The Terrifying Reality About "Dracula"
The rugged Transylvanian Alps
provide one of the most spectacular landscapes in Europe. Hawks soar around the
craggy, snow-covered peaks, while bears and chamois take refuge in the dense
forests below. Medieval villages and the ruins of once-proud castles can
abruptly materialize through the mist, as if daring outsiders to uncover their
secrets.
Transylvania also produced a leader
known as a defender of the Christian faith, a Romanian hero, and a subhuman
monster. His name was Prince Vlad, but the world knows him by his nickname:
Dracula.
The
Order of the Dragon
Vlad, or Dracula, was born in 1431
in Transylvania into a noble family. His father was called "Dracul,"
meaning "dragon" or "devil" in Romanian because he belonged
to the Order of the Dragon, which fought the Muslim Ottoman Empire.
"Dracula" means "son
of Dracul" in Romanian. Therefore young Vlad was "son of the
dragon" or "son of the devil." Scholars believe this was the
beginning of the legend that Dracula was a vampire.
Warrior
in Chains
Dracula lived in a time of constant
war. Transylvania was at the frontier of two great empires: the Ottoman Turks
and the Austrian Hapsburgs. Treachery, vindictiveness, and revenge ruled the
day, as young Dracula soon discovered.
Dracula was imprisoned, first by the
Turks, who hauled him away in chains, and later by the Hungarians. Dracula's
father was murdered, while his older brother, Mircea, was blinded with red-hot
iron stakes and buried alive.
Vlad
the Impaler
From 1448 until his death in 1476,
Dracula ruled Walachia and Transylvania, both part of Romania today. Twice he
lost and reclaimed his throne, once by fighting his own brother, Radu. Although
the Vatican once praised him for defending Christianity, it disapproved of his
methods, which soon became infamous.
Dracula earned another nickname,
"Vlad Tepes" (pronounced tsep-pesh), which means "Vlad the
Impaler." Dracula's favorite method of torture was to impale people and
leave them to writhe in agony, often for days. As a warning to others, the
bodies would remain on rods as vultures and blackbirds nibbled the rotting
flesh.
During one battle, Dracula retreated
into nearby mountains, impaling people as he went. The Turkish advance was
halted because the sultan could not bear the stench from the decaying corpses.
Another time, Dracula was reported
to have eaten a meal on a table set up outside amidst hundreds of impaled
victims. On occasion he was also reported to have eaten bread dipped in blood.
Defender
of the Faith
At that time it was believed that
religious charity, and a proper burial, would erase sin and allow entry to
heaven. Dracula surrounded himself with priests and monks and founded five
monasteries. Over a period of 150 years, his family established 50 monasteries.
Killed in December 1476 fighting the
Turks near Bucharest, Romania, Dracula's head was cut off and displayed in
Constantinople.
The
Corpse Disappears
Dracula was buried at the isolated
Snagov Monastery near Bucharest, which was also likely used as a prison and
torture chamber. When prisoners prayed before an icon of the Blessed Virgin, a
trap door opened dropping them onto sharp stakes below.
In 1931 archaeologists searching
Snagov found a casket partially covered in a purple shroud embroidered with
gold. The skeleton inside was covered with pieces of faded silk brocade, similar
to a shirt depicted in an old painting of Dracula.
The casket also contained a
cloisonné crown, with turquoise stones. A ring, similar to those worn by the
Order of the Dragon, was sewn into a shirtsleeve.
The contents were taken to the History Museum in Bucharest but have
since disappeared without a trace, leaving the mysteries of the real
Prince Dracula unanswered
earlier Iwas thinking that he is a character but now I come to know that........... it is reality
ReplyDeleteit is jst a character what i think.. still mystery????
ReplyDeletei dont thnk its a mystry, they really exist......
ReplyDeleteits just a symbolic Character of horror. it does not exist in reality but, in different dramas, movies and other stuff it is used as horrifying object.
ReplyDeletea great myth ever, i have faced.....
ReplyDeleteNot true
ReplyDeletevery dangeorous but informative.
ReplyDeleteFrom where you found the content??? its interesting one.
ReplyDelete