Vrykolakas
posted by Krista | 12/28/2002 7:43:23 PM | Permalink |
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The Tale of PhilinnonPhlegon was a town official called to keep the rumor of Philinnon's revival hushed up before it spread all over town. Upon examination of her burial vault, he found several gifts she had taken from her visit with Machates, but no body. A local wise man advised that the body be burned and given the appropriate purification rituals and propitiatory rites to the deities.
Early accounts of these beings described those who arose from the dead to attend unfinished business usually with a relative or close association. There also were stories of those who stayed for long periods of time, and even one who went off to a different location, married, and fathered children.
Becoming a Vrykolakas
When the Greek Orthodox church became a powerful influence on Greek lifestyle, it found itself having to deal with this popular belief in vrykolakas. It argued that the devil inhabited the body of the dead and caused it to move. It also occasionally tied such occurrences to those of mediums such as in the biblical story of the woman at Endor (I Samuel 28). Eventually, the Church proposed that anyone night be predisposed to becoming a vrykolakas if they died in an excommunicated state, if they were buried without proper church rites, if they died a violent death, if they were stillborn, or if they were born on one of the great church festivals.
Reference
- Vampires: A Brief History
- The Real Vampyre Phenomenon
- Website: Greek Accounts of the Vrykolakas - by D. Demetracopoulou Lee from The Journal of American Folklore, No. 54 (1941)
- Website: May the Ground Not Receive Thee - An Exploration of the Greek Vrykolakas and His Origins by Inanna Arthen (1998)
- Buy From Amazon.com: Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead



