Part
4 – The connection between Radu and Vlad Tepes
Looking
back, Radu’s devotion to Islam and to Sultan Mehmet II could be traced to the
political alliance of their respective fathers before them. Vlad II from the
House of Drăculeşti (“House of the Dragon”) was an ally and vassal of Sultan
Mehmet’s father, Sultan Murad II. Vlad II had 4 sons: Mircea II, Vlad IV
Călugărul (“The Monk”), Vlad III who would come to be known as Dracula, and
Radu III cel Frumos (“The Handsome”). As a gesture of unity with the Sultan,
Vlad II offered his sons, Dracula and Radu, to serve the Ottoman Sultan. Under
the Janissaries they studied the Qur’an, Arabic, Turkish, Persian, Islamic
Theology and Jurisprudence, and, coveted above all, Turkish military strategy
and tactics of war.
The
Ottoman Special Forces who held a higher status both militarily as well as
socially than the rank and file were the Janissaries and the Sipahis. The
Janissaries were the elite infantry of the Ottoman military as well as the
personal bodyguards of the Sultan and his family. The Sipahis were the elite
cavalry who surrounded the Sultan in battle and would be sent to deal with the
most stubborn of adversaries. They were the commandos and special forces of
their day. Though the Sipahis were almost exclusively Turkic in origin as
demanded by Sultan Mehmet II himself in his treatise of law entitled Kanun
Nameh-e-Sipahi (“Law Book of the Sipahis”), the Janissaries, within whose ranks
Dracula and Radu found themselves, were conversely converts to Islam.
The
young Dracula continually abused and rebelled against his hosts earning himself
imprisonment and castigation. Due to the heavy handedness of the Turks in
response to his insolence, he developed a compounded and complex series of
grudges. He hated his father for allying with the Turks, which he saw as a
betrayal of the Order of the Dragon to which his father had sworn an oath. The
Order of the Dragon was a Christian fraternity whose sole aim was to wipe out
Islam from the Balkans forever. Dracula hated Radu for his successes and the
favor the Turks bestowed upon him. He was filled with jealousy for the then
young Mehmet II who, like him, was a prince, but, very unlike him, lived in
splendor. He was also jealous of his brothers Mircea and Vlad the Monk due to
what he perceived as his father’s preference for them. His sentiments for Mircea
however, would teeter between jealousy and awe. It is from him that the young
Dracula learned the terror tactic of impaling thousands to create forests of
the dead.
Radu
remained faithful to Islam and the Sultan and spent his entire life in battle
on the frontiers of the Ottoman Empire, vanquishing the most difficult
adversaries of the Empire. His natural knack for battle was unparalleled even
amongst the Janissaries and elite Sipahis of the Ottoman military, and he would
be called upon frequently to subdue any foe that seemed insurmountable. It is
reported that he turned the very course of Near Eastern history when he stopped
the mighty Ak Koyunlu from overrunning the Ottomans, an event that, if not
stopped, would have definitely changed the faces of both the Middle East and
Europe today. For this very reason, he was called upon to face the threat from
his homeland of Wallachia that neither the elite Janissaries nor the Sipahis
could route.