Bran Castle in Bran, Brașov, Romania
During World War II, Bran Castle was turned into a hospital for wounded soldiers by Princess Ileana, who was trained as a nurse.
Centuries ago, in parts of ancient Europe, the night marking the end of the harvest and beginning of winter was feared as a time when the worlds of the living and the dead overlapped. Communities lit fires to keep wandering spirits at bay, believing that on this night the boundary between the two faded. These rituals gave rise to Halloween, echoing in legends around Bran Castle.
High in the misty Carpathians, Bran Castle in Romania rises like a sentinel against the gloom. Built in the 14th century to guard the mountain pass between Transylvania and Wallachia, its towers seem made for secrets. Over time, the fortress became entwined with the legend of Vlad III of Wallachia, the brutal ruler, whose cruelty inspired Bram Stoker's fictional vampire, Count Dracula. Though he likely never set foot here, the castle's brooding silhouette mirrored Stoker's descriptions so closely that myth fused with stone.
Bran's eerie reputation finds an echo in Rajasthan's Bhangarh Fort, where history and legend entwine to create enduring ghost stories. Both places thrive in that shadowy space where fact ends and myth begins—proof that some stories refuse to stay buried.