大象传媒

If the doors are creaking and the lights are flickering, don鈥檛 go down those stairs鈥

You know the , and perhaps there鈥檚 an abandoned house in your neighbourhood that you walk a little bit quicker to get past. But where did the idea of a 鈥榟aunted house鈥 come from? From humble ghost stories to Hollywood mansions, 大象传媒 Bitesize investigates the origins of the haunted house.

An illustration of a fairy court with lots of tiny pink-skinned people among mushrooms and grass.
Image caption,
People referred to fairies as 'Wee Folk' or similar to avoid inviting mischief or malevolence into their homes

The global polter-guide

Ghost stories are universal and ancient - in fact, a Babylonian tablet dated BC 3,500 describing an exorcism is thought to show the earliest depiction of a ghost. In the 1st Century, Roman author Pliny the Younger recorded that a bearded apparition rattling chains was haunting a house in Athens, Greece - but outside of ghost stories and legendary spirits, documented hauntings as we think of them today are pretty sparse until much later.

This is likely because of different folk beliefs. For a long time in the British Isles, paranormal activity in folklore used to be the work of fairies rather than ghosts. Fairies across cultures were thought to be invisible as they operate in a different world that exists alongside our own, but could be invited into the home or even take people back to theirs. These would be responsible for helpful, mischievous or sometimes malevolent happenings about the house.

Similar ideas exist in pre-Islamic Arabian and later Islamic cultures: Jinn (often romanised as 鈥楧jinn鈥 or anglicised as 鈥榞enies鈥) are invisible beings that live on Earth alongside humans and occupy vacant homes and empty places. Some Jinn torment humans and make them behave badly, like demons and possessive spirits in many other cultures.

It seems no matter where in the world you are, people have always been sure they鈥檙e not home alone鈥

An etching of phantasmagoria theatre projections of a demon and a flying skull, hovering above a cowering audoence of people.
Image caption,
Phantasmagoria scared audiences out of their seats before horror movies could

Spend a penny, see a ghost

So when did ghosts officially start moving in? By the time Shakespeare was writing about them, English society was more sceptic of faeries, and witches were the supernatural threat to be wary of. Roman Catholic attitudes reflected that ghosts were souls visiting from Purgatory, either to warn or deceive the living. Ghosts as characters in plays such as Shakespeare鈥檚 Hamlet usually symbolised death or madness. During 18th Century, the oceans were reportedly haunted by the vessels lost at sea, and living sailors were warned to look out for phantom ships.

But it wouldn鈥檛 be until after the Industrial Revolution and the following centuries that the sites of Medieval historic battles, murders, executions and tragedies became haunted hotspots. Neogothic architecture brought back the look of the Middle Ages, and Gothic literature took off. Phantasmagoria, a form of horror theatre involving optical illusions, mesmerised Europe in the 18th Century, and by the 19th Century skeletons, demons and ghosts were projected on stages all over Britain.

Public interest turned into scientific research: paranormal investigation began when the Society for Psychical Research was founded in 1882, and 鈥榩sychic researchers鈥 used early technology to monitor ghostly goings on. By the turn of the century, castles, buildings and houses all over the world became haunted hotspots, with frequent ghost sightings reported in America, the UK and Europe.

And if that wasn鈥檛 enough, we also have this era to thank for the earliest haunted houses you could visit: In 1802, the 鈥榮care attraction鈥 was revolutionised when Marie Tussaud showcased her wax sculptures in the Lyceum theatre in London. Tussaud鈥檚 鈥淐hamber of Horrors鈥 featured eerie wax figures, whose likeness was taken directly from the death masks of executed people, including King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette - eek!

An etching of phantasmagoria theatre projections of a demon and a flying skull, hovering above a cowering audoence of people.
Image caption,
Phantasmagoria scared audiences out of their seats before horror movies could
A creepy tudor-style house in fog through bare trees.
Image caption,
Don't go in there! The haunted house has been a backdrop in horror cinema since cinema began

There's a haunting in the USA

As soon as making feature length films was possible, so was making feature-length horrors - and the haunted house backdrop became a staple of horror cinema. The 1927 film The Cat and the Canary, based on the 1922 play of the same name, is often attributed as the film that launched the haunted house in pop culture. In it, a dying millionaire is driven mad by his greedy relatives who are then tested by his haunted mansion.

Meanwhile offscreen, Halloween was a night for trick-or-treating for the kids in America, and pranks were a tradition of the season among teens. However the Great Depression (1929-1933) caused a lot of unhappiness, and Halloween hijinks started turning disruptive and even grisly as teens and young adults engaged in neighbourhood vandalism. To counter this, rather than ban Halloween celebrations, many communities organised 鈥榯rails of terror鈥 and 鈥榞host houses鈥 to keep teens and young adults entertained and off the streets.

Disney's Haunted Mansion, a 19th Century New Orleans-style house decked in halloween decorations.
Image caption,
The Haunted Mansion isn't so spooky from the outside

The modern phantasmagoria

But these ghost houses were only a neighbourhood haunt. In 1969, almost twenty years after the project was approved, Disney opened its large-scale ghost ride, the Haunted Mansion - an immersive ghost walk and train through a house of practical effects. Its launch solidified the haunted house as a cultural icon and inspired carnival rides and 鈥榙ark ride鈥 attractions all across the country.

And even haunted history repeats itself: American studios embraced another period of horror cinema in the 1980s, and Hollywood鈥檚 ghosts kept the haunted house alive in pop culture. As these spooky traditions persisted over time, renditions in literature and film today range from the vengeful to the misunderstood and sympathetic.

This article was published in October 2023

Disney's Haunted Mansion, a 19th Century New Orleans-style house decked in halloween decorations.
Image caption,
The Haunted Mansion isn't so spooky from the outside

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