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October 1, 2019

Elizabeth Bathory: The Countess Who Bathed in Blood

A powerful terror ruled over lands in Hungary in the 16th century. For years, citizens were frightened of Elizabeth Bathory. While she lived unharmed by any authority for years, many young girls went missing or ended up dead. It took 35 years and 650 girls for the King of Hungary to take action. Even then, the punishment Bathory faced was nowhere near as cruel as what she did to these young girls.

Elizabeth Bathory, a Hungarian countess, was the daughter of Ann and George Bathory.1 She was born on August 7th, 1590, in Transylvania.2 She came from a wealthy, Protestant family that were significant landowners in Hungary. Elizabeth received a strong education, and she became fluent in several languages.3 Although she seemed to be a regular noble woman, there was a dark truth behind her family and her.

A painting of Elizabeth Bathory from the 16th century. | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

During her childhood, Bathory had a neurological disorder, and the environment around her only contributed to her sadistic ways. She suffered from epilepsy as a child, possibly from familial inbreeding. To cure her epilepsy, her family took blood from servants and put it on her lips. This is thought to be one of the reasons she became obsessed over blood. During this time, no laws protected servants or peasants from being tortured. Her family contributed to her sadism by torturing their servants and peasants.4 One story suggests that after Bathory witnessed a man being sewn into a horse’s stomach for theft, she laughed at the sight of it.5 Bathory saw her family members torture their servants for fun, and this turned her adolescent self into a full-blown killer.

Her life shifted when she married Ferenc Nadasdy, a noble from Hungary. Nadasdy moved Bathory to his estate in Savar. At times, Bathory’s husband went away at war, but when he was at home, he shaped Bathory in how she killed.6 Nadasdy enjoyed torturing peasants and servants in brutal ways. There is a rumor that Elizabeth became pregnant by a peasant right before she married Nadasdy, and he castrated the peasant and gave his body to wild dogs to eat. Bathory’s husband enjoyed killing so much, especially during wars, that he received the nickname “Black Knight of Hungary.”7 Nadasdy taught Bathory new techniques or tricks when torturing her servants. For example, he instructed her to strip her servants naked, cover them in honey, and let bugs eat at them.8 Elizabeth’s husband, Nadasdy, was yet another influence to why she became obsessed with torturing her servants. While Nadasdy taught her how to torture, yet another person in her life would teach her how to kill.

While Elizabeth’s husband was away at war, she met a witch named Anna Darvulia. This witch inspired most of Bathory’s brutal and sadistic killings. Darvulia supposedly implanted in Bathory’s mind that if she killed young virgins and bathed in their blood, she could maintain her youth.9 Bathory confided in Darvulia and took interest in learning more about witchcraft and Satanism. When Darvulia died a few years later, Bathory had to find another women to confide in while doing her killings. She met Erzsi Majorova soon after, who practiced witchcraft. Majorova convinced Bathory to kill noble women because fewer and fewer servants wanted to work for Bathory. Bathory took the advice, which turned out be a mistake for her. People grew more suspicious after she killed one noble girl. She tried to cover it up by saying the girl committed suicide. This is the turning point where Bathory began killing sporadically, and it eventually led to her arrest.10 

When Nadasdy passed away in 1604, he gave his whole estate away to Bathory including his castle, Cachtice, in modern day Slovakia. In the years after Bathory’s husband passed, whispers floated around about Bathory’s actions, specifically her killing young girls. Istvan Magyari, a  Lutheran minister, filed a complaint about Bathory. The King of Hungary, King Matthias II, ordered Gyorgy Thurzo, Palatine of Hungary, to look into the rumors and accusations about Bathory. Thurzo investigated and accumulated hundreds of witnesses, and a few were willing to testify against Bathory. During the trial, witnesses explained how Bathory would lure in servant girls to kill. She did this by saying she would give them a higher salary.11 The testimonies included how she killed the girls by mutilating their bodies, starving them, freezing them, and torturing them. Inside her castles, there were torture chambers. She used tools such as knives, razors, and wax to torture them.12 She would also bite pieces of flesh off of her victims.13 The people who lived in the same town as Bathory saw the girls that she tortured while they ran errands. Their hands showed burn marks, or their faces were disfigured. One girl even came running out of the castle with a knife still in her foot.14 The king showed no compassion or care for the peasants or servants being killed. It was only when noble girls started disappearing and dying that he demanded Thurzo to look into it.

A portrait of Nadasdy attributed by Dencey. | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

One day, Thurzo showed up to Bathory’s castle with armed guards. Thurzo found a dead body of a girl and two other girls wounded. Thurzo heard screaming, which led him to find one of Bathory’s torture chambers. It is not known if Elizabeth was actually caught in the act of harming her servants. Elizabeth pleaded her innocence to Thurzo, though he did not believe her, and he eventually arrested her.15 Bathory was only put on house arrest, because they did not want to cause a scene to the public, but rumors were already going around about what she did. She eventually was put on trial.

Soon after her arrest, Bathory attended the trial against her. She pled innocent to each crime. Bathory’s servants, thirteen in total, testified against her. One of the servants provided a list in Bathory’s handwriting of all 650 of her victims. The servants and Majorova who helped gather young women for Bathory to kill were all killed by either burning or beheading as a result of the trial.16 Elizabeth did not face a harsh death sentence. Instead, she was diagnosed as criminally insane.17

After the trials concluded, Thurzo founded Bathory guilty, and she stayed in solitary confinement in her castle, Cachtice, for the rest of her life. The citizens of Hungary did not even speak Bathory’s name for hundreds of years.18 Conspiracy theories argue that Bathory was actually innocent. These theories suggest that the King brought these charges against her because he did not like that she was Protestant and a powerful women.19 However, no evidence exists to back up these theories.

The main tower of Elizabeth Bathory’s castle taken by Jacomoman78. | Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

A few years later, Elizabeth Bathory died in solitary confinement on August 22, 1614. She told her guard that her hands were cold, and the next day the guard found her dead.20 She was buried somewhere around her castle, Cachtice. Any remains or signs of her or her body cannot be found today. During the time she lived, she was one of the most powerful women in Hungary.21 She gained notoriety and received the nickname “Blood Countess” through her deviant acts.22 Bathory is known today for being one of the worst female, serial killers. There are only secondary accounts of her actions. There is still no physical evidence to this day that proves she is innocent or guilty.

  1. Encyclopedia of Murder and Violent Crime, 2003, s.v. “Countess Elizabeth Bathory,” by Lisa Andrews.
  2. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2018, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory,” by Gavin R.G. Hambly.
  3. Douglas Brode and Leah Deyneka, Dracula’s Daughters the Female Vampire on Film (Lanham: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2014), 139.
  4. Wikipedia, 2019, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Báthory.
  5. Tori Telfer, Lady Killers Deadly Women Throughout History (New York: Harper Perennial, 2017), 2.
  6. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2018, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory,” by Gavin R.G. Hambly.
  7. Tori Telfer, Lady Killers Deadly Women Throughout History (New York: Harper Perennial, 2017), 4.
  8. The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead, 2010, s.v. “Bathory, Elizabeth (1560-1614),” by J. Gordon Melton.
  9. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2018, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory,” by Gavin R.G. Hambly.
  10. The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead, 2010, s.v. “Bathory, Elizabeth (1560-1614),” by J. Gordon Melton.
  11. Wikipedia, 2019, s.v. “Elizabeth Bathory.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth Bathory.
  12. Encyclopedia of Murder and Violent Crime, 2003, s.v. “Countess Elizabeth Bathory,” by Lisa Andrews.
  13.  The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead, 2010, s.v. “Bathory, Elizabeth (1560-1614),” by J. Gordon Melton.
  14. Tori Telfer, Lady Killers Deadly Throughout History (New York: Harper Perennial, 2017), 12.
  15. Tori Telfer, Lady Killers Deadly Women Throughout History (New York: Harper Perennial, 2017), 14.
  16. Salem Press Biographical Encyclopedia, 2018, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory,” by Gavin R.G. Hambly.
  17. Encyclopedia of Murder and Violent Crime, 2003, s.v. “Countess Elizabeth Bathory,” by Lisa Andrews.
  18. Douglas Brode and Leah Deyneka, Dracula’s Daughters the Female Vampire on Film (Lanham: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2014), 140.
  19. The Vampire Book: The Encyclopedia of the Undead, 2010, s.v. “Bathory, Elizabeth (1560-1614),” by J. Gordon Melton.
  20. Wikipedia, 2019, s.v. “Elizabeth Báthory.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Báthory.
  21. Douglas Brode and Leah Deyneka, Dracula’s Daughters the Female Vampire on Film (Lanham: The Scarecrow Press, Inc., 2014), 139.
  22. Encyclopedia of Murder and Violent Crime, 2003, s.v. “Countess Elizabeth Bathory,” by Lisa Andrews.

Tags from the story

blood

Crime

Elizabeth Bathory

Ferenc Nadasdy

Hungary

Murder

serial killer

Recent Comments

Nicole Ortiz

I had never heard the story of this woman until coming across this article. It’s crazy reading about it and seeing how it all started and at such a young age as well. What i thought was weird was that her family believed her epilepsy could be cured from placing blood on her lips like I’ve never heard of that and found it to be really weird. It’s sad though that so many young and innocent girls were killed or tortured by her.

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18/10/2019

11:20 pm

Cassandra Sanchez

I have never heard of this woman or her story before and it was both very interesting and terrifying to read about some of her crimes and her bad influencers who led and encouraged her to this way of living. It is crazy to think about how she got away with killing for so long until she was finally arrested and even then, she was only sentenced to house arrest for the rest of her life while her servants got much worse punishments.

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20/10/2019

11:20 pm

Sebastian Azcui

The title captured my attention as I got very curious with the blood bath. After reading the article it is disturbing and surprised me. How could this woman kill and torture so many innocent girls? I can not believe how she had so many victims and no one reacted or did something about it just because she was rich and the victims were peasants. Now a days similar things can be seen and I think classism or elitism still exists.

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20/10/2019

11:20 pm

Kristina Tijerina

Elizabeth Bathory was never given the death sentence, but she had 650 victims written on a list in her own handwriting. Not to mention the fact that nobody seemed to care until it was noble women that were going missing. I think Bathory should’ve been given the death sentence at her trial because prior, women were walking out and running errands for her with burns and messed up faces, and there was even a girl who ran out with a knife still in her foot. What else, besides this, screams murderer? She got off way too easy with house arrest. She was able to die in her castle, while all these girls were viciously murdered.

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20/10/2019

11:20 pm

Jose Maria Llano Aranalde

Unbelievable that she was able to get away with. The fact that she was able to do it to so many people for so long with no one really finding out. Scary to think about this. I cant see what her reason was for killing and torturing so many people. Its crazy that this events really happened. I could not imagine a single person being able to do all of this.

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27/10/2019

11:20 pm

Sara Guerrero

I can’t believe the influences in Bathory’s life that made her into a serial killer, and this publication taught me who she was and the gruesome story of who she was. Initially when she was given servants blood to cure her epilepsy was a technique I wouldn’t have imagined existed. The most concerning issue at the time would’ve been the disappearance of hundreds of girls and the torture they had to survive with, also how the King of Hungary waited 35 years to investigate Bathory. Definitely worth the read found this publication intriguing and unexpected.

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12/01/2020

11:20 pm

Micheala Whitfield

I am astonished about this publication. I was not expecting this story. The idea that putting blood on the lips cures epilepsy, back in that time is crazy. It’s interesting to see how a lot of times, serials killer learn their traits by what is being taught to them. If she truly committed this crime, I wonder how many lives her family took. Her nobility helped her. Her power was used to her ability. The fact others were executed for helping her and she got house arrest, shows how power is more important. The fact they question if it is true also wonders the mind on if it was created out of jealousy or greed. Very interesting publication.

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18/01/2020

11:20 pm

Seth Roen

Elizabeth Bathory, also known as the “Blood Countess,” is an interesting woman to see the least, regardless of her state of sanity. It’s a theory of her legend that could be fictitious is something I never heard; however, it seems unlike and Elizabeth was probably insane either from the inbreeding or the power. Yet the only thing we know of her is from people who were against Elizabeth Bathory

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19/01/2020

11:20 pm

Raul Colunga

This was a pretty crazy story to read about, I had never heard of Elizabeth Bathory before and it surprised me learn about the crimes she had committed. It is a bit comical to see that she had found a husband who liked torturing as much as she did. But this also makes it interesting to read about the conspiracy theories about because torturing over 600 people and finding a husband who has the same twisted hobby sounds like something fictitious.

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25/01/2020

11:20 pm

Juliana Montoya

This story was very chilling and disturbing. I never heard of this woman but the murderous acts that she committed are unbelievable especially because her childhood was also a big part of why she turned out to be a serial killer. The most disturbing part about the article was the fact that she would witness her parents torture their servants and she would laugh at them.

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13/02/2020

11:20 pm

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