The Bran castle was built in the 14th century, a stronghold to protect the villagers and landowners of the plains beyond the Bucegi Mountains, although it is most famous for being the location of the famous vampire, Dracula.

Is there a real Draculas castle?

Enter if you dare. Dracula may be a fictional character from Bram Stoker’s 1897 Gothic horror novel of the same name, but turns out there is actually a “Dracula’s Castle” located just outside of Brasov in Romania and the former Eastern border of Transylvania.

Why is Bran Castle called Dracula’s Castle?

Romania decided to put a wider focus on marketing for tourism to the country and because of the location of Bran Castle, its dramatic architecture, and its supposed connection to Vlad III Dracula and his connection to Bram Stoker’s Dracula, the Romanian government decided to market the castle as the “real Dracula …

Why is Bran Castle famous?

Bran Castle in Transylvania is famous for spawning the original vampire legend of Count Dracula. Perched precariously on a rock high above a valley near Brașov in Romania, Bran Castle is open for business, cashing in on its nefarious reputation as Dracula’s former abode.

Who lives in the Bran Castle?

The man who owns the Romanian castle known as “Dracula’s castle” really wishes you wouldn’t call it that. Seventy-nine-year-old Dominic Habsburg, spent his childhood at Bran Castle in Brașov, Romania, where his grandparents Queen Marie and King Ferdinand I lived. He inherited the 14th-century castle in 2006.

What is the real name of Dracula?

Vlad IIIVlad the Impaler / Full name

Vlad the Impaler, in full Vlad III Dracula or Romanian Vlad III Drăculea, also called Vlad III or Romanian Vlad Țepeș, (born 1431, Sighișoara, Transylvania [now in Romania]—died 1476, north of present-day Bucharest, Romania), voivode (military governor, or prince) of Walachia (1448; 1456–1462; 1476) whose cruel methods …

Who built Bran Castle?

In 1377 King Louis I of Hungary authorized the Transylvanian Saxons of the Brașov region to build a castle as a bulwark against northward expansion of the Ottoman Empire. The castle was completed by 1388; it also served as a customs house for Transylvania, then a voivodate (province) of Hungary.