The Japan Times - Vlad the Impaler steps out of Dracula's shadow

EUR -
AED 4.302379
AFN 77.630569
ALL 96.538014
AMD 446.976007
ANG 2.097477
AOA 1074.275501
ARS 1697.812677
AUD 1.7715
AWG 2.111649
AZN 1.988399
BAM 1.95657
BBD 2.359729
BDT 143.286422
BGN 1.95657
BHD 0.441674
BIF 3464.164096
BMD 1.171511
BND 1.514596
BOB 8.096188
BRL 6.491695
BSD 1.171561
BTN 104.976337
BWP 16.479489
BYN 3.443356
BYR 22961.621678
BZD 2.356328
CAD 1.615778
CDF 2997.309068
CHF 0.931329
CLF 0.027194
CLP 1066.824736
CNY 8.248552
CNH 8.240211
COP 4522.280754
CRC 585.130409
CUC 1.171511
CUP 31.04505
CVE 110.308437
CZK 24.328951
DJF 208.632154
DKK 7.469457
DOP 73.388899
DZD 152.378002
EGP 55.864539
ERN 17.57267
ETB 182.00927
FJD 2.675378
FKP 0.875597
GBP 0.875271
GEL 3.145526
GGP 0.875597
GHS 13.456299
GIP 0.875597
GMD 85.520537
GNF 10241.032647
GTQ 8.977535
GYD 245.11652
HKD 9.115606
HNL 30.865154
HRK 7.537036
HTG 153.610488
HUF 386.592292
IDR 19560.724345
ILS 3.757095
IMP 0.875597
INR 104.941054
IQD 1534.804365
IRR 49320.626361
ISK 147.176814
JEP 0.875597
JMD 187.463818
JOD 0.830623
JPY 184.597964
KES 151.019467
KGS 102.44844
KHR 4701.851464
KMF 492.034348
KPW 1054.359906
KRW 1728.822826
KWD 0.359923
KYD 0.976384
KZT 606.298744
LAK 25374.991999
LBP 104916.71342
LKR 362.742839
LRD 207.371657
LSL 19.654239
LTL 3.459169
LVL 0.708636
LYD 6.350501
MAD 10.739129
MDL 19.83481
MGA 5328.098064
MKD 61.574246
MMK 2460.509788
MNT 4160.172387
MOP 9.390298
MRU 46.887463
MUR 54.065043
MVR 18.100085
MWK 2031.59999
MXN 21.112051
MYR 4.77627
MZN 74.866593
NAD 19.654239
NGN 1710.59357
NIO 43.116978
NOK 11.867632
NPR 167.962139
NZD 2.034347
OMR 0.451528
PAB 1.171561
PEN 3.945454
PGK 4.983963
PHP 68.61665
PKR 328.252757
PLN 4.204513
PYG 7860.095097
QAR 4.271282
RON 5.078971
RSD 117.426239
RUB 94.25453
RWF 1705.871727
SAR 4.394365
SBD 9.544009
SCR 17.761994
SDG 704.665134
SEK 10.855317
SGD 1.5146
SHP 0.878937
SLE 28.175218
SLL 24566.01071
SOS 668.363184
SRD 45.034656
STD 24247.918847
STN 24.509651
SVC 10.251037
SYP 12955.112643
SZL 19.651738
THB 36.814765
TJS 10.796251
TMT 4.10029
TND 3.42935
TOP 2.820719
TRY 50.15797
TTD 7.952131
TWD 36.92475
TZS 2923.151059
UAH 49.537807
UGX 4190.650167
USD 1.171511
UYU 45.998113
UZS 14084.546121
VES 330.553221
VND 30825.391347
VUV 141.78771
WST 3.265972
XAF 656.2154
XAG 0.017352
XAU 0.000269
XCD 3.166068
XCG 2.111531
XDR 0.816121
XOF 656.2154
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.283144
ZAR 19.644956
ZMK 10545.005839
ZMW 26.507438
ZWL 377.226164
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.17

    -0.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.38

    -0.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.25

    -0.13%

  • BCC

    -2.9300

    74.77

    -3.92%

  • BCE

    -0.0100

    22.84

    -0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.2800

    76.11

    -0.37%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    48.61

    +0.66%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • RIO

    0.6900

    78.32

    +0.88%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    12.84

    +0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.2800

    15.68

    +1.79%

  • AZN

    0.7500

    91.36

    +0.82%

  • BTI

    -0.5900

    56.45

    -1.05%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    40.73

    +0.2%

  • BP

    0.6300

    33.94

    +1.86%

Vlad the Impaler steps out of Dracula's shadow
Vlad the Impaler steps out of Dracula's shadow / Photo: Alex HALADA - AFP

Vlad the Impaler steps out of Dracula's shadow

Cloaked in a black cape like the infamous count himself, 10-year-old Niklas Schuetz runs through the dark corridors of a hill-top castle in search of the truth about Dracula.

Text size:

"He was a Romanian prince, not a vampire," said the schoolboy, as he tripped by torchlight through the nocturnal gloom of Forchtenstein Castle.

The group being guided through the Austrian fortress are eager to sink their teeth into the gripping life of Vlad Tepes, the notorious "Vlad the Impaler", whose descendants once held the schloss.

The castle is home to one of the few paintings of the cruel 15th-century prince, and this Halloween its curators are trying to bring the real historical figure out from the chilling shadow of the monster invented by the Irish writer Bram Stoker.

Rather than being a ghoulish fiend, the real Vlad Tepes had for a "long time gone down in history as a positive figure" who courageously fought the Ottoman Turks, said the director of its collections, Florian Bayer.

"More and more people are able to distinguish between the bloodsucking vampire and the historical figure," he said.

Voivode Vlad III -- also known by his patronymic name Dracula derived from the Slavonic word for dragon -- once ruled over Wallachia, a Romanian-speaking vassal state of the Kingdom of Hungary.

- 'Forest' of the impaled -

Held as a child hostage of the sultan at the Ottoman court, he later turned against his former captors.

In several hard-fought campaigns against the Turks, he struck fear into his enemies by impaling thousands of Turkish prisoners.

This gruesomely slow death was also used against his internal rivals, like "the German merchants from neighbouring Transylvanian towns," historian Dan Ioan Muresan told AFP.

Tepes was often depicted amidst a "forest" of impaled bodies.

Yet despite his gory reputation, Vlad was a handsome devil and something of a ladykiller, according to Muresan.

He was a "very handsome man with an imposing build", with long hair flowing over his Turkish-style kaftans adorned with diamonds.

By marrying a cousin of the Hungarian king, he "gave rise to a branch from which the British royal family descends," the historian added.

Indeed Britain's King Charles III has repeatedly boasted of their shared blood ties, saying that Transylvania runs through his veins.

- Communist marketing -

The gothic novel by Stoker published in 1897 helped kickstart the modern vampire genre.

Dozens of films later, the fictional Dracula had transformed into a pop culture icon.

"Until the 1960s, Romanians didn't associate the character imagined by Stoker with Vlad Tepes," said Bogdan Popovici, head of the national archives in the Transylvanian city of Brasov, home to some of the prince's manuscripts.

"It was the Communists who started to commercialise it for the Western market to attract tourists," he said.

While cashing in on selling the vampire myth to visitors, the regime of Romanian Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu sought to resurrect Vlad as a national hero.

Paradoxically, the Communist regime was careful in differentiating the real Dracula from its fictitious counterpart as it pursued its mission to wipe out pagan traditions.

- Tears of blood -

"Romanians have never recognised themselves in the character, which was born out of a foreign imagination and planted into an exotic reality," said Muresan.

"It is being exploited as a kind of tourist trap," he said.

The real Vlad never set foot in Romania's Bran Castle -- widely taken as the inspiration for the lair of Dracula -- but it hasn't stopped it drawing visitors in their droves.

Murdered by his own people in 1476 in the wake of a conspiracy, experts dispute the whereabouts of his remains to this day, with some claiming that his head was sent to the sultan in Constantinople to confirm his death.

A recent Italian scientific study based on the analysis of the prince's handwritten letters found that Vlad probably suffered from haemolacria, indicating that he could shed tears of blood.

The creepy detail is undoubtedly enough to keep the Dracula myth alive for some time yet.

M.Ito--JT