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‘Dracula’s castle’ offers tourists COVID-19 shots

Visitors jabbed with needles instead of vampiric fangs in vaccination drive at Bran Castle



Bran Castle towers above Bran commune, in Brasov county, Romania.
Image Credit: via REUTERS

Bran, Romania: Visitors to Romania’s forbidding Bran Castle, widely known as the inspiration for the lair of Dracula, are being jabbed with needles rather than vampiric fangs this weekend in a coronavirus vaccination drive.

“I came to visit the castle with my family and when I saw the poster I gathered up my courage and agreed to get the injection,” said 39-year-old engineer Liviu Necula.

Those who take the jab are handed a certificate hailing their “boldness and responsibility” promising they will be welcome at the castle “for the coming 100 years” - as well as offered a free tour of the “torture chamber”.

Nestled in a misty valley in the Carpathian mountains, Bran Castle is associated with the 15th-century Romanian prince Vlad Tepes, known as “the Impaler”, although he never stayed there.

Courtyard of Bran Castle, in Bran, Romania.

Bran Castle,
Romania

Bran Castle’s fearful owner inspired the story of Dracula.

Bran Castle, built in 1212, in Romania is commonly known as Castle Dracula.

Bran Castle, Romania. Stunning HDR twilight image of Dracula fortress in Transylvania, medieval landmark.

The Bran Castle, owned by Habsburg royal family, is up for sale. The castle did not actually belong to Dracula.

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Modern vampire genre

Dracula author Bram Stoker is believed to have been inspired by Vlad and descriptions of Bran Castle when writing his 1897 novel that helped found the modern vampire genre.

Romania’s government has turned to local vaccination drives and 24-hour “marathons” at major venues like the National Library in Bucharest to get as many citizens as possible immunised.

“These centres are for everyone who wants to get vaccinated but doesn’t feel like making an appointment online,” Marius Nasta hospital director Beatrice Mahler told AFP.

But she added that it would still be difficult to reach people living in the many areas without local doctors.

Almost 3.6 million Romanians of the country’s 19 million people have received at least one vaccine dose, with authorities aiming for five million by June.

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