Huh. I had thought that Vampires were just a metaphor for the nobility. Rich guy who lives in a manor and sucks the life from the common folk to sustain themselves. But I just did some quick searching on that and apparently that’s a (relatively) more recent version of them (1800s), but a version of them existed in earlier Eastern European folklore as basically zombies way before that.
Anyway, I could definitely see a lot of what you’re saying, although from what I can tell, the garlic thing has more to do with medical matters than behavior. The two things I’ve seen are that 1) Garlic is an antiseptic, so it was thought to ward off evil probably because it helped reduce disease. 2) Apparently there is a disease that has garlic intolerance as a symptom. Although it also looks like that’s disputed. It can be hard to nail down stuff like this.
Actually, I didn’t know about this before I looked into it, but that wasn’t the first of it’s kind. Apparently that started with a story called "The Vampyre"from 1819. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vampyre
Huh. I had thought that Vampires were just a metaphor for the nobility. Rich guy who lives in a manor and sucks the life from the common folk to sustain themselves. But I just did some quick searching on that and apparently that’s a (relatively) more recent version of them (1800s), but a version of them existed in earlier Eastern European folklore as basically zombies way before that.
Anyway, I could definitely see a lot of what you’re saying, although from what I can tell, the garlic thing has more to do with medical matters than behavior. The two things I’ve seen are that 1) Garlic is an antiseptic, so it was thought to ward off evil probably because it helped reduce disease. 2) Apparently there is a disease that has garlic intolerance as a symptom. Although it also looks like that’s disputed. It can be hard to nail down stuff like this.
Noble families had high incidence of autism because social standing can override social awkwardness, and wives didn’t get to choose their husbands
No, that’s specifically Dracula, he lives in a manor because he’s Count Dracula :P
Actually, I didn’t know about this before I looked into it, but that wasn’t the first of it’s kind. Apparently that started with a story called "The Vampyre"from 1819. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Vampyre