Count Vlad Tepes tomb discovered in Italy

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Count Vlad Tepes is also known as Vlad the Impaler

Estonian researchers believe they may have finally discovered the whereabouts of “Dracula’s” grave, which is in Italy and not the Romanian Transylvanian Alps as first thought.

The inspiration behind Bram Stoker’s 1897 gothic novel “Dracula” is thought to be Vlad III, the 15th century Prince of Wallachia in Eastern Europe. Known posthumously as Vlad the Impaler, the ruler was known for his brand of cruelty across Europe, which included impaling his enemies.

Vlad’s ultimate enemy were the Ottomans. Depictions of his endless cruelty made history books, securing his reputation as one of the biggest villains in Turkey’s collective consciousness, as written by Emrah Güler of the Hürriyet Daily News in 2012. Vlad’s story was also converted into a ballet last year in Turkey.

Born in 1431, Count Vlad Tepes was part of a noble family who belonged to the Order of the Dragon, a group that was founded as a means of protecting Christianity in Eastern Europe from Ottoman expansion. His father was nicknamed Dracul, meaning “Dragon,” so the young Vlad became known as Dracula, or “son of Dragon.”

In 1476, Vlad Tepes disappeared in battle. While some sources have claimed he died, researchers claim he was in fact imprisoned by the Turks, who hauled him away in chains. His daughter Maria was meanwhile brought to the Neapolitan court, whose ruling family was allied with her own family, where she was adopted and eventually married to a Neapolitan nobleman...


Blazing Cat Fur: ‘Dracula’s -- Count Vlad Tepes -- tomb’ discovered in Italy

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‘Dracula’s tomb’ discovered in Italy - ARCHAEOLOGY
 

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The Queen, Prince Charles, Princess Anne, Prince Edward, Prince Andrew, Prince William, Prince Harry, Princess Eugenie, Princess Beatrice, Zara Phillips, Peter Phillips, Savannah Phillips, Isla Phillips, Mia Tindall, James, Viscount Severn, Lady Louise Windsor and Prince George are all direct descendants of Vlad the Impaler.

The Queen's grandmother, Queen Mary of Teck (who died in 1953), was descended from two of Vlad's sons.
 
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