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Elizabeth Báthory

Countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed (Hungarian: Báthori Erzsébet, pronounced [ˈbaːtori ˈɛrʒeːbɛt]; Slovak: Alžbeta Bátoriová; 7 August 1560 – 21 August 1614)[1] was a Hungarian noblewoman and alleged serial killer from the family of Báthory, who owned land in the Kingdom of Hungary (now Slovakia).

Elizabeth Báthory
Copy of the lost 1585 original portrait of Elizabeth Báthory
Born
Báthori Erzsébet

7 August 1560
Died21 August 1614(1614-08-21) (aged 54)
Other namesNádasdy Ferencné Báthori Erzsébet
SpouseFerenc II Nádasdy
Children8
Criminal penaltyConfinement until death
Details
Victims≥80; up to 650 alleged
Span of crimes
1590–1610
CountryKingdom of Hungary
Date apprehended
30 December 1610; 412 years ago (1610-12-30)

Báthory and four of her servants were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and women between 1590 and 1610.[2] Her servants were put on trial and convicted, whereas Báthory was confined to her home.[3] She was imprisoned within Castle of Csejte.[4]

The charges leveled against Báthory have been described by several historians as a witch-hunt.[5][6][7] Other writers, such as Michael Farin in 1989 have said that the accusations against Báthory were supported by testimony from more than 300 individuals, some of whom described physical evidence and the presence of mutilated dead, dying and imprisoned girls found at the time of her arrest.[8] In a 2018 article for Przegląd Nauk Historycznych (Historical Science Review) Aleksandra Bartosiewicz stated that when Báthory was persecuted, the accusations were a spectacle to destroy her family's influence in the region, which was considered a threat to the political interests of her neighbors, including the Habsburg empire.[9]

Stories about Báthory quickly became part of national folklore.[10] Legends describing her vampiric tendencies, such as the tale that she bathed in the blood of virgins to retain her youth, were generally recorded years after her death and are considered unreliable.[3] Some insist she inspired Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897),[11] although Stoker's notes on the novel provided no direct evidence to support this hypothesis.[12] Nicknames and literary epithets attributed to her include The Blood Countess and Countess Dracula.

Early life and education

 
Ecsed, the lake and the old castle

Báthory was born in 1560 on a family estate in Nyírbátor, Royal Hungary. She spent her childhood at Ecsed Castle. Her father was Baron George VI Báthory of the Ecsed branch of the family, brother of Andrew Bonaventura Báthory, who had been voivode of Transylvania. Her mother was Baroness Anna Báthory (1539–1570), daughter of Stephen Báthory of Somlyó, also voivode of Transylvania, who was of the Somlyó branch. Through her mother, Elizabeth was the niece of the Hungarian noble Stephen Báthory (1533–1586), the King of Poland, the Grand Duke of Lithuania of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, and Prince of Transylvania. She had several siblings.[9] Her older brother, Stephen Báthory (1555–1605), served as a Judge Royal of Hungary.

As a child, Báthory had multiple seizures that may have been caused by epilepsy.[13] At the time, symptoms relating to epilepsy were diagnosed as falling sickness and treatments included rubbing blood of a non-sufferer on the lips of an epileptic or giving the epileptic a mix of a non-sufferer's blood and piece of skull as their episode ended.[14][original research?]

A proposal made by some sources[who?] in order to explain Báthory's cruelty later in her life is that she was trained by her family to be cruel.[15]

Báthory was raised a Calvinist Protestant.[4] As a young woman, she learned Latin, German, Hungarian and Greek.[2][13][16] Born into a privileged family of nobility, Báthory was endowed with wealth, education and a prominent social rank.[17]

At the age of 13, before her first marriage, Báthory allegedly gave birth to a child.[15] The child, said to have been fathered by a peasant boy, was supposedly given away to a local woman who was trusted by the Báthory family.[15] The woman was paid for her actions, and the child was taken to Wallachia.[15] Evidence of this pregnancy came up long after Elizabeth's death, through rumors spread by peasants; therefore, the validity of the rumor is often disputed.

Biography

 
Portraits of Nádasdy and Báthori from the Čachtice Museum

In 1573,[9] Báthory was engaged to Count Ferenc Nádasdy, a member of the Nadasdy family. It was a political arrangement within the circles of the aristocracy. Nádasdy was the son of Baron Tamás Nádasdy de Nádasd et Fogarasföld and Orsolya Kanizsai.[citation needed]

On 8 May 1575, Báthory and Nádasdy were married at the palace of Vranov nad Topľou (Varannó in Hungarian).[9] The marriage resulted in combined land ownership in both Transylvania and the Kingdom of Hungary.[9]

Nádasdy's wedding gift to Báthory was his household, Castle of Csejte,[9] situated in the Little Carpathians near Vág-Ujhely and Trencsén (present-day Nové Mesto nad Váhom and Trenčín, Slovakia).[citation needed] The castle had been bought by his mother in 1569 and given to Nádasdy, who transferred it to Elizabeth during their nuptials, together with the Csejte country house and seventeen adjacent villages.[citation needed]

After the wedding, the couple lived in Nadasdy's castle at Sárvár.[9]

In 1578, three years into their marriage, Nádasdy became the chief commander of Hungarian troops, leading them to war against the Ottomans.[citation needed] Báthory managed business affairs and the family's multiple estates during the war. This role usually included responsibility for the Hungarian and Slovak people, providing medical care during the Long War (1593–1606), and Báthory was charged with the defense of her husband's estates, which lay on the route to Vienna.[16] The threat of attack was significant, for the village of Csejte had previously been plundered by the Ottomans while Sárvár, located near the border that divided Royal Hungary and Ottoman-occupied Hungary, was in even greater danger. There were several instances where Báthory intervened on behalf of destitute women, including a woman whose husband was captured by the Ottomans and a woman whose daughter was raped and impregnated.[citation needed]

Báthory's daughter, Anna Nádasdy, was born in 1585 and was later to become the wife of Nikola VI Zrinski. Báthory's other known children include Orsolya (Orsika) Nádasdy (1590 – unknown) who would later become the wife of István II Benyó; Katalin (Kata or Katherina) Nádasdy (1594 – unknown); András Nádasdy (1596–1603); and Pál (Paul) Nádasdy (1598–1650), father of Franz III Nádasdy, who was one of the leaders of the Magnate conspiracy against Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I.[citation needed] Some chronicles also indicate that the couple had another son, named Miklós Nádasdy, although this cannot be confirmed, and it could be that he was simply a cousin or died young, as he is not named in Báthory's will from 1610. György Nádasdy is also supposedly the name of one of the deceased Nádasdy infants, but this cannot be confirmed. All of Elizabeth's children were cared for by governesses, as Báthory herself had been.[citation needed]

Ferenc Nádasdy died on 4 January 1604 at the age of 48. Although the exact nature of the illness which led to his death is unknown, it seems to have started in 1601, and initially caused debilitating pain in his legs. From that time, he never fully recovered, and in 1603 became permanently disabled.[citation needed] He had been married to Báthory for 29 years. Before dying, Nádasdy entrusted his heirs and widow to György Thurzó, who would eventually lead the investigation into Báthory's crimes.[citation needed]

Accusations

Investigation

 
Elizabeth Báthory from Zay artist. Probably a copy of the other painting which is at the Hungarian National Museum, in Budapest (also made by Zay). Mentioned in the Magyar Várak book, page 34.

Between 1602 and 1604, after rumors of Báthory's atrocities had spread throughout the kingdom, Lutheran minister István Magyari made complaints against her, both publicly and at the court in Vienna.[18] In 1610, Matthias II assigned György Thurzó, the Palatine of Hungary, to investigate. Thurzó ordered two notaries, András Keresztúry and Mózes Cziráky,[19] to collect evidence in March 1610.[20] By October 1610 they had collected 52 witness statements;[19] by 1611, that number had risen to over 300.

Báthory is said to have begun killing daughters of the lesser gentry, who were sent to her gynaeceum by their parents to learn courtly etiquette.[3] The use of needles was also mentioned by the collaborators in court. There were many suspected forms of torture carried out by Báthory.

Some witnesses named relatives who died while at the gynaeceum. Others reported having seen traces of torture on dead bodies, some of which were buried in graveyards, and others in unmarked locations.

Arrest

On 13 December 1612, Nikola VI Zrinski confirmed the agreement with Thurzó about the imprisonment of Báthory and distribution of the estate.[19] On 31 December, Thurzó went to Csejte Castle and arrested Báthory along with four of her servants, who were accused of being her accomplices: Dorotya Semtész, Ilona Jó, Katarína Benická and János Újváry ("Ibis" or Fickó). According to Thurzó's letter to his wife, his unannounced visit found one dead girl and another living "prey" girl in the castle,[19] but there is no evidence that they asked her what had happened to her. Although it is commonly believed that Báthory was caught in the act of torture, she was having dinner. Initially, Thurzó made the declaration to Báthory's guests and villagers that he had caught her red-handed. However, she was arrested and detained prior to the discovery or presentation of the victims. It seems most likely that the claim of Thurzó's discovering Báthory covered in blood has been the embellishment of fictionalized accounts.[21]

Thurzó debated further proceedings with Báthory's son Paul and two of her sons-in-law, Nikola VI Zrinski and György Drugeth.[19] Her family, which ruled Transylvania, sought to avoid the loss of Báthory's property which was at risk of being seized by the crown following a public scandal.[citation needed] Thurzó, along with Paul and her two sons-in-law, originally planned for Báthory to be sent to a nunnery, but as accounts of her actions spread, they decided to keep her under strict house arrest.[22]

Most of the witnesses testified that they had heard the accusations from others, but did not see it themselves. The servants confessed under torture, which is not credible in contemporary proceedings. They were the king's witnesses, but they were executed.[23] Ilona Jó and Dorottya Szentes had their fingers torn out with a pair of red-hot pincers and were then burned alive. Due to his youth and the belief that he was less culpable, János Újváry was executed by a much less painful method: beheading. Afterwards, his body was burned on the same pyre as Jó and Szentes. Another servant, Erzsi Majorova, initially escaped capture, but was burned alive after being apprehended. Katarína Benická received a life sentence after evidence showed that she'd been abused by the other women.

The accusations of murder were based on rumors. There is no document to prove that anyone in the area complained about the Countess. In this time period, if someone was harmed, or someone even stole a chicken, a letter of complaint was written.[4][6][24] Two trials were held in the wake of Báthory's arrest: the first was held on 2 January 1611, and the second on 7 January 1611.[25]

The highest number of victims cited during the trial of Báthory's accomplices was 650, but this number comes from the claim by a servant girl named Susannah that Jakab Szilvássy, Báthory's court official, had seen the figure in one of Báthory's private books. The book was never revealed and Szilvássy never mentioned it in his testimony.[26]

Confinement and death

 
Aerial view of Castle of Csejte
 
Main tower at the Castle of Csejte

On 25 January 1611, Thurzó wrote a letter to King Matthias describing that they had captured and confined Báthory to her castle. The palatine also coordinated the steps of the investigation with the political struggle with the Prince of Transylvania.[clarification needed] She was detained in the castle of Csejte for the remainder of her life, where she died at the age of 54. As György Thurzó wrote, Elizabeth Báthory was locked in a bricked room, but according to other sources (written documents from the visit of priests, July 1614), she was able to move freely and unhindered in the castle, more akin to house arrest.[27][28]

She wrote a will in September 1610, in which she left all current and future inheritance possession to her children.[19] In the last month of 1614, she signed her arrangement, in which she distributed the estates, lands and possessions among her children.[29][7][contradictory] On the evening of 20 August 1614, Báthory complained to her bodyguard that her hands were cold, whereupon he replied "It's nothing, mistress. Just go lie down." She went to sleep and was found dead the following morning.[30] She was buried in the church of Csejte on 25 November 1614,[30] but according to some sources due to the villagers' uproar over having the Countess buried in their cemetery, her body was moved to her birth home at Ecsed, where it was interred at the Báthory family crypt.[31] The location of her body today is unknown but believed to be buried deep in the church area of the castle. The Csejte church and the castle of Csejte do not bear any markings of her possible grave.[citation needed]

Reputation

Several authors, such as László Nagy and Dr. Irma Szádeczky-Kardoss, have argued that Elizabeth Báthory was a victim of a conspiracy.[4][32] Nagy argued that the proceedings against Báthory were largely politically motivated, possibly due to her extensive wealth and ownership of large areas of land in Hungary, which increased after the death of her husband. The theory is consistent with Hungarian history at that time, which included religious and political conflicts, especially relating to the wars with the Ottoman Empire, the spread of Protestantism and the extension of Habsburg power over Hungary.[33] Moreover, Matthias owed a large debt to Báthory, which was cancelled after she was arrested.[1]

There are counter-arguments made against this theory. The investigation into Báthory's crimes was sparked by complaints from a Lutheran minister, István Magyari.[18] This does not contribute to the notion of a Catholic/Habsburg plot against the Protestant Báthory, although religious tension is still a possible source of conflict, as Báthory was raised Calvinist, not Lutheran.[17] To support Báthory's innocence, the testimony of around 300 witnesses[citation needed] and the physical evidence collected by the investigators have to be addressed or disputed. That evidence included numerous bodies and dead and dying girls found when the castle was entered by Thurzó.[8] Szádeczky-Kardoss argues that the physical evidence was exaggerated and Thurzó misrepresented dead and wounded patients as victims of Báthory, as disgracing her would greatly benefit his political state ambitions.[4]

Folklore and popular culture

The case of Elizabeth Báthory inspired numerous stories during the 18th and 19th centuries. The most common motif of these works was that of the countess bathing in her virgin victims' blood to retain beauty or youth. This legend appeared in print for the first time in 1729, in the Jesuit scholar László Turóczi's Tragica Historia, the first written account of the Báthory case.[34] The story came into question in 1817 when the witness accounts (which had surfaced in 1765) were published for the first time. They included no references to blood baths.[35] In his book Hungary and Transylvania, published in 1850, John Paget describes the supposed origins of Báthory's blood-bathing, although his tale seems to be a fictionalized recitation of oral history from the area.[36] It is difficult to know how accurate his account of events is. Sadistic pleasure is considered a far more plausible motive for Báthory's crimes.[37]

Báthory has been labelled by Guinness World Records as the most prolific female murderer, though the number of her victims is debated.[38]

Ancestry

Báthory was the great-great-granddaughter of Barbara Aleksandrówna and Bolesław IV of Warsaw, and Mikalojus Radvila the Old; the 3rd great-granddaughter of Bolesław Januszowic; the 4th great-granddaughter of Vladimir Olgerdovich; and the 5th great-granddaughter of Algirdas.

Ancestors of Elizabeth Báthory[39][40]
8. Andrew Báthory of Ecsed
4. Stephen Báthory of Ecsed
9. Dorothea Várdai
2. George Báthory of Ecsed
10. Konrad III Rudy
5. Sophia of Masovia
11. Anna Radziwiłł
1. Elizabeth Báthory of Ecsed
12. Nicholas Báthory of Somlyó
6. Stephen Báthory of Somlyó
13. Sophia Bánffy of Losonc
3. Anne Báthory of Somlyó
14. Stephen Telegdi
7. Catherine Telegdi
15. Margaret Bebek of Pelsőcz

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Pallardy, Richard. "Elizabeth Bathory | Biography & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. from the original on 24 July 2015.
  2. ^ a b Ramsland, Katherine. . Crime Library. Turner Entertainment Networks Inc. Archived from the original on 11 March 2014. Retrieved 13 June 2014.
  3. ^ a b c Gordon, Dee (2017). Bad Girls from History: Wicked Or Misunderstood?. South Yorkshire, England: Pen & Sword Books. ISBN 9781473862845.
  4. ^ a b c d e Irma Szádeczky-Kardoss: "The Bloody Countess? An Examination of the Life and Trial of Erzsébet Báthory", translated by Lujza Nehrebeczky, Hungarian original published in Élet és Tudomány , September 2005
  5. ^ Levack, Brian P. (28 March 2013). The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America. OUP Oxford. p. 348. ISBN 978-0-19-164883-0.
  6. ^ a b Lengyel, Tünde; Várkonyi, Gábor (2011). Báthory Erzsébet, egy asszony élete [Erzsébet Báthory: The Life of a Woman]. Budapest: General Press. pp. 285–291. ISBN 9789636431686.
  7. ^ a b Lengyel Tünde, Várkonyi Gábor: Báthory Erzsébet - egy asszony élete / Life of a woman
  8. ^ a b Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). p. 293. OCLC 654683776.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Bartosiewicz, Aleksandra (December 2018). "Elisabeth Báthory – a true story". Przegląd Nauk Historycznych. Lodz University Press, Poland. 17 (3): 103–122. doi:10.18778/1644-857X.17.03.04. S2CID 188107395.
  10. ^ . Elizabethbathory.net. Archived from the original on 20 October 2013. Retrieved 18 November 2013.
  11. ^ Joshi, S. T. (2011). Encyclopedia of the Vampire: The Living Dead in Myth, Legend, and Popular Culture. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 6. ISBN 9780313378331. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  12. ^ Stoker, Bram; Eighteen-Bisang, Robert; Miller, Elizabeth (2008). Bram Stoker's Notes for Dracula: A Facsimile Edition. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. p. 131. ISBN 9780786477302. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  13. ^ a b The most notorious serial killers : ruthless, twisted murderers whose crimes chilled the nation. United Kingdom: TI Incorporated Books. 2017. ISBN 9781683300274. OCLC 982117998.
  14. ^ Holmes, Gregory L. (January 1995). "The falling sickness. A history of epilepsy from the Greeks to the beginnings of modern neurology". Journal of Epilepsy. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier. 8 (1): 214–215. doi:10.1016/s0896-6974(95)90017-9. ISSN 0896-6974. PMC 1081463.
  15. ^ a b c d Leslie, Carroll (2014). Royal Pains: A Rogues' Gallery of Brats, Brutes, and Bad Seeds. New York City: New American Library. pp. 160–161. ISBN 9781101478776. OCLC 883306686.
  16. ^ a b Bathory-Kitsz, Dennis (4 June 2009). "Báthory Erzsébet – Báthory Erzsébet: Short FAQ". Bathory.org. Retrieved 15 September 2012.[self-published source]
  17. ^ a b Thorne, Tony (2012). Countess Dracula: The Life and Times of Elisabeth Bathory, the Blood Countess. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781408833650.
  18. ^ a b Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). pp. 234–237. OCLC 654683776.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Kord, Susanne (2009). Murderesses in German Writing, 1720-1860: Heroines of Horror. Cambridge University Press. pp. 56–57. ISBN 978-0-521-51977-9.
  20. ^ Letters from Thurzó to both men on 5 March 1610, printed in Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). pp. 265–266, 276–278. OCLC 654683776.
  21. ^ Thorne, Tony (1997). Countess Dracula. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 18–19. ISBN 9780747536413.
  22. ^ A letter from 12 December 1610 by Elizabeth's son-in-law Zrínyi to Thurzó refers to an agreement made earlier. See Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). p. 291. OCLC 654683776.
  23. ^ "The Life of Erzsébet Báthory". the-golden-dawn.livejournal.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  24. ^ "Báthory Erzsébet". nadasdymuzeum.hu.
  25. ^ "No Blood in the Water: The Legal and GenderConspiracies Against Countess Elizabeth Bathory in Historical Context".
  26. ^ Thorne, Tony (1997). Countess Dracula. London, England: Bloomsbury. p. 53. ISBN 978-1408833650.
  27. ^ Bledsaw, Rachael (20 February 2014). No Blood in the Water: The Legal and Gender Conspiracies Against Countess Elizabeth Bathory in Historical Context (MS thesis). Illinois State University. doi:10.30707/ETD2014.Bledsaw.R.
  28. ^ Ferencné, Palkó (2014). Báthory Erzsébet Pere (BA thesis). University of Miskolc.
  29. ^ Szádeczky-Kardoss Irma - Báthory Erzsébet igazsága / The truth of Elizabeth Báthory (10 years of research using contemporary correspondence)
  30. ^ a b Infamous Lady the true story of Countess Erzsebet Bathory Kimberly L. Craft 2009 p.298
  31. ^ Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). p. 246. OCLC 654683776.
  32. ^ Nagy, László. A rossz hirü Báthoryak. Budapest: Kossuth Könyvkiadó 1984[page needed]
  33. ^ Szakály, Ferenc (1994). "The Early Ottoman Period, Including Royal Hungary, 1526–1606". In Sugar, Peter F. (ed.). A History of Hungary. pp. 83–99. ISBN 978-0-253-20867-5.
  34. ^ in Ungaria suis *** regibus compendia data, Typis Academicis Soc. Jesu per Fridericum Gall. Anno MCCCXXIX. Mense Sepembri Die 8. p 188–193, quoted by Farin
  35. ^ Hesperus, Prague, June 1817, Vol. 1, No. 31, pp. 241–248 and July 1817, Vol. 2, No. 34, pp. 270–272
  36. ^ Paget, John (1850). Hungary and Transylvania; with remarks on their condition, Social, Political and Economical. Philadelphia: Lea & Blanchard. pp. 50–51.
  37. ^ Alois Freyherr von Mednyansky: Elisabeth Báthory, in Hesperus, Prague, October 1812, vol. 2, No. 59, pp. 470–472, quoted by Farin, Michael (1989). Heroine des Grauens: Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Báthory: in Briefen, Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen [Heroine of horror: the life and work of Elisabeth Báthory: in letters, testimonies and fantasy games] (in German). pp. 61–65. OCLC 654683776.
  38. ^ "Most prolific female murderer". Guinness World Records. Guinness World Records Limited. Retrieved 3 May 2018. The most prolific female murderer and the most prolific murderer of the western world, was Elizabeth Báthory, who practised vampirism on girls and young women. Described as the most vicious female serial killer of all time, the facts and fiction on the events that occurred behind the deaths of these young girls are blurred. Throughout the 15th century, she is alleged to have killed more than 600 virgins.
  39. ^ Horn, Ildikó (2002). Báthory András [Andrew Báthory] (in Hungarian). Új Mandátum. pp. 245–246. ISBN 978-963-9336-51-3.
  40. ^ Markó, László (2000). A magyar állam főméltóságai Szent Istvántól napjainkig: Életrajzi Lexikon [Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days: A Biographical Encyclopedia] (in Hungarian). Magyar Könyvklub. p. 256. ISBN 978-963-547-085-3.

Further reading

  • McNally, Raymond T. (1983). Dracula Was a Woman: In Search of the Blood Countess of Transylvania. New York: McGraw Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-045671-6. Raymond T. McNally (1931–2002) was a professor of Russian and East European History at Boston College
  • Thorne, Tony (1997). Countess Dracula. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-7475-2900-2.
  • Penrose, Valentine (2006). The Bloody Countess: Atrocities of Erzsébet Báthory. translator: Trocchi, Alexander. Solar Books. ISBN 978-0-9714578-2-9. Translation from the French Erzsébet Báthory la Comtesse sanglante
  • Craft, Kimberly (2009). Infamous Lady: The True Story of Countess Erzsébet Báthory. ISBN 978-1-4495-1344-3.
  • Ramsland, Katherine. . Crime Library. Turner Entertainment Networks Inc. Archived from the original on 11 March 2014.
  • Zsuffa, Joseph (2015). Countess of the Moon. Griffin Press. ISBN 978-0-9828813-8-5.

External links

  • The Blood Countess? - Epitome of Dr. Szádeczky-Kardoss Irma's research
  • BBC piece on Erzsébet Báthory, Created 2 August 2001; Updated 28 January 2002
  • (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 15 April 2015. Festival in Čachtice, Slovakia
  • Marek, Miroslav. "A genealogy of the Nádasdy family, including her descendants". Genealogy.EU.
  • Marek, Miroslav. "A genealogy of the Báthory family". Genealogy.EU.
  • A complete genealogy of all descendants Elizabeth Báthory (17th-20th century)
  • Novotny, Pavel (2014). [400 Years of Bloody Countess - The Secret Behind the Secret] (Motion picture). Archived from the original on 15 February 2015. Retrieved 27 May 2014. (Documentary film)

elizabeth, báthory, this, article, about, hungarian, countess, 1982, song, venom, countess, bathory, song, native, form, this, personal, name, ecsedi, báthori, erzsébet, this, article, uses, western, name, order, when, mentioning, individuals, this, article, m. This article is about the Hungarian countess For the 1982 song by Venom see Countess Bathory song The native form of this personal name is Ecsedi Bathori Erzsebet This article uses Western name order when mentioning individuals This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article has an unclear citation style The references used may be made clearer with a different or consistent style of citation and footnoting March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Elizabeth Bathory news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Countess Elizabeth Bathory de Ecsed Hungarian Bathori Erzsebet pronounced ˈbaːtori ˈɛrʒeːbɛt Slovak Alzbeta Batoriova 7 August 1560 21 August 1614 1 was a Hungarian noblewoman and alleged serial killer from the family of Bathory who owned land in the Kingdom of Hungary now Slovakia Elizabeth BathoryCopy of the lost 1585 original portrait of Elizabeth BathoryBornBathori Erzsebet7 August 1560Nyirbator Kingdom of HungaryDied21 August 1614 1614 08 21 aged 54 Csejthe Kingdom of Hungary now Cachtice Slovakia Other namesNadasdy Ferencne Bathori ErzsebetSpouseFerenc II NadasdyChildren8Criminal penaltyConfinement until deathDetailsVictims 80 up to 650 allegedSpan of crimes1590 1610CountryKingdom of HungaryDate apprehended30 December 1610 412 years ago 1610 12 30 Bathory and four of her servants were accused of torturing and killing hundreds of girls and women between 1590 and 1610 2 Her servants were put on trial and convicted whereas Bathory was confined to her home 3 She was imprisoned within Castle of Csejte 4 The charges leveled against Bathory have been described by several historians as a witch hunt 5 6 7 Other writers such as Michael Farin in 1989 have said that the accusations against Bathory were supported by testimony from more than 300 individuals some of whom described physical evidence and the presence of mutilated dead dying and imprisoned girls found at the time of her arrest 8 In a 2018 article for Przeglad Nauk Historycznych Historical Science Review Aleksandra Bartosiewicz stated that when Bathory was persecuted the accusations were a spectacle to destroy her family s influence in the region which was considered a threat to the political interests of her neighbors including the Habsburg empire 9 Stories about Bathory quickly became part of national folklore 10 Legends describing her vampiric tendencies such as the tale that she bathed in the blood of virgins to retain her youth were generally recorded years after her death and are considered unreliable 3 Some insist she inspired Bram Stoker s Dracula 1897 11 although Stoker s notes on the novel provided no direct evidence to support this hypothesis 12 Nicknames and literary epithets attributed to her include The Blood Countess and Countess Dracula Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Biography 3 Accusations 3 1 Investigation 3 2 Arrest 4 Confinement and death 5 Reputation 6 Folklore and popular culture 7 Ancestry 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life and education Edit Ecsed the lake and the old castle Bathory was born in 1560 on a family estate in Nyirbator Royal Hungary She spent her childhood at Ecsed Castle Her father was Baron George VI Bathory of the Ecsed branch of the family brother of Andrew Bonaventura Bathory who had been voivode of Transylvania Her mother was Baroness Anna Bathory 1539 1570 daughter of Stephen Bathory of Somlyo also voivode of Transylvania who was of the Somlyo branch Through her mother Elizabeth was the niece of the Hungarian noble Stephen Bathory 1533 1586 the King of Poland the Grand Duke of Lithuania of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and Prince of Transylvania She had several siblings 9 Her older brother Stephen Bathory 1555 1605 served as a Judge Royal of Hungary As a child Bathory had multiple seizures that may have been caused by epilepsy 13 At the time symptoms relating to epilepsy were diagnosed as falling sickness and treatments included rubbing blood of a non sufferer on the lips of an epileptic or giving the epileptic a mix of a non sufferer s blood and piece of skull as their episode ended 14 original research A proposal made by some sources who in order to explain Bathory s cruelty later in her life is that she was trained by her family to be cruel 15 Bathory was raised a Calvinist Protestant 4 As a young woman she learned Latin German Hungarian and Greek 2 13 16 Born into a privileged family of nobility Bathory was endowed with wealth education and a prominent social rank 17 At the age of 13 before her first marriage Bathory allegedly gave birth to a child 15 The child said to have been fathered by a peasant boy was supposedly given away to a local woman who was trusted by the Bathory family 15 The woman was paid for her actions and the child was taken to Wallachia 15 Evidence of this pregnancy came up long after Elizabeth s death through rumors spread by peasants therefore the validity of the rumor is often disputed Biography Edit Portraits of Nadasdy and Bathori from the Cachtice Museum In 1573 9 Bathory was engaged to Count Ferenc Nadasdy a member of the Nadasdy family It was a political arrangement within the circles of the aristocracy Nadasdy was the son of Baron Tamas Nadasdy de Nadasd et Fogarasfold and Orsolya Kanizsai citation needed On 8 May 1575 Bathory and Nadasdy were married at the palace of Vranov nad Topľou Varanno in Hungarian 9 The marriage resulted in combined land ownership in both Transylvania and the Kingdom of Hungary 9 Nadasdy s wedding gift to Bathory was his household Castle of Csejte 9 situated in the Little Carpathians near Vag Ujhely and Trencsen present day Nove Mesto nad Vahom and Trencin Slovakia citation needed The castle had been bought by his mother in 1569 and given to Nadasdy who transferred it to Elizabeth during their nuptials together with the Csejte country house and seventeen adjacent villages citation needed After the wedding the couple lived in Nadasdy s castle at Sarvar 9 In 1578 three years into their marriage Nadasdy became the chief commander of Hungarian troops leading them to war against the Ottomans citation needed Bathory managed business affairs and the family s multiple estates during the war This role usually included responsibility for the Hungarian and Slovak people providing medical care during the Long War 1593 1606 and Bathory was charged with the defense of her husband s estates which lay on the route to Vienna 16 The threat of attack was significant for the village of Csejte had previously been plundered by the Ottomans while Sarvar located near the border that divided Royal Hungary and Ottoman occupied Hungary was in even greater danger There were several instances where Bathory intervened on behalf of destitute women including a woman whose husband was captured by the Ottomans and a woman whose daughter was raped and impregnated citation needed Bathory s daughter Anna Nadasdy was born in 1585 and was later to become the wife of Nikola VI Zrinski Bathory s other known children include Orsolya Orsika Nadasdy 1590 unknown who would later become the wife of Istvan II Benyo Katalin Kata or Katherina Nadasdy 1594 unknown Andras Nadasdy 1596 1603 and Pal Paul Nadasdy 1598 1650 father of Franz III Nadasdy who was one of the leaders of the Magnate conspiracy against Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I citation needed Some chronicles also indicate that the couple had another son named Miklos Nadasdy although this cannot be confirmed and it could be that he was simply a cousin or died young as he is not named in Bathory s will from 1610 Gyorgy Nadasdy is also supposedly the name of one of the deceased Nadasdy infants but this cannot be confirmed All of Elizabeth s children were cared for by governesses as Bathory herself had been citation needed Ferenc Nadasdy died on 4 January 1604 at the age of 48 Although the exact nature of the illness which led to his death is unknown it seems to have started in 1601 and initially caused debilitating pain in his legs From that time he never fully recovered and in 1603 became permanently disabled citation needed He had been married to Bathory for 29 years Before dying Nadasdy entrusted his heirs and widow to Gyorgy Thurzo who would eventually lead the investigation into Bathory s crimes citation needed Accusations EditInvestigation Edit Elizabeth Bathory from Zay artist Probably a copy of the other painting which is at the Hungarian National Museum in Budapest also made by Zay Mentioned in the Magyar Varak book page 34 Between 1602 and 1604 after rumors of Bathory s atrocities had spread throughout the kingdom Lutheran minister Istvan Magyari made complaints against her both publicly and at the court in Vienna 18 In 1610 Matthias II assigned Gyorgy Thurzo the Palatine of Hungary to investigate Thurzo ordered two notaries Andras Keresztury and Mozes Cziraky 19 to collect evidence in March 1610 20 By October 1610 they had collected 52 witness statements 19 by 1611 that number had risen to over 300 Bathory is said to have begun killing daughters of the lesser gentry who were sent to her gynaeceum by their parents to learn courtly etiquette 3 The use of needles was also mentioned by the collaborators in court There were many suspected forms of torture carried out by Bathory Some witnesses named relatives who died while at the gynaeceum Others reported having seen traces of torture on dead bodies some of which were buried in graveyards and others in unmarked locations Arrest Edit On 13 December 1612 Nikola VI Zrinski confirmed the agreement with Thurzo about the imprisonment of Bathory and distribution of the estate 19 On 31 December Thurzo went to Csejte Castle and arrested Bathory along with four of her servants who were accused of being her accomplices Dorotya Semtesz Ilona Jo Katarina Benicka and Janos Ujvary Ibis or Ficko According to Thurzo s letter to his wife his unannounced visit found one dead girl and another living prey girl in the castle 19 but there is no evidence that they asked her what had happened to her Although it is commonly believed that Bathory was caught in the act of torture she was having dinner Initially Thurzo made the declaration to Bathory s guests and villagers that he had caught her red handed However she was arrested and detained prior to the discovery or presentation of the victims It seems most likely that the claim of Thurzo s discovering Bathory covered in blood has been the embellishment of fictionalized accounts 21 Thurzo debated further proceedings with Bathory s son Paul and two of her sons in law Nikola VI Zrinski and Gyorgy Drugeth 19 Her family which ruled Transylvania sought to avoid the loss of Bathory s property which was at risk of being seized by the crown following a public scandal citation needed Thurzo along with Paul and her two sons in law originally planned for Bathory to be sent to a nunnery but as accounts of her actions spread they decided to keep her under strict house arrest 22 Most of the witnesses testified that they had heard the accusations from others but did not see it themselves The servants confessed under torture which is not credible in contemporary proceedings They were the king s witnesses but they were executed 23 Ilona Jo and Dorottya Szentes had their fingers torn out with a pair of red hot pincers and were then burned alive Due to his youth and the belief that he was less culpable Janos Ujvary was executed by a much less painful method beheading Afterwards his body was burned on the same pyre as Jo and Szentes Another servant Erzsi Majorova initially escaped capture but was burned alive after being apprehended Katarina Benicka received a life sentence after evidence showed that she d been abused by the other women The accusations of murder were based on rumors There is no document to prove that anyone in the area complained about the Countess In this time period if someone was harmed or someone even stole a chicken a letter of complaint was written 4 6 24 Two trials were held in the wake of Bathory s arrest the first was held on 2 January 1611 and the second on 7 January 1611 25 The highest number of victims cited during the trial of Bathory s accomplices was 650 but this number comes from the claim by a servant girl named Susannah that Jakab Szilvassy Bathory s court official had seen the figure in one of Bathory s private books The book was never revealed and Szilvassy never mentioned it in his testimony 26 Confinement and death Edit Aerial view of Castle of Csejte Main tower at the Castle of Csejte On 25 January 1611 Thurzo wrote a letter to King Matthias describing that they had captured and confined Bathory to her castle The palatine also coordinated the steps of the investigation with the political struggle with the Prince of Transylvania clarification needed She was detained in the castle of Csejte for the remainder of her life where she died at the age of 54 As Gyorgy Thurzo wrote Elizabeth Bathory was locked in a bricked room but according to other sources written documents from the visit of priests July 1614 she was able to move freely and unhindered in the castle more akin to house arrest 27 28 She wrote a will in September 1610 in which she left all current and future inheritance possession to her children 19 In the last month of 1614 she signed her arrangement in which she distributed the estates lands and possessions among her children 29 7 contradictory On the evening of 20 August 1614 Bathory complained to her bodyguard that her hands were cold whereupon he replied It s nothing mistress Just go lie down She went to sleep and was found dead the following morning 30 She was buried in the church of Csejte on 25 November 1614 30 but according to some sources due to the villagers uproar over having the Countess buried in their cemetery her body was moved to her birth home at Ecsed where it was interred at the Bathory family crypt 31 The location of her body today is unknown but believed to be buried deep in the church area of the castle The Csejte church and the castle of Csejte do not bear any markings of her possible grave citation needed Reputation EditSeveral authors such as Laszlo Nagy and Dr Irma Szadeczky Kardoss have argued that Elizabeth Bathory was a victim of a conspiracy 4 32 Nagy argued that the proceedings against Bathory were largely politically motivated possibly due to her extensive wealth and ownership of large areas of land in Hungary which increased after the death of her husband The theory is consistent with Hungarian history at that time which included religious and political conflicts especially relating to the wars with the Ottoman Empire the spread of Protestantism and the extension of Habsburg power over Hungary 33 Moreover Matthias owed a large debt to Bathory which was cancelled after she was arrested 1 There are counter arguments made against this theory The investigation into Bathory s crimes was sparked by complaints from a Lutheran minister Istvan Magyari 18 This does not contribute to the notion of a Catholic Habsburg plot against the Protestant Bathory although religious tension is still a possible source of conflict as Bathory was raised Calvinist not Lutheran 17 To support Bathory s innocence the testimony of around 300 witnesses citation needed and the physical evidence collected by the investigators have to be addressed or disputed That evidence included numerous bodies and dead and dying girls found when the castle was entered by Thurzo 8 Szadeczky Kardoss argues that the physical evidence was exaggerated and Thurzo misrepresented dead and wounded patients as victims of Bathory as disgracing her would greatly benefit his political state ambitions 4 Folklore and popular culture EditMain article Elizabeth Bathory in popular culture The case of Elizabeth Bathory inspired numerous stories during the 18th and 19th centuries The most common motif of these works was that of the countess bathing in her virgin victims blood to retain beauty or youth This legend appeared in print for the first time in 1729 in the Jesuit scholar Laszlo Turoczi s Tragica Historia the first written account of the Bathory case 34 The story came into question in 1817 when the witness accounts which had surfaced in 1765 were published for the first time They included no references to blood baths 35 In his book Hungary and Transylvania published in 1850 John Paget describes the supposed origins of Bathory s blood bathing although his tale seems to be a fictionalized recitation of oral history from the area 36 It is difficult to know how accurate his account of events is Sadistic pleasure is considered a far more plausible motive for Bathory s crimes 37 Bathory has been labelled by Guinness World Records as the most prolific female murderer though the number of her victims is debated 38 Ancestry EditBathory was the great great granddaughter of Barbara Aleksandrowna and Boleslaw IV of Warsaw and Mikalojus Radvila the Old the 3rd great granddaughter of Boleslaw Januszowic the 4th great granddaughter of Vladimir Olgerdovich and the 5th great granddaughter of Algirdas Ancestors of Elizabeth Bathory 39 40 8 Andrew Bathory of Ecsed4 Stephen Bathory of Ecsed9 Dorothea Vardai2 George Bathory of Ecsed10 Konrad III Rudy5 Sophia of Masovia11 Anna Radziwill1 Elizabeth Bathory of Ecsed12 Nicholas Bathory of Somlyo6 Stephen Bathory of Somlyo13 Sophia Banffy of Losonc3 Anne Bathory of Somlyo14 Stephen Telegdi7 Catherine Telegdi15 Margaret Bebek of PelsoczSee also Edit Hungary portal Biography portal Law portal Politics portal History portalCountess Dracula 1971 horror film directed by Peter Sasdy Cruelty and the Beast 1998 conceptual album by British gothic metal band Cradle of Filth Immoral Tales 1973 portmanteau film the third story is Erzsebet Bathory Bathory 2008 historical drama written and directed by Juraj Jakubisko The Countess 2009 drama historical film written and directed by Julie Delpy Blood Countess 2020 fictional novel written by Lana Popovic Bathory Swedish metal band 1983 2004 Elizabeth Branch Elizabeth Brownrigg Katerina of Komarov Delphine LaLaurie Catalina de los Rios y Lisperguer Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova Mariam Soulakiotis Ranavalona I List of serial killers by countryReferences Edit a b Pallardy Richard Elizabeth Bathory Biography amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 24 July 2015 a b Ramsland Katherine Lady of Blood Countess Bathory Crime Library Turner Entertainment Networks Inc Archived from the original on 11 March 2014 Retrieved 13 June 2014 a b c Gordon Dee 2017 Bad Girls from History Wicked Or Misunderstood South Yorkshire England Pen amp Sword Books ISBN 9781473862845 a b c d e Irma Szadeczky Kardoss The Bloody Countess An Examination of the Life and Trial of Erzsebet Bathory translated by Lujza Nehrebeczky Hungarian original published in Elet es Tudomany September 2005 Levack Brian P 28 March 2013 The Oxford Handbook of Witchcraft in Early Modern Europe and Colonial America OUP Oxford p 348 ISBN 978 0 19 164883 0 a b Lengyel Tunde Varkonyi Gabor 2011 Bathory Erzsebet egy asszony elete Erzsebet Bathory The Life of a Woman Budapest General Press pp 285 291 ISBN 9789636431686 a b Lengyel Tunde Varkonyi Gabor Bathory Erzsebet egy asszony elete Life of a woman a b Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German p 293 OCLC 654683776 a b c d e f g Bartosiewicz Aleksandra December 2018 Elisabeth Bathory a true story Przeglad Nauk Historycznych Lodz University Press Poland 17 3 103 122 doi 10 18778 1644 857X 17 03 04 S2CID 188107395 The Plain Story Elizabethbathory net Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 Retrieved 18 November 2013 Joshi S T 2011 Encyclopedia of the Vampire The Living Dead in Myth Legend and Popular Culture Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 6 ISBN 9780313378331 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Stoker Bram Eighteen Bisang Robert Miller Elizabeth 2008 Bram Stoker s Notes for Dracula A Facsimile Edition Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 131 ISBN 9780786477302 Retrieved 29 September 2018 a b The most notorious serial killers ruthless twisted murderers whose crimes chilled the nation United Kingdom TI Incorporated Books 2017 ISBN 9781683300274 OCLC 982117998 Holmes Gregory L January 1995 The falling sickness A history of epilepsy from the Greeks to the beginnings of modern neurology Journal of Epilepsy Amsterdam Netherlands Elsevier 8 1 214 215 doi 10 1016 s0896 6974 95 90017 9 ISSN 0896 6974 PMC 1081463 a b c d Leslie Carroll 2014 Royal Pains A Rogues Gallery of Brats Brutes and Bad Seeds New York City New American Library pp 160 161 ISBN 9781101478776 OCLC 883306686 a b Bathory Kitsz Dennis 4 June 2009 Bathory Erzsebet Bathory Erzsebet Short FAQ Bathory org Retrieved 15 September 2012 self published source a b Thorne Tony 2012 Countess Dracula The Life and Times of Elisabeth Bathory the Blood Countess Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 9781408833650 a b Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German pp 234 237 OCLC 654683776 a b c d e f Kord Susanne 2009 Murderesses in German Writing 1720 1860 Heroines of Horror Cambridge University Press pp 56 57 ISBN 978 0 521 51977 9 Letters from Thurzo to both men on 5 March 1610 printed in Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German pp 265 266 276 278 OCLC 654683776 Thorne Tony 1997 Countess Dracula London Bloomsbury pp 18 19 ISBN 9780747536413 A letter from 12 December 1610 by Elizabeth s son in law Zrinyi to Thurzo refers to an agreement made earlier See Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German p 291 OCLC 654683776 The Life of Erzsebet Bathory the golden dawn livejournal com Retrieved 15 March 2022 Bathory Erzsebet nadasdymuzeum hu No Blood in the Water The Legal and GenderConspiracies Against Countess Elizabeth Bathory in Historical Context Thorne Tony 1997 Countess Dracula London England Bloomsbury p 53 ISBN 978 1408833650 Bledsaw Rachael 20 February 2014 No Blood in the Water The Legal and Gender Conspiracies Against Countess Elizabeth Bathory in Historical Context MS thesis Illinois State University doi 10 30707 ETD2014 Bledsaw R Ferencne Palko 2014 Bathory Erzsebet Pere BA thesis University of Miskolc Szadeczky Kardoss Irma Bathory Erzsebet igazsaga The truth of Elizabeth Bathory 10 years of research using contemporary correspondence a b Infamous Lady the true story of Countess Erzsebet Bathory Kimberly L Craft 2009 p 298 Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German p 246 OCLC 654683776 Nagy Laszlo A rossz hiru Bathoryak Budapest Kossuth Konyvkiado 1984 page needed Szakaly Ferenc 1994 The Early Ottoman Period Including Royal Hungary 1526 1606 In Sugar Peter F ed A History of Hungary pp 83 99 ISBN 978 0 253 20867 5 in Ungaria suis regibus compendia data Typis Academicis Soc Jesu per Fridericum Gall Anno MCCCXXIX Mense Sepembri Die 8 p 188 193 quoted by Farin Hesperus Prague June 1817 Vol 1 No 31 pp 241 248 and July 1817 Vol 2 No 34 pp 270 272 Paget John 1850 Hungary and Transylvania with remarks on their condition Social Political and Economical Philadelphia Lea amp Blanchard pp 50 51 Alois Freyherr von Mednyansky Elisabeth Bathory in Hesperus Prague October 1812 vol 2 No 59 pp 470 472 quoted by Farin Michael 1989 Heroine des Grauens Wirken und Leben der Elisabeth Bathory in Briefen Zeugenaussagen und Phantasiespielen Heroine of horror the life and work of Elisabeth Bathory in letters testimonies and fantasy games in German pp 61 65 OCLC 654683776 Most prolific female murderer Guinness World Records Guinness World Records Limited Retrieved 3 May 2018 The most prolific female murderer and the most prolific murderer of the western world was Elizabeth Bathory who practised vampirism on girls and young women Described as the most vicious female serial killer of all time the facts and fiction on the events that occurred behind the deaths of these young girls are blurred Throughout the 15th century she is alleged to have killed more than 600 virgins Horn Ildiko 2002 Bathory Andras Andrew Bathory in Hungarian Uj Mandatum pp 245 246 ISBN 978 963 9336 51 3 Marko Laszlo 2000 A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig Eletrajzi Lexikon Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days A Biographical Encyclopedia in Hungarian Magyar Konyvklub p 256 ISBN 978 963 547 085 3 Further reading EditMcNally Raymond T 1983 Dracula Was a Woman In Search of the Blood Countess of Transylvania New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 045671 6 Raymond T McNally 1931 2002 was a professor of Russian and East European History at Boston College Thorne Tony 1997 Countess Dracula Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 2900 2 Penrose Valentine 2006 The Bloody Countess Atrocities of Erzsebet Bathory translator Trocchi Alexander Solar Books ISBN 978 0 9714578 2 9 Translation from the French Erzsebet Bathory la Comtesse sanglante Craft Kimberly 2009 Infamous Lady The True Story of Countess Erzsebet Bathory ISBN 978 1 4495 1344 3 Ramsland Katherine Lady of Blood Countess Bathory Crime Library Turner Entertainment Networks Inc Archived from the original on 11 March 2014 Zsuffa Joseph 2015 Countess of the Moon Griffin Press ISBN 978 0 9828813 8 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elizabeth Bathory The Blood Countess Epitome of Dr Szadeczky Kardoss Irma s research Elizabeth Bathory the Blood Countess BBC piece on Erzsebet Bathory Created 2 August 2001 Updated 28 January 2002 Elizabeth Bathory Drop of Blood Festival 16 August 2014 in Slovak Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 Festival in Cachtice Slovakia Marek Miroslav A genealogy of the Nadasdy family including her descendants Genealogy EU Marek Miroslav A genealogy of the Bathory family Genealogy EU A complete genealogy of all descendants Elizabeth Bathory 17th 20th century Novotny Pavel 2014 Die Grafin Elisabeth Bathory und das Geheimnis hinter dem Geheimnis 400 Years of Bloody Countess The Secret Behind the Secret Motion picture Archived from the original on 15 February 2015 Retrieved 27 May 2014 Documentary film Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth Bathory amp oldid 1134714891, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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