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  1. The Carpathian Castle (French: Le Château des Carpathes) is a novel by Jules Verne first published in 1892. It is possible that Bram Stoker took inspiration from this for his 1897 novel Dracula. Due to castle aspect and local toponymy, it is assumed that Colț Castle in Hunedoara county inspired Jules Verne.

    • Jules Verne
    • 1892
  2. 23 de mar. de 1981 · The Carpathian Castle: Directed by Stere Gulea. With Maria Banica, Avram Besoiu, Ion Caramitru, Cornel Ciupercescu. In late 19th century, a Transylvanian revolutionary fleeing the Imperial authorities goes to Italy where he meets a beautiful soprano who later disappears under mysterious circumstances.

    • (105)
    • Adventure, Fantasy, Mystery
    • Stere Gulea
    • 1981-03-23
  3. 5 de mai. de 2019 · In the village of Werst in the Carpathian mountains of Transylvania (then part of Austria-Hungary), some mysterious things are occurring and the villagers believe that Chort (the devil) occupies the castle. A visitor to the region, Count Franz de Telek, is intrigued by the stories and decides to go to the castle and investigate.

  4. In late 1800s, a Transylvanian revolutionary, Frâncu Slatineanu, fighting for the civil rights of all Transylvanians, regardless of their ethnic origin, is forced to evade the Imperial authorities by fleeing to Italy. On the ship taking him to Italy, the revolutionary meets the world-famous soprano Stilla and her impresario.

  5. The Castle of the Carpathians. Jules Verne. 3.61. 5,159 ratings392 reviews. Mysterious entities take possession of a long deserted castle creating fear among the residents of the adjacent village of Werst, in Transylvania. The village sends two men to the castle to investigate, but they are repulsed by what the men feel are "supernatural" means.

    • (5,1K)
    • Hardcover
  6. The Mysterious Castle in the Carpathians. Original title: Tajemství hradu v Karpatech. 1981. 1h 37m. IMDb RATING. 7.2 /10. 1.4K. YOUR RATING. Rate. Adventure Comedy Fantasy.

  7. Carpathian Castle is a comparatively short yet densely written Verne tale. It is replete with obscure bits of Roumanian history and mythology (better brush up on your Rosza Sandor, staffi, balauri and zmei!), actual place names (Klausenberg, Kolosvar, Vulkan, Leany Ko) and folk customs; as usual, Verne’s research here is nearly impeccable.