There was a ruler in Romania called Vlad Tepes and he used to chop off his enemy's heads and put them on sticks in front of his palace. That's probably where the bloody aspect comes from. Bram Stoker, an Irishman, wrote Dracula, based on Vlad Tepes and added his own details, such as the whole vampire and blood sucking aspect. He placed the story in Transylvania, which is why the region is associated with vampires. There's also a castle called "Bran Castle" which is supposedly "Dracula's Castle" which makes the story even more real.
It's all a myth, though and native romanians don't associate Transylvania with vampires. It's a tourist thing.
2007-12-19 12:07:52
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answer #1
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answered by Melonball 5
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The real Dracula known as Vladmir Tepes came from Transylvania in Romania.
2007-12-19 12:09:29
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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As lore goes Val the Empaler was the basis for Dracula and he visited Transylvania and spent time in a Castle in Transylvania. He is Known to have impaled his victims on a stake to let all of their blood out
2007-12-19 12:14:06
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answer #3
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answered by bagrok 1
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Ugh. the priority you will possibly be able to desire to appreciate is the style of perception replaced into prevalent till the Communist era. nonetheless i'm no longer saying this specially approximately vampires, study Mircea Eliades. anyhow as close to as we are in a position to make out Vampires are an fairly surviving perception of the Indo-ecu religions, or proto-indo-ecu religions. specially they seem to be a narrative approximately what can ensue once you die a nasty loss of existence. And Transylvania looks to have been component of the Indo-ecu heartland, the place the infantrymen who unfold their languages cultures and religions got here out of and ideology survived longest. memories associating Transylvania with Vampires do date decrease back in the previous Dracula, inspite of the undeniable fact that the perception replaced into quite prevalent in the time of Western Europe or maybe u.s.. My State -- State of Rhode Island and windfall Plantations -- has 2 documented situations. a youthful guy whose call i do no longer understand in Exeter on the beginning up of the 19th Century, and Mercy Brown, a descendent of the State's founders, on the tip of it. Media has simplified our ideals so we tend to talk approximately Transylvania for this. i might extremely communicate approximately Csardases yet those are regularly Hungarian anyhow.
2016-12-18 05:11:36
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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Because Prince Vlad Tepes aka Vlad the Impaler was from Carpathia which is in Transylvania.
And Bram Stoker did his Dracula book based off of Vlad the Impaler's legend.
2007-12-19 12:07:06
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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If you read Dracula, the story is set there. This is the most famous contemporary vampire story out there.
Legends of vampires are thousands of years old, though-some think they go back to ancient times.
2007-12-19 12:08:20
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Because Dracula was from transylvania
2007-12-19 12:07:25
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answer #7
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answered by JcA 2
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because a certain author who had never previously been to transylvania decided the name alone sounded mysteriously enough to write a book about it. and that is the skinny . nope no real vamps in trans. sorry.
2007-12-19 12:10:44
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answer #8
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answered by bholley_24 1
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It was where Vlad III Dracula was born. Also known as Vlad the impaler, as he would impale the heads of his victims on the end of sharpened sticks to serve as a warning to others!
He was born Dec 1431 and died Dec 1476.
2007-12-19 12:13:53
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Because that is where Vlad the Impaler (or Count Dracula as he is known) lived and tortured people.
2007-12-19 12:07:30
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answer #10
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answered by Debbie Jane (after Jack and Dann 2
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