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Ecsed, the lake and the old castle. Elizabeth was born in 1560 on a family estate in Nyírbátor, Royal Hungary, and spent her childhood at Ecsed Castle. Her father was Baron George VI Báthory (d. 1570), of the Ecsed branch of the family, brother of Andrew Bonaventura Báthory (d. 1566), who had been ruling Voivode of Transylvania.
Red marble coat of arms of the family from 1484. The House of Báthory (Polish: Batory) was an old and powerful Hungarian noble family of the Gutkeled clan. The family rose to significant influence in Central Europe during the Late Middle Ages, holding high military, administrative and ecclesiastical positions in the Kingdom of Hungary.
Finnish detective novel 2008 Unkarilainen taulu ("The Hungarian Painting") by Mikko Karppi. Bathory: Memoir of a Countess (2008) is a novel by A. Mordeaux. Hungarian novella Én, Báthory Erzsébet (I, Elizabeth Báthory) by Mária P. Szabó (2010). She is the main protagonist of the 2010 novel The Countess by Rebecca Johns.
The Countess is a 2009 French-German historical crime thriller drama written and directed by Julie Delpy, who also composed its score. It stars Delpy, Daniel Brühl and William Hurt . It is based on the life of the notorious Hungarian countess Elizabeth Báthory .
Portrait of Ferenc's wife, Countess Elizabeth Báthory Count Ferenc II Nádasdy de Nádasd et Fogarasföld (6 October 1555 – 4 January 1604) was a Hungarian nobleman and a distinguished soldier. His family, the Nádasdy family , was one of the wealthiest and most influential of the era in Hungary.
Magnify has boarded “The Blood Countess,” a vampire mystery movie starring Isabelle Huppert as Countess Elizabeth Báthory, a 16th-century Hungarian serial killer. Directed by renowned German ...
The film is based on the story of Erzsébet Bathory, a Hungarian countess in the 16th and 17th centuries. Her story takes place in a part of the Kingdom of Hungary that is now Slovakia. In this retelling, the Countess is a healer who conducts medical experiments and rudimentary autopsies in a "hospital" beneath her castle.
The short answer is no. A quick Google search shows that there is at least one famous László Tóth, a Hungarian-born geologist who’s best known for vandalizing Michelangelo's Pieta statue in 1972.