Bram Stoker Dracula is not Vlad Tepes

21/03/2026

Bram Stoker (1847-1912) was a member of Freemasonry and various secret and mystical lodges. The world bestseller Dracula published in 1897 unfairly centers on the ruler Vlad Tepes (1431-1476) of Wallachia, also called Dracula (Son of the Dragon, which was a knightly order in which his father was enrolled) 

Bram Stoker borrowed from occultism and vampirism, not from the true historical figure of the Romanian ruler. After Draula, the author wrote another lesser-known vampire story called The Wampyre Count, which takes place in Austria in the Styria region. 

 The inspiration and origin of the Dracula character was actually the novel by author George du Maurier Trilby in which the evil character Svengali is a Khazar Jew who seduces, dominates and exploits young European girls. 

The Jewish blood-spilling habits are known in mystical circles, both the blood of innocent children for the resulting energy and the blood of innocent animals which are then ingested. 

Hence the parallel between the bloodthirsty god of the Jews in the Old Testament who demanded human and animal blood sacrifices and Epstein Island where not only blood was consumed but also the flesh of children and adults, cooked like animals and consumed in reptilian rituals.

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