"Cat people" vampire burials
Archaeologists excavating the site of future road construction near the town of Gliwice in Silesia, southern Poland, discovered four skeletons buried with their heads between their knees. Stones were placed on the skulls. Further digging unearthed another nine skeletons buried with their heads out of place. Eleven were found with the skull between the legs, one with skull between the hands, two with the skull perched directly on the shoulders. Most of the skeletons found buried this way appear to be female.
Putting the head anywhere but on top of the neck was a common folk
practice in Slavic countries for ensuring that the dead would not rise
from the grave to harry the living. The idea was that if the dead person
attempted to rise, without her head in place she wouldn’t be able to
see his victims or even coordinate the climb out of the grave...
There were no grave goods, not even the remains of clothing like
buttons, in the initial discoveries that could give an idea of when they
were buried. The ritual was in regular use in Poland from the arrival
of Christianity in the 10th century until the First World War (the last
known vampire burial in Poland took place in the east-central village of
Old Mierzwice in 1914), so that doesn’t help narrow it down...
Osteological examination has already returned extraordinary results:
the eye sockets are much larger than average while the nasomaxillary
area (the part between the nose and the upper jaw) is narrower than
average. This would have given them a cat-like appearance, a genetic
mutation that suggests the deceased are related and that might explain
why this group of people were seen as dangerous by their community.
More information at
The History Blog.
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