Showing posts with label list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label list. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Top Ten Week-The Most Evil People in History part 2


**APOLOGIES FOR THE WHITE LINES IN THE POST, I DON'T KNOW HOW TO FIX THIS ISSUE UNFORTUNATELY**



    Maximilien Robespierre
         1758-1794


The Spring of 1789, is one of the most important dates of history. That summer, the events that took place were about to change the word, and shape up our version of modern society. The French Revolution, a grand upheaval, literally uprooted centuries of old ideas, and lead Europe into a brighter future of democracy and equality. But, no revolution is velvet, and no matter how noble the motives could be, absolute power, always corrupts absolutely, and Robespierre is not an exception.

Liberty leading the people-Eugene Delacroix- 1830
Born on Arras in 1758, Maximilien Francois Marie de Robespierre suffered tragedy early in his life. His mother died when he was six, and a few months later, his father abandoned him and his siblings, who were brought up by elderly relatives. Maximilien was the eldest, a hard working, conscientious, scholarship boy. As soon as he was able to shoulder the burden of caring for his younger siblings, after becoming a lawyer like his father, he took his family under his protection, and lead a quiet and blameless life in his home town. He soon became known for defending the poor and underprivileged, and for his passionate speeches in the local academy.

In 1789, when he was in his early thirties, the Revolution was declared. an event that would transform his destiny, and him. He launched himself in the political maelstrom that would immerse him for the rest of his life. During the first two years of the revolution, in witch the Estates General became the National Assembly,  Maximilien spoke frequently in that body, but, as he was deeply influenced by Enlightenment philosophers, such as Rousseau and Montesquieu, his extremely democratic ideas, his emphasis on civil liberty and equality, his uncompromising rigidly in applying these ideas, and his open hostility to all authority, won him little support in this moderate legislature. He favored giving the right of vote to all men, and he opposed slavery. His mistake was only, that he was way ahead of his time. 
Luckily he found followers of his ideas in the Jacobin Club, the most important of the revolutionary clubs where people debated events and his stance won him a reputation among the sans-culottes (the common people of the lower class), and on the radical left, but the earlier years of the revolution were dominated by men who had no wish to see the power turned to the commoners, yet Robespierre persisted, as a spokesman of the opposition undaunted, tireless and consistent.

Robespierre giving a speech to the Jacobi Club
From the spring of 1792 onward France was involved in a spiral of war, revolt and civil war. Counter revolutionaries were plotting the restoration of the absolute monarchy with the support of the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II. The Girodins which were the dominant revolutionary faction in the Legislative Assembly at the time, spearheaded the drive for an aggressive war with the empire, declaring war on April 1792. 
Robespierre himself had long warned of the dangers of provoking counter revolution. He had tried to oppose the war because he believed it would divide France and provide support for the counter revolutionaries. Nor he shared Brissot's (leader of the Girodin Club) beliefs, that the people of Europe would welcome an invading French army, even one who claimed to bring liberty and equality. "No one welcomes armed liberators" he claimed, and while he kept his stance, he became unpopular, and politically isolated.
By the summer of 1792, his fears were realized. The army far from being victorious was on the verge of defeat and suffered greatly by lack of organization, and inexperienced troops. When people turned to him for advise, he suggested that King Louis was siding with the Austrian and Prussian armies, which were now threatening Paris itself. In August the monarchy was overthrown in the battle of Tuileries palace, and a new republic government, the National Convention was established in September. Robespierre's ascendancy in the political ladder was now unrivaled, thus marking the begging of his transformation
When the fate of the King, who was now a prisoner of the rebels, was debated in the convention, Maximilien claimed that "the king must die, in order for a revolution to live". Even though he had yet to abandon his libertarian convictions, he was coming to a conclusion that the ends justified the means. By October of 1793, Robespierre, was rushed to power with the full support of the San-culottes, who were now demanding blood. They wanted total freedom, in order to maintain their new found militia status, and Maximilien delivered. By the end of the month, most members of the Girondin, as well as Marie-Antoinette, followed the king's fate in the guillotine, thus beginning the Age of Terror. It is worth mentioning that for the first time in history, the terrorists were the government it self, and absolute violence was voted legally by the National Convention. "It is time that equality bore its scythe above all heads [...]" ,  Robespierre proclaimed. 



Caricature depicting Robespierre executing the executioner, after everyone is dead
Not counting the 200.000 dead of the civil war of Nantes in the same year, Robespierre's Age of Terror made the heads of 40.000 people to roll, all over France. 

Robespierre's desire for change was not limited to the political realm. He openly opposed the catholic church and the pope, and especially was opposed to its celibacy policies. Having denounced the excesses of dechrianisation, he sought to instill a spiritual resurgence in the France nation based on Deist beliefs. Accordingly, on May 7th 1794, Maximilien supported a decree passed by the Convention that established an official religion, known historically as the Cult of the Supreme Being. The notion of the supreme being was based on ideas that Jean-Jacques Rousseau had outlined in "The Social Contract" A nationwide "Festival of the Supreme Being" was held on June 8th, which is also the day of the christian holiday Pentecost. The festivities were held in the Champ de Mars, and Robespierre, who is now president of the Conversion, presented him self as a leader of the people for the first time. 

Festival of the Supreme Being

Even though Robespierre's delight couldnt be disrupted by his colleagues negativity, there were many who began to believe that he was taking things a bit too far. Reportedly, Jacques-Alexis Thuriot, one of his closest colleagues, was heard saying "look at the bugger, its not enough for him to be leader, he wants to be God". On that day many of his guests began to believe that the government was turning into a dictatorship, thus ensuring Maximilien Robespierre's downfall.

On May 23rd 1794, a failed assassination attempts against Collot d'Herbois, made Robespierre believe  that the lives of other government members could also be in danger. He introduced the Decree of 22 Prairial, which allowed the Comity of Public Safety, to freely execute anyone who thought to be suspicious without trial. The line was crossed when George-Jacques Danton, a key figure in the revolution and the overthrow of monarchy, was executed under unverified information of bribery by enemies of the revolution. After Robespierre failed to justify his actions under the Conventions accusations. His arrest was ordered by vote of the National Convention, which was  a coup d'etat against the Jacobin Club, known as the Themidorian Reaction.
After a failed attempt to rally the sans-culottes to defend him, Robespierre and his follower withdrew to the Hotel de Ville, and soon after were declared outlaws. When the forces of the Convention arrived at two in the morning, Robespierre attempted to kill himself with a pistol but only managed to shatter his lower jaw.
He was guillotined without trial at the Place de la Revolution, at July 28th 1794 along with his last remaining followers.
His last recorded words were "Merci monsieur'" , to a man who had given him a handkerchief for the blood in his face.

The execution of Robespierre

Maximilien Robespierre remains one of the most controversial figures of history to this day. Apart from one suburban Metro station and a few streets named after him, there no memorials nor monuments to him in France. Most people consider him a blood thirsty monster that was in love with the guillotine, while others the embodiment of virtue and total commitment, who remained incorruptible until the end. His goal in The Terror was to use the guillotine to create what he called a "republic of virtue", wherein terror and virtue, his principles, would be imposed. He thought of it as a tool to accomplish his overachieving goals for democracy, "a democracy for the people, who are intrinsically good and pure if heart, a democracy in which poverty is honorable, power innocuous, and the vulnerable safe from oppression. A democracy that worships nature, not as what it really is, cruel and disgusting, but nature sanitized, majestic and above all, good"

A murderous psychopath, or man with plans above our understanding, that willingly took up the role of the evil master, and the hate of the people, so that his country could be reborn anew, with philosophical foundation, instead of religious? In virtue, instead of corruption?
The only sure thing is, that even to this day, the story of Maximilien Robespierre, still fascinates historians and biographers worldwide, as one of the most enigmatic figures of history.









Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
1902-1989

Born on September 24, 1902, Ruhollah Mousavi whose given name means "inspired of God" was born into a family of Shi'ite religious scholars in the small Iranian village of Khomein. He would later take his hometown as his surname and become known by his more famous moniker, Ruhollah Khomeini. In 1903, just five months after Khomeini's birth, his father, Seyed Moustafa Hindi, was murdered.
Khomeini was raised by his mother and an aunt, Sahebeh, both of whom died of cholera in 1918. The responsibility for the family then fell to Khomeini's older brother, Seyed Mourteza. The family claimed to be descendants of the Prophet Muhammad. Both brothers were avid religious scholars like their forefathers, and both attained the status of Ayatollah, which is given only to Shi'ite scholars of the highest knowledge.  As a young boy, Khomeini was lively, strong, and good at sports. He was even considered the leapfrog champion of his village and the surrounding area. Far from being dedicated only to games, though, Khomeini was also an intellectual. He was known for his great ability at memorizing both religious and classical poetry, and also excelled at his studies at the local maktab, a school dedicated to teaching the Qu'ran. Because of his scholarly success, Khomeini's older brother decided to send him to the city of Arak (or Sultanabad) in 1920. There, Khomeini studied with the renowned Islamic scholar Yazdi Ha'iri. Ha'iri left Arak for the city of Qom in 1923, and Khomeini followed. There, he committed all of his efforts to furthering his own religious studies while also becoming a teacher for younger students at Ha'iri's school.
When Ha'iri died in the 1930s, the Ayatollah Boroujerdi succeeded him as the most important Islamic figure in Qom. As a result, Boroujerdi gained Khomeini as a follower. It is interesting to note that both Ha'iri and Boroujerdi believed that religion should not involve itself with government affairs. So, while the leader of Iran, Reza Shah, weakened the powers of religious leaders and promoted a more secularized country, the most powerful religious figures in Iran remained silent and encouraged their followers to do the same. Moreover, the same deference was encouraged when Reza Shah's son, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, turned to the U.S. for help quelling protests for democratic reforms in Iran's capital, Tehran, in the 1950s. One of those who were muted by the beliefs of the senior religious leaders was Khomeini. Unable to speak out against what he saw as a country leaving its Islamic roots and values behind, Khomeini turned his efforts toward teaching. He began to cultivate a group of dedicated pupils who became his staunchest supporters during his days as an Islamic revolutionary. On March 31, 1961, Ayatollah Boroujerdi died and Khomeini was in a position to take up the mantle left by the late religious leader. After publishing his writings on Islamic science and doctrines, many Shi'ite Iranians began to see Khomeini as Marja-e Taqlid (a person to be imitated). In 1962, Khomeini began protesting the intentions of the Shah in earnest. His first act of defiance was to organize the ulama (religious leaders) against a proposed law of the Shah's that would effectively end the requirement for elected officials to be sworn in on the Qu'ran. This action was just the beginning in a long string of events that would change Iranian politics forever.
Follower of Khomeini protesting for his release
In June 1963, Khomeini made a speech suggesting that if the Shah did not change the political direction of Iran, the populace would be happy to see him leave the country. As a result, Khomeini was arrested and held in prison. During his incarceration, people took to the streets with cries for his release, and were met by the government with military force. Even so, it was nearly a week before the unrest was resolved. Khomeini was held in prison until April 1964, when he was allowed to return to Qom.
The Shah continued to cultivate close ties with the United States, and to be what Khomeini considered "soft" on Israel. This prompted Khomeini to pronounce his belief that Jews would take over Iran and that the U.S. considered all Iranians to be little more than slaves to America's Western ideals. After delivering another inflammatory speech in the fall of 1964, Khomeini was arrested and deported to Turkey. Prevented by Turkish law from wearing the traditional clothes of a Shi'ite cleric and scholar, Khomeini took up residence in Najaf, Iraq in September 1965. He remained there for 13 years. In 1975, crowds gathered for three days at a religious school in Qom and could only be moved by military force. In response, Khomeini released a jubilant statement in support of the protesters. He declared that "freedom and liberation from the bonds of imperialism" was imminent.
A tending to her infant, wounded during the fighting between the rebels and the regime

More protests occurred in 1978 in Khomeini's defense, and were again put down violently by Iranian government forces. In the wake of these protests, the Shah felt that Khomeini's exile in Iraq was too nearby for comfort. Soon thereafter, Khomeini was confronted by Iraqi soldiers and given a choice: either stay in Iraq and abandon all political activity, or leave the country. He chose the latter. Khomeini moved to Paris, which was to be his last place of residence before his triumphant return to Iran. The year of his return was 1979, mere months after his move to Paris. Students, the middle-class, self-employed businessmen, and the military all took to the street in protest. The Shah turned to the U.S. for help, but ultimately had to leave the country himself in the face of the revolution at his doorstep. Despite statements such as the one he made in Paris, Khomeini was widely acknowledged as the new leader of Iran, and came to be known as the Supreme Leader. He returned home to cheering crowds, and began laying the groundwork for the Islamic state he had for so long been imagining.
Khomeini's triumphant return after his exile
During this period, he put other clerics to work on writing an Islamic constitution for Iran. He also began iterating more authoritarian sentiments than before: "Don't listen to those who speak of democracy. They all are against Islam. They want to take the nation away from its mission. We will break all the poison pens of those who speak of nationalism, democracy, and such things."
Meanwhile, the Shah needed a place to serve out his exile. It became known that the Shah was ill with cancer. With this in mind, the U.S. reluctantly allowed the Shah to enter the country. In protest, a group of Iranians seized more than sixty American hostages at the U.S. Embassy in Tehran on November 4, 1979. Khomeini saw this as a chance to demonstrate the new Iranian defiance of Western influence.
The hostage crisis of the U.S embassy
The new Iranian government and the Carter Administration of the U.S. entered a standoff in that wouldn't end until after Ronald Reagan's inauguration in late January of 1981, under the pressure of sanctions and oil embargoes imposed by the U.S. on Iran. This is now known as the Iranian Hostage Crisis.
Once in power, the Ayatollah Khomeini was no more sympathetic to the cries of the secular left than the Shah had been to Khomeini's cries for reform. Many who protested against his regime were killed, and Khomeini had his doctrines and beliefs taught in public schools. He also ensured that clerics sympathetic to his beliefs filled the government ranks, from the smallest town all the way to his own office.
Khomeini's military  forces, mural Tehran

Moreover, Khomeini believed that the ideas on which the new Iran had been built needed to be, in his words, "exported." Iraq and Iran had long been in territorial dispute over border areas and claims on petroleum reserves. Sensing an opportunity, on September 22, 1980, Iraq’s leader, Saddam Hussein launched an attack by land and air against Iran. Hussein hoped to catch Iran, weakened by revolution. Though Iraq made some early gains, but June, 1982, the war wore down to a stalemate that lasted another six years. Finally, after hundreds of thousands of lives and hundreds of billions of dollars were lost, the UN brokered a cease-fire in August, 1988, which both sides accepted. Khomeini called this compromise "more deadly than taking poison." Khomeini is also well known for releasing a fatwa (a legal document issued by a Muslim cleric) calling for the death of Indian-British author Salman Rushdie for his book The Satanic Verses in 1989. The book is a work of fiction that can be interpreted as depicting the Prophet Mohammed as a false prophet, and casts considerable doubt on many Islamic beliefs.
Salman Rushdie, author ft The Satanic Verses
Shortly after the Rushdie fatwa was declared, the Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini died, on June 3, 1989. Iran remains a religion-based society, and Khomeini's life's work and decade of rule will no doubt continue to influence the country far into the future.
More than 1.200.000 people died during Khomeini's call for revolution. His most fanatic followers founded Hezbollah, one of the most infamous terrorist groups that would became responsible for some of the most notorious terrorist attacks, with the Cinema Rex fire being consider as the largest act of terrorism prior to the 9/11 2001, with over 500 victims. It is widely believed that Ayatollah Khomeini, is the "father" of terrorism.

Tehran 1977, one of the most famous beauty salons in the city

Girl students in chemistry class, University of Tehran 1977

Women are now forced to wear the chador, after Khomeini's rise to power


Tehran 2000


Thank you for reading

Click here for the First Part http://theaquarious.blogspot.gr/2015/04/top-ten-week-most-evil-people-in-history.html



*All sources will be posted on the final post of the list


For any personal comments, hate or praise, ideas or simply anything, please feel free to contact me on facebook https://www.facebook.com/vlasis.sephirothz or twitter https://twitter.com/The_Vlasis

Sunday, April 19, 2015

Top Ten Week-The Most Evil People in History

I love top ten lists. I can literally spend hours watching All Time 10's or Watch Mojo, and i always wanted to do something similar. So while i was at work the other day, i came up with the "Top Ten Week". Simply, instead of a list of things with a picture and a few lines, i decided to separate it into five posts of two entries per post. By doing that i will be able to elaborate more on each entry, and maybe even provide some extra info. I plan to do this every now and then, and i am admitting that it also helps me to buy some time during my research for other posts (some of them turning out to be quite the challenge). For my first list i decided to kick things off with the most evil people in history, because i just happened to have a conversation on a similar subject recently, and realised that i was unaware of most of the entries you are about to see. So having researched this subject a little, i thought i could share with you some of my new found knowledge.
Please note this is not intended as a typical Top Ten list, as i avoided the ranking from least to most or vise versa. Also, be warned that some of these entries may include uncomfortable images.





Mehmed Talaat Pasha 
1874-1921 




Tallat Pasha was one of the Three Pashas that ruled the Ottoman Empire by the time of the first World War. He began his career in politics when he became deputy of Edirne (Andrianopolis) in 1908 after the Young Turks Movement revolution, one year later, after the assassination of the Grand Vizier Mahmud Sevket Pasha, he was appointed Minister of Interior Affairs. It was then that he, along with Enver and Djemal, formed the triumvirate, later known as the Three Pashas, over their mutual hatred for Armenia people, that basically ran the entire Ottoman government. On April 24 1915 Tallad issued the order to close all political organization within the empire, and arrest all community leaders and all intellectual people, such as writers and thinkers, that are connected to them, by claiming that they were responsible for upheavals in the Ottoman Empire, and they were secretly collaborating with the Russians. Of course, the truth is that the radical Turks didn't want Christians within their empire. With the pass of his techir law, on June 1 1915, began the mass deportation of 2.000.000 Armenians to the Syrian desert were they were abandoned to starve to death.
Ottoman Armenians are marched to a prison by armed Turkish soldiers in April 1915.


Tallat's "Butcher Battalions" as they were named, were made up from ex-convicts and murderers, and they were order to, as one officer claimed, to "liquidity the Christin element". They would strip down the people, and marched them around naked until they were burned from the sun. The killed children and babies with no remorse, and raped women and adolescent girls in from of their families, and crucify them after.
Armenian Christian girls crucified in the desert
By the end 1922 over 1.500.000 Armenians were brutally murdered, with their homes and proprieties seized, and by the end of 1923 the Armenian population was completely eliminated from Asia Minor and East Armenia leaving only 300.000 Armenians. The Armenian diaspora communities around the world came into being by those few survivors.

After the Allied forces occupied Istanbul, they sought to bring to justice those responsible, among other charges, for the Armenian Genocide. Those who where caught were put under arrest at the Bekiraga division and where subsequently exiled to Malta. The Pashas, who held the highest positions in the administration and whose names were on the top of the execution lists of the Armenian assassination teams could be condemned in absentia because they had gone abroad. A few months later the British secret service located Tallat in Stockholm, and planned to apprehend him, but dropped the plan, fearing implications with Germany, instead they decided to allow the Armenian revolutionaries to carry out the verdict. Tallat was assassinated with a single bullet through the head on March 15 1921 as he came out of his house in Hardenberastrasse. His assassin was an Armenian Revolutionary Federation member from Erzurum, named Soghomon Tehlirian.
He surrender himself, and after a two day trial was fount not innocent, on grounds of temporary insanity, due to the traumatic experience he went through during the genocide.
Tehlirian died in 1960 and is buried at the Ararat Cemetery in California, in a monumental grave.
He is still considered a national hero to the Armenians.



The Turkish government still denies that the Holocaust ever took place. They claim that the Armenians were an enemy force, so extreme measures had to be taken. Turkey is considered a valuable ally to America and most western nations, so many world governments have yet to condemn the Armenian Genocide.









Lady Elizabeth Bathory
1560-1614




Elizabeth, or Erzsebet, Bathory was the daughter of George and Anna Bathory, born in Nirbratoe, Hungary on 1560. As a child she spend most of her days in her families estate, castle Cachtice, located near the town of of Vishine, north east of present day Bratislava (although it is commonly mistakenly reported being in Transylvania). From a very young age she showed exceptional brilliance, and began to educate her self. By the age of 12 she was fluent at German, Latin and Greek, She showed a passion for fine arts and historians suggest that she was studying, and fascinated by, astronomy. All that in an era when most of the nobles couldn't even write their own name.
Elizabeth came from high nobility, her uncle was the former king of Hungary, and all of her family members were dukes and barons. Also her family was one of the first in Hungary to renounce the Catholic Church, and adopt Protestantism.
As a child she was subject to heavy seizures, accompanied by intense fits of rage and uncontrollable behavior, and possible even epilepsy. At the time it seems many of the peasants who were in the Bathory family service, believed her to be cursed, because of her aunt, who was rumored to be a witch.
Truth is, that it is highly possible that Elizabeth was a product of inbreeding, something that was really quite common within the nobility. Records of many dysfunctional members of her family also support this. Furthermore, she was growing in a era of war, when Hungary was overrun by the Ottoman empire, which lead to a constant series of proxy battles. On top of that, the Hungarians were influenced by the stories of Vlad the Impaler, and would mimic his brutality to instill fear to the Turks. It is suggested that Elizabeth witnessed countless brutal acts of punishment that deeply traumatize her, and psychologists believe that she was suffering from social anxiety due to these events. A historical analysis suggest that she once witnessed her father capturing a thief in his estate, witch he proceeded to beat near to death, and then sew inside the stomach of a dying horse and left to perish. So not only she was exposed to incredible violence, but her family absolutely condone attitude toward it.


The emblem of the Bathory family

Elizabeth Bathory was engaged at age 10 to a young knight named Ferenc Nadasty (known as "The Black Knight"), who was already famous for his brutal tactics against the ottomans, even though he was just 18, and were married on May 1575. He was a soldier, so he was away for long periods of time, even longer when he became chief commander of the Hungarian troops, and while he was away Elizabeth was tasked with protecting their vast estate and the seventeen villages that surround it.
A series of letters discovered later on, showed that Elizabeth would write to her husband, asking him to describe to her the ways he killed his enemies, and he would happily respond in gruesome detail. Apparently, all this gore was arousing Elizabeth to the point that she would take part in massive orgies with her servants, allowing historians to believe that she was in fact bisexual.
One day, Elizabeth suffered from a severe fit of rage, and since Ferenc was not around to restrain her, she killed a servant girl, who was supposedly jealous of too. It seems that the murderous rush was so intoxicating, that would turn young Elizabeth into the most prolific serial killer in history.

After her husband's death in 1604, nobody was left to restrain her, she was in charge of a huge territory, and bored from a comfortable life, that satisfied all her needs, Elizabeth resulted to the rush of murder. Having learned a lot from her late husband about torture, she unleashed her rage onto her servants and peasants, especially young girls. Some of her ways included:

  • Severe beatings administered by Elizabeth herself, who reportedly beat girls in the face "until their bones broke"
  • Applying red hot irons to the soles of girls feet
  • Mutilation of the face, fingers and genitals
  • Sexual abuse of the most depraved nature
  • Placing oil rages between a girls legs ans setting them on fire
  • Mock "surgery" 
  • She forced a girl to reportedly cut of, cook and eat her own flesh
  • Biting of their flesh until they die
  • Stabbed with needles under the finger nails
  • Doused with water and left in the cold
  • Forced girls in small cages filled with spikes and set on fire
  • Covered with honey and left outside to be killed by the bugs
  • Starvation






Lady Bathory was able to remain undetected for many years, despite the complaints of the villagers about he disappearing girls. Supposedly she crossed the line when she included a noble girl in her past time activity, drawing the attention of the crown, which was more than happy to carry out an inquiry. You see the king was in great dept to the Bathory family, so if she was guilty, not only he could keep his money, but also seize her vast territory. So, after a raid on a Christmas night in 1610, Elizabeth was apprehended and put on trial, where after almost 300 testimonies she was found guilty for 650 cases of murder (even though that this this number is highly unlikely).
She was sentenced to house restriction where she died in her sleep four years later.

Now it is worth mentioning that the tale of Lady Elizabeth Bathory is surrounded by myths. For instance, there are absolutely no proof that she would bathe in her victims blood to stay young, that myth surfaced more than 100 years later and its part of the folkloric tales the villagers created, mostly to attract tourists. Also it is believed that everything was a political conspiracy orchestrated by her familie's opponents to claim her land, and erase their dept to them (Knights Templar anyone?), after her husband died. Lets not forget that at that time, almost all widowed women were scape goats, and always considered witches.
So, guilty or not, the legend of Lady Bathory is what inspired Bram Stoker to write Dracula, one of themost famous novels, and create the vampire mythos, that would live to become an insuperable part of popular culture.



Thank you for reading

*All sources will be posted on the final post of the list


For any personal comments, hate or praise, ideas or simply anything, please feel free to contact me on facebook https://www.facebook.com/vlasis.sephirothz or twitter https://twitter.com/The_Vlasis