| Dracula, between legend and reality | |
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Dracula or
Vlad the Impaler was the son of Vlad Dracul (1436-1442;
1443-1447) and grandson of Mircea the Old (1386-1418).
Vlad Dracul was dubbed a knight of the Dragon Order by
the Hungarian king. All the members of the order had a
dragon on their coat of arms, and that is what brought
him the nickname of Dracul (the Devil).
Vlad the Impaler
used to sign himself Draculea or Draculya - the Devil's
son -, a name which was distorted into Dracula. In fact, Vlad was called Tepes (the Impaler) only after his death (1476). He ruled in Wallachia between 1456-1462 and in 1476. In 1462, having been defeated by the Turks, Vlad took refuge in Hungary. In 1476, with the help of the Hungarian king Matia Corvin and the Moldavian prince Stephen the Great, Vlad took over the Wallachian throne again for a month. A battle followed, during which Vlad was killed. His body was buried in the church of the Snagov Monastery, on an island near Bucharest. His body lies in front of the altar. In 1935, a richly dressed but beheaded corpse was exhumed at Snagov, a fate known to have overtaken Dracula, whose head was supposedly wrapped, perfumed and dispatched as a gift to the Turkish sultan. During his life there were no thieves in all Romanian territory, large cups of pure massive gold could be found next to all the fountains all over the country and no one would have the courage to steal one.
They say that impalling was one of Dracula's favorite punishments, but he was not the only one who made use of
it at the time. Other German and Spanish princes would do
the same. He used the method for boyars, thieves and
criminals, Turks, Saxons and those who conspired against
him; more than once it happened that a whole forest of
sharp stakes with enemies' heads would rise around
Tārgoviste, the capital of Wallachia at the time. |
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