Vlad: Illegitimate son of Vlad Dracul with a mistress
Alexandru: Brother of Vlad Dracul, vaivode of Wallachia
Wallachian Court and Countryside Figures
Nurse: Mother of Bogdan, caretaker of Lada and Radu
Bogdan: Son of the nurse, friend of Lada
Andrei: Boyar child from rival Danesti family
Aron: Boyar child from rival Danesti family
Costin: A boy without shoes at the frozen river
Danesti family: Rival family for the Wallachian throne
Lazar: A Janissary soldier serving in Wallachia, friend of Radu
Edirne Court Figures
Murad: Ottoman sultan, father of Mehmed
Halima: One of Murad’s wives, mother of the infant Ahmet
Ahmet: Mehmed’s infant half brother
Mara Brankovic: One of Murad’s wives, the daughter of the Serbian king
Huma: One of of Murad’s concubines, the mother of Mehmed
Mehmed: The third and least favorite son of the sultan
Sitti Hatun: Daughter of an important emir, Mehmed’s first wife
Gulsa: Mehmed’s concubine, the mother of his second son
Beyazit: Mehmed’s firstborn son
Molla Gurani: Mehmed’s tutor
Halil Pasha: An important advisor in the Ottoman court
Salih: The second son of Halil Pasha, friend of Radu
Kumaclass="underline" Devout vali of a small area outside of Edirne
Nazira: Kumal’s youngest sister
Fatima: Nazira’s maid
Amaclass="underline" A young servant in the palace
Military Figures in the Ottoman Empire
Ilyas: A Janissary commander
Kazanci Dogan: Military leader of the Janissaries
Ivan: A Janissary with a nasty disposition
Matei: An experienced Wallachian Janissary
Nicolae: A Wallachian Janissary and Lada’s closest friend
Petru: A young Wallachian Janissary
Stefan: A mysterious Wallachian Janissary
Tohin: A gunpowder expert
Political Figures in Opposition to the Sultan
Constantine: The emperor of Constantinople
Orhan: A false heir to the Ottoman throne, used by Constantinople as leverage
Skanderberg: Iskander Bey, also known as Skanderberg, a former Janissary and favorite of Murad, now holding the Albanian city of Kruje against the Ottomans
bey: A governor
beylerbey: Governors of the largest and most important provinces
boyars: Wallachian nobility
concubine: A woman who belongs to the sultan and is not a legal wife but could produce legal heirs
dervish: Religious ascetics (mostly from the Sufi branch of Islam) who take vows of poverty
dracuclass="underline" Dragon, also devil, as the terms were interchangeable
emir: A leader of the Turkmen tribes, Ottoman allies to the east
eunuch: A man who has been castrated, highly valued as a servant and a prestigious slave
hajj: Religious pilgrimage taken to Mecca as one of the Five Pillars of Islam
harem: A group of women, consisting of wives, concubines, and servants, that belongs to the sultan
Janissary: A member of an elite force of military professionals, taken as boys from other countries, converted to Islam, educated, and trained to be loyal to the sultan
Order of the Dragon: Order of Crusaders anointed by the pope
pasha: A noble in the Ottoman Empire, appointed by the sultan
pashazada: A son of a pasha
spahi: Military commander in charge of local Ottoman soldiers called up during wars
vaivode: Warlord prince of Wallachia
vali: A local governor, appointed by the sultan
valide sultan: The mother of the sultan
vassal state: Country allowed to retain rulership but subject to the Ottoman Empire, with taxes of both money and slaves for the army
vilayet: Small area of land governed by a vali
vizier: A high ranking noble, usually adviser to the sultan
Wallachia: Vassal state of the Ottoman Empire, bordered by Transylvania, Hungary, and Moldavia
While the book is based on actual historical figures, I have taken massive liberties, filling in gaps, creating characters and events, shifting time lines, and most particularly, changing Vlad the Impaler to Lada the Impaler.
Any book based in history is a vast and ultimately impossible undertaking. Because history is written by the victors—and those who are quite unhappy with those victors—major figures tend to be canonized or demonized in the records that make it through to our day.
Vlad the Impaler was a national hero, a freedom fighter, a brilliant military mind. Or he was a deeply disturbed psychopath, a vicious despot who murdered tens of thousands and literally sustained himself on their flesh.
Similarly divided accounts exist of Mehmed the Conqueror. History loves him and hates him. He was an incredibly devout, thoughtful ruler, even bordering on a religious figure, or he was a cruel predator who loved debauchery and destruction.
My goal in this book was to carve out a middle ground. In my research I set aside accounts that skewed too far in either direction and tried to focus on the truth: They were men who were born into great power, and they both did what they thought necessary to maintain and expand that power. The central aspect I wanted to explore was the path a person takes to get to the point where they can justify doing terrible things in the name of good. What motivations sway them? What stones laid in childhood become the foundation legacies are built on?
In the end, this is a work of fiction. I chose to make Vlad the Impaler a girl because it was a more interesting lens for me as a storyteller. Radu the Handsome is merely a footnote in Vlad’s stories, but I did my best to breathe life into his legacy. Mehmed the Conqueror is a revered Turkish national hero, with Istanbul still a testament to his greatness and his ability to think far into the future. I have done my best to honor that, while still acknowledging that he was a real person.
Just how much interaction the three would have had growing up in the Ottoman Courts together is unknown. I’ve crafted a fictional history in which the formative relationships of their young lives were with each other. If you would like to read more extensively on Vlad, Radu, and Mehmed and their time, as well as the incredible legacy of the Ottomans, I recommend using your local library and librarians. Some books I found helpful were:
The Ottoman Centuries, by Lord Kinross
1453, by Roger Crowley
A Short History of Byzantium, by John Julius Norwich
The Grand Turk, by John Freely
Dracula, Prince of Many Faces, by Radu R. Florescu and Raymond T. McNally
Islam: A Thousand Years of Faith and Power, by Jonathan Bloom and Sheila Blair