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Strix

Ancient Roman folklore included witches known as strix and strega that were believed to drain the blood of infants and fly at night. The strix was described by the Roman poet Ovid as a night demon that sucked the blood of babies. Stories of the strega developed the idea of a woman witch that could transform into a bird. Beliefs about vampiric witches led to witch hunts in the Roman Empire where accused individuals were burned or cannibalized. Elements of these folkloric beliefs influenced later works and persisted into modern Wiccan traditions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
216 views1 page

Strix

Ancient Roman folklore included witches known as strix and strega that were believed to drain the blood of infants and fly at night. The strix was described by the Roman poet Ovid as a night demon that sucked the blood of babies. Stories of the strega developed the idea of a woman witch that could transform into a bird. Beliefs about vampiric witches led to witch hunts in the Roman Empire where accused individuals were burned or cannibalized. Elements of these folkloric beliefs influenced later works and persisted into modern Wiccan traditions.

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Anastasia
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STRIX * STREGA * WITCHES * SCREECH-OWLS * VAMPIRES * SUCCUBI *

LAMIAE

https://alishamcostanzo.wordpress.com/tag/folklore/

Did You Know…About the Ancient Roman Vampire?


Ancient Rome’s vampiric lore did not develop to the same extent as in Ancient Greece;
however, the mythology did present itself. Vampirism focused less on the undead and
more on living witches. As with other culture’s lore, vampire-like entities were used to
explain the unexpected deaths of infants (as was true for the lamiai of Ancient Greece).
Most specifically, the Ancient Romans spoke of a night demon, the strix, which drained
infants of their blood.
the first century A.D., the Roman poet Ovid described such a witch in his fourth book,
Fasti: “They fly by night and look for children without nurses, snatch them from their
cradles and defile their bodies. They are said to lacerate the entrails of infants with their
beaks, and they have their throats full of the blood they have drunk. They are called
striges.”
Ovid helped develop the concept of a strega, usually a woman witch, who had the power
to change into a bird and fly around at night. She was believed to suck on human blood
and to possess poisonous breath. Stories of the strega became a part of popular culture in
the Roman Empire, creating their own version of the witch-hunts, where any person
believed to be a strix or strega were attacked, burned, and/or cannibalized as a way of
disposing of witches.
By the end of the fifteenth century, the witch had been demonized and turned into a
Satanist by the Inquisition and continued to be executed as part of the centuries of the
witch-hunts, where the accused would admit to vampirizing babies.
Between 1460 and 1525, ten book were published on witchcraft by the Italians. Among
those, Gianfrancesco Pico della Mirandola published a short volume, entitled Strix, in
Bolonga. The beliefs described by Mirandola became the dominant opinion of religious
and intellectual leader in the Renaissance and several centuries thereafter. However, by
the eighteenth century, the Italians joined the rest of Europe in doubting the existence of
such supernatural evil perpetuated by witches and vampires.
Yet, fragmented beliefs of the strix and strega have been passed into the modern Wiccan
revival due to the writings of C. G. Leland in the nineteenth century.
Want to know more? Check out this: http://vampireunderworld.com/strix/
and this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strix_(mythology)
Sources:
Melton, J. Gordon. The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead. Canton,
Michigan: Visible Ink Press, 1999.

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