A male skeleton from the 13th century with a plowshare driven through its ribcage has been excavated in the eastern European region in which the first reports of vampires originated nearly a millennium ago.
"We have no doubts that once again we’re seeing an anti-vampire ritual being carried out," Nikolay Ovcharov, a celebrity archaeologist, told the Daily Telegraph. He accidentally struck upon the burial site while excavating the remains of the much older Thracian city of Perperikon, not far from Bulgaria’s border with Greece.
Ovcharov said the 2lb (1kg) iron rod had been hammered into the
chest of the man – thought to have been between 40 and 50 at the
time of death – and a part of the left leg below the knee was
separately placed next to the rest of the skeleton. It is
presumed that the leg may have been sawn off, to stop the vampire
from 'escaping’ the grave.
"Often these rituals were applied to people who had died in
unusual circumstances, such as suicide," said Ovcharov.
While the find appears unusual, Bozhidar Dimitrov, head of the
National History Museum in the Bulgarian capital, Sofia, said
that at least 100 such corpses have been discovered by
archaeologists within the country’s borders.
The media paid particular attention to the ‘Twin Vampires of
Sozopol’, two corpses discovered in 2012 and 2013, also bearing
evidence of gruesome burial rituals.
In the earlier find, the feet of the man had been tied together,
to complement the plowshare. In the second one, where an
unusually tall 5’11” (180cm) skeleton was found – supposedly
belonging to a notorious 13th-century pirate by the name of
Krivich – a specially-processed stone had been laid across his
chest. The diggers have said that sometimes a cat or a chicken
was also buried next to the dead bodies, to 'watch over' the
vampire.
Ovcharov has played a key role in many of the finds in the past
three decades. With his media-friendly persona, and his penchant
for sand-colored fedoras, the scientist, himself the son of a
renowned archaeologist, has earned routine comparisons to Indiana
Jones.
Unfortunately,
archeological digs are plagued by illegal intruders in
Bulgaria. It is
estimated that 300 gangs of undercover tomb raiders operate in
the country, making at least 30 million euro a year collectively,
according to Dimitrov. These unlicensed groups, which often wreck
precious historical sites, digging carelessly under the cover of
night, extract precious artifacts – including Roman coins, and
Thracian armor – before exporting them under false documents to
be sold in auctions elsewhere, or directly to rich Middle Eastern
collectors.
Ovacharov has made it his life’s work to protect and reconstruct
the site of Perperikon, the site of many of the vampire finds. A
center of civilization as long as 5,000 years ago, it is thought
to have been the host to wild, orgiastic ceremonies praising the
god Dionysus, as well as being the birthplace of legendary poet
Orpheus. Later it became home to a massive Roman palace and after
that Byzantine basilicas.
“It rivals Machu Picchu. Bulgarian archaeology has enormous
potential. It can change the way people think about this country.
It can give us national pride as well as bringing in a lot of
wealth,” said Ovcharov in an interview with the Independent
last year, outlining his vision that would see illegal diggers
replaced with millions of tourists, currently unaware of
Bulgaria’s complex history, on the edge of the Oriental and
Western civilizations.