Vlad Tepes
BRAM STOKER wrote his definitive vampire novel, ‘Dracula'
in 1897 and 100 years later thousands of Dracula enthusiasts all over the
world held a party to celebrate the event. Almost everyone has heard of
Dracula, the fictional nosferatu (undead) count who lives forever by
drinking the blood of his victims. He sleeps by day in his coffin and
stalks his prey by night, and this gothic romantic villain from
Transylvania has been celebrated in numerous movies featuring Max Schreck,
Bela Lugosi, Christopher Lee and Gary Oldman among others.
We all have an idea of whom or what Count Dracula was, but
Vlad Tepes Dracula, the real historical figure and the inspiration behind
Bram Stoker's novel is definitely less well known. Vlad was not a vampire,
but he definitely was a killer with a passion for staking (or impaling)
his victims and watching them die slowly.
Vlad Tepes was born in November 1431 in the fortress of
Sighisoara , Romania . His father, Vlad Dracul was at that time the
military governor of Transylvania , appointed by the Emperor Sigismund.
Dracul had been inducted into the Order of the Dragon a year before. The
order was a semi-military and religious society, originally created in
1387 by the Holy Roman Emperor and his second wife, Barbara Cilli. The
main purpose of this secret fraternal order of knights was to promote
Catholicism and to crusade against the Turkish Empire . ‘Dracula' a
diminutive which means ‘the son of Dracul' was a surname ultimately used
by Vlad Tepes. ‘Dracul' in the Romanian language means ‘Dragon' and also
‘Devil'.
Another source of inspiration for Stoker's evil character
was the official dress of the Order of the Dragon: a black cape over a red
garment. This was to be worn only on Fridays or during the commemoration
of Christ's Passion. Stoker had his count dressed in this garb from the
moment he first met Jonathan Harker, the central character of his novel.
In the winter of 1436-37, Dracul was appointed Prince of
Wallachia (one of three Romanian provinces) and took up residence at the
palace of Tirgoviste . Vlad Tepes thus lived for the next six years at the
princely court. In 1442, Dracula and his younger brother Radu were taken
hostage by the Sultan Murad II. (This was done for political purposes and
was a common practice in those days). Dracula was held in Turkey until
1448, whilst his brother stayed in Istanbul until 1462. This captivity
played an important role in young Dracula's upbringing: he became
depressed and deeply distrustful of all those around him.
The Turks set him free after informing him that his father
had been assassinated in 1447 – a hit organised by Vladislav II. Dracula's
older brother Mircea had also been tortured and then buried alive by the
boyars of Tirgoviste. Dracula swore vengeance and at the age of 17 he
formed an army to get back the Wallachian throne. Supported by a force of
Turkish cavalry and 5,000 troops loaned to him by pasha Mustafa Hassan, he
met the army of Vladislav II in the field. But young Dracula was
inexperienced in warfare, and his men suffered a bad defeat. He was forced
to retreat to Transylvania and regroup his forces and it was not until
1456 that he finally won back the throne. During the battle, he had the
satisfaction of killing his mortal enemy and then had his father's
assassin tortured to death. Vlad Dracula began a reign of six years in
Wallachia when he committed many acts of cruelty and established a
fearsome reputation throughout Eastern Europe .
His first major act of revenge was aimed at the boyars of
Tirgoviste for the deaths of his father and brother. On Easter Sunday
1459, he had all the boyar families arrested. The older members were
impaled on stakes and the others were forced to march from the capital to
the town of Poenari . This 50 miles trek was pretty grueling, and those
that survived were not permitted to rest until they reached their
destination. Dracula then ordered them to build him a fortress on the
ruins of an older outpost overlooking the Arges River . Many died in the
process, and Dracula therefore cleverly succeeded in creating a new
nobility and obtaining a stronghold for the future. What remains today of
the fortress is identified as Castle Dracula, made world famous by
Stoker's fictional novel.
Vlad became infamous for brutal punishment techniques: he
often ordered his victims to be skinned, boiled, blinded, nailed and
buried alive. He also liked to have noses, ears and sexual organs hacked
off, but his favorite method of slow death was impaling men and women on
stakes. Vlad was a perfectionist who revolutionized the torture of
impalement. Traditionalists opted for a sharp stake for a quick death, but
Prince Dracula wanted to prolong the ‘entertainment'. So instead of having
the stakes sharpened, he preferred the wood to be rounded and oiled at one
end so that the death was long and drawn out, lasting for hours; sometimes
even days. Thus he earned the nickname ‘Tepes' which means ‘The Impaler'
in the Romanian language. The Turks referred to him as ‘Kaziglu Bey'
meaning ‘The Impaler Prince'.
He once executed by impaling around 2,000 Transylvanian
merchants who had ignored his trade laws. Some of these victims were
staked out as dinner-party entertainment for his guests. A squeamish
dinner companion made the mistake of holding his nose in order to avoid
the smell of blood and flesh. On seeing this, Vlad considerately had the
man impaled higher than the rest so that he was above the stench!
But Vlad Tepes Dracula was also particularly known for his
fierce insistence on honesty and order among his subjects. Almost any
crime, from lying and stealing to murder, could be punished by impalement.
Dracula was so confident in the effectiveness of his laws that he placed a
golden cup on display in the central square in Tirgoviste. The cup could
be used to scoop up and drink water from the fountain by any thirsty
traveler, but it had to remain in the square. Anyone caught stealing the
cup would of course be executed. According to reliable historical
research, the cup was never stolen throughout Vlad's reign.
The prince was also very concerned that all his subjects
work effectively for the community. He looked upon the poor, vagrants and
beggars as thieves. One day in 1460 he invited all the poor and sick of
Wallachia to his court in Tirgoviste for a great feast. After the numerous
guests had eaten their full and drank gallons of wine, Dracula addressed
them: “Would you all like to be without cares, lacking nothing in this
world?” Of course they enthusiastically answered, “Yes!” Prince Dracula
then quietly made his exit and ordered his servants to board up the hall
and set the building on fire. Any unfortunates who managed to escape the
flames were shot down by crossbowmen. No one survived. Dracula explained
that he did this, “So that no one will be poor or dispossessed in my
realm.” Well, that's one drastic way of achieving a laudable aim. I
suspect that Adolf Hitler would have approved.
In January 1462, Vlad launched a campaign against the
Turks along the Danube River . As Sultan Mehmed II had a much larger army
than Dracula's, this was quite a risky military exercise, but Vlad moved
his force about quickly, gaining many victories. In vengeance, the Sultan
attacked Wallachia with a large army, intending to defeat Vlad and turn
Wallachia into a Turkish province. Finding himself without allies when the
Turks advanced, Dracula's army retreated towards Tirgoviste and adopted a
scorched earth tactic: he had his men burn villages and poison wells along
the way so that the Turkish army would not be able to live off the land.
When the Sultan and his exhausted and hungry troops neared
the capital, they could see from far away what looked like a ribbon of
white surrounding the entire city. Then they got closer and were
confronted by a really gruesome sight – thousands of stakes held the
carcasses of some 20,000 Turkish captives. Flocks of crows and other
carrion birds descended on the corpses to feast on the sea of human flesh.
Dying men, women and children struggling in extreme pain had their eyes
pecked out before they expired on stakes driven through their backs. This
horror scene was named ‘The Forest of the Impaled', by Victor Hugo in his
‘Legende des Siecles'. Vlad's macabre terror tactic worked: the Sultan and
his men retreated in horror from this grisly sight.
A year later Vlad's younger brother Radu took up the
Turkish cause and attacked Wallachia with another large army. Radu was an
astute military leader, and he pursued his elder brother to Poenari castle
on the Arges River . According to legend, this was where Dracula's beloved
wife Elizabeta committed suicide by hurling herself from the upper
battlements in order to escape capture by the Turks. She fell down the
precipice into the freezing river below, and this scene was exploited by
Francis Ford Coppola in his dramatic movie ‘Bram Stoker's Dracula',
starring Gary Oldman.
When the castle fell to Radu's forces, Dracula managed to
escape by using a secret passage into mountains. He was helped by some
peasants of the Arefu village and finally reached Transylvania, only to be
imprisoned at the Hungarian capital of Visegrad by the new king of Hungary
, Matthias Corvinus. Dracula was not released until a ransom was paid in
1475.
Vlad enjoyed another brief reign in Wallachia until he
went out hunting on 27 December 1476. As he rode by with his nobles, an
unknown assassin loosed off a well-aimed crossbow bolt that struck
Dracula, lodging deep into his throat. The prince fell mortally wounded
from his horse and died minutes later. The news of his death quickly
spread, and there was wild rejoicing among many Romanians that evening.
We do not know exactly why Bram Stoker chose this
fifteenth century Romanian prince as a model for his fictional character,
Count Dracula. It is known that Stoker had a friendly relationship with Ariminius Vambery, a Hungarian professor of history at the University of
Budapest , and this man certainly gave Stoker a lot of information on Vlad
Tepes Dracula. In the novel, Dr Abraham Van Helsing mentions his “friend
Arminius” as the source of knowledge on Dracula and vampire lore. But the
only real link between the historical Dracula (1431-1476) and the modern
literary myth of the vampire is Stoker's fictional work.
Vlad Dracula's political detractors, mainly German Saxons,
made use of the other meaning of the Romanian word ‘Dracul – Devil' in
order to blacken the prince's reputation. Now the association of the words
‘Dragon' and ‘Devil' in Romanian language could explain an earlier link
between Vlad Dracula and vampires. He was known to drink his victims'
blood on occasion, but he certainly did not become a nosferatu and rise
from the grave, though this was surely a good story to scare young
children with.
Few mourned the passing of Vlad Tepes Dracula. He was a
bloodthirsty tyrant who had the power to fully exploit his psychotic
nature. The ‘ Forest of the Impaled', covering hundreds of acres outside
his city, was a truly horrifying sight that no one who witnessed it could
ever forget. Thankfully this kind of atrocity has never been repeated in
history
(Research: 'johnfranc/dracula').