The castle: Reply to Paul Murray & Brian Coffey

Volume 3 of the Journal of Vampire Studies (2023) contained an article by Paul Murray, “A Tour of Dracula’s Transylvania,” which discussed my theory on the location of the (fictional) Castle Dracula,  as presented in my article “Castle Dracula—Its Exact Location Reconstructed from Stoker’s Novel, his Research Notes and Contemporary Maps,” in “The Dracula Maps,”  and in my chapter “Count Dracula’s Address and Life-Time Identity,” included in Dracula: An International Perspective.  Anthony Hogg kindly invited me to react. 

My article is planned to appear in the December 2024 issue of the Journal of Vampire Studies. As both Murray’s article and my own text are hard to understand without consulting visual references and the Journal is not able to include any pictures, I have posted several maps and illustrations on this page.


The true site of the fictitious Castle Dracula

This is the site of the fictitious Castle Dracula as I discovered it in January 2012. Almost 13 years later, I still have no doubt that Mount Izvorul Călimanului is the very mountain top Bram Stoker had in mind while crafting Dracula and describing the routes of Jonathan Harker, Professor van Helsing & Mina, and the four men on horseback chasing the Szgany on their way to the Count's stronghold. Checking all details again in order to reply to Murray's article only strengthened my conviction that I was right; Murray, from his side, failed to understand my theoretical framework and mixed up the site where the Gypsies and their pursuers were supposed to leave the River Bistrița in Moldavia. According to Stoker's notes and Harker's Journal, this must have been at Straja, not at the coordinates 47°N, 25°45'E, as Murray assumes.

 

Mount Izvorul Călimanului can be found at Mapcarta, based on Open­Street­Map node 3692801810. This node indicates an elevation of 2,032 m, although both its terrain map and Google Earth show a maximum height of 2,013 m only. As far as I could see from Google Earth, this peak is reached at the ridge of a large black rock formation, at the very border of Suceava and Harghita County: the location I first spotted in May 2012. The exact Google Map coordinates 47°08'00.17"N, 25°17'13.93"E are ca. 140 m removed from the coordinates I published in spring 2012 (47°08’03” N, 25°17’19”E), before I even visited Romania. This small difference has no bearing on my theory about Stoker's intentions, however. Stoker picked the Izvorul as the location of his imaginary castle, but did not care to determine its highest point.

Maps & Illustrations

My first paper on the location of Castle Dracula, Linkoeping University Electronic Press, Febr. 7, 2012
My first paper on the location of Castle Dracula, Linkoeping University Electronic Press, Febr. 7, 2012nic Press
3D view of the Borgo Pass, created by NASA
3D view of the Borgo Pass, created by NASA
From Bistritz to the meeting point at the eastern end of the Borgo Pass: ca. 49 km
From Bistritz to the meeting point at the eastern end of the Borgo Pass: ca. 49 km
This diagram shows the distances along the road from Bistritz to the Bukovinian border
This diagram shows the distances along the road from Bistritz to the Bukovinian border
The map by Walker and Wright (Davison, 1997) has some fundamental errors
The map by Walker and Wright (Davison, 1997) has some fundamental errors
Walker and Wright seem to place the castle in Moldavia, not in Transylvania
Walker and Wright seem to place the castle in Moldavia, not in Transylvania
The castle must be situated in the highlighted area
The castle must be situated in the highlighted area, between ca. 15 and 33 km beeline distance from the Pass
The same map, with more details
The same map, with more details
47° North, 25°45" is NOT the point of disembarkation, but of the border crossing
47° North, 25°45" is NOT the point of disembarkation, but of the border crossing
Rosenbach Note #33b reveals the coordinates of the border crossing between Straja and Mount Izvorul
Rosenbach Note #33b reveals the coordinates of the border crossing between Straja and Mount Izvorul
Approaching the Izvorul Peak along the ridge of the caldera is a gradual climb.

No person familiar with the terrain would try and drive a calèche over the peak of the Pietrosul; the route north of this summit is safer and less exhausting, and is even used for marathon running nowadays.

The route along the ridge of the volcanic caldera is less strenuous than the steep foot walk up from the Neagra Creek to the top of the Izvorul I made twice in 2012. Already north of the Pietrosul, the path reaches an altitude of 1,700 m. From there, the road climbs to 1,974 m just south of the Rețițis, and then descends again, until a "dip" occurs at an elevation of 1,805 m. From there, the terrain ascends once more toward the Izvorul (see next diagram). Like at the Pietrosul, the local pathways developed over centuries allow for a gradual ascent and descent.

Just south of the Saua Voievodesei, the route along the ridge of the caldera (county border) has a "dip." The lowest elevation I could find on Google Earth is 1,803 m. Over a stretch of 2.1km along the available pathways, the elevation increases again, by altogether 210 m, until the top of the Izvorul is reached at 2,013 m. The average pitch is 10%, which corresponds to an angle of 5.7%. For a team of four "splendid" horses drawing a light calèche with only two persons, this incline should be no problem; see the calculations posted at Reddit and Worldbuilding Stackexchange.


NOTE: All images shown below are circulating on the Internet. Some of them, such as the photos by Adolph Chevallier, or the pictures of steam launches and rescue boats, are still under copyright. They are shown here by way of "Fair Use," for non-commercial, academic reference only. The copyright remains with the respective photographers. Attribution will follow.

Pontoon ferry at Peste Vale, 1900-1940

Rafts on the River Bistrița

These photos show rafts on the River Bistrița, before the Bicaz Dam created a wholly new situation. Some of them were taken as far north as Iacobeni in Bukovina, near the origins of the river, more than 100 km upstream from Straja. Although the route was not without obstacles, shallows and rapids—as duly acknowledged by Stoker—, already at Iacobeni the Bistrița  was obviously more than just a creek.

Steam launches

Various small steam launches that I assume to be similar to the “swift little steamboat” (Van Helsing) acquired by Arthur Holmwood. As the photos show, a steam launch manned by two persons does not need to be longer than 5-6½ meters. For the boats depicted here, the keel is not deeper than the hull itself; they have a very shallow draft.

Hundreds of photos of steam launches can be found at https://steamboat.org.uk/register.php.

Bonhams 'Lady Rose'. Here, the draft is less than 8% of the ship's length.
Bonhams 'Lady Rose'. Here, the draft is less than 8% of the ship's length. If the ship would be 6 m long, the draft would be less than 50 cm. If the length would be 7 m, the draft would be less than 55 cm.

Boats used by the rescue brigades in Piatra Neamț and Borca

Toy boats

All pictures: Pixabay.

As you can guess from these pictures, toy boats have a draft between 5 and 10 cm. Murray's claim that the River Bistrița at the point where the Count's men left it was only a small stream which could hardly have accommodated a toy boat is not correct—unless he was looking for the Bistrița at the wrong place, far from the actual river....

Width of the River Bistrița near Straja und Vatra Dorna

At this postcard from the Interbellum, the River Bistrița at Straja is ca. 20-30 m wide.
At this postcard from the Interbellum, the River Bistrița at Straja is ca. 20-30 m wide.
Even at the "Goetz" sister factory in Vatra Dornei, the River Bistrița had a considerable width.
Even at the "Goetz" sister factory in Vatra Dornei, the River Bistrița had a considerable width.