Radu cel Frumos
For the Arabian deity, see Radu (god) |
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Radu cel Frumos (Radu the Handsome), (c.1437/1439-
1475), was the younger brother of
Vlad Ţepeş (Dracula). They were both sons of
Vlad II Dracul (Dracul :
the dragon or devil), but by different mothers. They had an older brother too, called
Mircea, who was buried alive. In
1444 Radu went with his father and elder brother to visit the
Ottoman Sultan Murad in
Adrianople, where they were kept as hostages, while Mircea ruled the kingdom in their absence. The father, Vlad Dracul was released first in 1443. Vlad Ţepeş was released in
1448, and was the Turks' candidate for the throne of
Wallachia; Radu, however, remained with the Turks for the moment, apparently of his own volition, and willingly converted to
Islam. There is evidence supporting the speculation that he had become the lover of the Sultan's heir, the later
Mehmed II. According to
Chalcocondylas, Mehmed's first attempt to seduce him ended in disaster. Radu cut Mehmed with his sword and then, in fear for his life, ran and climbed up a tree. Mehmed only talked him into coming down by promising not to kill him.
Under Turkish pressure
Vlad Dracula fled to
Transylvania in 1462, and the
Ottomans placed his brother on the throne of
Wallachia. Radu ruled from
1462 until
1473, when
Basarab Laiotă cel Bătrân (Basarab Laiotă the Old) took over the throne for a year; in the same year Radu regained the throne and retained it until the following year. During the course of
1474 Radu was Prince three times, and Basarab twice; by the end of that year Radu was Prince once more, and remained so until the following year when he died of
syphilis, and was naturally succeeded by Basarab. He left a daughter, Maria Voichiţa, who afterwards became the wife of
Ştefan cel Mare.