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  1. Dec 15, 2021 · Vlad the Impaler, also known as Vlad III, Prince of Wallachia, was a 15th-century warlord, in what today is Romania, in south-eastern Europe. Stoker used elements of Vlad's real story for the ...

  2. Dec 15, 2022 · From burning the old and sick alive to impaling tens of thousands of enemy soldiers, earning his fearsome nickname, Vlad the Impaler’s bloodlust and cruelty was said to have inspired the most famous vampire of literature. But how much of him is in Bram Stoker’s Dracula and why has Vlad been remembered by some as a national hero?

    • Elinor Evans
  3. Feb 27, 2020 · Yet Vlad the Impaler was a real person, not a mythical monster. His life, though obscured by the haze of the past and distorted by countless fictions, tells a story as dramatic and compelling as the narrative to which he unwittingly lent his name centuries after his death.

    • Orrin Grey
  4. Jan 21, 2024 · Many of us have heard the stories about Vlad the Impaler, said to be the real-life model for Bram Stoker’s famous vampire, Dracula. But when we dig into history, we find that this link ain’t as clear as some might think.

  5. Oct 28, 2021 · Also known as Vlad III, Vlad Dracula (son of the Dragon), and—most famously—Vlad the Impaler (Vlad Tepes in Romanian), he was a brutal, sadistic leader famous for torturing his foes.

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  7. As the sun sets over the Carpathian Mountains, a figure emerges from the shadows, his eyes gleaming with an otherworldly hunger. He is Dracula, the most famous vampire in literature, but few know that his character was inspired by a real-life historical figure, Vlad the Impaler.

  8. Oct 14, 2016 · Most scholars believe that Bram Stoker based his evil count Dracula on a real-life 15th-century prince in Wallachia, Romania. Vlad Dracula (Vlad Son of the Dragon) or Vlad Tepes ( Vlad the Impaler ), as his story has come down through history, was a terrible man and a savage ruler.

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