Subject: That happens quite a lot, actually.
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Posted on: 2017-02-13 14:44:00 UTC

Twilight did it, and Doctor Who's done it at least once ('Vampires of Venice'). Maybe it's because some vampire fiction leans towards 'supernaturally pretty = long haired men', which harks back to Renaissance paintings?

Or maybe it's because Italy is inhabited by vampires. Do you often feel an urge to go out at night and drink red liquids? :D

hS

PS: Apparently they were part of the local legends up around Venice, which I guess is pretty close to the Slavic regions they're normally associated with. This is a wild guess, but your average early-20th-Century English or American vampirologist wouldn't have heard of Romania or Bulgaria, but Italy was a known quantity (and Venice is famous in its own right). So maybe that's why.

PPS: Or even more simply... the early vampire novels like Carmilla and Dracula feature creatures whose names end in vowels, which isn't all that common in English. Apart from simple, old-fashioned names like Anna or Joe, the first associations that spring up are things like Leonardo, Michelangelo, and all those other Italians/ninja turtles. Take that, add a hundred years, and you end up with Italian vampires coming out of the walls.

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