"Mysteries at the Museum" Vampires: Mysteries at the Museum Specials
ID | 13179487 |
---|---|
Movie Name | "Mysteries at the Museum" Vampires: Mysteries at the Museum Specials |
Release Name | Mysteries.at.the.Museum.S16E20.Vampires.1080p.Travel.WEB-DL.AAC2.0.H.264-Absinth |
Year | 2017 |
Kind | tv |
Language | English |
IMDB ID | 7890690 |
Format | srt |
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Of all the monsters the human imagination
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has willed into existence, nothing quite matches
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the perverse, surreal characteristics of vampires.
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But why do they fascinate us?
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Vampires are bloodsucking, sun-fearing,
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shapeshifting immortal demons that should terrify us.
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I'm digging deep into a legend
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that has fed our imaginations and plagued our nightmares
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for generations
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to explore the story of vampires.
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Even now, people believe in the undead.
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From medieval folklore...
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This is where the torture would have happened.
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...to Count Dracula himself.
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From Bram Stoker's Transylvania
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to the gory dungeons of Vlad the Impaler,
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I'm here to find out what is fact and what is fiction
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when it comes to the world's most infamous
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bloodsucking fiends, vampires.
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It's all right here. This is how to be a vampire.
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I'm Don Wildman.
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I've explored the world's greatest mysteries,
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examined rare artifacts and epic monuments.
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That is unbelievable.
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Now, I'm digging deeper into some of the most
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perplexing and famous cases in history.
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My goal--to get closer to the truth.
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Let's burn this place down. Let's burn it down.
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On this special episode of "Mysteries at the Museum"...
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Vampires.
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For over 1,000 years,
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vampires have fueled our superstitions
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and haunted our nightmares,
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but what do we really know about vampires?
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I want to find out how much is legend
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and how much is real when it comes to
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these bloodsucking monsters.
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To do that, I've traveled to the place
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where the vampire began, to what is now
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the eastern European country of Romania.
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Today, Romania is a vast, mountainous collection
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of towns and villages known for its natural beauty and wildlife,
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but back in the day,
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Romania was a land full of mystery,
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known for its colorful folklore and superstitions,
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but no part of Romania has more to do
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with the story of vampires than the place where
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I'm starting my journey--
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the very real region of Transylvania,
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the birthplace of vampires.
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Vampires seduce us with sex appeal,
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lust, and the promise of eternal life
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and repel us with their savage thirst for blood.
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Sometimes, they are sophisticated aristocrats,
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while other times, they are rotting,
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bloodsucking demons resembling zombies.
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But those are just some of the depictions that have
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developed over hundreds of years.
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Of course, the most famous vampire of all
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is Count Dracula, a pop culture icon
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featured in horror movies, television,
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and literature throughout the ages.
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Dracula is the main character of Bram Stoker's
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infamous horror novel, written in 1897
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and set here in Romania.
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Stoker's terrifying gothic novel
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popularized the vampire as we know it
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and continues to shape how we think of vampires today.
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Watch Online Movies and Series for FREE
www.osdb.link/lm
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The tale of Dracula began
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deep in the Romanian countryside
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in the now famous region called Transylvania.
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Check it out--
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Bran Castle. Beautiful.
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This looming castle is what Bram Stoker's Dracula
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called home,
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so why does Stoker adopt it as a setting
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for his vampire novel?
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Hello! Hey, Don!
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Bram Stoker's great-grandnephew, Dacre Stoker,
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is here to share how the Dracula character was born.
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Nice to meet you-- whoa, whoa, whoa.
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How are you? Well, I'm great.
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This is a picturesque spot. It certainly is.
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So why this castle?
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You gotta remember where this is.
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You know, for those guys in that time, in the 1800s,
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people in Europe, in England, they knew nothing
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about this part of the world, it was literally the land
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beyond the forest, this was deep, dark spooky stuff. Okay.
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What did this look like in the day?
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Well, I tell you something-- Bram actually had
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a collection of books that actually showed us
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what it looked like-- this is one of Oh, I see.
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the two images that he actually used to create the description of this I see.
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in his writing--what he did was he used Transylvania
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as the location because of all the superstitions
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from this part of the world, and most importantly,
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he wanted to create a sense of reality. Yeah.
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The fact that it's set in a real place
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gives it a sense of authenticity. With real superstitions and mythologies.
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Born in Dublin in 1847,
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the worst year of Ireland's potato famine,
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Stoker was a sickly, bed-ridden child.
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His mother would often regale him with tales
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of people being buried alive during the fever epidemics
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of 1832.
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As Stoker grew as a writer, his love of history
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and science continued to feed his macabre imagination,
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which planted the seeds for the creation of
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the world's most infamous vampire.
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Wow.
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It is a perfect setting for a great story, isn't it?
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So as far as the story of Dracula,
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this is where it all starts.
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Yeah, and Bram used this castle as his inspiration
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for Castle Dracula.
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While Stoker had published other novels,
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none would capture the imagination like Dracula .
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Published in 1897
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and set at the end of the 19th century,
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Dracula tells the story of the young Englishman,
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Jonathan Harker, as he travels
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through Transylvania on business.
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Harker is there to meet a mysterious Transylvanian nobleman...
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Count Dracula.
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But soon, Harker comes to realize
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that he's a prisoner of a bloodsucking fiend
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and trapped inside his stone fortress.
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I've gotta show some pretty cool things.
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Dracula's secret passageway.
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Dacre's offered me special access
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to get some rare insight into Bram Stoker's
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fascinating process as he created
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the most infamous vampire of all time.
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This is a collection of the resources
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that Bram used for his writing of Dracula . Wow, cool.
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And we've got some of his notes.
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And they represent all the information
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that he extracted from these books.
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And here's the timeless classic itself.
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Here it is--this is a first edition book that's been in the family for a long time.
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And the cool thing about this is this is Bram's copy that he gave to his mother.
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You can read it right there. To my dear mother, Abraham Stoker.
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So he did a tremendous amount of research
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prior to even writing this book, yes? Yeah.
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I mean, we know it took about seven years
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from the dates on these notes to put this whole thing together.
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It seems so obvious that you'd need to do this research,
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but it's really that which makes this novel so scary,
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'cause these are real places and even a real castle.
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These are three pages that he actually took
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notes from all these other books and created the traits
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that a vampire-- we know nowadays that most vampires
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have no looking glass, no reflection.
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It's a menu of vampire traits. Sure it is.
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That's fascinating-- see in the dark. See in the dark, painters cannot paint him,
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can't reproduce him. That's amazing.
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Power of getting himself large or small,
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shapeshifting. Right, seeing in the dark.
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Yep, money's always old gold. God, it's all right here.
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This is how to be a vampire!
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So he's really a genius of synthesizing
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all of these ideas. Absolutely.
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That's really his mark as a writer, isn't it? Yeah.
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He created a manual that was followed for 100 years afterwards.
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I mean, all the great vampire stories and movies Yeah.
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and all that... He did all the work for everybody else.
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That's incredible.
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But there was one more gem that Stoker found hidden
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within his research--
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a book about a medieval ruler who reigned
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over a Romanian kingdom known as Wallachia.
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His name
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was Vlad Dracula.
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This is, you know, a question everybody asks.
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How did Bram ever decide on the name Dracula?
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And what we understand
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is that from his notes, he took out this book
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called the Account of Principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia , Mmhm.
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And look what was written in there, read that. Oh, there you go.
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Dracula, page 19 of this book. Yes.
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Dracula in Wallachian language
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means devil. Yes.
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Because of that word, devil, Yeah.
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that solidified in Bram's mind the character he wanted.
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It was a devil-like creature.
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Although it wasn't an immediate success,
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Dracula brought Bram Stoker critical praise
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and would go on to become his most successful novel,
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outliving its author and serving as the template
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for all vampires that followed.
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It's got eternal life, doesn't it?
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Sure, just like the character.
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Right, and it all started right here.
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In Transylvania, in this castle as his image
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of the perfect castle.
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And then goes out over that hillside
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and all over the world.
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Fact and fiction,
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history and folklore.
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Under the surface of the vampire myth
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lies real truths.
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So who is the mysterious Vlad Dracula?
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And what else besides a name
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does he share with the most notorious vampire
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of all time?
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This is where the torture would have happened.
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I'm in Romania in search of the truth
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about vampires.
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My visit to Bran Castle, deep in the heart
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of the infamous and very real region known as Transylvania
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revealed something fascinating.
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Dracula,
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the most famous fictional vampire of them all
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is, in fact, based on a real man.
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His name was Count Dracul, Dracula.
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To find out more about him, I'm headed deep
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into the Romanian mountains.
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Over 500 years ago, this area in Romania
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was known as the Kingdom of Wallachia,
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and Vlad Dracula was king.
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Mei, how you doin'? Nice to meet you.
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Mei Trow is a Welsh historian and author
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who has extensively studied the history surrounding Vlad Dracula.
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He can show us the inside of this 15th-century fortress
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and the real dungeons that inspired the legend of Dracula.
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Ah, this is spectacular. Wow!
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This is the citadel. This is the home
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of Wallachia, it's the center, the capital, the heart Okay.
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of Vlad Dracula's kingdom.
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If you think, Wallachia was very small, about the size
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of New York State today. Okay.
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It's not modern Romania by any means,
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and we haven't got those national boundaries.
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They're constantly moving, as you say, constantly changing
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depending on the political situation.
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This is a kid who's raised in incredibly violent circumstances Yeah.
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from the get-go-- he would've seen
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people burned, uh, heads chopped off. Yeah, absolutely.
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Absolutely. You name it.
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This would have made him inured to it somewhat Yes.
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but also see its value.
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Yes, absolutely. Yep, yep. I mean, this is a kid, and he's royalty,
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so he knows this is how you control people. Yeah, yeah.
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When Vlad was only 17,
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his father was murdered by traitors inside his own kingdom.
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After his father's death,
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Vlad Dracula took control of the kingdom of Wallachia.
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And by this time,
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the kingdom had fallen into lawlessness,
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and the very same people who had betrayed his father
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were roaming free.
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The new king needed to assert his power,
255
00:13:25,606 --> 00:13:27,872
and he was out for revenge.
256
00:13:27,908 --> 00:13:31,676
He takes control in a place where people have not Yeah.
257
00:13:31,745 --> 00:13:33,945
been controlled for awhile. Yeah, that's right.
258
00:13:34,014 --> 00:13:36,548
How does he do that? All kinds of torture.
259
00:13:40,187 --> 00:13:42,687
And it was in these dungeons that Vlad Dracula
260
00:13:42,823 --> 00:13:45,023
avenged his father's death...
261
00:13:45,025 --> 00:13:47,559
in the most extreme ways.
262
00:13:47,628 --> 00:13:50,828
For example, people were literally boiled, Yeah.
263
00:13:50,864 --> 00:13:52,898
uh, in cauldrons of water.
264
00:13:52,900 --> 00:13:55,967
They were broken on a wheel, a gigantic wheel
265
00:13:55,969 --> 00:13:58,904
in which experts used iron bars Yeah.
266
00:13:58,906 --> 00:14:00,638
to break their limbs.
267
00:14:06,446 --> 00:14:09,047
Was he doing this for-- to set an example,
268
00:14:09,116 --> 00:14:12,316
or was this guy crazy? He shows an awful lot of traits
269
00:14:12,353 --> 00:14:15,653
of a psychopath-- he doesn't care about human suffering.
270
00:14:15,689 --> 00:14:19,657
But soon, Vlad's appetite for torture grew,
271
00:14:19,693 --> 00:14:21,993
and he created something
272
00:14:21,995 --> 00:14:24,029
even more brutal for his enemies.
273
00:14:30,003 --> 00:14:33,471
Wow. So this is the-- this is the real hellhole? This is.
274
00:14:33,540 --> 00:14:36,674
This is where it would all have happened, yeah. Ewugh.
275
00:14:36,743 --> 00:14:40,678
It's what the French call oubliette,
276
00:14:40,747 --> 00:14:44,549
the place of the forgotten, and this is where
277
00:14:44,618 --> 00:14:47,152
the torture would have happened.
278
00:14:47,287 --> 00:14:49,487
You can almost hear the screams down here.
279
00:14:52,626 --> 00:14:55,226
But it didn't end there. It didn't end there.
280
00:14:55,295 --> 00:14:57,695
He invented a brand-new torture,
281
00:14:57,731 --> 00:14:59,598
and that, of course, was impalement.
282
00:15:02,503 --> 00:15:04,769
Vlad Dracula began publicly impaling
283
00:15:04,805 --> 00:15:07,471
his own people on tall, wooden stakes.
284
00:15:07,474 --> 00:15:10,842
It was a level of sheer brutality
285
00:15:10,844 --> 00:15:12,977
that horrified everyone
286
00:15:13,046 --> 00:15:15,179
and earned him the infamous nickname,
287
00:15:15,215 --> 00:15:17,816
"Vlad the Impaler."
288
00:15:20,420 --> 00:15:23,454
Here we have the famous stake.
289
00:15:23,490 --> 00:15:26,991
That sharpened end is inserted up from below
290
00:15:27,060 --> 00:15:29,794
and goes right up through the body.
291
00:15:29,797 --> 00:15:32,197
If it goes through the brain, you're gonna die quickly, Yep.
292
00:15:32,266 --> 00:15:35,199
but if that doesn't happen, you're going to die slowly,
293
00:15:35,235 --> 00:15:38,403
and that was the whole point in the exercise.
294
00:15:45,212 --> 00:15:48,145
And soon, Vlad the Impaler's notorious reputation
295
00:15:48,181 --> 00:15:51,683
that ultimately inspired Bram Stoker's Dracula character
296
00:15:51,752 --> 00:15:54,485
would become known throughout the western world,
297
00:15:54,555 --> 00:15:58,756
because in 1462, the Turkish army
298
00:15:58,825 --> 00:16:01,960
invaded Wallachia, and the bloodthirsty Vlad
299
00:16:01,962 --> 00:16:04,295
was ready.
300
00:16:04,331 --> 00:16:07,299
He put a three-mile-wide screen Wow.
301
00:16:07,301 --> 00:16:09,434
of stakes, and on every one of them,
302
00:16:09,503 --> 00:16:11,903
there was a victim.
303
00:16:11,939 --> 00:16:14,739
We're talking about the so-called forest of the impaled.
304
00:16:20,581 --> 00:16:23,181
It's a new kind of psychological warfare.
305
00:16:23,250 --> 00:16:25,717
Yeah, exactly. Nobody had tried this before.
306
00:16:25,719 --> 00:16:28,586
And these are times of great superstitions,
307
00:16:28,722 --> 00:16:31,456
magic, etcetera-- that same soldier
308
00:16:31,525 --> 00:16:34,325
would have thought something evil was afoot. Absolutely.
309
00:16:34,361 --> 00:16:37,128
Remember that in the Wallachia language,
310
00:16:37,164 --> 00:16:39,864
Dracula means "Son of the Dragon."
311
00:16:39,866 --> 00:16:42,600
It also means "Son of the Devil," and here he is,
312
00:16:42,636 --> 00:16:45,136
he is proving that he is, indeed, the son of the devil
313
00:16:45,172 --> 00:16:47,706
with this diabolical scene.
314
00:16:52,612 --> 00:16:55,546
Vlad the Impaler may have been using impalement
315
00:16:55,582 --> 00:16:58,149
and other extreme tactics to scare off
316
00:16:58,151 --> 00:17:01,086
his much stronger enemies and create the impression
317
00:17:01,088 --> 00:17:03,888
of a mad ruler who knew no boundaries,
318
00:17:03,957 --> 00:17:07,358
but how did he become linked to vampires?
319
00:17:07,427 --> 00:17:10,628
The answer is because his thirst for power and dominance
320
00:17:10,664 --> 00:17:13,498
didn't stop at impalement.
321
00:17:13,500 --> 00:17:16,367
Vlad Dracula was even said to have the blood
322
00:17:16,403 --> 00:17:19,571
of the impaled Turkish soldiers brought to him in a bowl
323
00:17:19,706 --> 00:17:21,973
where he actually dipped his bread
324
00:17:22,108 --> 00:17:24,576
and consumed his enemy.
325
00:17:24,645 --> 00:17:27,645
Horrified, the Turkish army
326
00:17:27,714 --> 00:17:29,847
left the Wallachian border
327
00:17:29,883 --> 00:17:33,551
saying "The devil himself is at Târgoviste."
328
00:17:38,692 --> 00:17:42,060
The forest of the impaled was a stunning success...
329
00:17:42,062 --> 00:17:45,930
at first, but the Turkish army's sheer size and force
330
00:17:45,999 --> 00:17:49,600
eventually drove Vlad to what is now northern Romania
331
00:17:49,636 --> 00:17:53,738
to the region of Transylvania where, years later,
332
00:17:53,774 --> 00:17:56,941
Bram Stoker's Dracula would be set.
333
00:18:00,180 --> 00:18:02,680
Vlad scorched the earth and poisoned the rivers
334
00:18:02,716 --> 00:18:04,882
along the way, destroying their value
335
00:18:04,951 --> 00:18:07,485
for his Turkish enemy, who was hot on his trail.
336
00:18:07,521 --> 00:18:10,622
High on the crest of the Romanian mountains,
337
00:18:10,624 --> 00:18:13,892
they cornered Vlad at another one of his fortresses,
338
00:18:14,027 --> 00:18:18,263
this one named Poienari Castle.
339
00:18:42,856 --> 00:18:44,923
More and more, Vlad was alone.
340
00:18:44,925 --> 00:18:48,660
Many in his army had deserted him, even Vlad's wife.
341
00:18:48,729 --> 00:18:51,329
Desperate upon hearing about the approaching Turks,
342
00:18:51,331 --> 00:18:54,365
threw herself from the walls of Poienari Castle
343
00:18:54,401 --> 00:18:56,768
to her death below in the River Arges.
344
00:18:56,870 --> 00:18:59,270
Just as it seemed Vlad was cornered,
345
00:18:59,306 --> 00:19:01,739
he somehow mysteriously slips away
346
00:19:01,808 --> 00:19:03,875
into the caves of the Carpathians
347
00:19:03,944 --> 00:19:06,244
and deep into the forests of Transylvania.
348
00:19:10,283 --> 00:19:12,950
The mysterious king hiding like a bat
349
00:19:13,019 --> 00:19:15,286
deep within the caves of Transylvania
350
00:19:15,322 --> 00:19:18,089
with a taste for blood.
351
00:19:18,224 --> 00:19:20,625
So if we compare him to the Dracula character
352
00:19:20,760 --> 00:19:24,696
he would later inspire, was Vlad Dracula a vampire?
353
00:19:24,698 --> 00:19:27,565
If a vampire is defined as one who feeds
354
00:19:27,700 --> 00:19:30,501
off the lives of others, then you could argue
355
00:19:30,537 --> 00:19:33,104
that Vlad Dracula was, indeed, a vampire,
356
00:19:33,173 --> 00:19:35,240
if only in the figurative sense.
357
00:19:35,242 --> 00:19:37,975
You can sense the power still
358
00:19:38,011 --> 00:19:40,578
of Vlad's bloodstained legacy.
359
00:19:42,582 --> 00:19:45,316
The vampire legend dates back over 1,000 years
360
00:19:45,451 --> 00:19:48,520
and does, indeed, have its roots right here in Romania.
361
00:19:48,655 --> 00:19:51,989
But while Vlad the Impaler inspired the greatest
362
00:19:52,025 --> 00:19:54,926
vampire of all time, who served as the model
363
00:19:55,061 --> 00:19:57,395
for vampires we know today,
364
00:19:57,397 --> 00:20:00,131
Count Dracula wasn't the first.
365
00:20:00,266 --> 00:20:03,200
So where, then, does the original vampire come from,
366
00:20:03,236 --> 00:20:06,471
and how much of it is based on something real?
367
00:20:23,924 --> 00:20:27,091
I'm deep in the land of vampires--Romania--
368
00:20:27,227 --> 00:20:30,428
where a real-life king known as Vlad the Impaler
369
00:20:30,563 --> 00:20:34,465
and his craven thirst for blood inspired Bram Stoker's
370
00:20:34,501 --> 00:20:37,035
infamous character, Dracula.
371
00:20:37,037 --> 00:20:39,236
So when it comes to vampires,
372
00:20:39,272 --> 00:20:41,406
what else is real?
373
00:20:46,046 --> 00:20:48,246
What we think we know about vampires
374
00:20:48,248 --> 00:20:50,915
is a list that seems as long as their history.
375
00:20:50,984 --> 00:20:52,983
They loathe garlic,
376
00:20:53,053 --> 00:20:55,453
fear sunlight, crucifixes,
377
00:20:55,522 --> 00:20:57,855
holy water, and they've been said
378
00:20:57,857 --> 00:21:00,258
to shapeshift into other creatures at their will,
379
00:21:00,260 --> 00:21:02,694
into wolves, even bats.
380
00:21:07,701 --> 00:21:10,268
Which brings me here, to the Moeciu Cave,
381
00:21:10,270 --> 00:21:12,837
just south of the Transylvanian border.
382
00:21:14,508 --> 00:21:16,274
Man, look at this place.
383
00:21:21,147 --> 00:21:23,214
Romania is famous for its caves, you know.
384
00:21:23,283 --> 00:21:25,849
The whole nation is built on limestone,
385
00:21:25,886 --> 00:21:27,685
so you're walking through the forest, you can find
386
00:21:27,820 --> 00:21:29,553
all these bat caves right here,
387
00:21:29,589 --> 00:21:31,756
and they are filled with the things-- just look at them.
388
00:21:31,825 --> 00:21:35,092
Behind every legend and superstition
389
00:21:35,161 --> 00:21:37,561
lies a kernel of truth,
390
00:21:37,597 --> 00:21:41,299
so where did vampires really come from?
391
00:21:45,305 --> 00:21:47,505
To find out, I'm headed to Sighisoara,
392
00:21:47,507 --> 00:21:49,841
one of the best preserved medieval towns
393
00:21:49,976 --> 00:21:51,776
in all of Europe,
394
00:21:51,778 --> 00:21:53,778
deep in the wilds of Transylvania.
395
00:22:15,601 --> 00:22:17,201
Dr. Rickels?
396
00:22:17,237 --> 00:22:19,270
Nice to see you. Good to see you.
397
00:22:19,339 --> 00:22:21,272
Dr. Laurence Rickels is a professor
398
00:22:21,341 --> 00:22:23,341
who's written extensively about the myths
399
00:22:23,476 --> 00:22:25,409
attached to vampires.
400
00:22:25,478 --> 00:22:29,113
He can help me separate vampire fact from fiction.
401
00:22:32,319 --> 00:22:34,284
Where do vampires come from? Where does the idea
402
00:22:34,321 --> 00:22:36,287
of vampires originate?
403
00:22:36,323 --> 00:22:39,290
Well, we know, um, of course, that the modern vampire
404
00:22:39,359 --> 00:22:41,759
has to be traced through Bram Stoker
405
00:22:41,795 --> 00:22:44,362
and his influences, but every bit of folklore
406
00:22:44,431 --> 00:22:47,832
I've looked at suggests that every civilization,
407
00:22:47,901 --> 00:22:50,435
culture, on record, um,
408
00:22:50,570 --> 00:22:53,771
had some kind of bloodsucking demon or god.
409
00:22:57,243 --> 00:22:59,577
Vampirism found its roots in the graves
410
00:22:59,579 --> 00:23:02,046
of old medieval towns like this one.
411
00:23:02,181 --> 00:23:04,982
In the 14th century,
412
00:23:05,018 --> 00:23:07,117
a plague known as the Black Death
413
00:23:07,153 --> 00:23:09,320
ravaged this village.
414
00:23:09,389 --> 00:23:12,857
Thousands of people died, and bodies began to pile up.
415
00:23:12,992 --> 00:23:15,259
And here,
416
00:23:15,295 --> 00:23:18,596
against this bleak backdrop, the vampire legend flourished.
417
00:23:27,540 --> 00:23:29,807
Wow, look at this cemetery. Gorgeous. Wow.
418
00:23:29,843 --> 00:23:33,678
We're at the highest point of this fortress town
419
00:23:33,813 --> 00:23:37,014
and what's most protected, the resting place of the dead.
420
00:23:37,050 --> 00:23:38,682
Interesting, yeah.
421
00:23:38,752 --> 00:23:40,684
I mean, today, we think of cemeteries as sort of
422
00:23:40,754 --> 00:23:43,821
pastoral, peaceful places to go and visit our loved ones,
423
00:23:43,956 --> 00:23:47,492
but in these days, they're worried about the undead.
424
00:23:47,494 --> 00:23:50,027
Worried what might come back out of the grave,
425
00:23:50,096 --> 00:23:52,196
especially in the evening.
426
00:23:55,735 --> 00:23:58,302
So in the time of the Black Death,
427
00:23:58,305 --> 00:24:01,972
you have very small areas, these cemeteries,
428
00:24:02,008 --> 00:24:05,643
suddenly packed up with too many people.
429
00:24:05,712 --> 00:24:08,446
The overcrowding problem was already impressing
430
00:24:08,515 --> 00:24:11,449
throughout western Europe in particular.
431
00:24:11,584 --> 00:24:14,519
Look at this.
432
00:24:16,723 --> 00:24:19,790
So why would these stones be misplaced?
433
00:24:19,859 --> 00:24:21,859
I mean, they're not with any graves at all.
434
00:24:21,895 --> 00:24:25,863
Yeah, they were under pressure to make room for the dead.
435
00:24:25,899 --> 00:24:29,066
And in doing so, the villagers had to move
436
00:24:29,102 --> 00:24:32,470
freshly buried bodies, witnessing decomposition
437
00:24:32,472 --> 00:24:35,006
up close for the first time ever.
438
00:24:37,343 --> 00:24:40,744
So where did they come up with the notion of the undead?
439
00:24:40,814 --> 00:24:43,881
Well, if they had to unbury the recently deceased,
440
00:24:44,016 --> 00:24:47,885
they were bound to see signs of decomposition
441
00:24:48,020 --> 00:24:51,889
that they were not prepared to read. Right, because this had never happened before,
442
00:24:52,024 --> 00:24:54,091
this kind of, uh, the necessity to find
443
00:24:54,160 --> 00:24:56,560
new space for so many bodies. Right.
444
00:24:56,596 --> 00:24:58,830
Suddenly this phenomenon of understanding what actually
445
00:24:58,965 --> 00:25:01,032
happens in the grave. Right.
446
00:25:01,034 --> 00:25:03,033
And in the course of decomposition,
447
00:25:03,103 --> 00:25:07,038
internal gases can build up and mount. Yeah.
448
00:25:07,040 --> 00:25:10,241
Not only are there bloated distortions in the body
449
00:25:10,243 --> 00:25:13,444
that seem so alive after several weeks in the ground, Yeah.
450
00:25:13,513 --> 00:25:16,881
but also, the gases can prompt the corpse simply to sit up.
451
00:25:21,254 --> 00:25:23,520
Certain things continue to grow on a corpse--
452
00:25:23,556 --> 00:25:25,923
fingernails, the hair.
453
00:25:26,058 --> 00:25:28,992
The blood builds up and starts to flow out of the mouth.
454
00:25:29,028 --> 00:25:32,129
Given these graveside experiences,
455
00:25:32,132 --> 00:25:35,800
they would learn to fear the dead as forces that could
456
00:25:35,935 --> 00:25:38,735
tear one down into the underworld.
457
00:25:38,771 --> 00:25:42,739
So naturally, they would have to develop rituals and practice
458
00:25:42,775 --> 00:25:44,809
to protect themselves from this.
459
00:25:44,811 --> 00:25:47,344
They had never seen decomposition on this scale.
460
00:25:47,413 --> 00:25:50,080
Because it's not just a flatline--the body produces
461
00:25:50,116 --> 00:25:53,217
a kind of light show, special effects that no one expected.
462
00:25:58,391 --> 00:26:00,891
So while vampires may not be real,
463
00:26:00,927 --> 00:26:04,028
the characteristics we attribute to them came from
464
00:26:04,030 --> 00:26:07,231
real face-to-face exposure to dead bodies in cemeteries
465
00:26:07,300 --> 00:26:09,433
just like this.
466
00:26:09,569 --> 00:26:11,568
When you add that to the real-life story
467
00:26:11,604 --> 00:26:15,706
of Vlad the Impaler and Bram Stoker's infamous Dracula character,
468
00:26:15,742 --> 00:26:19,510
you start to see the birth of the vampire as we know it today.
469
00:26:22,982 --> 00:26:25,582
So originally,
470
00:26:25,618 --> 00:26:29,253
the function of vampires is to explain the undead. Mmhm.
471
00:26:29,322 --> 00:26:32,957
Uh, why these bodies looked like they did, essentially,
472
00:26:33,059 --> 00:26:35,125
explain away that crazy phenomenon,
473
00:26:35,195 --> 00:26:37,328
but it doesn't go away.
474
00:26:37,463 --> 00:26:39,596
I mean, the vampire is everlasting.
475
00:26:39,632 --> 00:26:41,699
The first vampires that you recognize
476
00:26:41,768 --> 00:26:45,536
in the graveyard here locally were more like zombies, ghouls, Yeah.
477
00:26:45,605 --> 00:26:48,739
that were hungry to stay alive.
478
00:26:48,741 --> 00:26:52,009
Once it comes to American popular culture,
479
00:26:52,144 --> 00:26:54,011
you have these two choices,
480
00:26:54,146 --> 00:26:58,115
between an aristocratic lineage and zombieism.
481
00:27:01,154 --> 00:27:04,555
The vampire count is someone that one can idealize,
482
00:27:04,690 --> 00:27:08,158
but with the zombie, especially, as is the case
483
00:27:08,194 --> 00:27:11,295
in most zombie films where you don't recognize the people,
484
00:27:11,364 --> 00:27:13,497
you thrill to the killing of them, because that's,
485
00:27:13,633 --> 00:27:16,434
um, the germination phase of mourning.
486
00:27:16,569 --> 00:27:19,570
You can only mourn someone if you kill that person
487
00:27:19,639 --> 00:27:21,639
Interesting. that's dead.
488
00:27:21,774 --> 00:27:24,575
These two characters, the zombie and the vampire,
489
00:27:24,611 --> 00:27:27,377
are two aspects of the same process,
490
00:27:27,413 --> 00:27:30,114
Count Dracula being this idealized version,
491
00:27:30,183 --> 00:27:32,650
so he's very, kind of, interesting and sexy, Right.
492
00:27:32,652 --> 00:27:34,785
but these zombies are disgusting,
493
00:27:34,787 --> 00:27:38,389
and it's telling that we're so fascinated by zombies now.
494
00:27:38,391 --> 00:27:40,791
Yeah. They've sort of taken over, haven't they?
495
00:27:40,860 --> 00:27:44,528
The pleasure that lies in killing the dead. Yeah, right.
496
00:27:44,530 --> 00:27:46,797
Here's to the dead.
497
00:27:46,799 --> 00:27:49,267
May they never come back. The dead dead.
498
00:27:49,402 --> 00:27:51,035
Stay dead.
499
00:27:56,209 --> 00:27:59,343
So now, I understand where much of the fear
500
00:27:59,412 --> 00:28:01,945
surrounding vampires comes from.
501
00:28:01,981 --> 00:28:04,215
Some people relied on superstitions
502
00:28:04,350 --> 00:28:06,750
to ward them off, but others didn't.
503
00:28:06,786 --> 00:28:09,753
They took matters into their own hands,
504
00:28:09,822 --> 00:28:12,756
battling suspected vampires face-to-face.
505
00:28:12,792 --> 00:28:16,260
They were the vampire slayers.
506
00:28:35,448 --> 00:28:38,315
I'm in Romania, the birthplace of vampires,
507
00:28:38,384 --> 00:28:41,585
to find out what is fact and what is fiction.
508
00:28:41,621 --> 00:28:44,789
Today, there is still evidence being unearthed
509
00:28:44,924 --> 00:28:49,192
that shows how extreme the fear of vampires really was.
510
00:28:49,228 --> 00:28:52,997
In order to fend off bloodthirsty vampires,
511
00:28:53,066 --> 00:28:56,267
people in these medieval villages began to fight back,
512
00:28:56,402 --> 00:28:59,603
and these brave few were called vampire slayers,
513
00:28:59,639 --> 00:29:02,540
and according to legend, their methods could be brutal.
514
00:29:02,675 --> 00:29:06,409
But how do we really know
515
00:29:06,446 --> 00:29:08,479
how people reacted generations ago?
516
00:29:08,481 --> 00:29:10,848
Some experts think they have proof.
517
00:29:15,288 --> 00:29:17,421
Archeologist Andre Gonciar
518
00:29:17,490 --> 00:29:19,490
has invited me to see a current dig
519
00:29:19,625 --> 00:29:22,292
in an old graveyard dating back to the 14th century.
520
00:29:22,328 --> 00:29:26,364
He has unearthed mysterious discoveries that reveal
521
00:29:26,366 --> 00:29:29,099
the fears and superstitions of the past.
522
00:29:29,135 --> 00:29:32,436
So all these piles of dirt,
523
00:29:32,472 --> 00:29:36,440
this is what you've taken out of the tombs? That is correct.
524
00:29:36,476 --> 00:29:38,642
We are in a cemetery, right? Right.
525
00:29:38,644 --> 00:29:40,577
So we are bound to encounter human remains
526
00:29:40,613 --> 00:29:42,580
that are completely mixed with the dirt
527
00:29:42,715 --> 00:29:45,716
that belong to a past that literally everybody forgot.
528
00:29:45,718 --> 00:29:48,051
Look at that.
529
00:29:48,087 --> 00:29:51,122
There's a Romanian village person
530
00:29:51,257 --> 00:29:53,790
and their teeth.
531
00:29:53,826 --> 00:29:56,326
He had pretty good teeth, didn't he?
532
00:29:56,362 --> 00:29:58,796
He had some nasty little cavities, though.
533
00:29:58,865 --> 00:30:01,465
Oh, yes, that was probably the least of his problems.
534
00:30:01,567 --> 00:30:04,935
This takes us back to the time
535
00:30:05,004 --> 00:30:08,405
when people believe in undead and vampires
536
00:30:08,474 --> 00:30:11,876
and werewolves and all the rest of it. Oh, absolutely.
537
00:30:11,878 --> 00:30:14,411
Well, that being said, even now, people believe, actually,
538
00:30:14,480 --> 00:30:16,413
literally believe in the undead.
539
00:30:16,482 --> 00:30:20,284
There are rituals for them when people are buried. Still, yeah.
540
00:30:20,286 --> 00:30:23,621
It's amazing to me how the mystery of, you know,
541
00:30:23,623 --> 00:30:26,457
what happens to us after we die lives on.
542
00:30:34,834 --> 00:30:36,634
These graves, or graves in general,
543
00:30:36,769 --> 00:30:39,103
are a perfect lens to study culture, yes?
544
00:30:39,105 --> 00:30:42,039
It's the point of intersection
545
00:30:42,041 --> 00:30:45,843
of social conventions, of folklore. Right. Doesn't get any more basic.
546
00:30:45,978 --> 00:30:48,446
Or any more honest. Yeah, exactly.
547
00:30:48,448 --> 00:30:52,182
Recent archeological digs in burial grounds
548
00:30:52,251 --> 00:30:55,586
from Ireland to Romania have brought remarkable
549
00:30:55,721 --> 00:30:58,589
new evidence to the surface about medieval populations
550
00:30:58,591 --> 00:31:01,057
and the fear of the undead.
551
00:31:01,094 --> 00:31:04,028
They're called deviant burials.
552
00:31:07,800 --> 00:31:10,334
When you have a cemetery where the treatment of the body
553
00:31:10,336 --> 00:31:12,803
in the grave is different,
554
00:31:12,938 --> 00:31:15,673
it is a deviant environment.
555
00:31:18,944 --> 00:31:21,145
The word deviant refers to the fact
556
00:31:21,214 --> 00:31:23,280
that this is not a normal burial. Yes.
557
00:31:23,349 --> 00:31:25,082
In a normal burial, they wouldn't be worried
558
00:31:25,217 --> 00:31:28,219
about things happening after this person's put in the ground.
559
00:31:28,221 --> 00:31:30,554
Deviant burial worries about that person.
560
00:31:30,590 --> 00:31:33,891
Why were they worried about that person? Those, uh, spirits
561
00:31:34,026 --> 00:31:37,093
are not at peace.
562
00:31:37,130 --> 00:31:39,763
They cannot find their way on the other side. True.
563
00:31:39,899 --> 00:31:42,733
And so they come back for revenge.
564
00:31:51,978 --> 00:31:53,577
So this is your land back here?
565
00:31:53,646 --> 00:31:55,779
Yes, this is where we get all the bones together,
566
00:31:55,915 --> 00:31:58,515
we wash them and we analyze them,
567
00:31:58,518 --> 00:32:01,051
we reconstruct whatever we can reconstruct, and we prepare them
568
00:32:01,053 --> 00:32:05,055
for preservation and whatever
569
00:32:05,057 --> 00:32:08,292
we need to do next in terms of analysis, in terms of DNA.
570
00:32:12,398 --> 00:32:13,731
Wow, who is this?
571
00:32:16,936 --> 00:32:21,138
This is one of the strangest graves we've found yet.
572
00:32:21,273 --> 00:32:23,273
Where did you find it? Where does this come from?
573
00:32:23,276 --> 00:32:25,876
About five kilometers just on the other side of the rise
574
00:32:25,878 --> 00:32:28,145
from where we were just a bit ago.
575
00:32:28,147 --> 00:32:30,414
Male, female? It's female.
576
00:32:30,416 --> 00:32:32,282
What's absolutely fascinating about it is
577
00:32:32,351 --> 00:32:36,420
when you look at the vertebra, they're highly compacted,
578
00:32:36,422 --> 00:32:39,489
and they're compacted at a very, very steep angle.
579
00:32:39,559 --> 00:32:43,227
When this happens, the shape of the spine,
580
00:32:43,296 --> 00:32:46,163
it's very convoluted. Sure.
581
00:32:46,232 --> 00:32:49,767
So she was the archetype image of the...
582
00:32:49,769 --> 00:32:52,536
the wicked witch that you can see...yes. The old woman like this.
583
00:32:56,542 --> 00:32:58,509
She was surrounded by babies.
584
00:32:58,644 --> 00:33:00,978
What do you mean? What I mean...
585
00:33:04,984 --> 00:33:07,517
Oh, these are children. They're babies.
586
00:33:07,586 --> 00:33:09,519
Look at this, oh, my goodness.
587
00:33:09,589 --> 00:33:11,988
Boy, it just breaks your heart to see this.
588
00:33:12,024 --> 00:33:15,191
And these were found near this woman in the same church.
589
00:33:15,228 --> 00:33:18,662
Three of almost a hundred children that were found What?!
590
00:33:18,698 --> 00:33:21,665
surrounding the old lady of the church. No kidding.
591
00:33:23,335 --> 00:33:25,202
We may never know the real story behind
592
00:33:25,337 --> 00:33:28,805
this remarkable deviant burial or if it's connected
593
00:33:28,841 --> 00:33:32,809
to a fear of the undead, but other graves
594
00:33:32,845 --> 00:33:36,079
excavated throughout Europe have provided archeologists
595
00:33:36,148 --> 00:33:38,816
with more direct evidence.
596
00:33:38,951 --> 00:33:41,551
There are a couple of cemeteries where they excavated graves
597
00:33:41,620 --> 00:33:45,623
where the people that buried the dead in those graves
598
00:33:45,758 --> 00:33:48,092
took extra precautions to make absolutely sure
599
00:33:48,094 --> 00:33:50,427
that that person would not rise from the grave.
600
00:33:50,562 --> 00:33:53,097
They put blades across their throats,
601
00:33:53,232 --> 00:33:55,966
so when they rise from the dead, they would get decapitated. Wow.
602
00:33:56,035 --> 00:33:58,902
They would stick stones into their mouths
603
00:33:58,905 --> 00:34:01,171
so they could not bite anymore.
604
00:34:01,240 --> 00:34:04,841
They would put big nails in the lid of the coffin
605
00:34:04,877 --> 00:34:06,577
so when the dead comes back to life,
606
00:34:06,712 --> 00:34:09,713
they would just simply impale themselves in those nails. Wow.
607
00:34:09,715 --> 00:34:12,115
This is really the source of this idea of the undead,
608
00:34:12,184 --> 00:34:15,452
this restlessness of the soul needing to be dealt with
609
00:34:15,521 --> 00:34:17,187
by the living.
610
00:34:22,328 --> 00:34:25,262
Fear of vampires was common throughout all of Europe
611
00:34:25,397 --> 00:34:27,397
for hundreds of years.
612
00:34:27,433 --> 00:34:29,933
Is there evidence in Romania today
613
00:34:30,069 --> 00:34:32,569
that this fear still exists?
614
00:35:07,773 --> 00:35:10,040
Hollywood has kept Bram Stoker's Dracula
615
00:35:10,042 --> 00:35:12,642
and the vampire legend alive and well,
616
00:35:12,678 --> 00:35:15,446
feeding off of a new franchise every couple of years,
617
00:35:15,581 --> 00:35:17,915
each more sensational than the last,
618
00:35:17,917 --> 00:35:20,184
but in some places,
619
00:35:20,186 --> 00:35:22,519
remote corners of the world,
620
00:35:22,555 --> 00:35:24,855
time seems to stand still,
621
00:35:24,857 --> 00:35:27,958
and the old superstitions still reign supreme.
622
00:35:36,802 --> 00:35:39,136
Look at this--I'm meeting a local resident here
623
00:35:39,205 --> 00:35:42,272
who's lived here for many years to talk to her
624
00:35:42,308 --> 00:35:45,376
about the, you know, beliefs in this area about the dead.
625
00:35:48,581 --> 00:35:50,547
Hello, hello.
626
00:35:53,619 --> 00:35:55,819
Hello. This is Don.
627
00:35:55,888 --> 00:35:57,488
Don. Very nice to meet you.
628
00:35:57,623 --> 00:35:59,222
Don. Don.
629
00:35:59,258 --> 00:36:02,092
Brezan Alexandrina.
630
00:36:02,094 --> 00:36:04,361
Brezan Alexandrina. Da.
631
00:36:04,363 --> 00:36:07,164
Let's see inside. Da.
632
00:36:07,166 --> 00:36:11,168
How long as Alexandrina lived here?
633
00:36:11,237 --> 00:36:13,670
She's 87.
634
00:36:13,772 --> 00:36:16,773
She's, uh, she's been born here,
635
00:36:16,776 --> 00:36:19,576
6th December 1930. Wow, okay.
636
00:36:19,645 --> 00:36:22,579
So many generations of her family have lived
637
00:36:22,714 --> 00:36:25,082
even before that, I imagine. Yes.
638
00:36:33,993 --> 00:36:36,726
Alexandrina, this is such a mysterious land.
639
00:36:41,167 --> 00:36:43,533
Do you recall, when you were young,
640
00:36:43,569 --> 00:36:46,670
where the stories of vampires may have come from?
641
00:36:46,672 --> 00:36:49,005
You know, where did those beliefs start?
642
00:37:09,995 --> 00:37:11,961
She says they...
643
00:37:11,997 --> 00:37:15,132
they believe that this comes from witchcraft,
644
00:37:15,201 --> 00:37:18,635
black magic, so you want
645
00:37:18,771 --> 00:37:21,071
to do something against that.
646
00:37:25,711 --> 00:37:28,912
As recently as 2004,
647
00:37:28,948 --> 00:37:31,715
in the remote village of Marotinu de Sus,
648
00:37:31,850 --> 00:37:35,451
half a dozen people were charged with desecrating a man's grave.
649
00:37:35,487 --> 00:37:38,055
Their reasoning?
650
00:37:38,057 --> 00:37:40,591
He had become a vampire,
651
00:37:40,593 --> 00:37:43,527
or as locals call it, a strigoi.
652
00:37:43,529 --> 00:37:47,130
A young woman had fallen ill in the village.
653
00:37:47,132 --> 00:37:50,601
She claimed that her recently deceased uncle
654
00:37:50,603 --> 00:37:53,537
had been visiting her to drink blood from her heart.
655
00:37:53,539 --> 00:37:55,806
In the dead of night,
656
00:37:55,875 --> 00:37:58,141
the band of villagers had exhumed her uncle's body,
657
00:37:58,277 --> 00:38:01,345
used a pitchfork to crack open his chest,
658
00:38:01,480 --> 00:38:03,947
and drove a stake through his heart.
659
00:38:03,949 --> 00:38:06,817
Then, they took the heart, stake and all,
660
00:38:06,952 --> 00:38:09,620
to the nearest crossroads where it was burned,
661
00:38:09,755 --> 00:38:13,090
and then, the ashes were given to the young woman to drink.
662
00:38:13,225 --> 00:38:16,159
In doing so, she would be healed,
663
00:38:16,195 --> 00:38:18,628
and it was ensured that the strigoi
664
00:38:18,631 --> 00:38:21,497
was now truly dead.
665
00:38:21,533 --> 00:38:24,101
In small, removed villages like Marotinu de Sus,
666
00:38:24,103 --> 00:38:27,170
it's traditionally believed that after a body
667
00:38:27,239 --> 00:38:29,439
has been in the grave for 40 days,
668
00:38:29,508 --> 00:38:32,509
it can become a strigoi, or as we know it,
669
00:38:32,578 --> 00:38:34,778
the walking dead.
670
00:38:34,847 --> 00:38:37,146
A strigoi can live and walk
671
00:38:37,183 --> 00:38:39,249
among the living
672
00:38:39,384 --> 00:38:41,552
and attack them whenever they choose.
673
00:38:49,661 --> 00:38:52,061
It's fascinating to see firsthand
674
00:38:52,097 --> 00:38:54,664
how the ancient ways are still so much a part
675
00:38:54,667 --> 00:38:56,599
of contemporary life here.
676
00:38:56,635 --> 00:38:59,268
Romania's origins, its history, its folklore
677
00:38:59,305 --> 00:39:02,806
is very much in the hearts and minds of all these people
678
00:39:02,875 --> 00:39:05,274
living in these rural communities.
679
00:39:05,311 --> 00:39:09,613
Why do vampires continue to capture our imagination?
680
00:39:09,615 --> 00:39:13,650
And will this fascination haunt us for eternity?
681
00:39:29,996 --> 00:39:32,729
Everlasting life,
682
00:39:32,798 --> 00:39:35,065
a stake through the heart,
683
00:39:35,200 --> 00:39:37,401
the kiss of death.
684
00:39:37,470 --> 00:39:39,936
For over 1,000 years, our unsatiated
685
00:39:40,006 --> 00:39:42,205
vampire obsession has endured,
686
00:39:42,274 --> 00:39:45,275
but what gives this bloodthirsty legend
687
00:39:45,344 --> 00:39:48,211
everlasting life is the fact that it's rooted
688
00:39:48,280 --> 00:39:50,947
in real people and moments from history,
689
00:39:50,983 --> 00:39:53,750
starting with the dead bodies that piled up
690
00:39:53,786 --> 00:39:56,753
during the Black Death right here in Romania.
691
00:39:56,756 --> 00:39:59,823
Vampires were a way for people to cope with the real horrors
692
00:39:59,825 --> 00:40:02,059
they saw every day.
693
00:40:03,529 --> 00:40:05,829
That gory folklore spread and found its way
694
00:40:05,831 --> 00:40:08,365
into the eager hands of Bram Stoker,
695
00:40:08,367 --> 00:40:11,101
who brought the very real region of Transylvania
696
00:40:11,137 --> 00:40:13,570
and a fictional character named Count Dracula
697
00:40:13,639 --> 00:40:15,905
to the rest of the world.
698
00:40:15,941 --> 00:40:19,509
So while Dracula may be the most recognizable and frightening
699
00:40:19,545 --> 00:40:22,179
vampire of all time, he was, indeed,
700
00:40:22,314 --> 00:40:25,048
partly based on a real, bloodthirsty ruler
701
00:40:25,117 --> 00:40:27,551
known as Vlad the Impaler.
702
00:40:29,388 --> 00:40:31,722
Vlad Dracula's reign was as long as it was violent.
703
00:40:31,724 --> 00:40:34,591
His daring escape from the tunnels beneath
704
00:40:34,627 --> 00:40:37,394
Poienari Castle was by far the last time the world
705
00:40:37,529 --> 00:40:38,929
would ever hear from him.
706
00:40:38,998 --> 00:40:41,532
He beat invading armies for years to come.
707
00:40:41,667 --> 00:40:43,333
Indeed, he even managed to reclaim
708
00:40:43,335 --> 00:40:45,669
the Wallachian throne once more.
709
00:40:45,804 --> 00:40:48,872
It was almost as if Vlad was immortal--
710
00:40:48,908 --> 00:40:53,243
that is, until 1476, when Vlad Dracula met his end.
711
00:40:58,284 --> 00:41:00,750
Just over 40 kilometers north of Bucharest,
712
00:41:00,786 --> 00:41:03,153
hidden in the center of this wooded island,
713
00:41:03,288 --> 00:41:05,489
is Snagov Monastery,
714
00:41:05,491 --> 00:41:07,958
where many believe Vlad Dracula's remains
715
00:41:08,093 --> 00:41:09,993
are laid to rest.
716
00:41:12,765 --> 00:41:15,565
Legend suggests that Vlad was ambushed and beheaded
717
00:41:15,601 --> 00:41:17,967
by the Ottoman Empire and that monks
718
00:41:18,003 --> 00:41:20,770
at this monastery moved his headless body here
719
00:41:20,806 --> 00:41:22,906
to rest for all eternity.
720
00:41:22,942 --> 00:41:25,309
To this day,
721
00:41:25,444 --> 00:41:27,511
there is a plaque marking a stone
722
00:41:27,513 --> 00:41:29,313
in front of the altar that suggests
723
00:41:29,448 --> 00:41:32,249
Vlad Dracula is here and finally dead.
724
00:41:38,123 --> 00:41:40,590
Reality and fantasy,
725
00:41:40,659 --> 00:41:42,559
history and fiction.
726
00:41:42,595 --> 00:41:45,262
The vampire legend blurs the boundaries between it all
727
00:41:45,331 --> 00:41:48,999
and reminds us of the mysterious magic behind the exotic
728
00:41:49,001 --> 00:41:51,601
and unknown-- from the seductive allure
729
00:41:51,637 --> 00:41:55,471
of a Transylvania castle to the war-torn borderlands
730
00:41:55,508 --> 00:41:57,908
between the Hungarian and Ottoman Empires.
731
00:42:00,613 --> 00:42:03,280
Vampires have been around this place forever,
732
00:42:03,349 --> 00:42:05,748
and from the looks of it,
733
00:42:05,785 --> 00:42:08,218
they're not going anywhere, lurking in the shadows
734
00:42:08,220 --> 00:42:10,421
for generations to come.
734
00:42:11,305 --> 00:43:11,476
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