Are Vampires Real? Inside 9 Chilling Accounts Of Alleged Bloodsucking Monsters From History

Published October 26, 2023
Updated November 1, 2023

Peter Plogojowitz, Another Real-Life Vampire From Serbia

Vampire Sucking Blood

Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy Stock PhotoVillagers in Plogojowitz’s village claimed on their deathbeds that he had come to them in their sleep and strangled them.

Like Arnold Paole, the next real vampire on our list died in Serbia in the 18th century. And like Paole, Peter Plogojowitz was exhumed by his fellow villagers out of fear that he was an undead bloodsucker.

In the weeks after Plogojowitz died, a number of his fellow villagers also perished after suffering from a mysterious 24-hour illness. The dead were both young and old, and many made a terrifying claim on their deathbeds. They said that Plogojowitz had come to them in their sleep and strangled them. Even Plogojowitz’s wife claimed that her husband had visited her in her sleep (though she said that he’d just wanted a pair of shoes).

The villagers decided to exhume Plogojowitz’s body and search him for telltale signs of vampirism. According to Vampires, Burial, and Death: Folklore and Reality by Paul Barber, they asked a parish priest and an imperial provisor to be present during the exhumation. Reluctantly, the provisor agreed — and recorded what he witnessed.

Exhuming A Vampire's Grave

imageBROKER.com GmbH & Co. KG/Alamy Stock PhotoPeter Plogojowitz’s body was exhumed to check for signs of vampirism — which the townspeople allegedly found.

“First of all I did not detect the slightest odor that is otherwise characteristic of the dead,” the provisor wrote. “[T]he body, except for the nose, which was somewhat fallen away, was completely fresh… Not without astonishment, I saw some fresh blood in his mouth, which, according to the common observation, he had sucked from the people killed by him.”

As in Paole’s exhumation, the townspeople quickly sharpened a stake, which they plunged into Plogojowitz’s chest. To the provisor’s shock, fresh blood flowed from his ears and mouth. Other “wild” things also happened which the provisor declined to detail, writing: “I pass [them] by out of high respect.”

Plogojowitz’s body was then burned to ashes. Unlike in the case of Mercy Brown, however, it doesn’t seem that anyone consumed them.

author
Kaleena Fraga
author
A senior staff writer for All That's Interesting since 2021 and co-host of the History Uncovered Podcast, Kaleena Fraga graduated with a dual degree in American History and French Language and Literature from Oberlin College. She previously ran the presidential history blog History First, and has had work published in The Washington Post, Gastro Obscura, and elsewhere. She has published more than 1,200 pieces on topics including history and archaeology. She is based in Brooklyn, New York.
editor
Cara Johnson
editor
A writer and editor based in Charleston, South Carolina and an editor at All That's Interesting since 2022, Cara Johnson holds a B.A. in English and Creative Writing from Washington & Lee University and an M.A. in English from College of Charleston. She has worked for various publications ranging from wedding magazines to Shakespearean literary journals in her nine-year career, including work with Arbordale Publishing and Gulfstream Communications.
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Fraga, Kaleena. "Are Vampires Real? Inside 9 Chilling Accounts Of Alleged Bloodsucking Monsters From History." AllThatsInteresting.com, October 26, 2023, https://allthatsinteresting.com/real-vampires. Accessed July 16, 2025.