The Real Count Dracula

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The Real Count Dracula
It all started with Count Dracula, a blood sucking, immortal monster. Dracula could turn into a bat by night, and if he was touched by even the smallest ray of light during the day, he would burn into a smoking pile of ash. Dracula had fangs that he used to break the skin on the necks of people he drank the blood from. Dracula could live as long as he wanted to, if he could survive that long. Dracula lived in Transylvania. Many people have heard different stories of Count Dracula, and not all are the same. The original story was created by an old writer names Bram Stoker. Bram Stoker wrote and sold many copies of his book, Dracula, in 1897. In this book, a young man named Jonathon Harker visits a strange man, known as Count Dracula, in Transylvania. Dracula follows Harker back to England and he tries to suck all the blood from the neck of Harker’s fiancée. Though this character might be original, the name is not. It is said that Bram Stoker based his character from a man named Vlad Dracula III. Bram Stoker’s book might have a compelling story, but it’s not the story of The Real Count Dracula. This is his story.
Vlad Dracula was born in 1431, in a three-story house in Sighisoara, Transylvania. His father was Vlad Dracul, a ruler of Wallachia who had an extreme case of bi-polarity. The moment Dracula was born, he was crowned Prince of Wallachia. Vlad Dracula, also known as Vlad III, had three brothers. Radu was Vlad’s younger brother. Vlad and Radu had been imprisoned when they were younger, because their father Vlad II, had an enemy that was going to try and take the throne from him. Vlad II was obsessed with power and would do anything to keep it. Even give his two youngest sons as priso...

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...ed to Islam and trained as soldiers. Dracul didn’t really plan to honor any of these promises. But he made one last promise that he was forced to do. When he returned home, he would have to send his two sons as hostages for the Turks. In the middle of 1443, Dracul returned to Wallachia. Dracula and Radu left the castle in Targoviste. They traveled 700 miles into the center of the Ottoman Empire. They became prisoners in a dark fortress. Their father, again, became the Prince of Wallachia. In 1446, Vlad and Radu were sent free.

Works Cited

Goldberg, Enid A & Norman Itzkowitz. Vlad the Impaler: The Real Count Dracula. New York: An Imprint of Scholastic Inc., 2008. Print. “The Real Dracula: Vlad he Impaler.” The UnMuseum.Org. 2011. Web. 30 Jan. 2014. “Vlad IV.” Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th Edition (2013): 1. Middle search Plus. Web. 27 Jan. 2014.

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