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      • Vlad III, Prince of Wallachia called "Vlad the Impaler" and also known as Vlad Dracula or simply Dracula, in Romanian Drăculea (1431 – December 1476), was a Wallachian (southern Romania) voivode (military commander). His three reigns were in 1448, 1456–1462, and 1476.
      www.newworldencyclopedia.org › entry › Vlad_III_the_Impaler
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  2. Apr 30, 2024 · Vlad the Impaler, prince of Walachia (now in Romania) whose cruel methods of punishing his enemies gained notoriety in 15th-century Europe. Some in the scholarly community have suggested that Bram Stoker’s Dracula character was based on Vlad. Learn more about Vlad in this article.

  3. Mar 7, 2023 · Vlad III Dracula (1431-1467/77) was one of the most important rulers in Wallachian history. He was also known as Vlad the Impaler for the brutality with which he dispensed with his enemies, gaining him notoriety in 15th century Europe. Here are 10 facts about the man who inspired fear and legends for centuries to come. 1.

  4. 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 title...

  5. May 15, 2019 · This real-life Dracula was more vicious than the stories he inspired. fotokon/Getty Images. By. Robert Wilde. Updated on May 15, 2019. Vlad III (between 1428 and 1431–between December 1476 and January 1477) was a 15th-century ruler of Wallachia, an east European principality within modern Romania.

  6. Apr 9, 2023 · Vlad III, also called Vlad the Impaler, was a prince of Wallachia infamous for his brutality in battle and the gruesome punishments he inflicted on his enemies. In 1897, writer Bram Stoker published the novel Dracula , the classic story of a vampire named Count Dracula who feeds on human blood, hunting his victims and killing them in the dead ...

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  7. This article will show that the life of the ‘real Dracula’, as he is commonly known, was in many ways more fascinating than the camp villain of Stoker’s novel. Vlad Dracul, father of Vlad Tepes, 17th-century copy of an unknown original found at Dracul’s home, Sighisoara, Transylvania. Ancient Pages The Name ‘Dracula’

  8. Bram Stoker’s Dracula is popularly associated with Vlad the Impaler, and some scholars do believe that the literary bloodsucker is derived in part from the historical Walachian prince. If Stoker did indeed base the archetypal vampire on Vlad, what led him to do so? Among the other possible real-life inspirations, what set Vlad apart from the ...

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