Archaeologists discovered quite a few tombs that are believed to contain vampire remains, shocking in the scientific world.
In early May 2014, archaeologists in Poland announced they had discovered a skeleton with a brick stuck in its mouth, proof that it was a skeleton of a vampire. The skeleton, dating from the 16th to 17th centuries, was unearthed in a tomb in the town of Kamien Pomorski, northwestern Poland.
Previously, in July 2013, archaeologists also found a vampire tomb in the town of Gliwice, southern Poland.
In the tomb there are 4 skeletons with the head cut off from the body. The practice of beheading is believed to be the only way to ensure that vampires will die completely, forever unable to resurrect.
In June 2012, archaeologists in Bulgaria unearthed two skeletons from the Middle Ages with iron rods through their chests that, according to the usual interpretation of vampires, prevent them from resurrecting from their graves.
In addition to the iron bar on the body, the vampire skeleton discovered in Bulgaria shows many other stab wounds on the chest and stomach area. The two skeletons are believed to be around 800 years old.
In 2009, researcher Matteo Borrini of the University of Florence, Italy found the skeleton of a woman with a brick in her mouth while excavating the tombs of medieval plague patients on the island of Lazzaretto Nuovo, Venice. Italia.
Skeletons dug up from a mass grave of bubonic plague victims at the Venetian (old Venice) in 1576, showing a brick inserted into the woman’s mouth.
Vampire remains with thorns pierced through the heart, killed between 550 – 700 AD, discovered in the ancient town of Southwell, Nottinghamshire, England. The victim was killed by many wounds, the most obvious of which was the metal spike pierced the shoulder, ankle and especially the heart of the victim.
Source: vtc.vn