Sunday, June 14, 2020

Vlad the Impaler: The Real Count Dracula by Enid A. Goldberg and Norman Itzkowitz



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Vlad the Impaler: The Real Count DraculaVlad the Impaler: The Real Count Dracula by Enid A. Goldberg

My rating: 5 of 5 stars


This short book was packed with interesting information about Vlad Dracula, the real man who inspired Bram Stoker's vampire novel.

Reading about the life of this real Dracula, if I had to choose between the two, I'd take the vampire over this real life tyrant.

Vlad Dracula was the son of Vlad Dracul senior and was "Dracula" which means "little dragon" or more appropriately, "little devil", except there was nothing little about the monstrosities Vlad Dracula committed against friend and foe alike. Who was friend or foe depended on who Dracula believed would help him attain and keep power. These would switch back and forth fairly rapidly.

He came by this philosophy honestly. When his father was in power, the area that later became known as Romania in Transylvania was wedged between the Holy Roman Empire and the Ottoman Empire. As a last ditch effort to stay in power, Vlad Senior sent Vlad Jr. and his brother Rudi to the Sultan of the Ottomans as prisoners in exchange for his help to fight the Western Europeans.

Vlad and Rudi spent several years in prison with the Ottomans. After Vlad's release he returned home under the promise he would help the Sultan's cause in bringing Transylvania under Ottoman rule. Vlad did not keep his promise. This was a habit with him.

After the death of his father, Vlad Dracula took over, at times fighting the Ottomans, which included his brother who chose to stay with the Ottomans, killing other brothers and former friends. Other times he fought with the Ottomans against the soldiers of western Europe. It all depended on who would help him stay in power.

He was also vengeful. The ruling class in Transylvania, the Boyers, were responsible for killing his father. He invited them to a feast after which he had them all impaled and their bodies left to rot on stakes. This was called The Forest of the Impaled. There is a wooden engraving showing Vlad eating a meal among this horrible forest.

As for the older men, the women and children, he forced them to climb a mountain and build a castle, called Castle Dracula, which can still be seen today and has probably been used in horror movies. These builders were literally worked to death and the trail to the mountain top where the castle resides is paved with the skeletons of the builders.

Furthermore he created a severe police state where even minor infractions were punished by death. Whole villages were murdered in Vlad's determination to maintain control. His subjects feared him more than they feared the Turks.

Vlad seemed not only to be capable of heartless, violent pragmatism, he was also sadistic. It was not enough to make his victims die. He enjoyed watching them suffer as they died slowly.

Some historians say Vlad Dracula killed as many people as the Bubonic plague which also ravished Europe around the same time. While that may be an exaggeration, it is estimated that his death toll may have approached a hundred thousand or more.

And his reign only lasted seven years. Eventually, Dracula was overpowered by soldiers of the Roman Empire, killed and beheaded. His truncated body is buried beneath the floor of the Comana Monastery, surrounded by swampland in Romania.

While this book can seem gruesome, it provides and interesting an informative account of life in middle Europe during the 15th century. While life during these unsettling times was violent and cruel by any account, still Vlad took it to a whole other level that turned him into a nefarious legend and, an inspiration for many vampire legends.



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Castle Dracula

12 comments:

Brian Joseph said...

Great review Sharon. I had a fuzzy familiarity of these events. I think that I gained them from documentaries. Vlad seems to have been a very bad guy even for the time. Killing a hundred thousand people on seven years over a relatively small area in that time is staggering.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Brian,

I had hear of Vlad the Impaler and a little of his atrocities. After reading this, I feel I know who he really was. It makes me think that turning him into a vampire, doesn't do his evil justice. He needs to be an Orc or a Balrog.

mudpuddle said...

ugh.. i try to not think about stuff like this... sorry...

Debbie Nolan said...

Sharon what a truly evil person. Amazing how often fiction is based on true events. Your reviews are always so intetesting to read. Hope Percy is still keeping you entertained and doing well. Hugs!

RTD said...

I read a book long ago about that nasty piece of evil. How do people get that sick!
New site: http://briansbabblingbooks.blogspot.com/
RT

Carol said...

I haven’t read Dracula yet but I had no idea it was based on a real person. The world has had no shortage of this type of person, unfortunately.

J said...

No wonder he was reimagined as Dracula. And his castle looks kind of creepy even today!

Sharon Wilfong said...

Aw, mudpuddle. Now I feel bad. I'll try not to post these kind of reviews so much in the future.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Debbie,

I don't want to glorify evil, but I think it is so important to know our history, be grateful we don't live like that anymore, and do what we can to prevent repetitions of history.

Percy is just a little doll. Hope your dogs are well. They are so handsome.

Sharon Wilfong said...

HI RT

Great to hear from you. It does truly boggle the mind, doesn't it? I will gladly hop over to your new blog. Whew! You are hard to keep up with.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Carol,

I remember an atheist explaining how he became a Christian. He said it was because he knew there had to be a devil, therefore there also had to be God.

Sharon Wilfong said...

Hi Janitha,

I don't think Dracula the vampire is even close to being as evil as the real count.