Before Dracula: sleepy Serbian village stakes claim as home of the original vampire
Historical records detail villagers in Kisiljevo exhuming Petar Blagojevic, believing he rose from the grave to kill locals

At the back of an overgrown cemetery in a tiny Serbian village, a mysterious 300-year-old headstone marks the grave of the first recorded vampire.
Pushing through thick scrub, local historian Nenad Mihajlovic pulls back branches to reveal the gravesite. According to locals, it is the long-lost burial site of Petar Blagojevic, known as the father of vampires.
Backed by historical record, Mihajlovic and his fellow villagers hope Kisiljevo, about 100km east of the capital, Belgrade, can stake its claim as the cradle of vampires and suck in tourists.
It was here, in the summer of 1725, well before Irish writer Bram Stoker made Transylvania Dracula’s infamous home, that villagers exhumed Blagojevic’s body, suspecting him of rising from the grave at night to kill locals.

“Petar Blagojevic was found completely intact,” recalled Mirko Bogicevic, a former village mayor whose family has lived there for 11 generations.