Showing posts with label vampire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vampire. Show all posts

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Countess Dracula, Elizabeth Báthory on This Day in History

 


This day in history: Elizabeth Báthory was born on this day in 1560. She was nicknamed the Blood Countess and she is said to have killed 650 young girls...many of whom died in very cruel ways. She may have been one of the first and most prolific female serial killers.

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. 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. 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. 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.

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

The Wide World Magazine of 1914 wrote of Bathory: 

"Now Elizabeth was to all outward appearances strikingly handsome-beautiful of form and face. Like most pretty women she naturally cherished a desire to remain bewitching as long as possible, and the scheme which she adopted to this end was distinctly original.

In one way and another young girls were lured to the castle, perhaps on the pretext of being engaged as servants, but really to be murdered! These unfortunate creatures were conducted to the cellar of the castle, and here, presumably in à state of nature, were compelled to walk towards the figure of a large doll. This doll was nothing more than a diabolical machine, in the construction of which a number of knives had been introduced. In approaching this hideous invention the victim all unwittingly released a hidden spring, which set the machine in action. Like a living fiend the outstretched arms of the doll grasped the poor girl in a death embrace before she had a chance to withdraw, literally cutting her to pieces in a few moments. The blood from the body was conducted by small channels to a bath close by, and in this Elizabeth is said to have bathed, thinking thereby to preserve her beauty.

These atrocities went on for no less than ten years before they were discovered, and some six hundred girls are said to have lost their lives in this way. The crimes came to light through one of the girls enticed to the castle managing to get in communication with her sweetheart, who rescued her after surmounting great difficulties.

Now this story is fact, not fable. It is quite possible that the number of lives sacrificed did not aggregate six hundred, but the manner in which the girls met their death and the gist of the story in general is correct. That such a state of affairs could have gone on for years without being discovered may seem to many incredible. But a visit to Csejthe (castle) is sufficient to satisfy anybody as to the probability of the story. It is one of the wildest, most isolated spots that could possibly be imagined.

Quite justly, the ogress Elizabeth Bathory herself came to a dreadful end, being imprisoned in one of the rooms of the castle, where she was slowly starved to death."

Thursday, May 26, 2022

Bram Stoker's Dracula on this Day in History


This day in history: Dracula was published on this day in 1897. The novel did not make much money for the author, Bram Stoker, who eventually went broke just before he died. The movies are what really made Dracula a star. He has appeared in more films than any other horror character—over 200 and counting—and that number doesn't even include comedies and cartoons.

Bram Stoker started writing Dracula right after the Jack the Ripper killings, but it may also have been influenced by a Romanian prince named Vlad Dracula, or Vlad the Impaler, who was known for skewering his enemies. The working title of the novel was The Dead Undead, which was later shortened to The Undead. Right before the book was published, Stoker changed the title to Dracula.


The 1922 German classic film Nosferatu was almost destroyed because of the Dracula copyright. Today, Dracula is now in the public domain.

Did you know: "Count Dracula’s reputation as a blood-sucking vampire is based more on fact than most people realize. The real Count Dracula was a prince known as Vlad the Impailer. He was a politician, in other words. He earned his nickname by beheading what the IRS would call “tax cheats” and impailing their heads on posts in order to scare the s_ _ _ out of other would-be 'cheats.'"



Sunday, December 19, 2021

The Butcher of Hanover on This Day in History

 

Today in History: German serial killer Fritz Haarmann was sentenced to death for a series of murders on this day in 1924. He committed sexual assault, murder, mutilation and dismemberment of at least 24 boys and young men between 1918 and 1924 in Hanover, Germany. Haarmann became known as the Butcher of Hanover due to the extensive mutilation and dismemberment committed upon his victims' bodies and by such titles as the Vampire of Hanover and the Wolf Man because of his preferred murder method of biting into or through his victims' throats.

Haarmann actually sold the clothes and meat of his victims to unsuspecting buyers. He was odd but likable, and the police even used him as an informant who frequently gave up other criminals to investigators. It had never occurred to police that the serial killer they were looking for was well-known to them and right under their nose, even though some of the victims were last seen in his company. 

At 6 o'clock on the morning of 15 April 1925, Fritz Haarmann was beheaded by guillotine in the grounds of Hanover prison. In accordance with German tradition, Haarmann was not informed of his execution date until the prior evening.

Between 1933 and 1945 Germany used the guillotine to execute 16,500 prisoners, a figure which accounts for 10,000 executions between 1944 and 1945 alone. The guillotine was last used in West Germany in 1949 and was last used in East Germany in 1966. The Stasi used the guillotine in East Germany between 1950 and 1966 for secret executions.


In 1923 alone, almost 600 teenage boys and young men had been reported missing in Hanover.


Wednesday, October 20, 2021

Dracula Actor Bela Lugosi on This Day in History

 


This Day in History: Hungarian horror actor Bela Lugosi was born on this day in 1882. Lugosi is best known for playing Dracula in the 1931 Universal movie. In fact, that movie was so big, it turned Bela Lugosi into a household name and may have saved Universal studios from bankruptcy.

The movie Dracula also turned Bela Lugosi into a sex symbol...97 percent of his fan mail came from women. In fact, one of his fans who wrote to him, Hope Lininger, who was 37 years his junior, became his fifth wife.

Lugosi was also something of a philatelist. Like other actors (Charlie Chaplin, Gary Burghoff, James Earl Jones and Patrick Dempsey), he enjoyed stamp collecting as a hobby. Lugosi would have loved knowing that he would eventually be on a US stamp in 1997. 

Lugosi could not avoid typecasting. His Hungarian accent limited his prospects to certain niche horror movies at the time.

Bela Lugosi died penniless in 1956. Dracula author Bram Stoker also died penniless in 1912. Many such writers died in poverty, such as Edgar Allan Poe, HP Lovecraft and The Picture of Dorian Gray author Oscar Wilde. 


There are about 100 movies based on Dracula or characters derived from Bram Stoker's famous book:

Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein

Batman Dracula
Batman Fights Dracula
The Batman vs. Dracula
Billy the Kid Versus Dracula
Blacula
Blade: Trinity
Blood for Dracula
Blood of Dracula's Castle
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1974 film)
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992 film)
Bram Stoker's Dracula's Curse
Bram Stoker's Dracula's Guest
The Brides of Dracula

Count Dracula (1970 film)
Count Dracula (1977 film)
Count Dracula's Great Love
The Creeps (film)
Cuadecuc, vampir

Dark Prince: The True Story of Dracula
Deafula
Doctor Dracula
Dracula (1931 English-language film)
Dracula (1931 Spanish-language film)
Dracula (1958 film)
Dracula (1979 film)
Dracula (2006 film)
Dracula (miniseries)
Dracula 3D
Dracula 2000
Dracula 2012
Dracula 3000
Dracula A.D. 1972
Dracula and Son
Drácula contra Frankenstein
Dracula: Dead and Loving It
Dracula Has Risen from the Grave
Dracula II: Ascension
Dracula III: Legacy
Dracula Reborn
Dracula Sir
Dracula vs. Frankenstein
Dracula: Pages from a Virgin's Diary
Dracula: Prince of Darkness
Dracula: The Dark Prince
Dracula's Daughter
Dracula's Dog
Dracula's Widow
Dracula's Death
The Dragon Lives Again
Drakula İstanbul'da

Fracchia contro Dracula

The Halloween That Almost Wasn't
Hollywood on Parade No. A-8
Hotel Transylvania 2
Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation
Hotel Transylvania: Transformania
House of Dracula
House of Frankenstein (miniseries)
House of the Wolf Man
Hrabe Drakula

Jonathan (1970 film)

Lady Dracula
Lake of Dracula
The Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires
The Librarian: Curse of the Judas Chalice

Mad Mad Mad Monsters

Mad Monster Party?
Monster Family
Monster Mash (1995 film)
Monster Mash (2000 film)
Los Monstruos del Terror

Nocturna: Granddaughter of Dracula
Nosferatu
Nosferatu the Vampyre

The Return of Dracula

Saint Dracula 3D
Santo en el tesoro de Drácula
The Satanic Rites of Dracula
Scars of Dracula
Scooby-Doo and the Ghoul School
Scooby-Doo! and the Reluctant Werewolf
Scream Blacula Scream
Shadow of the Vampire
Son of Darkness: To Die For II
Son of Dracula (1943 film)

A Taste of Blood
Taste the Blood of Dracula
Tender Dracula
To Die For (1989 film)

U.F.O. (1993 film)

Vampira (1974 film)
Vampire Hunter D (1985 film)
Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust
Vampyros Lesbos
The Vulture's Eye

Waxwork (film)