"Another anecdote tells of a foreign merchant who was in Vlad's capital city. The merchant left his wagon out, knowing the strict punishment for breaking the law. When he came back to the wagon in the morning he found that 16 ducats were missing. He went to Dracula and told him of the stolen money. Vlad told him he would have his money by sundown. He then told the people that if they did not find the thief, then he (Vlad), would burn down the city. He then told one of his servants to place 17 ducats in the merchant's wagon. After the merchant discovered the ducats, he went to Dracula and told him that there was an extra ducat. At this point the thief was brought to Dracula who ordered him impaled, and Dracula also told the merchant that if he had not returned the extra ducat, he would have been impaled along with the thief."
"On a kinder note, another story tells that Vlad placed a golden cup at a well-travelled spring so travelers could drink. Not once during his entire reign was the cup ever stolen. The legend also says that the very day people saw the cup missing they knew that Vlad was gone."
I think Vlad was the kind of ruler the Wallachians needed and appreciated at the time.
He was a Christian warrior holding the gates of Europe against the Turks.
By the way, young Vlad probaly learned about impalements while kept hostage by the brutal Turks.
Using their own techniques against them was fair play.
Exactly,
What the Turks did as common practice was very similar to what he did.
It was a brutal time (glad I wasn't there) but he was the right person for the era.
Thanks. You got me searching.
See
http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Cavern/3987/1.html
for extensive pages.