Any quote remained from Vlad Dracul.
Vlad II Dracul was born in 1390.
Not known
Vlad Dracul was the ruler (voivode or domn) of Wallachia (Ţara Românească): 1493-1447Reigns: 1436-1442 and 1443-1447.
Dead. Vlad Dracul assassinated 1476.
He was killed... search Vlad the impaler and you'll see what happened to him
No, Vlad Dracul was his father. "Dracul" means "the Devil" in Romanian; he got his nickname after returning from the German wars with his battle flag which had a dragon painted on. The peasants thought it showed the Devil, hence the name. Tepes got his name from his rather cruel form of punishment ("Tepes" = approximately "The Impaler").
Romania (Wallachia or Ţara Românească)
Romania (Wallachia or Ţara Românească)
Vlad Dracul - Vladamir Basarab II was born near the end of the 14th century in Wallachia, located between Transylvania and the Danube River in the southern part of modernday Romania. He was a duke of the Wallachian royal family, and all 4 of his sons ruled as Prince of Wallachia at one time or another during the 15th century. His nickname was Vlad Dracul or "Vlad the Dragon", following his induction into the Order of the Dragon, a 15th century chivalric order. Vlad Dracul is most noteworthy as the father of the more famous Vladamir Basarab III, known as Vlad Dracula ("Vlad, son of the Dragon") and later as Vlad Tepes ("Vlad the Impaler"). Vlad III was a violent and successful warrior and ruler, but noted for his cruelty toward enemies; his later nickname comes from a favorite form of execution, impaling his victims on sharpened wooden stakes. Myth and superstition surrounding the vicious Vlad Dracula created a legend of supernatural evils, and even contributed to a change in the meaning of the name Dracul; in modern Romanian, Dracul now means "devil".
The real Dracula was Vladimir III, Prince of Wallachia; also known as 'Vlad the Impaler'.
His father was Vlad II Dracul, the epithet Dracul added after he was inducted into the Order of the Dragon in the city of Nuremberg in 1431. The identity of his mother is less known and still up for debate, but most believe it was Princess Cneajna of Moldavia, Vlad II's second wife.