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30 apr 2024 · Elizabeth Báthory (born August 7, 1560, Nyírbátor, Hungary—died August 21, 1614, Castle Čachtice, Čachtice, Hungary [now in Slovakia]) was a Hungarian countess who purportedly tortured and murdered hundreds of young women in the 16th and 17th centuries. Báthory was born into prominent Protestant nobility in Hungary.
- Richard Pallardy
2 mag 2024 · Countess Báthory was a 17th-century Hungarian noblewoman who lived in Čachtice Castle, situated in what is now western Slovakia. Far from being a depraved killer, she appears to have been a well-educated patron of the arts, who was proficient in Hungarian, Latin, Greek and German.
- Sonia Velton
2 mag 2024 · In 1573, Countess Erzsébet Báthory gave birth to an illegitimate child. The infant, a girl, was swiftly bundled up and handed to a local peasant family to be brought up in one of the hamlets surrounding the Castle.
9 mag 2024 · Itt található többek között a Báthori család vörös márvány sárkányos címerköve, Báthory Gábor szablyája, Bethlen Gábor díszkardja és az 1511-ben Firenzében készült templomi ülőpad (stallum) kisebbik padsora, mely eredetileg a Báthoriak Szent György nevét viselő templomában állt.
5 giorni fa · Are you ready to meet the world's bloodiest and most murderous countess? Elizabeth Báthory, the most famous female serial killer of all time, is a real perso...
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- HistoryBites
15 mag 2024 · Serial killers and their gruesome crimes have sparked terror and intrigue for centuries. From Hungarian countess Elizabeth Báthory in the 1600s to more recent examples such as Jeffrey Dahmer and...
4 giorni fa · The University of Szeged traces its origins back to 1581 with the foundation of the Academia in Cluj (Kolozsvár). István Báthory, Prince of Transylvania, King of Poland (1571-1586), Grand Duke of Lithuania took measures to estabilish a Catholic university (academia – universitas) consisting of two faculitues, Arts and Theology.