Sunday, February 10, 2019
The Lilith in Dracula, Carmilla, Christabel, Geraldine and The Hunger
The Lilith in Dracula, Carmilla, Christabel,  Geraldine and The Hunger      For centuries Lilith, the Queen of the Night, has been blamed when a child or  bit dies with fall out certain cause or when a woman refuses to be  bowing to her husband. While the Legend of Lilith is not widely known today, it is not  effortful to find information about the demoness. However, there are slight variations  instal from story to story. Here we will focus on the  romance as  institute in  Hebraical mythology, and we will particularly emphasize the similarities seen between Lilith and various vampires seen in literature today.             The Hebrew figure of Lilith was actually borrowed from Babylonian and Syrian myths. Lilitu was a Babylonian demon and a spirit of the  shadow and of storms. Lamassu was a Sumerian goddess and the daughter of Anu, the god of Heaven. It is believed that Lilith is a combination of these  both demons from earlier legends. However, for the purpose of our study, we will    focus on the legend of Lilith found in Hebrew scriptures.             According to Hebrew scriptures, Lilith was Eves  forerunner and therefore, the first wife of Adam. However, there are  cardinal variations on the Hebrew creation myth. The first states that God make man and woman out of the same material (earth or clay), at the same time, thus the two beings were equals in every way. The alternative version of this myth states that Adam was made of clay while Lilith was made of dirt and filth. However, regardless of her origin, the remainder of the myth proceeds much the same way.             Legends states when it was time for the two to have intimate intercourse, Adam insisted that Lilith take the more submissive position. This angered her and in ...  ...le from the  tend of Eden, she was doomed to forever prey on newborn children and suck the  cable and life fluids from men. For this reason, she is the earliest known force of evil, thus making her the  improve image of the mot   her of all vampires. Works Cited      Begg, Ean. The Cult of the Black Virgin. Arkana Penguin Books, 1996      pp.34-40.      Bunson, Matthew. The vampire Encyclopedia. New York Crown Trade       Paperbacks, 1993.Coulter, Charles Russell, and Patricia Turner. The Encyclopedia of Ancient      Deities. London McFarland and Company, Inc., 2000, pp. 285-86.Masters, Anthony. The  earthy History of the Vampire. London Rupert      Hart-Davis, 1972, pp. 170-71.      THE GNOSIS ARCHIVE Gnostic Studies on the Web. Accessed on  may 1,      2003. http//www.webcom.com/gnosis/lilith.html                  
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