The Real Prince Dracula
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.
According to legend, Walachia was founded in 1290 by a
Transylvanian named Radu Negru, or Rudolph the Black. Dracula's
grandfather, Prince Mircea the Old, reigned from 1386 to 1418.
He fought to keep Walachia independent from the Turks but was
forced to pay tribute to them. He and his descendants continued
to rule Walachia, but under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire
(Turkey).
The throne of Wallachia 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 royal House of Basarab was split into two
factions -- Mircea's descendants, and the descendants of
another prince named Dan II. Dan's descendants were called the
Danesti.
Mircea had an illegitimate son, Vlad, born around 1390. He
grew up in the court of King Sigismund of Hungary, first
probably as a hostage and later as a page. Sigismund, who became
the Holy Roman Emperor in 1410, founded a secret fraternal order
of knights called the Order of the Dragon to uphold Catholicism
and defend the empire against Turkey. Vlad was admitted to the
Order, probably in 1431. The boyars of Walachia 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 some of Dracula's enemies called him "son of the devil."
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.
Young Dracula
Dracula was born in November or December of 1431. His given
name was Vlad. He had an older brother, Mircea, and a younger
brother, Radu the Handsome. Their mother may have been a
Moldavian princess or a Tranyslvanian noble. It is said that
she educated Dracula in his early years. Later he was trained
for knighthood by an old boyar who had fought the Turks.
Dracula's father was not content to remain a mere governor
forever. During his years in Transyvlania, he gathered
supporters for his plan to seize Wallachia's throne from its
current occupant, a Danesti prince named Alexandru I. In late
1436 or early 1437 Vlad Dracul killed Alexandru and became
Prince Vlad II.
Vlad was a vassal of Hungary and also had to pay tribute to
Hungary's enemy, Turkey. In 1442 Turkey invaded Transylvania.
Vlad tried to stay neutral, but Hungary's rulers blamed him and
drove him and his family out of Wallachia. A Hungarian general,
Janos Hunyadi (who may have been the illegitimate son of Emperor
Sigismund) made a Danesti named Basarab II the prince of
Wallachia.
The following year Vlad regained the throne with the help of
the sultan of Turkey. In 1444 he sent his two younger sons to
Turkey to prove his loyalty. Dracula was about 13. He spent the
next four years in Adrianople, Turkey as a hostage.
In 1444 Hungary went to war with Turkey and demanded that
Vlad join the crusade. As a member of the Order of the Dragon,
Vlad was sworn to obey this summons. But he didn't want to anger
the Turks, so he sent his eldest son, Mircea, in his place. The
Christian army was demolished at the Battle of Varna, and Vlad
and Mircea blamed Janos Hunyadi.
In 1447 Vlad and Mircea were murdered. Mircea was killed by
the boyars and merchants of the Walachian city Tirgoviste.
There are different stories about how he died - he may have
been tortured and burned, or buried alive. Apparently his father
died at the same time. Some say that the assassinations were
organized by Hunyadi.
Since Vlad and Mircea were dead, and Dracula and Radu were
still in Turkey, Hunyadi was able to put a member of the Danesti
clan, Vladislav II, on the Walachian throne. The Turks didn't
like having a Hungarian puppet in charge of Wallachia, so in
1448 they freed Dracula and gave him an army. He was seventeen
years old.
It seems that Dracula's little brother Radu chose to remain
in Turkey. He had grown up there, and apparently remained loyal
to the sultan.
Dracula's Reign
With the help of his Turkish army, Dracula seized the
Walachian throne. However, he only ruled for two months before
Hunyadi forced him into exile in Moldavia. Again Vladislav II
became Wallachia's prince.
Three years later Prince Bogdan of Moldavia was assassinated
and Dracula fled the country. By now Vladislav II had become a
supporter of Turkey, and Hunyadi was sorry he had put him on
the throne. Everyone switched sides - Dracula became Hunyadi's
vassal, and Hunyadi now supported Dracula's attempt to regain
his throne. In 1456 Hunyadi invaded Turkish Serbia while
Dracula invaded Walachia. Hunyadi was killed, but Dracula
killed Vladislav II and took back his throne.
He established his capital at Tirgoviste - you can still
see the ruins of his palace there. And nearby a statue of Vlad
Tepes still stands. He is considered an important figure in
Romanian history because he unified Walachia and resisted the
influence of foreigners.
But it's Dracula's cruelty that most non-Romanians
remember. After becoming prince, Dracula supposedly invited
many beggars and other old, sick and poor people to a banquet
at his castle. When his guests had finished eating their meal
and drinking a toast to him, Dracula asked them, "Would you like
to be without cares, lacking nothing in this world?"
Yes, they said enthusiastically.
So Dracula had the castle boarded up and set it on fire.
Nobody made it out alive - and that was the end of their
problems, as he had promised. "I did this so that no one
will be poor in my realm," he said.
According to another story, he invited 500 boyars to a
banquet and asked them how many princes had ruled in their
lifetimes. They said they had lived through many reigns.
Shouting that this was their fault because of their plotting,
Dracula had them all arrested on the spot. The older ones were
impaled; the others were marched 50 miles to Poenari where they
were forced to build a mountaintop fortress. They worked a long
time; when their clothes fell off, they worked naked. Most of
them died, of course. And of course Dracula seized the boyars'
property and passed it out to his supporters. In that way he
created a new nobility, loyal to him.
(The ruins of the Poenari fortress can still be seen. You
have to climb nearly 1,500 steps and cross a little bridge to
reach it. It's now called Castle Dracula, but several places
are called that. Another "Castle Dracula" is Bran Castle, near
the town of Brasov. Although Dracula may have stayed there
occasionally, it certainly wasn't his home.)
Dracula liked to set up a banquet table and dine while he
watched people die. His favorite form of execution was
impalement. It was slow; people could take days to die. He
liked to impale many people at once, arranging the stakes in
fancy designs. Nothing was too brutal for Dracula - he enjoyed
having people skinned, boiled alive, etc. He prided himself on
making the punishment (supposedly) fit the crime.
By 1462, when he was deposed, he had killed between 40,000
and 100,000 people, possibly more. He always thought up some
excuse for these executions. He killed merchants who cheated
their customers. He killed women who had affairs. Supposedly he
had one woman impaled because her husband's shirt was too short.
He didn't mind impaling children, either. Afterwards he would
display the corpses in public so everyone would learn a lesson.
It's said that there were over 20,000 bodies hanging outside
his capital city. Of course, the stories about Dracula's
cruelty might have been exaggerated by his enemies.
Despite all this, Dracula's subjects respected him for
fighting the Turks and being a strong ruler. He's remembered
today as a patriotic hero who stood up to Turkey and Hungary.
He was the last Wallachian prince to remain independent from
the Ottoman Empire. He was so scornful of other nations that
when two foreign ambassadors refused to doff their hats to him,
he had the hats nailed to their heads. He was opposed to the
Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches because he thought
foreigners, operating through the churches, had too much power
in Wallachia. He tried to prevent foreign merchants from taking
business away from his citizens. If merchants disobeyed his
trade laws, they were, of course, impaled.
Dracula created a very severe moral code for the citizens of
Wallachia. You can guess what happened to anyone who broke the
code. Thieves were impaled, even liars were impaled. Naturally
there wasn't a lot of crime in Wallachia during his reign.
To prove how well his laws worked, Dracula had a gold cup
placed in a public square. Anyone who wanted to could drink
from the cup, but no one was allowed to take it out of the
square. No one did.
A visiting merchant once left his money outside all night,
thinking that it would be safe because of Dracula's strict
policies. To his surprise, some of his coins were stolen. He
complained to Dracula, who promptly issued a proclamation that
the money must be returned or the city would be destroyed. That
night Dracula secretly had the missing money, plus one extra
coin, returned to the merchant. The next morning the merchant
counted the money and found it had been returned. He told
Dracula about this, and mentioned the extra coin. Dracula
replied that the thief had been caught and would be impaled.
And if the merchant hadn't mentioned the extra coin, he would
have been impaled, too.
Dracula Overthrown
In 1462 Dracula attacked the Turks to drive them out of the
Danube River valley. Sultan Mehmed II retaliated by invading
Wallachia with an army three times larger than Dracula's.
Dracula was forced to retreat to his capital, Tirgoviste.
He burned his own villages and poisoned wells on the way so
that the Turkish army wouldn't have any food or water.
When the sultan reached Tirgoviste, he saw a terrifying
scene, remembered in history as "the Forest of the Impaled."
There, outside the city, were 20,000 Turkish prisoners, all
impaled. The sultan's officers were too scared to go on -
Dracula had won again.
Although the sultan retreated, Dracula's little brother Radu
did not. The Turks had provided him with an army in hopes that
he could seize Dracula's throne. Many of Dracula's boyars
abandoned him to join Radu. Radu's army pursued Dracula to his
fortress at Poenari. Dracula's wife was so frightened that she
threw herself from the upper battlements. The Turks seized the
castle, but Dracula managed to escape through a secret tunnel.
There were still some peasants around he hadn't impaled, and
they helped him flee from Wallachia.
He went to the new king of Hungary, Matthias Corvinus, for
help. Instead the king had him imprisoned in a tower. Dracula
remained in Hungary while Radu ruled Walachia as a puppet for
the Turks. After the first four years he was allowed to move
into a house. He became a Catholic to please the Catholic
Hungarians. He ingratiated himself with the Hungarian royal
family, and even married one of its members (possibly the king's
cousin).
But he was still the same old Dracula. He impaled rats and
birds for fun. Once a thief broke into his house and a Hungarian
captain followed him to arrest him. Dracula didn't kill the
thief - he killed the officer. Why? Because the officer was a
gentleman, and should have known not to enter a house uninvited.
The Death of Dracula
In 1473, Dracula's brother Radu lost the Walachian throne to
a member of the Danesti clan, Basarab the Old. Radu died of
syphilis in January of 1475, and in 1476 Dracula invaded
Wallachia with the help of Moldavia and Transylvania. They
drove Basarab out of the country, and Dracula again became
Wallachia's prince. Most of Dracula's army then went home to
Transylvania.
The Turks attacked a few months later. Dracula was killed
while fighting near Bucharest in December 1476. Some say he
died at the hands of a Turkish assassin posing as a servant,
or that he was accidentally killed on the battlefield by his
own men because he had disguised himself as a Turk to confuse
the enemy. The sultan displayed Dracula's head on a pike in
Constantinople to prove that he was dead. His body was buried
at the island monastery of Snagov, which he had patronized. But
excavations in 1931 failed to turn up any sign of his coffin!
Source:
Royalty.nu