A Habsburg heir is
hoping someone will take a bite of his offer Monday to sell "Dracula's
Castle" in
Legend has it that the
ruthless Vlad — who earned his nickname because of
the way he tortured his enemies — spent one night in the 1400s at the castle. The
Habsburgs formally put the
After being restored in
the late 1980s and following the end of communist rule in
In May 2006, the castle
was returned to Princess Ileana's son,
Habsburg, 69, offered
to sell the castle last year to local authorities for $80 million, but the
offer was rejected. On Monday, he put the castle up for sale "to the right
purchaser under the right circumstances," said Michael Gardner, chief
executive of Baytree Capital, the company
representing Habsburg. "The Habsburgs are not in the business of managing
a museum."
He predicted the castle
would sell for more than $135 million but added that Habsburg will only sell it
to a buyer "who will treat the property and its history with appropriate
respect."
Habsburg said in a
statement: "Aside from the castle's connection to one of the most famous
novels ever written,
According to a contract
signed when the castle was returned, the government pays rent to Habsburg to
run the castle as a museum for three years, charging admission. After 2009,
Habsburg will have full control of the castle,
The government has
priority as a buyer if it can match the best offer for the castle, he said.
Opposition lawmakers
have claimed the government's decision to return the castle to Habsburg was
illegal because of procedural errors. In recent years, the castle — complete
with occasional glimpses of bats flying around its ramparts at twilight — has
attracted filmmakers looking for a dramatic backdrop for films about Dracula
and other horror movies.
Some 450,000 people
visit the castle every year,