More on Count Dracula.. Happy Halloween

by campanaro | October 16, 2008 at 06:07 am
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More on Count Dracula.. Happy Halloween

More on Count Dracula.. Happy Halloween

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Yes, there was a real Dracula, and he was a true prince of darkness. He was Prince Vlad III Dracula, also known as Vlad Tepes, meaning "Vlad the Impaler." The Turks called him Kaziglu Bey, or "the Impaler Prince." He was the prince of Walachia, but, as legend suggests, he was born in Transylvania, which at that time was ruled by Hungary.Walachia was founded in 1290 by a Transylvanian named Radu Negru, or Rudolph the Black. It was dominated by Hungary until 1330, when it became independent. The first ruler of the new country was Prince Basarab the Great (1310-1352), an ancestor of Dracula. Dracula's grandfather, Prince Mircea the Old, reigned from 1386 to 1418. He participated in one too many losing battles against the Turks and was forced to pay tribute to them. He and his descendants continued to rule Walachia, but as vassals of the Ottoman empire.The throne of Walachia was not necessarily passed from father to son. The prince, or voivode, was elected by the country's boyars, or land-owning nobles. This caused fighting among family members, assassinations, and other unpleasantness. Eventually the House of Basarab was split into two factions - Mircea's descendants, and the descendants of another prince named Dan. Dan's descendants were called the Danesti.Mircea had an illegitimate son, Vlad, born around 1390, who was educated in Hungary and Germany. Vlad served as a page for King Sigismund of Hungary, who became the Holy Roman Emperor in 1410. Sigismund founded a secret fraternal order of knights called the Order of the Dragon to uphold Christianity and defend the empire against Turkey. Because of his bravery fighting Turks, Vlad was admitted to the Order, probably in 1431. The boyars started to call him Dracul, meaning "dragon." Vlad's second son would be known as Dracula, or "son of the dragon." Dracul also meant "devil." So Dracula's enemies, especially German Saxons, called him "son of the devil."

Interesting fact:

Members of the Order of the Dragon had a special costume to wear on Sundays. It was a red garment with a black cape over it . . . that's why the fictional Dracula wears a cape!
Eventually Sigismund made Vlad the military governor of Transylvania, a post he held from 1431 to 1435. During
that time he lived in the town of Sighisoara or Schassburg. You can still visit the citadel there and even the house
where Vlad's son Dracula was born. Today there's a restaurant on the second floor. There's also a mural in the
house that may depict Vlad Dracul.

campanaro

This story courtesy of:
http://mural.uv.es/emuhol/Real%20Count%20Dracula's%20life.html


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Steffanie

this is ridiculous. there is no such thing as vampires, they are only fictional. the only way i would believe there are really vampires is if i see one myself. no offense to anyone that may believe in them. they are interesting and all but nobody has proved there is or there aren't a such thing as vampires.

 

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Fairbanks

i would believe there are really vampires is if i see one myself. . . .

If one does not see vampires, how can one see vampires?

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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