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  2. Seeing this, the monks at Snagov stole the prince's body and gave it a proper burial, but in secrecy and without pomp. The Snagov Monastery is famous because it is considered to be one of the alleged burial sites of Vlad the Impaler, the inspiration for Bram Stoker's Dracula.

  3. Around the year 1456, a prison was built on the island, along with defense walls, and a bridge connecting the island to the mainland, with orders from Vlad III. it functioned until around 1856, being used by Wallachian Voivodes to imprison traitors and thieves.

  4. Oct 10, 2018 · Vlad Tepes (the real-life Dracula’s) grave site inside the Snagov Monastery. During the 1930s this area was excavated and no signs of Vlad’s headless torso were uncovered. Just some artifacts and a number of animal bones.

    • Why was Vlad buried in Snagov?1
    • Why was Vlad buried in Snagov?2
    • Why was Vlad buried in Snagov?3
    • Why was Vlad buried in Snagov?4
    • Why was Vlad buried in Snagov?5
  5. Mar 14, 2016 · Vlad’s followers did not want to see their leader’s body defiled or used for propaganda purposes. So they buried him in this remote, inaccessible setting, with an additional precaution. They buried his body deep beneath the church floor.

  6. Mar 23, 2018 · It is believed that Vlad’s decapitated body was found in the woods around Bucharest by the monks of the Snagov monastery and brought here to be buried since both Vlad and his father had donated money to the church.

    • Christopher Wunder
  7. Nov 10, 2012 · The lady explained that Vlad had requested to be buried where the priest would walk over his tomb to approach the altar. There was a small picture of him and a candle to mark the grave.

  8. Aug 20, 2013 · On a tiny island in a lake just outside of Bucharest stands Snagov Monastery, which local tradition states is the burial place of Vlad the Impaler, the inspiration for Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

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