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Vampire Fakelore

Created by stuthehistoryguy

Fun Trivia : Quizzes : Vampires
Vampire Fakelore game quiz
"Much of what most people think of as vampire folklore is actually the invention of fantasy writers from the UK and US. This quiz examines which is which."

15 Points Per Correct Answer - No time limit  



1. Most of us think of the vampire as a creature of Eastern Europe, and rightly so - the belief was so strong in some regions that graves were torn up in hunts for undead. In which of these regions would one be least likely to find vampire hunts in pre-1800 Eastern Europe?
    Bulgaria
    Serbia
    Transylvania
    Greece


2. Some Eastern European vampires are indeed shapeshifters, though their abilities in this regard tend to be greater in folktales that were never meant to be believed - as opposed to legends, which were meant to be taken as fact. Which of these forms would an Eastern European vampire be least likely to take?
    Wolf
    Moth
    Mist
    Bat


3. Much vampire “fakelore” (defined by folklorist Richard Dorson as “a synthetic product claiming to be authentic oral tradition but actually tailored for mass edification”) originates from the most influential vampire novel, Bram Stoker’s “Dracula”. Which of these elements did Stoker introduce to the popular concept of the vampire?
    Destruction by wooden stake
    Sexuality
    Destruction by sunlight
    The lack of a reflection in mirrors


4. As you may have guessed by now, the vampire in folklore is not the suave sophisticate one would find in Anne Rice or Laurel Hamilton. He’s usually a peasant, and a rather disgusting creature at that. The first aristocratic vampire appears in John Polidori’s 1818 story “The Vampyre”, and is modeled after a well-known figure of the period. What celebrity of the period was this?
    Lord Byron
    Napoleon Bonaparte
    George Washington
    Casanova


5. Did Bram Stoker base his novel "Dracula" on the vampiric legends surrounding fifteenth-century Prince Vlad III of Wallachia?
    Yes
    No


6. In 1985, Dr. David Dolphin gave a talk on vampires at the prestigious American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting. His thesis was that porphyria (a metabolic disorder that causes mental disturbance, photosensitivity, and gum necrosis that may be mistaken for fangs) may have been responsible for vampire reports of the past, especially since the disorder is now treated by injections of blood products. On what grounds have folklorists rejected Dolphin’s hypothesis?
    The blood product that treats porphyria, heme, cannot be absorbed by drinking blood
    All of these
    Folkloric vampires don’t usually have fangs
    Almost all vampires are recognized as dead people, not living people acting delusionally


7. In 1997, Spanish neurologist Juan Gómez-Alonso suggested another disease as the origin of vampire belief, citing that condition’s symptoms of photosensitivity, mental disturbance, and propensity to bite. What disease was this?
    Rabies
    Influenza
    Syphilis
    Mononucleosis


8. Many vampire enthusiasts have domesticated Dracula somewhat; he has become more of a mascot in some circles than a figure of abject terror. The name of Elizabeth Báthory, however, still inspires genuine shock and fear among those familiar with her story. As most popular tellings go, Countess Báthory drained the blood of young peasant women and bathed in it to maintain her youth. Do these stories come from the facts established at Báthory’s 1611 trial?
    Yes
    No


9. In most Eastern European folklore, how old do vampires usually get?
    About a century - then they despair of immortality and burrow underground, never to be seen again
    Ancient - many cultures have legends casting Cain as the first vampire, and Eastern European folklore holds that he still lives
    Not very old - they are usually destroyed in the months after their death
    Their lifespan is long but indeterminate


10. Finally, we come to one of the most iconic of vampire images - its aversion to the cross! Is this based in Eastern European folklore?
    Yes - The most complete story of a Bulgarian vampire exorcism involves the exorcist “herding” the vampire into a bottle with an icon, then capping the bottle and throwing it into the fire
    No - in one of the best known accounts, the cross shape actually holds the evil spirit in the vampire’s body, prolonging the vampire’s unlife
    All of these are correct
    Yes - Serbs have traditionally painted tar crosses on their doors to keep vampires away


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