Vlad
Tepes, The Life of Vlad III Dracula (1431-1476)
Dracula was
born in 1431 in the Transylvanian city of Sighisoara. At that time
Dracula's father, Vlad II Dracul, was living in exile in Transylvania.
Vlad Dracul was in Transylvania attempting to gather support for
his planned effort to seize the Wallachian throne from the Danesti
prince, Alexandru I. The house where Dracula was born is still standing.
In 1431 it was located in a prosperous neighborhood surrounded by
the homes of Saxon and Magyar merchants and the townhouses of the
nobility.
Little is
known about the early years of Dracula's life. It is known that
he had an elder brother, Mircea, and a younger brother named Radu.
His early education was left in the hands of his mother, a Transylvanian
noblewoman, and her family. His real education began in 1436 after
his father succeeded in claiming the Wallachian throne and killing
his Danesti rival. His training was typical of that common to the
sons of the nobility throughout Europe. His first tutor in his apprenticeship
to knighthood was an elderly boyar who had fought under the banner
of Enguerrand de Courcy at the Battle of Nicolopolis against the
Turks. Dracula learned all the skills of war and peace that were
deemed necessary for a Christian knight.
The political
situation in Wallachia remained unstable after Vlad Dracul seized
the throne in 1436. The power of the Turks was growing rapidly as
one by one the small states of the Balkans surrendered to the Ottoman
onslaught. At the same time the power of Hungary was reaching its
zenith and would peak during the time of John Hunyadi, the White
Knight of Hungary, and his son King Matthias Corvinus. Any prince
of Wallachia had to balance his policies precariously between these
two powerful neighbors. The prince of Wallachia was officially a
vassal of the King of Hungary. In addition, Vlad Dracul was a member
of the Order of the Dragon and sworn to fight the infidel. At the
same time the power of the Ottomans seemed unstoppable. Even in
the time of Vlad's father, Mircea the Old, Wallachia had been forced
to pay tribute to the Sultan. Vlad was forced to renew that tribute
and from 1436-1442 attempted to walk a middle course between his
powerful neighbors.
In 1442 Vlad
attempted to remain neutral when the Turks invaded Transylvania.
The Turks were defeated and the vengeful Hungarians under John Hunyadi
forced Dracul and his family to flee Wallachia. Hunyadi placed a
Danesti , Basarab II, on the Wallachian throne. In 1443 Vlad II
regained the Wallachian throne with Turkish support, on the condition
that he sign an new treaty with the sultan that included not only
the customary annual tribute but the promise to yearly send contingents
of Wallachian boys to join the sultan's Janissaries. In 1444, to
further assure the sultan of his good faith, Vlad sent his two younger
sons to Adrianople as hostages. Dracula remained a hostage in Adrianople
until 1448.
In 1444 the
King of Hungary, Ladislas Posthumous, broke the peace and launched
the Varna campaign under the command of John Hunyadi in an effort
to drive the Turks out of Europe. Hunyadi demanded that Vlad II
fulfill his oath as a member of the Order of the Dragon and a vassal
of Hungary and join the crusade against the Turk. The Pope absolved
Dracul of his Turkish oath but the wily politician still attempted
to steer a middle course. Rather than join the Christian forces
himself he sent his oldest son, Mircea. Perhaps he hoped the sultan
would spare his younger sons if he himself did not join the crusade.
The results
of the Varna Crusade are well known. The Christian army was utterly
destroyed in the Battle of Varna. John Hunyadi managed to escape
the battle under conditions that add little glory to the White Knight's
reputation. Many, apparently including Mircea and his father, blamed
Hunyadi for the debacle. From this moment forth John Hunyadi was
bitterly hostile toward Vlad Dracul and his eldest son. In 1447
Vlad Dracul was assassinated along with his son Mircea. Mircea was
apparently buried alive by the boyars and merchants of Tirgoviste.
Hunyadi placed his own candidate, a member of the Danesti clan,
on the throne of Wallachia.
On receiving
the news of Vlad Dracul's death the Turks released Dracula and supported
him as their own candidate for the Wallachian throne. In 1448 Dracula
managed to briefly seize the Wallachian throne with Turkish support.
Within two months Hunyadi forced Dracula to surrender the throne
and flee to his cousin, the Prince of Moldavia, while Hunyadi once
again placed Vladislav II on the Wallachian throne.
Dracula remained
in exile in Moldavia for three years, until Prince Bogdan of Moldavia
was assassinated in 1451. The resulting turmoil in Moldavia forced
Dracula to flee to Transylvania and seek the protection of his family
enemy, Hunyadi. The timing was propitious; Hunyadi's puppet on the
Wallachian throne, Vladislav II, had instituted a pro-Turkish policy
and Hunyadi needed a more reliable man in Wallachia. Consequently,
Hunyadi accepted the allegiance of his old enemy's son and put him
forward as the Hungarian candidate for the throne of Wallachia.
Dracula became Hunyadi's vassal and received his father's old Transylvanian
duchies of Faragas and Almas. Dracula remained in Transylvania,
under Hunyadi's protection, until 1456 waiting for an opportunity
to retake Wallachia from his rival.
In 1453 the
Christian world was shocked by the final fall of Constantinople
to the Ottomans. The East Roman Empire which had existed since the
time of Constantine the Great and which for a thousand years had
shielded the rest of Christendom from Islam was no more. Hunyadi
immediately began planning another campaign against the Turks. In
1456 Hunyadi invaded Turkish Serbia while Dracula simultaneously
invaded Wallachia. In the Battle of Belgrade Hunyadi was killed
and his army defeated. Meanwhile, Dracula succeeded in killing Vladislav
II and taking the Wallachian throne but Hunaydi's defeat made his
long term tenure questionable. For a time at least, Dracula was
forced to attempt to placate the Turks while he solidified his own
position.
Dracula's
main reign stretched from 1456 to 1462. His capital was the city
of Tirgoviste while his castle was raised some distance away in
the mountains near the Arges River. Most of the atrocities associated
with Dracula's name took place in these years. It was also during
this time that he launched his own campaign against the Turks. This
campaign was relatively successful at first. His skill as a warrior
and his well-known cruelty made him a much feared enemy. However,
he received little support from his titular overlord, Matthias Corvinus,
King of Hungary (the son of John Hunyadi) and Wallachia's resources
were too limited to achieve any lasting success against the conqueror
of Constantinople.
The Turks
finally succeeded in forcing Dracula to flee to Transylvania in
1462. Reportedly, his first wife committed suicide by leaping from
the towers of Dracula's castle into the waters of the Arges River
rather than surrender to the Turks. Dracula escaped across the mountains
into Transylvania and appealed to Matthias Corvinus for aid. Instead
the King had Dracula arrested and imprisoned in a royal tower near
Buda. Dracula remained a prisoner for twelve years.
Apparently
his imprisonment was none too onerous. He was able to gradually
win his way back into the graces of Hungary's monarch; so much so
that he was able to meet and marry a member of the royal family
(some of the sources claim Dracula's second wife was actually the
sister of Matthias Corvinus). The openly pro-Turkish policy of Dracula's
brother, Radu the Handsome, who was prince of Wallachia during most
of Dracula's captivity probably was a factor in Dracula's rehabilitation.
During his captivity Dracula also renounced the Orthodox faith and
adopted Catholicism. It is interesting to note that the Russian
narrative, normally very favorable to Dracula, indicates that even
in captivity he could not give up his favorite past-time; he often
captured birds and mice which he proceeded to torture and mutilate
-- some were beheaded or tarred-and-feathered and released, most
were impaled on tiny spears.
The exact
length of Dracula's period of captivity is open to some debate.
The Russian pamphlets indicate that he was a prisoner from 1462
until 1474. However, during that period Dracula managed to marry
a member of the Hungarian royal family and have two sons who were
about ten years old when he re-conquered Wallachia in 1476. McNally
and Florescu place Dracula's actual period of confinement at about
four years from 1462 until 1466. It is unlikely that a prisoner
would be allowed to marry into the royal family. Diplomatic correspondence
from Buda during the period in question also seems to support the
claim that Dracula's actual period of confinement was relatively
short.
Apparently
in years between his release and 1474 when he began preparations
for the re-conquest of Wallachia Dracula resided with his new wife
in a house in the Hungarian capital. One anecdote from that period
tells how a Hungarian captain followed a thief into Dracula's house.
When Dracula discovered the intruders he killed the Hungarian officer
rather than the thief. When questioned about his actions by the
king Dracula answered that a gentlemen does not enter the presence
of a great ruler without an introduction -- had the captain followed
proper protocol he would not have incurred the wrath of the prince.
In 1476 Dracula
was again ready to make another bid for power. Dracula and Prince
Stephen Bathory of Transylvania invaded Wallachia with a mixed force
of Transylvanians, a few dissatisfied Wallachian boyars and a contingent
of Moldavians sent by Dracula's cousin, Prince Stephen the Great
of Moldavia. Dracula's brother, Radu the Handsome, had died a couple
of years earlier and been replaced on the Wallachian throne by another
Turkish candidate, Basarab the Old, a member of the Danesti clan.
At the approach of Dracula's army Basarab and his coherents fled,
some to the protection of the Turks, others to the shelter of the
mountains. After placing Dracula on the throne Stephen Bathory and
the bulk of Dracula's forces returned to Transylvania, leaving Dracula's
tactical position very weak. Dracula had little time to gather support
before a large Turkish army entered Wallachia determined to return
Basarab to the throne. Dracula's cruelties over the years had alienated
the boyars who felt they had a better chance of surviving under
Prince Basarab. Apparently, even the peasants, tired of the depredations
of the Impaler, abandoned him to his fate. Dracula was forced to
march to meet the Turks with the small forces at his disposal, somewhat
less than four thousand men.
Dracula was
killed in battle against the Turks near the small town of Bucharest
in December of 1476. Some reports indicated that he was assassinated
by disloyal Wallachian boyars just as he was about to sweep the
Turks from the field. Other accounts have Dracula falling in defeat,
surrounded by the bodies of his loyal Moldavian bodyguard (the troops
loaned by Prince Stephen of Moldavia remained with Dracula after
Stephen Bathory returned to Transylvania). Still other reports claim
that Dracula, at the moment of victory, was accidentally struck
down by one of his own men. Dracula's body was decapitated by the
Turks and his head sent to Constantinople where the sultan had it
displayed on a stake as proof that the Impaler was dead. He was
reportedly buried at Snagov, an island monastery located near Bucharest.
from:
Prophet's Haunted Webpage: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Cavern/3987/main2.html
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