimson pool.
And every now and then, a really lovely young girl would be obtained. As a
special treat, Elizabeth would drink the child's blood: at first from a golden flask, but later, as her taste for it increased,
directly from the stream, as the writhing and whimpering body hung from the rafters, turning pale.
Although she had held off her political foes, after five years of this enterprise
Elizabeth at last began to realize that the blood of peasant girls was having little effect on the quality of her skin. Obviously
such blood was defective and better blood was required.
In early 17th century Transylvania, parents of substantial position wished
their daughters to be educated in the appropriate social graces and etiquettes, so that they might gain the 'right' connections
when ripe. Here was an opportunity.
In 1609, Elizabeth established an academy in the castle, offering to take
25 girls at a time from proper families, and to correctly finish their educations. Indeed, their educations were finished.
Assisted by Dorotta Szentes (known also by the graceful diminutive "Dorka")
these poor students were consumed in exactly the same beastly fashion as the anguished peasant girls who preceded them. This
was too easy, and Elizabeth became careless in her actions for the first time in her dreadful career. During a frenzy of lust,
four drained bodies were thrown off the walls of the castle.
The error was realized too late, for villagers had already seen, collected,
and begun to identify the girls. The disappearance of all those young women began to be solved; the secret was finished.
Word of this horror spread rapidly and soon reached the Hungarian Emperor,
Matthias II, who immediately ordered that the Countess be placed on public trial. But, her aristocratic status did not allow
that she be arrested. Parliament at once passed a new Act to reverse this privilege of station (lest she slip from their hands)
and Elizabeth was brought before a formal hearing in 1610. Interestingly, no authority seemed inclined to offer any form of
attention to these matters when merely peasant girls had been the subject of Elizabeth's blood-letting for five years previous.
By the final count, 600 girls had vanished; Elizabeth admitted nothing. Dorka
and her witches were burned alive, but the Countess, by reason of her noble birth, could not be executed. Katarina was somehow
seen as another victim, and was set free.
So, Elizabeth was damned to a death while alive. Sealed into a tiny closet
of her castle -- and never let out -- she died four years later.
Elizabeth did not ever utter even a single word of regret, or remorse.
John George Haigh(the acid Bath Vampire)
In the halls of vampiric crime, few names stand out
like that of John George Haigh. Half a century ago, England's newspapers screamed, "Vampire!" The trial of "The Acid Bath
Vampire", one of England's most infamous serial killers, was about to begin.
Haigh grew up in Wakefield, England. His parents were
deeply religious members of a faith called the "Plymouth Brethren". In order to rebel against the strict teachings of his
parents and their faith, Haigh joined the Church of England while he was still a boy. He was a devout follower and spent a
great deal of time there as a youngster.
Throughout his life, Haigh suffered from a recurring
dream. He spoke of a forest of crucifixes in the dream that would gradually turn into trees that dripped blood. He would see
a man collecting the blood into a cup. The man would offer the cup to Haigh, but he always awakened before he could take a
drink.
It was the dream, Haigh would confess to the police
after his arrest, that made him believe he needed blood in order to live
Early adulthood was a problematic time at best for
Haigh. He was imprisoned several times for fraud and forgery. But his true criminal nature began to manifest in middle adulthood,
just after World War II had ended.
In 1944 Haigh rented a basement in London to use as
a workshop. It would soon become the grisly testament to his growing need for blood. He killed his first victim in that basement
on September 9, 1944. He drained the fresh corpse (William Donald McSwan) of enough blood to fill a cup, and drank it. To
dispose of the body, Haigh placed it in a tub and proceeded to pour buckets of acid over it. When the remains had been reduced
to sludge, he poured the rest down a manhole in the workshop floor.
That night set the pattern for the future. Victim
after victim was killed for blood (and profit, as Haigh tended to commandeer what he could of his victims' wealth) and disposed
of in an acid bath. His ever increasing orders for acid and acid bath tanks grew large enough for suppliers to grow curious.
After an extraordinary amount of time, some of Haigh's
victims were missed by their friends and family, and the police began an investigation. Eventually, he was arrested by the
police. Once in custody he confessed to everything, including his need for blood and why he had killed his many victims.
The press
took the idea and ran with it. The words "Acid Bath Vampire" screamed from all the headlines as Haigh was brought to trial.
After only 15 minutes of deliberation, the jury returned a verdict of guilty. His sentence of death by hanging was carried
out on August 10, 1949.
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A Vampires Last
Pledge
Trickling little droplets of crimson Tickling down my chin
Drunk of you I have Taken you deep within Now your life is mine For within each drop I consume Leaves
you bleeding profusely Drenching my senses through and through
Trickling little droplet of crimson Sweet aching
life to wash through me anew Life giving candy I draw from you Within each deadly kiss placed upon your neck Fill
me ever more, my love, with your undying soul Your body grows cold now, within my loving arms That cradle your dying
flesh with lips upon a tender neck Glassy eyes stare blankly now At the ceiling that hovers above So full of stars
at midnight With the moon and her silvery light
Take your dying breath, my dear For this be your last upon
this earth And twilight beckons you hither While the sun sets upon your life eternal Laura riddle |
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