
Vampires page 7
Premature burial
It has also been hypothesized that vampire
legends were influenced by individuals being buried alive due to
primitive medical knowledge. In some cases in which people reported
sounds emanating from a specific coffin, it was later dug up and
fingernail marks were discovered on the inside from the victim trying
to escape. In other cases the person would hit their heads, noses or
faces and it would appear that they had been "feeding." A problem
with this theory is the question of how people presumably buried alive
managed to stay alive for any extended period without food, water or
fresh air. An alternate explanation for noise is the bubbling of
escaping gases from natural decomposition of bodies. Another
likely cause of disordered tombs is grave robbing.
Contagion
Folkloric
vampirism has been associated with a series of deaths due to
unidentifiable or mysterious illnesses, usually within the same family
or the same small community. The epidemic allusion is obvious in
the classical cases of Peter Plogojowitz and Arnold Paole, and even
more so in the case of Mercy Brown and in the vampire beliefs of New
England generally, where a specific disease, tuberculosis, was
associated with outbreaks of vampirism. As with the pneumonic form of
bubonic plague, it was associated with breakdown of lung tissue which
would cause blood to appear at the lips.
Porphyria
In
1985 biochemist David Dolphin proposed a link between the rare blood
disorder porphyria and vampire folklore. Noting that the condition is
treated by intravenous haem, he suggested that the consumption of large
amounts of blood may result in haem being transported somehow across
the stomach wall and into the bloodstream. Thus vampires were merely
sufferers of porphyria seeking to replace haem and alleviate their
symptoms. The theory has been rebuffed medically as suggestions
that porphyria sufferers crave the haem in human blood, or that the
consumption of blood might ease the symptoms of porphyria, are based on
a misunderstanding of the disease. Furthermore, Dolphin was noted to
have confused fictional (bloodsucking) vampires with those of folklore,
many of whom were not noted to drink blood. Similarly, a parallel
is made between sensitivity to sunlight by sufferers, yet this was
associated with fictional and not folkloric vampires. In any case,
Dolphin did not go on to publish his work more widely. Despite
being dismissed by experts, the link gained media attention and
entered popular modern folklore.