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Metatron's video: The TRUE Story of Historical DRACULA - Vlad The III - Legend or Reality

@The TRUE Story of Historical DRACULA - Vlad The III - Legend or Reality?
Click my trainwell (formerly CoPilot) link https://go.trainwell.net/Metatron to get 14 days FREE with your own personal trainer! On this video we will present the true historically accurate tale of Dracula in a way you have never seen before. Born: 1428, Vlad the Third, connonly known as Vlad the impaler is the historical character upon which the fictional vampire Dracula is based on. While on one hand "Dracula", the famous novel published by Bram Stoker in 1897, has undoubtedly immortalized the person of Vlad III Drakulya of Wallachia, it has simultaneously shrouded his figure in a series of fictional characteristics, now so deeply rooted in the collective imagination that it's extremely difficult to discern between the dark novelistic character and the historical one. The name The name "Vlad" should be understood as a contraction of Vladislav, which in Slavic languages literally means "possessor of glory", and in autograph documents written in Latin, Vlad III presented himself with the form "Ladislaus". "Dracula", "Draculea", "Dracuglia", "Drakulya" are all different forms of what is a patronymic, (a name derived from the name of a father or ancestor, typically by the addition of a prefix or suffix, e.g., Johnson, Anderson) which in Vlad III's autograph texts appears in this form of "Dragkwlya". All forms are to be considered correct, and the proliferation of variants is linked to a context where literacy was extremely limited, leading to the coexistence of different spellings when words were reproduced in written form. Dragkwlya" literally means "Son of the Dragon", because Vlad III's father, Vlad II of Wallachia, was known as Vlad Dracul, "Vlad the Dragon", as he had been appointed a knight of the Order of the Dragon by Sigismund of Luxembourg, King of Hungary and Holy Roman Emperor, in 1431. It should be noted that Vlad II himself is mentioned in some documents simply as "Draculea" or "Drakwla", where the term does not serve as a true patronymic, but indicates membership in the Order of the Dragon, and should be translated as "Vlad OF THE Dragon". The Order of the Dragon, created by Sigismund himself, had the purpose of opposing the hegemony of the Ottoman Turks, and at the same time fostering loyalty among Hungarian and Wallachian nobility by gathering them into a brotherhood. Reconstruction of the symbol of the Order of the Dragon From this moment on, the house of Vlad II's descendants became known as the Drăculești. In Romanian, one of the main languages spoken in Wallachia, "Dracul" would increasingly acquire a negative character and the exclusive meaning of "Devil", while "balaur", originally the name of a specific dragon from Romanian mythology, or "zmeu", a word of Slavic origin, progressively became established to indicate the dragon. If "Dracul" at the time of Vlad II was a nickname without negative connotations, already during Vlad III's reign the term had begun to change meaning, so much so that Nicolaede Madrussa, the Pope's envoy to Hungary in 1470, referring to Vlad III, wrote "the tyrant Dracul, a name they [the Romanians] use for the devil". The progressive disappearance of the term "Dracul" in Romanian to indicate the fantastic beast and its focus on defining the demon is probably linked to Vlad III's authoritarian policy, and to an instrumental use of his patronymic by his detractors and political opponents, specifically his rival for the Wallachian throne, Dan III of the Dăneștii dynasty, who on at least two occasions accused Vlad III of being guided by the devil, or of being a demon himself. Wallachia The historical figure of Vlad III is that of a Voivode, a noble title of Slavic origin whose literal meaning is "War Leader", of the region of Wallachia. Wallachia is a region of present-day Romania, whose name broadly means "Land of the Romans" or "Land of Foreigners": the Germanic word *Walhaz, which originally indicated the Celtic population of the Volci, is progressively extended by Germanic populations to any foreign reality located to the south or west, whether it is actually Celtic or, later, Roman or speaking a Celtic or Neo-Latin language: its derivatives will be used by the Anglo-Saxons to define the British-Romans and Wales, "Welsh" / "Wales", by the Flemish to define the French-speaking element, "Walen" (English "Walloons", Italian "Valloni"), by the Norse to indicate the kingdom of France or the Roman Empire, "Valir", and by German-speaking Swiss to indicate Italian and Ladin speakers, "Walsche" or "Welsche". Derivatives of *Walhaz are also acquired in Slavic languages, which is why "Vlachs" (Slavic "Vlahiskoi") is used to indicate Romanian speakers and in Polish, Italians are still called "Włosi" today.

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This video was published on 2024-08-20 23:45:12 GMT by @Metatron on Youtube. Metatron has total 0.9M subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 1K video.This video has received 1.4K Likes which are lower than the average likes that Metatron gets . @Metatron receives an average views of 105.1K per video on Youtube.This video has received 250 comments which are lower than the average comments that Metatron gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.Metatron #metatron #dracula #vladtheimpaler has been used frequently in this Post.

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