And the cause of modern vampires is Bram Stoker (Bram Stoker) wrote a vampire novel called "vampire Count Dracula" (English "Dracula"). At that time, Bram Stoker (Bram Stoker) was preparing to write this novel in the search for information accidentally found about the name of the archduke, which means demonic. It was later named after him.
And there was indeed a Dracula in European history. He was known for his cruelty. Often, he would insert a long wooden stick through his buttocks and then all the way through his body and out of his mouth, and then he would set the stick up high and let the prisoner die a torturous death. It was later adapted into the movie Dracula. [edit]Biography Dracula was a valiant warrior and fought bravely against the invading Ottoman Turkish army throughout his reign. He was defeated twice and died on the battlefield. Dracula was a national hero in the eyes of the Romanian people for his great achievements against foreign enemies. However, Dracula's character was unusually brutal, and every time he captured a prisoner, he had to inflict the punishment of impalement (i.e., to sharpen a wooden stake standing in the soil, and impale the enemy on the tip of the stake and bleed to death), and thus got the infamous name of "King of the Impaler, Vlad the Impaler" (Vlad the Impaler). Perhaps because of Dracula's brutality, he eventually became one with the legendary vampire. Ironically, Dracula's favorite form of stabbing becomes his Achilles' heel in Stoker's novel.
The name Count Dracula first appeared in Bram. The name Count Dracula first appeared in Bram Stoker's 1897 novel "Dracula". But this character is not a figment of the imagination. There was in fact a Dracula in the 15th century, Vlad the Impaler, who was not well known to Stoker, but whom he found in a book called "An Account of the Principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia". A short section of the book is devoted to Dracula, who fought the Turks. But the real attention is drawn to the footnote in the book, "In Wallachia (a former kingdom in southeastern Europe that became part of Romania in 1861) Dracula means devil." Stoker noted this entry and wrote it down. In fact, Stoker intended to name the vampire in his work "Count Wampyr", but eventually changed it to "Count Dracula". The real Dracula, in fact, is neither a count nor a vampire or even a vampire at all. These two Dracula's have confused many people.
Of course, Dracula is only the most famous vampire, he is not the earliest vampire. In myth and legend vampires have been around for a long time don't get confused. [edit]Biography Historically Dracula's full name (according to the Romanian pronunciation) was Vlad?6?4 Zebes?6?4 Dracula.
Born in 1431 in the city of Sighisoara in present-day Romania. His father, Vlad Dracul, was a member of the "Dragon Knights" organization and was appointed by King Sigisuund of the Romanian region to be the governor of Trans-Sovanian. According to the Romanian language, "Targul" comes from the word "dragon", which indicates the honor of being included as a Dragon Rider, and "Dracula" is the word " son of the dragon". The later Romanian association of the word with "devil" was influenced by the terminology used by the Saxons of southern Germany, who were in Romania at the time. These Saxons had come to Romania to escape the wilderness, and had been punished by Dracula for their misbehavior, so they were referred to as such in private. At that time, the organization of the Dragon Knights had a sacred status and was created by the Holy Roman Emperor in present-day Germany in order to serve the Holy See and to save Catholics from Turkish persecution. Dracula was so named because of his father's valor in battle, and became Duke Vlad IV of the Danubian Duchy of Walachia.
According to historical records, between 1436 and 1437, Dracula became prince of Walachia, one of the three duchies of Romania. The residence his family built for him in Trgoviste made it a noble capital. Volodya followed his father here for six years. In 1442 for political reasons, Dracula, along with his brother Radu, was sent to Constantinople, the capital of Ottoman Turkey, as a hostage of Sultan Murad II. Dracula remained in Turkey until 1448. His brother, on the other hand, stayed until 1462. This imprisonment in Turkey undoubtedly left an indelible mark on Dracula's development, and he developed a pessimistic view of life during that period. This period was marked not only by the hostile environment around him, but also by the news that his father and brother had been assassinated by renegade nobles. In fact, the Turks released him after informing him of his father's assassination (1447). At the same time he learned that his brother Mircea had been killed by the Turks. The news of the death of his relatives tormented him y, and from then on he was haunted by the people of Tergoviste. At the age of seventeen, with the support of the Sultan of Turkey, he led an army back to Walachia and regained power. The first thing he did after coming to power was to purge the dissidents, and his methods were harsh, but he also used all kinds of severe punishments to deal with the criminals to clean up the country, the most famous of which was the punishment of impalement. For this reason, he was often nicknamed "Tapes" (the man who tortured people with wooden stakes).
Dracula became a national hero of Romania when he defeated a Turkish army several times larger than the Romanian legions on the banks of the Danube River to save his country. When engaged in battle, he utilized 'surprise warfare' and 'outright killing and pillaging'. What really frightened the Turks was the battle of 1462, in which Dracula was betrayed by his allies and fled to the capital. When the Turkish army arrived at the city, they saw more than 20,000 soldiers captured at the beginning of the battle, all stripped naked and displayed in public, and pierced alive on stakes up to one kilometer long around the city. Sticks pierced through the mouth or buttocks stood everywhere, crows and vultures constantly pecked at these corpses, so that the surrounding area is filled with a strong stench of rot, the Turkish army, which was still advancing straight ahead, witnessed this horrifying scene, all of them for the heart of a broken, no will to fight and had to withdraw. For the Duke of Dracula in front of the Turkish emissary who did not want to take off his hat, he ordered: "Since you do not want to take off your hat, then let him never take off." Thereupon the emissary had an iron nail driven into his head from the top of his cap.
Stories such as this one, which repelled the mighty Turkish army, saved the Christian nations from the invasion of the Moslem nations. At the same time, the Duke of Dracula became known as a bloodthirsty maniac, and the name 'vampire' spread throughout Europe. He died on the battlefield near Bucharest in the winter of 1476, having fought the Ottoman army to the last man with his own tiny army and no external help. The Turkish army later split Dracula's body into pieces and his head was sent as far as Constantinople. It is only the spirit of Dracula that is enshrined in the Snakov Monastery in Romania. It guards Romania.
Dracula's tyrannical behavior added rich material for many chroniclers of the time to write him as a legendary figure. Now, his name is inseparable from the vampire. [edit]Related movies Since Dracula was written in 1897, probably no other character in history has become as beloved as Count Dracula, from Stephen?6?1 King to Anne?6?1 Rice, from Castlevania's Moonlight Nocturne to Vampire Hunter D. Countless works have been influenced by the novel, and to date, some 160 films have featured Dracula as a protagonist, and over 600 films have involved Count Dracula. Transylvania has become a mecca for countless vampire fans.
DraculaThe first movie adaptation of Dracula was actually not the well-known black-and-white silent film Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror. After the books of Polidori's The Vampyre and Stoker's Dracula were written, there were already play adaptations in 1820, and the image of the vampire became a symbol of popular culture, resulting in plays and musicals that flooded the stages of England and continental Europe. This was especially true in France, where every theater in Paris had its own production of The Vampire. As a result of this influence, a movie called Drakula was first made in Hungary in 1921, directed by Karoly Lajthay. Later German director F.W. Murnau was inspired to bring the novel to the screen the following year, also without authorization, in what would become Nosferatu. In the movie, the original plot was drastically cut, the two female protagonists were merged into one, and no names from the book appeared -- Dracula became Count Orlok, and Jonathan?6?1 Harker became Thomas?6?1 Hutter --even so, the movie couldn't escape losing the copyright lawsuit. The Hungarian film more rightfully caught the attention of Stoker's belligerent widow, Florence, who spent almost 20 years trying to get the film censored and destroyed. Later, American publisher Horace Liveright fought the same copyright issue, and finally, in 1931, the first "official" Dracula movie was made.
There have been many vampire movies, some of the most famous being "Night of the Vampire", "Queen of the Vampires", "Nosferatu", "Shadow of the Vampire", "Vampirella", "Vampirella D", and "Legends of the Night" series.
There are relatively few movies that are really related to Dracula, and some of the more famous ones are as follows:
The 400 Years of Fright
The 400 Years of Fright is based on the 1897 novel The Vampire Counts: the Kiss of Dracula by [Irish] author Bram Stoker.
This novel is also one of the best-selling novels in the world. Bram Stoker's Dracula's Kiss is perhaps the most famous horror novel ever published. Bram Stoker once witnessed the sinking of a Russian two-masted ship, the Dimitri, off Whitehaven. Combining this experience with the atmosphere of the town, he completed and published this novel of sexual repression and medieval horror in 1897, and its impact is still unparalleled. You may have never read the book, and you probably haven't seen any of the movies related to it, but you've definitely heard of Dracula's Kiss and the impact he had on the living. As the most influential horror novel ever written, that ability to turn from a bat into a man and back again still captivates and sends shivers down the spine of young and old alike.
Synopsis:
The Legend of Dracula Becoming a Vampire
Count Dracula swore an oath to God to defend the Church from foreign invasion! He went out of the city on his wedding night to fight the enemy! He pierced his enemies through the chest with a long spear and set it up on the battlefield to demonstrate to the enemies who fled in disarray! His beloved leaps with excitement in the castle! At dawn. The enemy sends spies to spread rumors to the castle that Count Dracula, while pursuing the remnants of the enemy, was ambushed and died on the battlefield! His beloved mourned when she heard about it! Jumped down inside the castle's moat! Dracula returned in triumph! He was shocked to hear the news! He was frozen to the spot! When he came to his senses, he shed no tears, and his eyes showed boundless hatred! Because Christianity has a rule that members who die by suicide are not allowed to go to heaven! He questioned the church people why he could not go to heaven after the death of his beloved, even though he was so loyal to the church and laid down his life for it! The churchmen said it was God's will! Dracula drew his sword and swore a vow of repentance to heaven: he would never defend the Church again! He will never again defend the Church! And he will never again believe in God! He put the sword through the stone statue in the church hall! The statue sheds crimson tears! Count Dracula picks up the stone bowl and takes a drink of the silver-red blood! He cries out in pain to the heavens! He faced the stone statue of God and swore a heavy oath: "I can be reborn after death! To feed on blood! To fight against you with all the power of evil! Even if I will never be reborn!!!" The stone statue of God also shed crimson tears! God accepted his vow and turned him into a vampire! Turned him into a god of death who returned to the sun from his gloomy tomb to suck the blood of the living! A possessed monster who fell into hell but escaped the judgment of doom. A ruthless hunter who steals the life springs of innocent men and women. The noble, beautiful, pale and lonely poet of the night.
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This is the first time I've ever seen a ghost of a man who was so angry that he didn't want to rest in peace.