Let me put it like this: if Bram Stoker really intented his Dracula to be Vlad Tepes then why is that name not mentioned even once? And his notes? Why isn't there a single hint of the horrible things he had done in this past, like his brutal ways of excution? Why does Van Helsing claim he was a "most wonderful man" during his lifetime?
Not to mention that there a condradictions that outweight the hints you brought forward. Vlad Tepes is a prince and not a Count. He is not a boyar, in fact the real Tepes liked to kill them or use them as slaves. He also isn't a descendant of Atilla the Hun. Instead he belongs to some kind off Slavish race.
Trust me if they really were supposed to be one and the same the author would have done a lot more research. That source I was talking about is proven to be the only book he read about the subject ever. He is known for directly copying trivial information from sources he used for his book and tie them to completely unrelated things sometimes. He just wanted to have an appealing backstory for his vampire character and therefore he just goes with the person he got the name Dracula from. There is a difference between actually being the same character or being loosely based on one.
@VGuyver
Yeah I understand that but wouldn't it have been logical if he just killed the ones who were responsible? Or at most just the entire village where Lisa lived. Dracula just comes off as an overreacting drama queen.
Guess you missed that whole thing about a voivode i put up early, allow me to refresh your memory.
Voivode[1] is a Slavic title that originally denoted the principal commander of a military force. The word gradually came to denote the governor of a province; the territory ruled or administered by a voivode is known as a voivodeship.
In English, the title is often translated as "prince", "duke", or, as in Bram Stoker's Count Dracula, "count". The Polish title is sometimes rendered in English as "palatine" or "count palatine", in charge of a palatinate. In Slavic terminology, the rank of a voivode is in some cases considered equal of that of a German Herzog.
And that whole wonderful man thing probably meant that Romania still supports Vlad as one of their greatest and most beloved Princes.
Also take into consideration that this book was written in 1897 in Ireland perhaps at that time there wasn't a lot on Vlad at said time. Plus Vlad only inspired the creation of Dracula his model was used to create a fictional character. And it does mention his past but only slightly, did Bram wish everyone to love Vlad? No he wanted his book to sale so he could become a famous author, he wanted people to love his character Dracula not the real Vlad because a lot of people probably wouldn't have liked Vlad very much because he murdered shit tons of people. Vlad was only the inspiration that would lead into a completely different character and by different I mean he drank the blood of the innocent to live, slept in a coffin, and turned into a bat. And also did your source know Bram? Is she/he a vampire too? lol seriously not buying that.
And another thing Im not seeing any facts to back up your theories. I got plenty of written down facts supporting me which whether you like it or not he wrote down occurrences of Vlad's life, mention his own brother betraying him, even used the Slavic term for prince when he couldve used the English version, even came out in the book and said "Hes Dracula". You got a bunch of "theories" with nothing substantial that has been written down as fact other then your "source" who acts like they were alive in 1897 and watched his every move and claimed he only read one book about Vlad
but actions speak louder than words and he wrote down things that actually occurred in his life so guess what that means? He did some more research than what was placed in his notes meaning he must have been too lazy to take notes. Or maybe he didn't want people knowing he used Vlad III because at the time his name was so obscured no one knew who the hell he was until sometime after this novel was published. And he didnt want to lose creditability as a writer by using someone who already existed instead of creating a character from scratch like Sir Author Conan Doyle did with Sherlock Holmes. That would be like me deciding to write a werewolf novel where Hitler is the main werewolf but instead I use the name Adolf because i dont really want people knowing I used him directly. I write down in my notes some tidbit about reading one book that mentions his name three times. So I write the book and actually put down historical occurrences that point to him being the honest to god jew hatin Hitler but not everything because I dont want people thinking I'm trying to ride his tail coats too much. Do you know what that means? It means I did a little more research thats what that means. And you are gonna seriously argue because I'm lazy and didnt place it down in my notes that Hitler isn't whom I got inspirations for the jew hatin werewolf I created for my book?
So you can harp all you want like some 911 conspiracy theorist but unfortunately me and the rest of the world disagree with you along with Bram's own written down words that pointed directly to Vlad III do too. And thats what this comes down if it brightens your world up that Vlad III isn't what inspired Bram's Dracula then by all means go for it, I'm not gonna stop ya. Have at it.