Full answer: The blood bathing myth first appeared in Crimson Book (1729) by a Jesuit scholar who had never met Báthory. Historian Dr. Kimberly L. Craft, in her 2014 translation of the trial documents, found zero contemporary mentions of blood baths. The "full" truth is that it is a legend invented to sensationalize a political persecution.

Unlike Dracula (power) or Carmilla (seduction), Estella Bathory’s full power set revolves around regret . She does not enjoy killing; she is addicted to it. Her struggle for redemption forms the core of her narrative.

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