According to a CNN report, ‘Bran Castle’ was built in 1388 and it is located outside the city of Brashov. Now this castle is applying vaccine to people for free.
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‘Dracula Castle’, located in Romania, has offered a vaccine to tourists visiting on the lines of Vaccination Drive. Bran Castle, located in the Transylvania region of the country, announced that it will vaccinate people through the Pfizer BioNotech vaccine.
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According to a CNN report, ‘Bran Castle’ was built in 1388 and is located outside the city of Brashov. Taking this castle, it is said that Dracula is inhabited here. Actually, the reason behind this is to be considered as the place of Count Dracula, the main character of the Irish writer Bram Stoker’s novel ‘Dracula’. This novel was published in 1897.
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The Dracula character of Bram Stoker’s Novel is believed to be based on blood thirsty 15th-century King Vlad III Dracula. King Vlad committed thousands of murders during his reign.
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At the same time, ‘Bran Castle’ is a popular tourist destination among the people. It told in a Facebook post that people coming to the Castle on any weekend in May will be vaccinated without any appointment. It said that those who would get the vaccine, they would be given ‘Vaccination Diploma’ and they would also get a chance to roam free inside the Castle.
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Castle is eager to express his relationship with Dracula. A message has also been given on its website for those who think that Dracula is really there. Castle said that people coming to Bran Castle should distinguish between Bran’s historical reality and his Dracula character in Bram Stoker’s Novel. Dracula only happens in our imaginations.
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Presently, doctors and nurses are putting vaccines on people inside the castle by putting stickers with big teeth. Castle hopes that through vaccinations, crowds of people will once again come to roam here. Due to the Corona epidemic, there has been a decline in the number of tourists visiting here.
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More than 1 million cases of coronavirus have been reported in Romania, while more than 29 thousand people have died. A survey by consultancy Globusac found that the people of Romania and Bulgaria are the most reluctant to get vaccinations compared to the people of 10 Central and Eastern European countries.
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