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Chapter 170 Blood-sucking zombies
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Arcadia, a mountainous pastoral area in ancient Greece, was famous for the simplicity and tranquility of its residents' lives, and later became synonymous with "Utopia".
Some stories say that Lycaon was a cruel king, and some stories said that Lycaon was a good king, but his sons were ungodly.
Anyway, when Zeus went to Arcadia, he was so angry at the poor reception that he turned Lycaon into a wolf.
The Acadians, who were exiled in the 18th century and then immigrated to the United States, lived in southern Alabama and southeastern Mississippi. They were a mixture of white, black and Indian blood. They called werewolves "loupgarou."
Although there are many myths and legends about werewolves among the people, this theme has not made much achievements in literature and art. Unlike vampires, there is a vampire Count Dracula as the cornerstone of modern vampires. The only one worthy of praise is Gale. N'Dolay wrote a novel called The Werewolf of Paris in 1933.
The Greek concept of living corpses has changed since the eleventh century.
Etymologically, the word vrykolakas comes from the Slavic word meaning werewolf.
So in the Balkans and the Carpathians at that time, people used the same word to refer to harmless zombies and dangerous werewolves.
For example, on October 1216, 10 AD, King John Lakeland of England was poisoned by a monk and died of his injuries.
It is believed that the poison contains wolfberry, which means that the poisoned person will transform into a werewolf.
Soon after various howls were heard coming from his tomb, and the terrified residents dragged the body out and left it to rot.
But soon after, someone claimed to have seen the king transformed into a werewolf wandering in the forest.
Sigismund, the king of Hungary in the fifteenth century and later the leader of the Germanic dynasty of the Holy Roman Empire, prompted the church to officially recognize the existence of werewolves at the Ecumenical Council in 1414.
By the sixteenth century, werewolf legends had spread throughout Europe, and the Holy See decided to launch an official investigation. From 1520 to the mid-seventeenth century, tens of thousands of cases were found among patients with lycanthropy in Europe, the largest number. France, as well as Serbia, Bohemia and Hungary in Eastern Europe.
It was under this circumstance that the legend of werewolves arose. The superstition that werewolves look like humans but can transform into wolves can be traced back to the mythology of the Middle Ages.
By the early Middle Ages, Europeans were no longer unfamiliar with werewolves. The Roman Inquisition at that time considered Jews, Protestants, witches, and werewolves to be heretics.
Among these pagan devils, werewolves are considered the most dangerous. Because they were once humans, they particularly hate other normal humans. Their main prey and food are the humans around them and their domestic animals.
Due to the ferocity of werewolves, victims of their attacks often suffer severe physical damage.
Guided by the official rulings of the church, people's fear of monsters like werewolves reached hysterical proportions: thousands of people were forced to confess their crimes, and these "sinners" were usually sentenced to be burned at the stake after confessing.
In the sixteenth century, approximately thirty thousand people were believed to be werewolves or vampires and burned alive in France alone.
At the time, people thought werewolves were easily identifiable by their joined eyebrows, hairy palms, and their very solitary, hermit-like personalities, among other things.
It can be seen from this that in European society at that time, patients with genetic diseases with abnormal appearances, albinos who were particularly sensitive to sunlight, and some lost, abandoned, and wild children adopted by animals all became victims of the church's cruel policies.
Superstition grew stronger, and by the late 17th century rumors spread about werewolves, who after death turned into zombies that drank human blood.
For a time, rumors about vampires and their victims appeared in countries and regions such as Silesia, Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, Moldovia and Russia.
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Chapter 171 Preview of the Bloodthirsty Demon"
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