The Horrors of Countess Elisabeth Bathory.

If it's not covered by one of those other categories, you should probably talk about it here. Be nice.
Post Reply
User avatar
Nigredo
Posts: 1282
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2003 11:03 pm
Location: Knoxville, TN
Contact:

The Horrors of Countess Elisabeth Bathory.

Post by Nigredo »

Here is someone in history who just snapped one day. This is the story of someone trying to stay forever young by bathing in the blood of young servant girls. She feared aging and felt that the blood would keep her young. Here is a link to her web site if you want more.

http://bathory.org/

Here some books about her as well.

Countess Dracula: The Life and Times of Elisabeth Bathory,

The Blood Countess by Tony Thorne

Dracula Was a Woman: In Search Of the Blood Countess of Tranylvania by McNally

The Blood Countess by Andrei Codrescu
Hate finds fertile soil so easily. ~Diary of Dreams
shadow dancer
Posts: 1215
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 8:50 am
Location: Knoxville
Contact:

Re: The Horrors of Countess Elisabeth Bathory.

Post by shadow dancer »

Frostmourne wrote:The Blood Countess by Andrei Codrescu


I read that one about three years ago. There is some really sick stuff there. Its not greatly written, but it was interesting for a read.
I'm not wicked. I'm just viciously mischievous.
User avatar
ophelia
Posts: 424
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 9:28 am
Contact:

Post by ophelia »

She didn't just snap one day.

She was always batshit crazy.
Sure, I'll try to be nicer, if you try to be smarter.
User avatar
iblis
Don't click the iblis link!!!!
Posts: 4866
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 7:19 pm
Contact:

Post by iblis »

ophelia wrote:She didn't just snap one day.

She was always batshit crazy.

I have to respect that. Anyone can "just snap one day" but it takes a badass to be, as you so succinctly put it, "batshit crazy" from day one.

Then again, inbreeding as it was (and *cough* is to this day, at least in some locales) probably had something to do with it.



...Oh, and remember kids: If you read it online, it must be true!

*goes and writes a bible dedicated to himself*
If carpenters made buildings the way programmers make programs, the first woodpecker to come along would destroy all of civilization. — Anonymous
User avatar
TheInfiniteMonkey
Posts: 487
Joined: Wed Oct 15, 2003 10:09 pm
Location: I'm not telling, last time you sank my battleship!
Contact:

Post by TheInfiniteMonkey »

I definitely remember her story. I read it when I was in third grade at Norwood Elementary. It had a very detailed account, woodcuts and all, also Vlad the Impaler and others. Find THAT in a gradeschool library these days.
“A gem cannot be polished without friction, nor a man perfected without trials.â€
User avatar
B_Ko
Posts: 968
Joined: Sun Aug 01, 2004 1:57 pm
Location: takin' the midnight train goin' anywhere
Contact:

Post by B_Ko »

That's so goth.
Dude, i've got a full on robot chubby.
User avatar
Mother Mo
Over 2000 posts. Beware.
Posts: 2340
Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2003 3:31 am
Location: A hobbit hole in north knox
Contact:

Post by Mother Mo »

TheInfiniteMonkey wrote:I definitely remember her story. I read it when I was in third grade at Norwood Elementary. It had a very detailed account, woodcuts and all, also Vlad the Impaler and others. Find THAT in a gradeschool library these days.


They burned all those books on the playground long ago, I'm sure. ;)
Change how you see, not how you look.
User avatar
Celestial Dung
Global Moderator
Posts: 504
Joined: Wed Feb 19, 2003 2:35 pm
Contact:

Post by Celestial Dung »

Two extras I know.

One is the theory that Bram Stroker based Dracula more on the Bloody Countess then Vlad. Vlad didn't have a reputation for blood rituals, Bathory did. Vlad wasn't a Count but Bathory was. Stroker probably missed out on a lot by not presenting Dracula as a woman. Well that and not making a tighter written story.

And secondly.....What if the lady was just a lady? Copied from Winkipedia

"More than 300 people were interrogated before her death between 1611 and 1614. Despite several interventions by the Hungarian king, a regular trial never took place and the case remained open. The reason for this might have been that the palatine Thurzo did not want a trial against a member of the high gentry (with which he was reproached at the time). Moreover, Elizabeth’s nephew Gabriel Báthory was the ruler of Transylvania and Thurzo did not want to get into troubles with Transylvania. And finally, Thurzo’s properties were adjacent to those of Elizabeth and Thurzo was interested in her properties.

Many scholarly sources mention the strong possibility that she was falsely convicted by the political opponents of the family, mainly because the Báthory family owned large areas of land and were wealthy. The existing historical documents show lack of investigation, omitted evidence and decisions kept in tight local political circles. Some of the most dramatic charges against her, that of Satanism and vampirism, are thought to have been either deliberate falsehoods or folklore that grew up around an unliked figure. Some people claim that the vampire legends could have been exaggerations of actual medical help provided for peasants; at that age it was very unusual that a noble cared about the health of her servants, and bloodletting was practiced by medical authorities for many years. Modern supporters of the vampire legends attached to her life are either unaware of or choose to ignore historical documents and letters that would possibly ruin the otherwise dramatic tales."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Bathory

A little bit of lazy writing...who are those "some people claim that the vampire legends could have been exagerations" anyway? Something worth mulling over in any event.
blindboy
Posts: 525
Joined: Thu Feb 20, 2003 2:02 pm
Contact:

Post by blindboy »

I got this Elizabeth Bathory action figure for Danielle a few months ago. It's made by Mcfarlane Toy's and the pictures on there don't do it justice.
Post Reply
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest