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Vlad Tepesh house found in Hungary |
2009-10-04 |
![]() Researchers at Pecs University, where the cellar was found, say Vlad III Tepes lived in a two-story town house on what is currently the central square of the southern city of Pecs. According to tutor of medieval and early modern history at Pecs University Tamas Fedeles, there is a document containing a detailed description of the house and referring to it as the "Drakulya House." Authorities, meanwhile, are going to fill in the newly discovered site after the official archaeologist of the Cultural Heritage Protection Service, Zoltan Karpati, said the excavations did not yield any items related to an individual owner. Karpati also rejected the position of the house as referred to in the medieval document, but agreed that the cellar could have been part of the "Dracula House" of the document, Digital Journal reported. It was the 19th Century English novelist Bram Stoker who first put the character of Count Dracula under the spotlight. The book, however, was not closely based on the life of Voivode (Duke) Vlad III (1431 to 1476), who is said to have been very cruel and stories of his cruelty were circulated in pamphlets in as far away as Germany and Russia. |
Posted by:Fred |
#7 The Victorian women in the Count Dracula story, Barbara. Such characters, like their counterparts in the pulp romance novels and films of today, are completely unlike real, live, adult female humans. |
Posted by: trailing wife 2009-10-04 20:42 |
#6 "Women find him sexually irresistible" Not this woman. |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2009-10-04 15:48 |
#5 I have long thought that the Dracula mythos needs a rewrite. Either they try to be true to the original novel, which has some serious problems; or they just use cheesy pulp plots. Instead what they need to do is to go the way of 'The Company of Wolves' for the werewolf concept. Blended with the story of Little Red Riding Hood, you needed hip waders to get through the symbolism and psychology. A great movie even if you didn't understand the nuances--you still knew that they were there, and they were kinky. More than anything else, Dracula is a symbol of severe romance and sexuality. Women find him sexually irresistible, and men find him sexually threatening. This is why he fits in so well in sexually repressed Victorian England. Today this seems outdated, but only because there is confusion between sexuality and sex. The truth is that we are just as repressed as the Victorians, but in a different way. But Dracula needs to be rewritten to reflect that. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2009-10-04 13:33 |
#4 I was told the word Dracula was their word for "Count", so "Count Dracula" was Redundant. |
Posted by: Redneck Jim 2009-10-04 11:27 |
#3 Hey they likely beheaded his guys just like the Jihadist of today so he just up'ed the ante. I see the head and raise you a tared and ignited elevator shaft. |
Posted by: 3dc 2009-10-04 04:13 |
#2 I'm a Prince but don't get the publicity this guy gets - perhaps I should impale several thousands like this guy did in 1450 - after allthey were only captured MOOOOOSLEMS |
Posted by: KNAZ BUTOP ALKSANDR 2009-10-04 01:37 |
#1 Cruel is pretty subjective. He did a pretty good job keeping the turks at bay. |
Posted by: James Carville 2009-10-04 01:20 |