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How did Dracula become the world's most famous vampire? - Stanley Stepanic

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    How did Dracula become
    the world's most famous vampire?
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    More than 100 years after
    his creator was laid to rest,
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    Dracula lives on as the most famous
    vampire in history.
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    But this Transylvanian noble,
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    neither the first fictional vampire
    nor the most popular of his time,
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    may have remained buried
    in obscurity if not for a twist of fate.
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    Dracula's first appearance was in
    Bram Stoker's 1897 novel of the same name.
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    But that was far from the beginning
    of vampire myths.
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    Blood-sucking monsters had already been
    part of folklore for at least 800 years.
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    It was Slavic folklore that gave us
    the word vampire,
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    or "upir" in Old Russian.
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    The term's first known written mention
    comes from the 11th century.
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    Vampire lore in the region predated
    Christianity's arrival
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    and persisted despite the church's efforts
    to eliminate pagan beliefs.
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    Stories of vampires originated from
    misinterpretations of diseases,
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    such as rabies,
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    and pellagra,
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    and decomposition.
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    In the case of the latter, gasses swelling
    the body and blood oozing from the mouth
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    could make a corpse look like
    it had recently been alive and feeding.
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    Vampires were describe as bloated
    with overgrown teeth and nails.
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    This gave rise to many rituals
    intended to prevent the dead from rising,
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    such as burying bodies with garlic
    or poppyseeds,
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    as well as having them staked,
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    burned,
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    or mutilated.
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    Vampire lore remained a local phenomenon
    until the 18th century
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    when Serbia was caught in the struggle
    between two great powers,
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    the Habsburg Monarchy
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    and Ottoman Empire.
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    Austrian soldiers and government officials
    observed and documented
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    the strange local burial rituals,
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    and their reports
    became widely publicized.
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    The resulting vampire hysteria
    got so out of hand that in 1755,
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    the Austrian Empress was forced
    to dispatch her personal physician.
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    He investigated and put an end
    to the rumors
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    by publishing a thorough,
    scientific refutation.
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    The panic subsided, but the vampire
    had already taken root
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    in Western Europe's imagination,
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    spawning works like "The Vampyre" in 1819,
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    and Joseph Sheridan
    Le Fanu's "Carmilla" in 1872.
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    This book would greatly influence a young
    Irish drama critic named Bram Stoker.
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    Stoker, who was born in Dublin in 1847,
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    was famously bedridden with an unknown
    illness until the age of seven.
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    During that time,
    his mother told him folktales
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    and true tales of horror,
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    including her experiences during
    an outbreak of cholera in 1832.
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    There, she described victims buried alive
    in mass graves.
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    Later in his life, Stoker went on to write
    fantasy, romance, adventure stories,
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    and, in 1897, "Dracula."
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    Although the book's main villain
    and namesake
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    is thought to be based on the historical
    figure of Vlad III Dracula,
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    or Vlad the Impaler,
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    the association is mostly just
    that they share a name.
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    Other elements and characters
    were inspired directly and indirectly
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    by various works in the Victorian Era,
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    such as "The Mysterious Stranger."
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    The novel, upon release, was only
    a moderate success in its day,
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    nor was it even
    Stoker's most well-known work,
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    mentioned only briefly in a 1912 obituary.
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    But a critical copyright battle would
    completely change Dracula's fate,
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    and catapult the character
    into literary renown.
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    In 1922, a German studio adapted the novel
    into the now classic silent film "Nosferatu"
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    without paying royalties.
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    Despite changes in character names
    and minor plot points,
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    the parallels were obvious,
    and the studio was sued into bankruptcy.
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    To prevent more plagiarism attempts,
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    Stoker's widow decided
    to establish copyright
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    over the stage version of "Dracula"
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    by approving a production
    by family-friend Hamilton Deane.
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    Although Deane's adaptation made drastic
    cuts to the story,
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    it became a classic,
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    thanks largely to Bela Lugosi's
    performance on Broadway.
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    Lugosi would go on to star in
    the 1931 film version by Universal,
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    lending the character
    many of his signature characteristics.
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    And since then, Dracula has risen again
    in countless adaptations,
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    finding eternal life far beyond
    the humble pages of his birth.
Title:
How did Dracula become the world's most famous vampire? - Stanley Stepanic
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-did-dracula-become-the-world-s-most-famous-vampire-stanley-stepanic

Over a hundred 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. Stanley Stepanic explains how a critical copyright battle catapulted Bram Stoker’s character into literary renown.

Lesson by Stanley Stepanic, animation by Phuong Mai NGUYEN.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:06

English subtitles

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