How did Dracula become the worlds most famous vampire Stanley Stepanic

How did Dracula become
the world’s most famous vampire?

More than 100 years after
his creator was laid to rest,

Dracula lives on as the most famous
vampire in history.

But this Transylvanian noble,

neither the first fictional vampire
nor the most popular of his time,

may have remained buried
in obscurity if not for a twist of fate.

Dracula’s first appearance was in
Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel of the same name.

But that was far from the beginning
of vampire myths.

Blood-sucking monsters had already been
part of folklore for at least 800 years.

It was Slavic folklore that gave us
the word vampire,

or “upir” in Old Russian.

The term’s first known written mention
comes from the 11th century.

Vampire lore in the region predated
Christianity’s arrival

and persisted despite the church’s efforts
to eliminate pagan beliefs.

Stories of vampires originated from
misinterpretations of diseases,

such as rabies,

and pellagra,

and decomposition.

In the case of the latter, gasses swelling
the body and blood oozing from the mouth

could make a corpse look like
it had recently been alive and feeding.

Vampires were describe as bloated
with overgrown teeth and nails.

This gave rise to many rituals
intended to prevent the dead from rising,

such as burying bodies with garlic
or poppyseeds,

as well as having them staked,

burned,

or mutilated.

Vampire lore remained a local phenomenon
until the 18th century

when Serbia was caught in the struggle
between two great powers,

the Habsburg Monarchy

and Ottoman Empire.

Austrian soldiers and government officials
observed and documented

the strange local burial rituals,

and their reports
became widely publicized.

The resulting vampire hysteria
got so out of hand that in 1755,

the Austrian Empress was forced
to dispatch her personal physician.

He investigated and put an end
to the rumors

by publishing a thorough,
scientific refutation.

The panic subsided, but the vampire
had already taken root

in Western Europe’s imagination,

spawning works like “The Vampyre” in 1819,

and Joseph Sheridan
Le Fanu’s “Carmilla” in 1872.

This book would greatly influence a young
Irish drama critic named Bram Stoker.

Stoker, who was born in Dublin in 1847,

was famously bedridden with an unknown
illness until the age of seven.

During that time,
his mother told him folktales

and true tales of horror,

including her experiences during
an outbreak of cholera in 1832.

There, she described victims buried alive
in mass graves.

Later in his life, Stoker went on to write
fantasy, romance, adventure stories,

and, in 1897, “Dracula.”

Although the book’s main villain
and namesake

is thought to be based on the historical
figure of Vlad III Dracula,

or Vlad the Impaler,

the association is mostly just
that they share a name.

Other elements and characters
were inspired directly and indirectly

by various works in the Victorian Era,

such as “The Mysterious Stranger.”

The novel, upon release, was only
a moderate success in its day,

nor was it even
Stoker’s most well-known work,

mentioned only briefly in a 1912 obituary.

But a critical copyright battle would
completely change Dracula’s fate,

and catapult the character
into literary renown.

In 1922, a German studio adapted the novel
into the now classic silent film “Nosferatu”

without paying royalties.

Despite changes in character names
and minor plot points,

the parallels were obvious,
and the studio was sued into bankruptcy.

To prevent more plagiarism attempts,

Stoker’s widow decided
to establish copyright

over the stage version of “Dracula”

by approving a production
by family-friend Hamilton Deane.

Although Deane’s adaptation made drastic
cuts to the story,

it became a classic,

thanks largely to Bela Lugosi’s
performance on Broadway.

Lugosi would go on to star in
the 1931 film version by Universal,

lending the character
many of his signature characteristics.

And since then, Dracula has risen again
in countless adaptations,

finding eternal life far beyond
the humble pages of his birth.

德古拉
是如何成为世界上最著名的吸血鬼的?


他的创造者安息 100 多年后,德古拉仍然是历史

上最著名的
吸血鬼。

但这位特兰西瓦尼亚贵族,

既不是第一个虚构的吸血鬼,
也不是他那个时代最受欢迎的吸血鬼,

如果不是因为命运的转折,他可能一直默默无闻。

德古拉的第一次出现是在
布拉姆斯托克 1897 年的同名小说中。

但这远非
吸血鬼神话的开始。

吸血怪物已经
成为民间传说的一部分至少 800 年。

斯拉夫民间传说给了我们
吸血鬼这个词,

或者古俄语中的“upir”。

该术语的第一次已知书面提及
来自 11 世纪。

该地区的吸血鬼传说早于
基督教的到来,

并且尽管教会
努力消除异教信仰,但仍然存在。

吸血鬼的故事源于

狂犬病

和糙皮病等疾病的误解

和腐烂。

在后者的情况下,
膨胀身体的气体和从嘴里渗出的血液

会使尸体看起来
像是最近还活着并正在进食。

吸血鬼被描述为臃肿
的牙齿和指甲。

这引发了许多
旨在防止死者复活的仪式,

例如用大蒜
或罂粟籽掩埋尸体,

以及将它们钉在桩子上、

烧毁

或肢解。

直到 18 世纪,

当塞尔维亚陷入

哈布斯堡王朝

和奥斯曼帝国这两个大国之间的斗争中,吸血鬼的传说一直是当地的现象。

奥地利士兵和政府官员
观察并记录

了当地奇怪的葬礼

,他们的报告
被广泛宣传。

由此产生的吸血鬼歇斯底里
变得如此失控,以至于在 1755 年

,奥地利皇后
被迫派遣她的私人医生。

通过发表彻底的
科学驳斥来调查并结束谣言。

恐慌平息了,但吸血鬼
早已

在西欧的想象中扎根,

催生了 1819 年的《吸血鬼》

和 1872 年约瑟夫·谢里丹
·勒法努的《卡米拉》等作品。

这本书极大地影响了
一位名叫布拉姆·斯托克的年轻爱尔兰戏剧评论家 .

斯托克于 1847 年出生在都柏林,他因

一种未知疾病卧床不起,
直到 7 岁。

在那段时间里,
他的母亲告诉他民间

故事和真实的恐怖故事,

包括她
在 1832 年霍乱爆发期间的经历。

在那里,她描述了活埋在万人坑中的受害者

在他生命的后期,斯托克继续写
幻想、浪漫、冒险故事,

并在 1897 年创作了《德古拉》。

虽然这本书的主要反派
和同名人物

被认为是基于
Vlad III Dracula

或 Vlad the Impaler 的历史人物,但

这种关联主要是
因为他们有一个共同的名字。

其他元素和角色
直接或间接地

受到维多利亚时代各种作品的启发,

例如《神秘的陌生人》。

这部小说一经发行,在当时只是
取得了适度的成功,

它甚至也不是
斯托克最著名的作品,

只是在 1912 年的讣告中简要提及。

但一场关键的版权战将
彻底改变德古拉的命运,

并使这个
角色一举成名。

1922年,一家德国工作室将这部小说改编
成现在经典的无声电影《Nosferatu》,

无需支付版税。

尽管角色名称
和小情节点发生了变化

,但相似之处显而易见
,工作室被起诉破产。

为了防止更多的抄袭企图,

斯托克的遗孀决定通过批准家庭朋友汉密尔顿迪恩的制作

为舞台版“德古拉”建立版权

尽管迪恩的改编对故事进行了大刀阔斧的
剪辑,

但它成为了经典,

这在很大程度上要归功于贝拉·卢戈西
在百老汇的表演。

卢戈西将继续
出演 1931 年环球影业的电影版本,

赋予该角色
许多他的标志性特征。

从那以后,德古拉
在无数次改编中再次崛起,在

他出生的卑微页面之外找到了永恒的生命。