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Feeling like a sudden and invisible burden, the life force of wary travellers were long subjected to the terror of the Aufhocker. A creature between the vampire, werewolf and goblin spirits, the legend of the empty road were long haunted by something heavy.
Feeling like a sudden and invisible burden, the life force of wary travellers were long subjected to the terror of the Aufhocker. A creature between the vampire, werewolf and goblin spirits, the legend of the empty road were long haunted by something heavy.
Across the old forests of central Europe, travelers once spoke of a terror that stalked lonely paths after dusk. In German folklore this entity is known as the aufhocker, a creature of fear and fatigue.
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The name aufhocker comes from German words meaning “to squat upon” or “to climb upon.” It is sometimes known as a Huckauf as well. Although the term appears in various regional traditions, the aufhocker’s most chilling aspect is its similarity to vampire lore. This is not the vampire that drinks blood from the neck. It is a predator that feeds on life force through relentless pursuit and physical contact.
A Footstep Followed
In folktales, the creature often appears at night along forest paths, river crossings, and isolated roads. A lone traveler walking home late in the dark might see nothing until a presence is suddenly at their shoulder. The aufhocker does not simply appear in view. It arrives with footsteps that echo the traveler’s own steps, as though it steps into the world by attaching itself to a living person.
Once it has latched on, it stays on the victim’s back. Physical weight, relentless pressure, increasing fear. Some descriptions say the creature physically climbs upon the victim and refuses to move, resting its full weight on the traveler. Others depict it as invisible yet oppressive, like someone riding piggyback only the victim can feel.
The Statue in Hildesheim, Lower Saxony: “Junge, lat die Appels stahn,/ süs packet deck dei Huckup an / Dei Huckup is en starken Wicht,/ hölt mit dei Stehldeifs bös Gericht.” (Boy, stop stealing apples,/ otherwise the thief will catch you,/ the thief is a strong imp,/ who will hold a wicked court against a thief like you.)
The result is the same. The victim becomes exhausted, panicked, and unable to escape. In some stories the victim falls or collapses from fatigue. In others, the pressure fractures resolve and spirit, leaving the person in a state of lasting terror or sickness. The person perched on the wanderer remains seated until the wanderer is released by the oncoming light, a prayer, or the ringing of bells.
The Werewolf Link
But what exactly is the Aufhocker, what does it look like? Some claim it is more like a shapeshifting goblin, a werewolf type of creature. It is also sometimes seen as a gigantic demonic dog. These characteristics are similar to that of the Black Dog in British folklore and the Kludde in Belgian tradition. Sometimes, the creatures are also said to be a black horse, luring people on their backs before throwing them in a swamp or water.
Prevalent in mid-western Germany, the Rhineland, and adjacent Dutch and Flemish regions, the Aufhocker legend reflects localized beliefs tied to historical werewolf trials from the 16th century, where such back-riding behaviors may have substituted earlier spirit-riding traditions.
In western Germany, the Aufhocker merges with the werewolf to form the Stüpp, a dangerous monster that leaps at people and has them carry it around until the victim dies of exhaustion. So, could it be more of a werewolf than a vampire adjecent legend then?
The Vampiric Creature
Other variations of the legend would claim it is much closer to our modern understanding of the vampire. The parallels with vampire tradition become clear when the aufhocker is viewed as a hunter of life rather than a consumer of blood. Where the classical vampire drains the physical body, the aufhocker drains strength, breath, and will. It attaches itself as parasitic shadow. It thrives in darkness rather than daylight.
Descriptions vary by region, but the theme remains constant. Some variations describe the creature as a shapeshifter or phantom form, while others combine it with local vampire traditions where the undead go out at night to feed and that it appears to travelers as a corpse they approach to examine. When the lonesome traveller is closes enough, it latches onto its prey.
Other Vampiric Creature from German Folklore:In German folklore, a Nachzehrer, literally a creature that consumes from the afterlife in German, is a type of Wiedergänger (revenant), which was believed to be able to drag the living after it into death, either through malice or through the desire to be closer to its loved ones through various means. A nachzehrer was thought to be able to drain their victim’s life-force remotely. This could involve devouring their own funeral shrouds and clothing – thought to be a very common sign of a nachzehrer. Many would claim that the Aufhocker is some sort of Wiederganger.
Scholars interpret the Aufhocker as a regional variant of broader European back-riding spirits such as the more vampiric Mare for instanve. Although the werewolf stories really took off in the 16th century, there have been tales about the heavy weight of something dragging you down like an Aufhocker since the twelfth century.
And in some version it is just that, a spirit, bodiless and invisible to the naked eye of the wary traveller.
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