Lady killers
Sunday, September 6, 2015
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Lady Killers…
1. Erzsébet Báthory (Countess Elizabeth Báthory de Ecsed)
Born: 7 August 1560
Died: 22 August
1614 (aged 54)
Country: Kingdom of
Hungary (today Čachtice, Slovakia)
Span of killings: 1590–1610
Children: Paul, Andrew,
Anna, Ursula, Katherine
Date apprehended: 30 December 1610
Criminal
penalty confinement until death.
There's something so
seductive about the word “murderess.” It's mostly that serpentine double “s” at
the end that gives the word its poisonous charm. But murderesses: we're into
them. We like them clever, glamorous, powerful, and built for a compelling
Hollywood biopic—everything that the average female serial killer from the past
century or so is not. Statistically speaking, the murderesses of the modern world
tend to fall under similar lowbrow headings: drug problems, low
levels of education, pink collar jobs held between long periods of
unemployment. They're not into torture, nor do they engage in “overkill”—or
violence beyond what is necessary to end a life. They like poison, knives, and
guns. Nothing fancy.
But the first known female
serial killer? That's a whole different story. She was the type of girl to
really put the double “s” into “murderess”; a woman who history hasn't been
able to stop immortalizing, vampirizing, and sexualizing since records of her
trial were discovered in the 1720s. I'm talking about the Grande Dame of serial
killers; the OG female sadomasochist; the woman who inspired not one, not two,
but eight black metal band names; the dreadful Hungarian Countess
herself: Erzsébet Báthory.
Erzsébet Báthory was given
the trappings of an enviable life. In 1560, little Erzsébet was born into one
of the most powerful clans in Central Europe, and she had the ridiculous wealth
and impeccable educational pedigree to prove it. She was a precocious kid, and
knew how to read and write in Hungarian, Greek, Latin, German, and even Slovak,
the language many of her servants would have spoken. She snagged a
fantastically prestigious husband, she was given her own castle, and she ended
up richer than the King of Hungary himself. But money and power and beauty
can't keep a bad woman down, and Erzsébet Báthory ended up walled into her
precious castle with the blood of hundreds of young virgins on her hands,
making this Countess the worst known female serial killer of all time.
See, all was not well in the
world of little Erzsébet. She reportedly suffered terrible seizures as a child,
probably due to epilepsy. And like many noble clans back in the good old days,
the Báthory family had a penchant for inbreeding—after all, you have to keep
the wealth in the family somehow—which, historically, has resulted in so
many nobles with weak constitutions and a propensity toward madness. (When analyzing
her will centuries later, handwriting experts noted signs of schizophrenia.)
Legend even has it that
Erzsébet witnessed some terrible things during her childhood, including a
peasant sewn alive inside a dying horse as a punishment for theft. As the story
goes, little Erzsébet cackled at the sight of the peasant's head sticking out
of the horse's body. Whether or not this particular anecdote is true, Erzsébet
probably did see a good deal of violence as a child. Back then, it was
considered perfectly acceptable to brutally punish one's servants (peasants
really didn't have rights), and it's also likely that Erzsébet would have
attended the occasional public execution.
But she wasn't just smart
and freakishly unbothered by violence—Erzsébet was also really, really pretty.
A portrait of Erzsébet from 1585 depicts a haunted, delicate beauty with a high
white forehead (women of the time plucked their hairline to make their
foreheads appear bigger) and mournful, slightly downturned eyes. It's great fun
to stare deep into those enormous eyes and imagine all the terrible things she
did to young girls! But we'll get there.
At the age of 11, Erzsébet became engaged to 16-year-old Count Ferenc
Nádasdy, the son of another powerful Hungarian family; they
married in 1575, after Erzsébet turned an appropriate 14. As was common back
then, Erzsébet moved to the Nadasy palace during the engagement, where rumor
has it that she fooled around with a local boy and became pregnant. The child
was given away, all was hushed up, and the marriage proceeded as normal. In a
wildly modern move, Erzsébet kept her last name, and Ferenc
hyphenated his; that's just how powerful the Báthorys were back then.
Ferenc even gave his bride a home of her own—Castle Csejthe—as a wedding present.
The 19-year-old Ferenc could never have anticipated the crimes Erzsébet would
eventually commit in Csejthe's dark, lonely halls.
The Nádasdy-Báthorys were
now an incredibly wealthy couple, and but if they ever had a honeymoon period,
it didn't last for long. Three years after their marriage, the Ottoman Turks
began attacking Hungary again, and Ferenc went off to war. He must have enjoyed
the bloody pastime, because he spent the rest of his life on the battlefield,
earning himself the epithet “Black Knight of Hungary” for his vicious ways.
With Ferenc at war, Erzsébet
was left at home for long stretches of time—and because history loves a good
dirty rumor, there are all sorts of stories about her sexual deviancy during
this period, but very little proof for any of them. The book Royal
Pains refers salaciously to a “well-endowed manservant” that Erzsébet
liked to fool around with in Ferenc's absence, but scholar Kimberly L. Craft
argues against that in the book Infamous Lady, since none of the hundreds
of testimonies against Erzsébet Báthory mention her ever taking a lover. There
are also plenty of scandalous historical (and internet) rumors concerning
Erzsébet's infamous Aunt Klara, supposedly a bisexual and a sadist. As the
story goes, Erzsébet liked to visit Klara's castle during Ferenc's long
absences, where Klara would teach her niece witchcraft, sadism, and how to make
love to a woman. But since Klara would have been about 60 years old by then—in
an era where people died around 50—it's unlikely that she would have been up
for that sort of energetic tutoring.
Really, we don't have a
conclusive proof for any of the sexual rumors that surround
Erzsébet—just the violent ones. Letters from the time show that Erzsébet was
busy keeping her family's massive properties and accounts orderly. But the
stories of late-night S&M parties persist as part of the Báthory charm.
After all, a bored, beautiful, unsatisfied woman filling her empty days with
sex as her husband skewers Turks—is there anything more pleasingly dramatic?
Not that Erzsébet was
terribly in love with Ferenc. Their marriage was primarily a business
arrangement between two powerful families, and they didn't have children for
the first ten years of marriage, though maybe it's because Ferenc was gone for
most of it. Kimberly Craft points out that that Erzsébet was probably abused by
Ferenc—in those days, it was acceptable for men to make their wives “submit”
behind closed doors—especially if Ferenc resented her for having a child with
another man.
Still, Erzsébet and Ferenc definitely found time to bond over one mutual
interest: torturing young servant girls.
Ferenc was a bloody guy
already. After all, you don't get a nickname like “the Black Hero of Hungary”
without viciously skewering a few enemies on your way to the top. (Royal
Pains mentions that Ferenc liked to throw two Turkish prisoners into the
air at the same time and, um, “catch” them on the point of two swords.) And
Erzsébet was already known for her fits of rage. So battle-hungry Ferenc introduced
his young bride to the ways of torture, Black Hero-style, resulting in a
long-distance relationship that was a little less “staring at the same moon”
and a little more “stabbing people at the same time.” Ferenc taught Erzsébet a fun trick called “star-kicking,” wherein a
piece of oiled paper was inserted between the toes of a disobedient servant and
then set on fire. He also bought her a set of claws that could be fitted
over one's hand for slashing the servants' flesh; once, he reportedly covered a
young girl with honey and forced her to stand outside to be stung by insects.
In short, Ferenc was a great source of inspiration for an impressionable young
sociopath.
But Ferenc wasn't Erzsébet's
only sparring partner. At some point around 1601, a mysterious woman named Anna
Darvolya joined their household. Locals described her as a “wild beast in
female form,” and she was rumored to be a witch and/or Erzsébet's lesbian
lover. Whatever else, she was definitely a sadist. According to trial
transcripts, she'd beat the girls 500 times on the palms of the hands and the
soles of their feet, or she'd “tie their hands backward” and hit them “until
their bodies burst.” Anna died around 1609, just before Erzsébet's bloody
crimes were brought to trial, but she may have been the worst thing to happen
to the Báthory servant girls since the whole peasants-not-having-rights thing;
the other servants claimed that after Anna's arrival, “the Lady became more
cruel.”
Servant girls died
occasionally at the Báthory-Nádasdy household, but it was nothing worth raising
a royal eyebrow over. After all, in the eyes of the ruling classes, these young
peasant girls were practically disposable. And Erzsébet knew she was above the
law—in fact, the King of Hungary had been forced to borrow money from the
Báthory-Nádasdys so many times that Erzsébet was untouchable. (At the time of
Fernec's death, the King owed him almost 18,000 gulden, a practically unpayable
debt.) Tucked away in her craggy castle on a hill, Erzsébet could pretty much
do whatever she wanted.
This isn't to say that
nobody noticed anything icky happening to Erzsébet's servants. In fact, the
local pastors began to grow suspicious when Erzsébet kept asking them to
perform funeral rites for servant girls who'd died of “cholera” or “unknown
causes.” At one point, they even heard a
rumor that the oversized coffin they'd been asked to bless (it was closed,
always closed) housed three girls inside. The rumors got so bad
that one of the pastors denounced Countess Báthory from the pulpit, saying,
“Your Grace should not have so acted because it offends the Lord, and we will
be punished if we do not complain to and criticize Your Grace. In order to
confirm that my words are true, we need only exhume the body [of the latest
dead girl, to prove she was beaten to death].” The Countess stormed out of the
church, and eventually Ferenc managed to appease the ministry. The allegations
against Erzsébet slowed—for a while.
It was after Fernec's death that things really started to get scary.
When Ferenc died in 1604,
Erzsébet was 44 years old, and losing her looks. She may have found it
difficult to manage such extensive property and staff without the quick income
from Ferenc's Turkish spoils; she may have recoiled in horror at the aging
process; maybe a latent tendency toward schizophrenia, from that infamous
Báthory inbreeding, began to rear its head during Erzsébet's later years.
Either way, what had started as a shared hobby with Ferenc and Anna quickly
turned into a full-blown obsession, and Erzsébet became fanatical about
torturing and killing young girls. She liked them young, strong, and
unmarried—10- to 14-year-old peasant children from the towns surrounding the
castle, expendable bodies that nobody important would miss.
As always, Erzsébet didn't work
alone. Along with Anna Darvolya, Erzsébet gathered a gruesome torture squad of
three old women and one boy: her children's nurse, Ilona Jó; an old friend of
Ilona Jó's, who went by Dorka; an old washerwoman named Katalin; and a
disfigured young boy known as Ficzkó. According to the trial transcripts, Dorka
lured the most peasant girls to the castle—attracting them “with the promise
that they would either marry a merchant or that they would be brought somewhere
as a chambermaid”—where they'd eventually meet a gruesome end. Anna, Dorka, and
Ilona Jó were the most vicious of the torturers and took pride in their gory
skill sets. Ficzkó helped, but he was awfully young (documents from the time
refer to him as a “child”), and Katalin appears to have been the most
soft-hearted of the bunch—she'd participate in the torture because she had to,
but she also snuck food to the broken-down girls when she could.
According to the trial
transcripts, the torturing would usually start with irritation over a servant
girl's mistake. Maybe the girl would miss a stitch, causing the Countess to
turn on her with a snarl. She'd begin by slapping, kicking, or punching, and
the punishment often fit the “crime”: misbehaving sewing girls would be poked
with needles; a girl who stole a coin got that same coin heated in the fire and
branded into the palm of her hand. Erzsébet would prick the girls' fingers with
pins, saying, “If it hurts the whore, then she can pull it out.” Psych! If the
girl did pull out the pin, Erzsébet would cut off her finger.
If the torture stopped
there, it was a pretty good day for the servant girls, but Erzsébet's craving
for violence was rarely satisfied with pinpricks and the occasional severed
finger. According to Ficzkó, girls would be tortured up to ten times a day in
the Countess' torture chambers—she had a specific place for torturing girls in
each of her many castles—and the brutalities were absolutely inhuman. The
torturer squad would heat irons and burn the girls all over their body,
including their genitals. Erzsébet forced girls to stand naked outside and
poured cold water over them until they froze to death. Once, she put her
fingers inside a girl's mouth and tore her face apart. There were also reports
of pincers used to rip out the girls' flesh, along with rumors of
cannibalism—force-feeding the girls pieces of their own bodies or the flesh of
their fellow servant girls. Dorko liked to cut the girls' fingers with shears.
Anna preferred her 500 lashes. And Erzsébet liked it all. She'd strip the girls
naked before she beat them, and once bit a piece out of a girl's face and
shoulder when she herself was too sick to get out of bed. Endless beatings,
starvation, knives, cannibalism, branding, and maybe even an Iron Maiden—these
were the ways the Báthory servant girls died.
Wherever Erzsébet Báthory
traveled, she killed servant girls. “Anywhere she went,” confessed Ilona Jó,
“she looked immediately for a place where they could torture the girls.” She'd
kill girls in her carriage on the way to social events and have their bodies
buried on the go. The killing was turning into some sort of deep psychological
need, exacerbated by social stress. A witness at Erzsébet's trial claimed to
have seen shackled servant girls who told him that “their mistress could neither
eat nor drink if she had not previously seen one of the virgins from amongst
her maids killed in a bloody way.”
One of the most enduring
rumors about Erzsébet says that she bathed in blood to preserve her beauty.
This story goes like this: one day, when a servant girl messed up some aspect
of Erzsébet's toilette, Erzsébet slapped the girl so hard that blood spattered
Erzsébet's hand (or face). After washing off the blood, Erzsébet noticed that
her skin looked younger than it had before. This lead to an obsession with
soaking in a tub of virginal blood during top-secret 4 a.m. baths.
Unfortunately for the
vampire-obsessives among us, this is probably not true. None of the servants
who testified against Erzsébet mention anything about the Countess bathing in
blood. In fact, what they do mention is that so much blood was
spilled during torture sessions that you could scoop it off the floor. So
Erzsébet didn't seem too concerned with saving—much less bathing in—the
precious blood that poured from her victims. In fact, the first mention of her
blood baths appears over a century after her death, in a 1729 book by the
Jesuit scholar László Turóczi, called Tragica Historia, which he wrote
after discovering the Báthory trial transcripts.
It's easy to see why the blood
bath rumor has persisted, though. Not only is it a compellingly creepy image,
but it solves the distressing idea of a murderess who kills just because she's
a killer. If Erzsébet killed those girls in order to preserve her looks,
we don't have to worry about the question of evil in the Báthory case. Vanity
is a much more accessible reason for the crimes, since all that bloodshed
simply comes down to a misguided desire to look extra-good for boys. An
Erzsébet who bathes in blood is actually much safer than an Erzsébet with an
anger problem.
But be not disappointed at
the lack of blood baths. Plenty of blood was shed at chez Erzsébet, so
much that the walls were spattered with it and, according to Ilona Jó, Erzsébet
sometimes had to stop mid-torture and change her shirt because it was so
drenched (ugh). While her affinity for stripping her young maids naked does
seem to hint at some sort of sexual disorder, and her dealings with the occult
may have occasionally focused on preserving her youth, it seemed that what the
Countess truly liked was pretty straightforward: to absolutely destroy the
body.
Until now, Erzsébet was
still killing peasants, which was a pretty safe bet. Parents would sell their
child for a lump sum to work as a servant, and if the child died of “cholera” —
Erzsébet's go-to excuse— the family could never press charges against the
noble, no matter how suspicious the circumstances. Sure, Erzsébet and her cohort
were killing so many girls that they couldn't even bury them all—at one point,
dogs uncovered some of the hastily-dug graves, and you can imagine what they
dragged around the courtyard—but Erzsébet remained unassailable. Remember, the
Crown owed her money. But like many a serial killer after her, the Countess
grew reckless, which proved to be her downfall.
Tired of peasant girls—or
perhaps running out of live peasant girls— Erzsébet decided to harvest the
daughters of lesser nobility. The suggestion may have come from her Lady
Steward, Erzsi Majorova, who was also a witch. By then, cruel Anna Darvolya had
died, and Erzsébet was taking advice from Erzsi. Rumor has it that Erzi
suggested the potent blood of noble girls, since peasant blood wasn't staving
off the Countess' inevitable aging. Or maybe the Countess just wanted a change
in her regular lineup. But how to lure these bright young things over to the
castle? Peasant parents were easy to deal with, but the nobles
would definitely notice if their daughters went missing.
Eventually, Erzsébet hit on
the brilliant idea of pretending to open a finishing school for young women,
called a Gynaecaeum. She ushered in a gaggle of aristocratic youngsters
and, well, finished them. When wealthy parents began inquiring about the state
of their offspring, Erzsébet invented a truly crazy cover-up: one of the girls
had been really jealous of the other girls' jewelry, said Erzsébet, and so she
murdered them. For their jewelry, get it? Then, after realizing what she'd
done, the gem-hungry girl committed suicide. OKAY?
Needless to say, the
Countess wasn't convincing anyone by this point. Rumors were spreading like
wildfire—people had actually heard the girls in
the Gynaecaeum crying, and townspeople were beginning to report
seeing the Countess' black-and-blue servant girls out in public with bandaged
faces and hands. But most importantly, noble girls had been killed. This was
enough for the King to move against bloody Erzsébet.
In February 1610, the King
ordered his Palatine, György Thurzó, to begin an investigation against Countess
Báthory. It's worth noting that this wasn't a simple case of good king vs. evil
lady—the King still owed enormous sums of money to Erzsébet, and if she were
locked up, his debts to her would be conveniently cancelled. So Thurzó began
collecting testimonies against the Countess.
You can read the witnesses'
testimonies today—they're translated in the appendix of Infamous Lady—but
you'll want to wait until after lunch. Hundreds of people affirmed the rumors
of terrible violence against the Báthory servants, placing the number of dead
girls around 175 or 200. Unfortunately, few had actually seen anything
conclusive, so the investigation dragged on for months. By December, Thurzó was
almost ready to act, but before he could arrest such a powerful woman, he had
to be completely certain that she was guilty. So Thurzó met with the Countess
in person, where she smoothly denied all the allegations, saying that the girls
had merely died of an epidemic—oh, and that whole murder-suicide-jewelry-thief
thing. He then returned with the King himself, but Erzsébet—getting
desperate?—tried to poison them with a magical cake, courtesy of her go-to
witch, Erzsi. Something was rotten in the state of Csejthe, despite the cool,
glamorous composure of its Countess. Everyone knew it.
On the night of December 29,
1610, Erzsébet and Erzsi went outside to cast a spell, which their scribe later
revealed to the court. It began, “Help, oh help, you clouds!...Send, oh send
forth, you clouds, 90 cats!” These cats were instructed to “chew to pieces the
heart” of those causing the Countess grief. Erzsébet then retreated inside to
begin, we can only assume, her regular blood-soaked nightly routine.
Later that night, Thurzó
crept toward Castle Csejthe, accompanied by a party of armed guards. It didn't
take them long to gather evidence: they found the dead body of a mutilated girl
near the entryway to the castle, and two more girls lay dead or dying right
inside the castle doors. The sound of screaming led the men to one of the
torture chambers, where they caught Countess' cohort of torturers at work. It's
unclear if Thurzó actually caught the Countess in the act, but they had their
evidence—she was responsible for her employees' actions, at the very least—and
they wasted no time in dragging her out of the castle. Later, Thurzó wrote to
his wife that they'd discovered even more girls “hidden away where this damned
woman prepared these future martyrs.”
A grand total of 306 people
testified against the Blood Countess. Ilona Jó, Dorka, Katalin, and Ficzkó were
all tortured, and confessed to their crimes in detail, pointing to Erzsébet as
the source of it all. While those four claimed the number of dead girls fell
around 36-51, another witness (a young servant girl named Szuzanna) said that
the countess had killed 650 girls and kept their names written in a little
ledger. To this day, no one knows for sure how many girls Erzsébet Báthory
killed.
Ilona Jó, Dorka, and Ficzkó
all received the death sentence. Since Ilona Jó and Dorka had been personally
responsible for so many “serious, ongoing atrocities perpetuated against
Christian blood,” their fingers were torn out by heated iron tongs before they
were executed and thrown into a huge bonfire. Because of his youth, Ficzkó was
beheaded and then burned. Katalin, who appeared to have shown some mercy to the
girls, was sentenced to be jailed “until perhaps other more clear evidence is
given against her.” (Kimberly Craft speculates that she may have been quietly
released later.)
And as for the Blood
Countess herself? She was still too far above the law to receive the death
penalty, as much as the King or the court may have desired it. She was never
brought in for interrogation—torturing such a high-standing member of the
Hungarian nobility to get a confession would have set a dangerous precedent.
And while Thurzó and the King tried to figure out how to condemn her, she
willed her lands to her children, meaning that the King wouldn't get to keep
the extensive Báthory estates even if Erzsébet was executed.
Eventually, Thurzó condemned
the Countess to lifelong imprisonment in her own bloody Castle Csejthe,
pronouncing, “You, Erzsébet, are like a
wild animal. You are in the last months of your life. You do not deserve to
breathe the air on earth or see the light of the Lord. You shall disappear from
this world and shall never reappear in it again. As the shadows envelop you,
may you find time to repent your bestial life.”
The King's debt was
cancelled, and all legal documentation about the trials was sealed. The
Countess was walled into her own castle, with just enough space between the
bricks to pass food through. Parliament decreed that “the name of Erzsébet
Báthory would never again be spoken in polite society.” And the towns around
Csejthe grew quiet for the next 100 years.
But despite the court's best
efforts to act as though Erzsébet Báthory had never lived, her story spread and
spread once the trial transcripts were rediscovered in the 1720s. Today, the
Blood Countess is a hugely popular figure in the world of horror, gore, and
sexy vampires, featured in everything from a Venom single (notable lyric:
“Couuuuuntess BAAAAAATHORY”) to poetry, novels, and films. Historian Raymond
McNally has even argued that it was Erzsébet who
inspired Bram Stoker's Dracula. Run a Google Image Search on the Countess and you'll see just how
sexualized her legend has become—you'll find everything from manga of the
Countess sporting bloody nipple clamps to fan art featuring a nude Erzsébet
reclining seductively in a bathtub full of—well, you know. As scholar
Christina Santos wrote in a paper on Erzsébet, “the “monstrous”
characterization of Báthory is unfairly and predominantly linked to her sexual
deviance: her suspected lesbianism, her marital infidelities, and an overall
deviation from the proscribed role for women in her society and culture.”
Her story has a sick glamour,
sure. Who isn't drawn to the idea of a vampiric Countess with long black hair
and penchant for ripping apart lithe nudes? She's a seductive antagonist,
worthy of the serpentine sound of murderess. But all this talk about sex and beauty distracts from the fact that
according to historical documents, Erzsébet may have simply been the most
frightening and least pretty thing of all: a killer. The fan art that
features a voluptuous Erzsébet with blood-splattered cleavage isn't
scary—what's scary is that 1585 portrait of Erzsébet. What's scary is staring
down the blank innocence in those big, 400-year-old eyes.
Countess Erzsébet Báthory
died on August 22, 1614. According to a letter by Thurzó, the last thing she
did was lay down in her bed and sing, beautifully. She was buried in holy
ground, but her body was later removed, after residents complained, and taken
to the Báthory crypt. That crypt was opened in 1995. No trace of Erzsébet was
found.
www.imdb.com/title/tt0469640/
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