Dracula’s UFO: discovery in a 15th century painting.

A UFO appears to hover over a building which can be connected to Dracula’s real life in a recently discovered painting from the city of Sighisoara, Romania. A photo of the mysterious painting appearing on the wall of a 700-year-old monastery was photographed this summer by tourist Catalina Borta, who sent it to a prominent UFO research group for evaluation. The bizarre painting shows what appears to be a church – perhaps the same one where the painting was found – apparently engulfed in flames. Above the church, a large disk looms, floating, sending a column of smoke skyward above. The town of Sighisoara is believed to be where Vlad Tepes, the notorious “Vlad the Impaler”, also known as Vlad III Dracula, was born in 1431 – not long after the monastery where the painting appears was built.

El OVNI de Drácula: descubrimiento en una pintura del siglo XV.

The name “Vlad III Dracula” translates as “Vlad III, Son of the Dragon.” The nickname “Impaler”, not imposed on Vlad Tepes until after his death sometime around 1477, came from the bloodthirsty warlord’s practice of nailing the bodies of his enemies to sharpened posts and leaving them exposed to the sun. public as a show of power. Vlad III Dracula was Irish author Bram Stoker’s inspiration for the vampire Count Dracula in the 1897 Dracula novel in which the now-legendary fictional villain first appeared. “But why would a painting that may have been created in Dracula’s real life, in his own hometown, depict what appears to be a flying disc-shaped craft, of the type described today as a UFO?” According to Gilli Schechter and Hannan Sabat of an Israel-based UFO Research Association, the painting in the Dominican Convent Church in Sighisoara depicts a flying disc that appears very similar to other UFO-type objects scattered through artwork. art of the medieval period.

El OVNI de Drácula: descubrimiento en una pintura del siglo XV.

They cite, in particular, an illustration from a book called the Liber Prodigiorum, an account of an ancient Roman battle during which a mysterious round object appeared in the sky. The frisbee in the illustration looks very similar to the UFO in the Sighisoara church painting. Similar discs have also appeared on 17th-century French coins. But UFO expert Marc Dantonio says the images on the coins are actually meant to represent military shields. They were supposed to be the shields to symbolize the military might of the French King Louis XIV. Experts have had some trouble coming up with the strange UFO painting from Vlad Dracula’s birthplace. The inscription below the painting is a biblical quote in German, suggesting that the painting was created no earlier than 1523, the first year the Bible was translated into German. Was the UFO painting created during Vlad Dracula’s lifetime or nearly a century later? Is the painting supposed to symbolize Dracula’s military power, or is there some relationship between the warlord who turned into a fictional vampire and aliens? UFO experts remain baffled as they hope to learn more about the amazing painting from Dracula’s house.

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