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  1. Vlad II ( Romanian: Vlad al II-lea ), also known as Vlad Dracul ( Vlad al II-lea Dracul) or Vlad the Dragon (before 1395 – November 1447), was Voivode of Wallachia from 1436 to 1442, and again from 1443 to 1447. He is internationally known as the father of Vlad the Impaler, or Dracula. Born an illegitimate son of Mircea I of Wallachia, he ...

  2. Oct 5, 2022 · Order of the Dragon, a military Order founded by Emperor Sigismund in 1408. The Order was ... Vlad II’s first wife Cneajna* (also called Eupraxia*) of Moldavia, the eldest daughter of Prince .

  3. Vlad III was born sometime between 1428 and 1431, presumably after his father, Vlad II settled in Transylvania. According to most historians, his mother was either a daughter (Princess Cneajna of Moldavia) or a kinswoman (Eupraxia of Moldavia) of Alexander I of Moldavia and the first wife of his father.

  4. Life. Born in Kiev in the early years of the 12th century, Dobrodeia was the daughter of Mstislav I of Kiev and Christina Ingesdotter of Sweden. [2] In or shortly after 1122, she married Alexios Komnenos, the eldest son and co-emperor of Byzantine emperor John II Komnenos ( r. 1118–1143 ). She received the title of empress ( basilissa ), and ...

  5. Aug 2, 2010 · Eupraxia of Kiev (1071 - July 20, 1109 AD) was the daughter of Vsevolod I, Prince of Kiev and second wife of Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor. She was the sister of Vladimir Monomakh. Eupraxia was first married to Henry the Long, Markgraf of Nordmark. They had no children before his death in 1087.

  6. Sep 21, 2023 · Wikipedia Public Domain. The House of Draculesti. The brutal Vlad the Impaler, believed to be the inspiration for Bram Stoker’s , was born in Sighisoara, Transylvania (today’s Romania) in 1431. He was part of the Draculesti dynasty. Vlad was the 2nd son of Vlad II Dracul and Eupraxia of Moldavia. The addition of an "a" to his surname ...

  7. The Life of St Eupraxia of Tabenna is a detailed account of the life and deeds of one of the first Egyptian desert mothers, who entered a desert convent as a child and spent her life in ascetic deeds. Though St Eupraxia does not count among the most popular and widely known women saints within the Byzantine world, as a regular ‘model nun ...

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