Difference between revisions of "Carol I of Romania" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{Infobox Romanian Royalty|monarch
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{{Ready}}{{Images OK}}{{Approved}}{{copyedited}}
| name            = Carol I
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[[image:Carol I of Romania king.jpg|thumb|300px|Carol of Romania.]]
| title          = Domnitor of Romania (until 1881)<br>King of the Romanians (since 1881)
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'''Carol I of Romania,''' original name '''Prince Karl Eitel Friedrich Zephyrinus Ludwig of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen,''' later simply '''of [[House of Hohenzollern|Hohenzollern]]''' (April 20, 1839 - October 10, 1914) [[Germany|German]] prince, was elected Domnitor (Prince) of [[Romania]] on April 20, 1866, following the overthrow of [[Alexandru Ioan Cuza]], and proclaimed king on March 26, 1881, with the acquiescence of the [[Ottoman Empire|Turkish Sultan]] whose armies were defeated in Romania's 1877 Independence War by the Romanian-Russian army under the command of Prince Charles I. He was, then, the first ruler of the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen dynasty which would rule the country until the imposition of a Stalin-directed republic, dictated at gun point in a coup d'etat devised by Dr. Petru Groza, whose government was backed up by the Soviet armies of occupation in 1947; this forced abdication (and later exile) of [[King Michael]] I of Romania by his former [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] allies occurred shortly after the soviet dictator Joseph (Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili) [[Stalin]] bestowed the Soviet Order of Victory upon King Michael I for his central role in the overturn of the Germans in Roumania in late August 1944.
| image          = Carol I of Romania king.jpg
 
| caption        = King Carol I of Romania
 
| reign          = 10 May 1866 - {{OldStyleDate|10 October|1914|27 September}}
 
| coronation      = 10 May 1881
 
| full name       = Karl Eitel Friedrich Zephyrinus Ludwig von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
 
| predecessor    = [[Alexandru Ioan Cuza]] (Domnitor)
 
| successor      = [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand I]]
 
| spouse          = [[Elisabeth of Wied]]
 
| issue          = [[Princess Maria of Romania (1870-1874)|Princess Maria of Romania]]
 
| royal house    = [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen#Eastern Europe|Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]
 
| royal anthem    =
 
| father          = [[Prince Karl Anton of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]
 
| mother          = [[Princess Josephine of Baden]]
 
| date of birth  = {{birth date|1839|4|20|mf=y}}
 
| place of birth  = [[Sigmaringen]], [[Germany]]
 
| date of death  = {{OldStyleDate|10 October|1914|27 September}}
 
| place of death  = [[Sinaia]], [[Romania]]
 
| place of burial = [[Curtea de Argeş]], [[Romania]]
 
|}}
 
  
'''Carol I of Romania'''<ref>http://www.larousse.fr/</ref>, original name '''Prince Karl Eitel Friedrich Zephyrinus Ludwig of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen''', later simply '''of Hohenzollern''' (April 20th, 1839 - {{OldStyleDate|10 October|1914|27 September}}), German prince, was elected [[Domnitor]] (Prince) of [[Romania]] on  April 20th, 1866, following the overthrow of [[Alexandru Ioan Cuza]], and proclaimed king on  March 26th 1881, with the acquiescence of the [[Porte]] and the [[Turkish Sultan]] whose armies were defeated in Roumania's 1877 [[Independence War with the Ottoman Empire]] by the Roumanian-Russian army under the command of Prince Charles I. He was, then, the first ruler of the [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]] dynasty which would rule the country until the imposition of a Stalin-directed republic, dictated at gun point in a coup d'etat devised by Dr. Petru Groza whose government was backed up by the Soviet armies of occupation in 1947; this forced abdication (and later exile) of [[King Michael]] I of Roumania by his former Soviet allies occurred shortly after the soviet dictator Joseph (Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili) [[Stalin]] bestowed the Soviet [[Order of Victory]] upon King Michael I for his central role in the overturn of the Germans in Roumania in late August 1944.
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During the Independence War of 1877-1878, Prince Charles personally led Romanian troops, and also assumed command of the Russo-Romanian army during the siege of Pleven, (in Romanian, Plevna) with the acquiescence of Russia's [[Alexander II of Russia|Czar Alexander II]]. The country achieved full independence from the Ottoman Empire (Treaty of Berlin, 1878), acquired access to the [[Black Sea]], and later also acquired the Southern part of the Dobruja from [[Bulgaria]] in 1913, but lost Bessarabia in 1878 to its Russian "allies." Domestic political life, still dominated by the country's wealthy landowning families organized around the rival Liberal and Conservative]] parties, was punctuated by two widespread peasant uprisings, in [[Walachia]] (the southern half of the country) in April 1888 and in [[Moldavia]] (the Northern half) in March 1907.
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{{toc}}
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Unlike [[Otto of Greece]] who, also a foreigner, had been installed as the king of [[Greece]] after independence from Ottoman rule, Carol I fully embraced his new country and tried to emulate the developing constitutional monarchies of Western Europe. Under Carol, [[democracy]] was nurtured, the [[economics|economy]] thrived and stability was achieved. From 1947 until 1989, the Communists suppressed his memory but now that Romania is once more free and democratic, this can be celebrated again.
  
During the Independence War of 1877-1878, Prince Charles personally led Roumanian troops, and also assumed command of the Russo-Roumanian army during the [[siege of Pleven]], (in Romanian, [[Plevna]]) with the acquiescence of Russia's [[Alexander II of Russia|Czar Alexander II]]. The country achieved full independence from the [[Ottoman Empire]] ([[Treaty of Berlin, 1878]]), acquired access to the [[Black Sea]], and later also acquired the Southern part of the [[Dobruja]] from [[Bulgaria]] in 1913, but lost [[Bessarabia]] in 1878 to its Russian 'allies'. Domestic political life, still dominated by the country's wealthy landowning families organised around the rival [[National Liberal Party (Romania)|Liberal]] and [[Conservative Party (Romania)|Conservative]] parties, was punctuated by two widespread peasant uprisings, in [[Walachia]] (the southern half of the country) in April 1888 and in [[Moldavia]] (the Northern half) in March 1907.
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==Early life==
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Carol was born in Sigmaringen as Prince Karl von Hohenzollern Sigmaringen. He was the second son of Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and his wife, Princess Josephine of Baden. After finishing his elementary studies, Karl entered the Cadet School in Münster. In 1857, he was attending the courses of the Artillery School in [[Berlin]]. Up to 1866 (when he accepted the crown of Romania), he was a German officer. He took part in the [[Second War of Schleswig]], particularly at the assault of the Fredericia citadel and Dybbøl, experience which would be very useful to him later on in the [[Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878|Russian-Turkish war]].
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Although he was quite frail and not very tall, prince Karl was reported to be the perfect soldier, healthy, disciplined, and also a very good politician with liberal ideas. He was familiar with several European languages. His family being closely related to the [[Napoleon Bonaparte|Bonaparte]] family (one of his grandmothers was a Beauharnais and the other a Murat), they enjoyed very good relations with [[Napoleon III]].  
  
He married [[Elisabeth of Wied]] in [[Neuwied]] on 15 November 1869. They only had one daughter, [[Princess Maria of Romania (1870-1874)|Maria]], who died aged three.
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===Romania: The search for a ruler===
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Romania, throwing off Ottoman rule, had chosen Alexandru Ioan Cuza as prince (Domnitor) in 1859. Now, they wanted to replace him with a new ruler. Cuza had proven both too authoritarian, as well as having alienated the elite through proposed land-reforms. Romanians thought that a foreign prince, who was already a member of a ruling house, would both "enhance the country's prestige" and "put an end to internal rivalry for the throne."<ref>Lucian Boia and James Christian Brown, ''Romania: Borderland of Europe'' (London, UK: Reaktion Books, 2001, ISBN 9781861891037), 79.</ref> They "began searching Europe for a suitable prince."<ref>Boia and Brown, 87.</ref>
  
Carol's childlessness left his elder brother Leopold next in line to the throne. In October 1880 Leopold renounced his right of succession in favour of his son William, who in turn surrendered his claim eight years later in favour of his younger brother, the future king [[Ferdinand of Romania|Ferdinand]].
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Romania was, at the time, under the influence of [[France|French]] culture, so when Napoleon decided to recommend of Prince Karl of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, this weighed heavily in the eyes of Romania's politicians, as did his blood relation to the ruling Prussian family. Ion Brătianu was the leading Romanian statesman who was sent to [[negotiation|negotiate]] with Karl and his family about the possibility of installing Karl on the Romanian throne. Ion Brătianu met privately with Prince Karl at Dusseldorf, where he arrived on Good Friday 1866. The next day he submitted the proposition that Karl become the official ruler ("Domnitorul Romaniei") and Prince of Romania, that is, of both Vallachia and Moldavia (but not Transylvania, which was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the time). Although Prince Karl may have been favorably inclined, he needed the approval or nodding consent of [[Otto von Bismark]], Napoleon III, and [[Wilhelm II, German Emperor|Wilhelm II]] before providing a definitive and positive answer. He replied that while he had enough courage to accept the offer, he had to decline until he had permission to accept from the Kaiser as head of the family. When a letter from the King arrived on April 16, it was not encouraging. In addition to asking whether such a position was sufficiently dignified for a member of the House of Hohenzollern, two issues remained undecided:
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<blockquote>
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(a) Is there to be a union or not? (b) Is there to be a foreign Prince or not? Russia and the Porte are against the union, but it appears that England will join the majority, and if she decides for the union the Porte will be obliged to submit. In the same way both the former States are opposed to the election of a foreign Prince as the ruler of the Danubian Principalities. I have mentioned this attitude to the Porte, and yesterday we received a message from Russia to say that it was not disposed to agree to the project of your son's election, and that it will demand a resumption of the Conference… All these events prevent the hope of a simple solution. I must therefore urge you to consider these matters again… and we must see whether the Paris Conference will reassemble again. Your faithful Cousin and Friend, WILLIAM.
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P.S.—''A note received today from the French Ambassador proves that the Emperor
 +
Napoleon (III) is favorably inclined to the plan. This is very important.<ref>Sidney Whitman, ''Reminiscences of the King of Roumania'' (Palala Press, 2015, ISBN 1342610660), 16.</ref></blockquote>
  
==Early life==
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"The position will only be tenable if Russia agrees…on account of her professing the same religion and owing to her geographical proximity and old associations… If you are desirous of prosecuting this affair your son must, above all things, gain the consent of Russia. It is true that up to now the prospect of success is remote…." A "most important interview then took place between Count Bismark and Prince Charles (Karl) at the Berlin residence of the former, who was at the time confined to his house by illness. Bismark opened the conversation with the words:
Carol was born in [[Sigmaringen]] as Prince Karl von Hohenzollern Sigmaringen. He was the second son of [[Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]] and his wife, [[Princess Josephine of Baden]]. After finishing his elementary studies, Karl entered the Cadet School in [[Münster]]. In 1857 he was attending the courses of the Artillery School in [[Berlin]]. Up to 1866 (when he accepted the crown of Romania) he was a German officer. He took part in the [[Second War of Schleswig]], particularly at the assault of the [[Fredericia]] citadel and [[Dybbøl]], experience which would be very useful to him later on in the [[Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878|Russian-Turkish war]].
 
  
Although he was quite frail and not very tall, prince Karl was reported to be the perfect soldier, healthy, disciplined, and also a very good politician with liberal ideas. He was familiar with several European languages. His family being closely related to the [[Bonaparte]] family (one of his grandmothers was a [[Stéphanie de Beauharnais|Beauharnais]] and the other a Murat), they enjoyed very good relations with [[Napoleon III of France]]. Romania was, at the time, under the influence of French culture and Napoleon's recommendation of Prince Karl of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen weighed heavy in the eyes of Romanian politicians of the time, as did his blood relation to the ruling Prussian family. [[Ion Brătianu]] was the leading Roumanian statesman who was sent to negotiate with Karl and his family the possibility of installing Karl on the Romanian throne. Ion Brătianu was to meet privately with Prince Karl at Dusseldorf, where he arrived on Good Friday 1866 "to lay the offer of the Roumanian people before Prince Charles and his father. In an audience granted by the latter on the following day, March 31, Brătianu announced
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<blockquote>I have requested your Serene Highness to visit me, not in order to converse with you as a statesman, but quite openly and freely as a friend and an adviser, if I may use the expression. You have been unanimously elected by a nation to rule over them. Proceed at once to the country, to the government of which you have been called! …Ask the King for leave—leave to travel abroad. The King (I know him well) will not be slow to understand, and to see through your intention. You will,
the intention of the ''Lieutenance Princi`ere'', inspired by Napoleon III, to advance Prince Charles Anthony's second son, Charles (n'ee Karl), as a candidate for the throne of the Principalities" (p.11, Ch. II of ref. 2 in the Notes.)<ref>http://www.archive.org/stream/reminiscencesofk00kremiala "Reminiscences of the KING OF ROUMANIA", Edited from the original with an Introduction by Sidney Whitman, Authorized edition, Harper& Brothers: New York and London, 1899, pp.275-277.</ref> There he submitted the proposition that Prince Charles become the official ruler ('Domnitorul Romaniei') and Prince of Roumania, that is, of both Vallachia and Moldavia (but not Transylvania, which was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the time). Although Prince Charles may have been favourably inclined, he needed the approval or nodding consent of both Bismark and Napoleon III before providing a definitive and positive answer; "Prince Charles (Karl) replied that he possessed courage enough to accept the offer, but feared that he was not equal to the task,
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moreover, remove the decision out of his hands, a most welcome relief to him, as he is politically tied down. Once abroad, you resign your commission (in the Prussian army of the King), and proceed to Paris, where you will ask the Emperor (Napoleon III) for a private interview.<ref>Whitman, 18.</ref></blockquote>
adding that nothing was known of the intentions of the King of Prussia, without whose permission, as chief of the family, he could not take so important a step. He therefore declined for the moment to give any definite answer to the proposals of the Roumanian Government. Brătianu returned to Paris, after promising to take no immediate steps in the matter... on p. 13: Prince Frederick Charles also at once
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Ironically, the branch of the Hohenzollern that Carol established in Romania outlasted the German dynasty, which ended in 1918, with Wilhelm's abdication.
started upon a minute discussion of the Roumanian question.  He seemed to be intimately acquainted with the issue, and volunteered the opinion that I (Karl) was intended for better things than to rule tributary Principalities: he therefore advised me to decline the offer." (''loc.cit''.) Furthermore, the written reply from the King of Prussia to his cousin Prince Charles Anthony's memorial was discouraging: "Two questions still remain undecided: (a) Is there to be a union or not? (b) Is there to be a foreign Prince or not? Russia and the Porte are against the union, but it appears that England will join the majority, and if she decides for the union the Porte will be obliged to submit. In the same way both the former States are opposed to the election of a foreign Prince as the ruler of the Danubian
 
Principalities. I have mentioned this attitude to the Porte, and yesterday we received a message from Russia to say that it was not disposed to agree to the project of your son's election, and that it will demand a resumption of the Conference... All these events prevent the hope of a simple solution. I must therefore urge you to consider these matters again... and we must see whether the Paris Conference will reassemble again. Your faithful Cousin and Friend, WILLIAM.
 
P.S.— ''A note received today from the French Ambassador proves that the Emperor
 
Napoleon (III) is favourably inclined to the plan. This is very important.''
 
The position will only be tenable if Russia agrees...on account of her professing the same religion and owing to her geographical proximity and old associations... If
 
you are desirous of prosecuting this affair your son must, above all things, gain the consent of Russia. It is true that up to now the prospect of success is remote...".  A "most important interview then took place between Count Bismark and Prince Charles (Karl) at the Berlin residence of the former, who was at the time confined to his house by illness. Bismark opened the conversation with the words:
 
'I have requested your Serene Highness to visit me, not in order to converse with you as a statesman, but quite openly and freely as a friend and an adviser, if I may use the expression. ''You have been unanimously elected by a nation to rule over them. Proceed at once to the country, to the government of which you have been called!''' ...'Ask the King for leave—leave to travel abroad. The King (I know him well) will not be slow to understand, and to see through your intention. You will,
 
moreover, remove the decision out of his hands, a most welcome relief to him, as he is politically tied down. Once abroad, you resign your commission (in the Prussian
 
army of the King), and proceed to Paris, where you will ask the Emperor (Napoleon III) for a private interview.' " (''loc.cit.)''.)<ref>http://www.archive.org/stream/reminiscencesofk00kremiala "Reminiscences of the KING OF ROUMANIA", Edited from the original with an Introduction by Sidney Whitman, Authorized edition, Harper& Brothers: New York and London, 1899</ref>
 
  
 
==On the way to Romania==
 
==On the way to Romania==
{{House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen}}
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[[Image:Kingdom of Romania - Big CoA.svg|300px|thumb|Kingdom of Romania]]
{{Infobox Monarch styles|
 
image=[[Image:Kingdom of Romania - Big CoA.svg|50px]]|
 
royal name=King Carol I of Romania|
 
dipstyle=[[Majesty|His Majesty]]|
 
offstyle=Your Majesty|
 
altstyle=Sir|}}
 
The former Romanian ruler, Alexander Joan Cuza, had been banished from the country and Romania was in chaos. Since his double election had been the only reason the two Romanian countries ([[Wallachia]] and the [[Principality of Moldavia]]) were allowed to unite by the European powers of the time, the country was in danger of dissolving.
 
  
Young Karl had to travel incognito on the railroad [[Düsseldorf]]-[[Bonn]]-[[Freiburg]]-[[Zürich]]-[[Vienna]]-[[Budapest]], due to the conflict between his country and the [[Austrian Empire]]. He travelled under the name of Karl Hettingen. As he stepped on Romanian soil, Brătianu bowed before him and asked him to join him in the carriage (at that time, Romania didn't have a railroad system).
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The former Romanian ruler, [[Alexander Joan Cuza]], had been banished from the country and Romania was in chaos. Since his double election had been the only reason the two Romanian countries (Wallachia and the Principality of Moldavia) were allowed to unite by the European powers of the time, the country was in danger of dissolving. These two states had not been united since the time of [[Michael the Brave]], who very briefly had united all three of the Romanian principalities. The third, [[Transylvania]], did not join until after [[World War I]].
  
On 10 May 1866, Karl entered [[Bucharest]]. The news of his arrival had been transmitted through telegraph and he was welcomed by a huge crowd eager to see its new ruler. In [[Băneasa]] he was handed the key to the city. As a proverbial sign, on the same day it had rained for the first time in a long period of time. He pledged his oath in French: "I swear to guard the laws of Romania, to maintain its rights and the integrity of its territory".
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Young Karl had to travel incognito on the railroad Düsseldorf-Bonn-Freiburg-Zürich-Vienna-Budapest, due to the conflict between his country and the [[Austrian Empire]]. He traveled under the name of Karl Hettingen. As he stepped on Romanian soil, Brătianu bowed before him and asked him to join him in the carriage (at that time, Romania did not have a railroad system).
  
==The Constitution==
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On May 10, 1866, Karl entered [[Bucharest]]. The news of his arrival had been transmitted through telegraph and he was welcomed by a huge crowd eager to see its new ruler. In Băneasa he was handed the key to the city. As a proverbial sign, on the same day it had rained for the first time in a long period of time. He pledged his oath in French: "I swear to guard the laws of Romania, to maintain its rights and the integrity of its territory."<ref>Whitman, 31.</ref>
[[Image:Medal Carol I of Romania 2.jpg|thumb|left|Medal of Carol I]]
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Immediately after arriving in the country, the Romanian parliament adopted, on 29 June 1866, the first [[Constitution of Romania]], one of the most advanced constitutions of its time. This constitution allowed the development and modernization of the Romanian state. In a daring move, the Constitution chose to ignore the country's current dependence on the [[Ottoman Empire]], which paved the way for Independence.
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==The constitution==
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[[Image:Medal Carol I of Romania 2.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Medal of Carol I]]
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Immediately after arriving in the country, the Romanian parliament adopted, on June 29, 1866, the first Constitution of Romania, one of the most advanced constitutions of its time. This constitution allowed the development and modernization of the Romanian state. In a daring move, the Constitution chose to ignore the country's current dependence on the Ottoman Empire, which paved the way for Independence.
  
 
{{Coin image box 1 double
 
{{Coin image box 1 double
Line 69: Line 45:
 
| caption_left = <SMALL>Obverse: (Romanian) ''CAROL I DOMNUL ROMANIEI'' or in English, "Carol I, Prince of Romania"</SMALL>
 
| caption_left = <SMALL>Obverse: (Romanian) ''CAROL I DOMNUL ROMANIEI'' or in English, "Carol I, Prince of Romania"</SMALL>
 
| caption_right = <SMALL>Reverse: (Romanian) ''ROMANIA 5 L 1880'', or in English, "Romania, 5 Leu, 1880"</SMALL>
 
| caption_right = <SMALL>Reverse: (Romanian) ''ROMANIA 5 L 1880'', or in English, "Romania, 5 Leu, 1880"</SMALL>
| width = 250
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| width = 450
| position = left
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| position = right
 
| margin = 0
 
| margin = 0
 
}}
 
}}
  
Article 82 said "The ruler's powers are hereditary, starting directly from His Majesty, prince Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, on male line through the right of first-born, with the exclusion of women and their issue. His Majesty's descendants will be raised in the Eastern Orthodox Religion."
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Article 82 said, "The ruler's powers are hereditary, starting directly from His Majesty, prince Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, on male line through the right of first-born, with the exclusion of women and their issue. His Majesty's descendants will be raised in the Eastern Orthodox Religion."
  
After the proclamation of the Independence (1877), Romania was effectively a kingdom. From 1878, Carol held the title of Royal Highness (''Alteţă Regală''). On 15 March 1881, the Constitution was modified to state, among other things, that from then on the head of state would be called king, while the heir would be called royal prince. The same year he was [[Steel Crown of Romania|crowned]] King.
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After the proclamation of the Independence (1877), Romania was effectively a kingdom. From 1878, Carol held the title of Royal Highness ''(Alteţă Regală)''. On March 15, 1881, the Constitution was modified to state, among other things, that from then on the head of state would be called king, while the heir would be called royal prince. The same year he was [[coronation|crowned]] King.
  
 
The basic idea of all the royalist constitutions in Romania was that the King rules without governing.
 
The basic idea of all the royalist constitutions in Romania was that the King rules without governing.
  
==[[Romanian War of Independence]] with the Ottoman Empire (1877-1878)==  
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==Romanian War of Independence with the Ottoman Empire (1877-1878)==  
"''A report was received at 4 P.M. on the 31st that the Russians had suffered a severe defeat at Plevna, and were retiring panic-stricken on Sistow; this was confirmed at 9 P.M. by the following dispatch... (i.e., to Prince Carol) in cipher:
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On the 31st, a report was received
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<blockquote>that the Russians had suffered a severe defeat at Plevna, and were retiring panic-stricken on Sistow; this was confirmed at 9 P.M. by the following dispatch… (i.e., to Prince Carol) in cipher:
 +
 
 
'WEDNESDAY, July 19-31, 1877, 3.35 P.M.
 
'WEDNESDAY, July 19-31, 1877, 3.35 P.M.
 
'PRINCE CHARLES OF ROUMANIA.
 
'PRINCE CHARLES OF ROUMANIA.
 
'Headquarters of the Roumanian Army.:
 
'Headquarters of the Roumanian Army.:
  
'The turks having assembled in great force at Plevna are crushing us. Beg you
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'The Turks having assembled in great force at Plevna are crushing us. Beg you
 
to join, make a demonstration, and, if possible, cross the Danube, as you wish.  
 
to join, make a demonstration, and, if possible, cross the Danube, as you wish.  
 
This demonstration between Jiul and Corabia is indispensible to facilitate my movements.
 
This demonstration between Jiul and Corabia is indispensible to facilitate my movements.
''NICHOLAS''" (the Russian Commander, General Nicholas, appointed by Czar Alexander II). "Prince Charles replied that the Fourth... (i.e., Roumanian) Division would hold Nikopoli, and that the Third occupy the position quitted by the Fourth";...
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''NICHOLAS''" (the Russian Commander, General Nicholas, appointed by Czar Alexander II).<ref name=Whitman275>Whitman, 275.</ref></blockquote>
"''Prince Charles refused to allow the Third Division to cross, as he had no intention of allowing his army to be incorporated with the Russian''." <ref>http://www.archive.org/stream/reminiscencesofk00kremiala "Reminiscences of the KING OF ROUMANIA", Edited from the original with an Introduction by Sidney Whitman, Authorized edition, Harper& Brothers: New York and London, 1899, pp.15-20.</ref>
 
  
==A truly devoted and great, Roumanian King==
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"Prince Charles replied that the Fourth... (i.e., Roumanian) Division would hold Nikopoli, and that the Third occupy the position quitted by the Fourth";...
King Carol was mistakenly reported to be a 'cold' person. He was permanently concerned with the prestige of the country and dynasty that he had founded. His wife, Queen Elizabeth (Regina Elisabeta—whose 'nomme de plume' was ''"Carmen Sylva"'' ), has been reputed to have said that 'he wore the crown in his sleep'. He was very meticulous and he tried to impose his style upon everyone that surrounded him. This style was very important for the development and thorough, professional training of a disciplined and successful Roumanian army to gain Roumania's Independence from both the Turks and the Russians. Though he was entirely devoted to his position as a Roumanian Prince, and later King, naturally he never forgot his German roots.
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"''Prince Charles refused to allow the Third Division to cross, as he had no intention of allowing his army to be incorporated with the Russian''."<ref name=Whitman275/>
  
In the beginning of his 48 years of rule (the longest rule any Roumanian principality has ever known), Prince Charles prepared/trained Roumania's armies and fought together with them to gain Roumania its independence from both the Ottoman Empire and Roumania's Russian 'allies' in this Independence War. After victory and the subsequent peace treaty, the (1881) crowned King Carol I raised enormously the country's prestige with the Porte, Russia, and Western European countries, procured funding from Germany— arranged for Romania's first railway system, successfully boosted Romania's economy to unprecedented levels in its history, and also initiated the development of the very first Roumanian sea fleet and navy with the port at ancient Tomis (Constantza). In the beginning, some of his efforts to encourage economical prosperity in Roumania encountered quite strong opposition from a large section of his government, and at one point he even oferred to abdicate if his leadership continued to be challenged to a stalemate by such Roumanian political, dissenting factions and their continuous bickering. During his reign, Roumania became the paid 'agricultural supplier' of both Western Europe and Russia, exporting huge quantities of wheat and corn. He also succeeded (where his predecessor's attempts failed) to reward and endow with farmland many of the surviving Roumanian veterans who fought along with him in Roumania's Independence War.  
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==As king==
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King Carol was mistakenly reported to be a "cold" person. He was, however, permanently concerned with the prestige of the country and of the dynasty that he had founded. Although he was entirely devoted to his position as a Romanian Prince, and later King, he never forgot his German roots. Very meticulous, he tried to impose his style on everyone that surrounded him. This style was very important for the thorough and professional training of a disciplined and successful Romanian army. This army, under his command, gained Romania's independence from both the Turks and the Russians.  
  
He then firmly established on March 26th, 1881, upon his Corronation as the first King of Roumanians, a Hohenzollern-family based dynasty, with his main purpose being that of making his new, adopted country a durable and sustainable, permanent one, well-integrated with Western Europe; thus, King Carol I's true intent in establishing 'his' dynasty was to allow the Romanian nation to exist free and independent of its Eastern and Western, militarily powerful neighbor states, by preventing the latter to reverse after his demise what he accomplished in his lifetime. By a rather strange (but perhaps meaningful) coincidence, his former Russian 'ally' in the Independence War, the Czar (Tsar) Alexandr II Nykolaevich died, assassinated by the 'russified' Polish-Lithuanian [[Ignacy Hryniewiecki]]—known as "Ignaty Grinevitzky", only two weeks before the Corronation of King Carol I in 1881. (The Tsar's assassination had been meant to ignite revolution in Russia
+
After victory and the subsequent [[peace]] treaty, King Carol I raised the country's prestige with the Ottomans, Russia, and Western European countries, procured funding from Germany, arranged for Romania's first [[Rail transport|railway system]], successfully boosted Romania's economy to unprecedented levels in its history, and also initiated the development of the very first Romanian sea fleet and navy with the port at ancient Tomis (Constantza). In the beginning, some of his efforts to encourage [[economics|economical]] prosperity in Romania encountered strong opposition from a large section of his government, and in 1870, he even offered to abdicate if his leadership continued to be challenged to a stalemate by such Romanian political, dissenting factions and their continuous bickering. During his reign, Romania became the "agricultural supplier" of both Western Europe and Russia, exporting huge quantities of [[wheat]] and [[corn]]. It was the second largest exporter of cereal and the third of [[oil]].<ref>Boia and Brown, 96-97.</ref> Carol also succeeded in rewarding with farmland many of the surviving Romanian veterans who had fought with him in Romania's Independence War.  
, whereas in neighbor Roumania, the crowning of its first, ''independent'' King was received with great enthousiasm by most Roumanians, who were then looking forward to a much brighter future as ''free'', just liberated descendants of an ancient people).
 
  
After leading Roumania's (and also allied Russia' s) armies to victory in its Independence War, King Carol I received repeatedly similar offers to rule over two other countries as well, the neighor Bulgaria and also Spain, but he courteously declined such serious propositions as he saw these as a conflict of interest which he could not accept. In the [[Carpathian mountains]], he built [[Peleş Castle]], still one of Romania's most visited touristic attractions. The castle was built in an external, German style, as a reminder of the King's origin, but its interior was, and is, decorated in various elegant styles, including art objects of neighboring nations, both East and West. After the Russo-Turkish war, Romania gained [[Dobruja]] and King Carol I ordered the first [[King Carol I Bridge|bridge]] over the [[Danube]], between [[Feteşti]] and  [[Cernavodă]], linking the new acquired province to the rest of the country.  
+
Following his coronation on March 26, 1881, as the first King of Romanians, he firmly established a Hohenzollern-family based dynasty. His main purpose was to make his new, adopted country sustainable and permanent, well-integrated with Western [[Europe]]. King Carol I's true intent in establishing his dynasty was to allow the Romanian nation to exist [[freedom|free]] and independent of its militarily powerful neighbor states to the east and west, by preventing the former from reversing after his death what he had accomplished in his lifetime. By a rather strange (but perhaps meaningful) coincidence, his former Russian "ally" in the Independence War, the Czar (Tsar) [[Alexandr II Nykolaevich]] died, assassinated by the "russified" Polish-Lithuanian [[Ignacy Hryniewiecki]]—known as "Ignaty Grinevitzky," only two weeks before Carol coronation. The Tsar's assassination had been meant to ignite revolution in Russia, whereas in neighboring Romania, the crowning of its first, ''independent'' King was received with great enthusiasm by most Romanians, who were looking forward to a much brighter future as ''free,'' liberated descendants of an ancient people.
  
King Carol I left Roumania a rich legacy, unprecedented in its entire history of more than a thousand years (claimed, in fact, by some historians to go as far back as two millenia to the established [[Roman]] colony of [[Dacia]]), which his follower at the throne, [[King Ferdinand I]] will succeed to build upon, to what was called before [[WWII]] the ' [[Greater Romania]] ' (in Romanian: '''[[România Mare]]'''), that will also include the other three Roumanian principalities of: [[Transylvania]], [[Bukovina]]  (Bucovina) and [[Bessarabia]] (Bassarabia—now the [[Republic of Moldova]]).
+
After leading Romania's (and also allied Russia's) armies to victory in its Independence War, King Carol I received repeatedly similar offers to rule over two other countries as well, [[Bulgaria]] and [[Spain]], but he courteously declined such serious propositions as he saw these as a conflict of interest which he could not accept. In the [[Carpathian Mountains]], he built Peleş Castle, still one of Romania's most visited touristic attractions. The castle was built in an external, German style, as a reminder of the King's origin, but its interior was, and is, decorated in various elegant styles, including art objects of neighboring nations, both East and West. After the Russo-Turkish war, Romania gained Dobruja and King Carol I ordered the first bridge over the [[Danube]], between Feteşti and Cernavodă, linking the new acquired province to the rest of the country.
 +
 
 +
King Carol I left Romania a rich legacy, unprecedented in its entire history of more than a thousand years (claimed, in fact, by some historians to go as far back as two millennia to the established [[Roman Empire|Roman Empire]] colony of Roman Dacia), which his follower at the throne, King [[Ferdinand I]] would build upon, to what was called before [[World War II]], the "Greater Romania" (in Romanian: '''România Mare'''), that will also include the other three Romanian principalities of: Transylvania, Bukovina (Bucovina), and Bessarabia (Bassarabia—now the Republic of Moldova).
  
 
==The end of the reign==
 
==The end of the reign==
The long rule of 48 years by King Carol I allowed both the rapid establishment and the strong economical development of the Romanian state. Towards the very end of his reign in 1913, and close to the start of the [[World War I]], the German-born king was in favor of entering the war on the side of the [[Central Powers]], whereas the majority of the Romanian public opinion sided with the [[Triple Entente]] because of the traditional, Roumanian cultural (and historical) links with France. However, King Carol I had signed a secret treaty in 1883 that linked Roumania with the [[Triple Alliance (formed in 1882)]], and although the treaty was to be activated only in case of attack from [[Imperial Russia]] towards one of the treaty's members, Carol I thought that the honorable thing to do was to enter the war on the side of the [[German Empire]]. An emergency meeting was held with members of the government where the King told them about the secret treaty and shared his opinion with them. The strong disagreement that ensued is said by some to have brought on the 75-year old King's sudden death on {{OldStyleDate|October 10th,|1914|27 September}}. The future King Ferdinand I, under the influence of his Parliament and also of his wife, [[Marie of Edinburgh]], a British ([[Scottish]]) Princess, will be much more willing to listen to public opinion and join instead the [[Triple Entente]] treaty; as Carol I might have anticipated in his thorough considerations of the European balance of military power, King Ferdinand's decision resulted in several years of misery for the Roumanian population, and also millions of Roumanian soldiers dying in WWI by figthing the very well-equipped German army; however, King Ferdinand's and his government's gamble did surprisingly pay off when the Triple Entente finally won [[WWI]], and the [[Greater Romania]] was established under King Ferdinand I at the [[Treaty of Versailles]], signed on 28 June 1919.
+
The long rule of 48 years by King Carol I allowed both the rapid establishment and the strong economical development of the Romanian state. Towards the very end of his reign in 1913, and close to the start of the [[World War I]], the German-born king was in favor of entering the war on the side of the Central Powers, whereas the majority of the Romanian public opinion sided with the [[Triple Entente]] because of the traditional, Romanian cultural (and historical) links with [[France]]. However, King Carol I had signed a secret treaty, in 1883, that linked Romania with the Triple Alliance (formed in 1882), and although the treaty was to be activated only in case of attack from Imperial Russia towards one of the treaty's members, Carol I thought that the honorable thing to do was to enter the war on the side of the German Empire. An emergency meeting was held with members of the government where the King told them about the secret treaty and shared his opinion with them. The strong disagreement that ensued is said by some to have brought on the 75-year old King's sudden death on October 10, 1914. The future King Ferdinand I, under the influence of his Parliament and also of his wife, Marie of Edinburgh, a British Princess, will be much more willing to listen to public opinion and join instead the Triple Entente treaty; as Carol I might have anticipated in his thorough considerations of the European balance of military power, King Ferdinand's decision resulted in several years of misery for the Romanian population, and also millions of Romanian soldiers dying in the war by fighting the very well-equipped German army; however, King Ferdinand's and his government's gamble surprisingly pay off when the Triple Entente finally won World War I, and the Greater Romania was established (with Transylvania joining Romania) under King Ferdinand I at the [[Treaty of Versailles]], signed on June 28, 1919.
  
 
==Life and family==
 
==Life and family==
[[Image:CharlesOfRomania.JPG|left|thumb|King Carol I (right) and Queen Elizabeth of Romania]]
+
[[Image:CharlesOfRomania.JPG|right|thumb|300px|King Carol I (right) and Queen Elizabeth of Romania]]
When he was elected prince of Romania, Carol was not married and, according to the Romanian Constitution he himself had approved, he was not allowed to marry a woman of Romanian origin. In 1869, the prince started a trip around Europe and mainly Germany, to find a bride. During this trip he met and married at [[Neuwied]] on 15 November 1869 princess [[Elizabeth of Wied]]. Their marriage was said to be 'one of the most unfitted matches' in history, with Carol being a 'cold' and calculating man, whereas Elizabeth was a notorious dreamer and a poet at heart. They had only one child, [[Princess Maria of Romania (1870-1874)|Princess Maria]], born in 1871, who died on the 24th of March 1874. This is said to have led to the further estrangement of the royal couple, Elizabeth never completely recovering from the trauma of losing her only child.
+
When he was elected prince of Romania, Carol was not married and, according to the Romanian Constitution he himself had approved, he was not allowed to marry a woman of Romanian origin. In 1869, the prince started a trip around Europe and mainly Germany, to find a bride. During this trip he met and married at Neuwied on November 15, 1869, princess Elizabeth of Wied. Their marriage was said to be "one of the most unfitted matches" in history, with Carol being a "cold" and calculating man, whereas Elizabeth was a notorious dreamer and a poet at heart. They had only one child, Princess Maria, born in 1871, who died on March 24, 1874. This is said to have led to the further estrangement of the royal couple, Elizabeth never completely recovering from the trauma of losing her only child.
  
After the proclamation of the Kingdom of Roumania in 1881, the succession became a very important matter of state. Since Carol I's brother, Leopold, and his oldest son, William, declined their rights to succession, the second son of Leopold, [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand]], was named Prince of Romania, and also heir to the throne. Elizabeth tried to influence the young Prince into marrying her favorite lady in waiting, [[Elena Văcărescu]], but according to the Roumanian Constitution the heir was forbidden from marrying any Roumanian lady. As a result of her attempt, Elizabeth was exiled for two years, until Ferdinand's marriage to [[Marie of Edinburgh|Princess Marie of Edinburgh]].
+
After the proclamation of the Kingdom of Romania in 1881, the succession became a very important matter of state. Since Carol I's brother, Leopold, and his oldest son, William, declined their rights to succession, the second son of Leopold, Ferdinand, was named Prince of Romania, and also heir to the throne. Elizabeth tried to influence the young Prince into marrying her favorite lady in waiting, Elena Văcărescu, but according to the Romanian Constitution the heir was forbidden from marrying any Romanian lady. As a result of her attempt, Elizabeth was exiled for two years, until Ferdinand's marriage to Princess Marie of Edinburgh.
  
Towards the end of their lives, though, Carol I and Elizabeth are said to have 'finally found a way to understand each other', and were reportedly to have become 'good friends'.
+
Towards the end of their lives, though, Carol I and Elizabeth are said to have finally found a way to understand each other, and were reportedly to have become good friends. He died in his wife's arms.<ref>Julia P. Gelardi, ''Born to Rule: Five Reigning Consorts, Granddaughters of Queen Victoria'' (New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 2005, ISBN 9780312324230), 204.</ref> He was buried in the Church at Curtea de Arges Monastery. His son, Ferdinand was king from 1914 until 1927.
  
'''Source:'''
+
==Legacy==
 +
Under the 1866 Constitution (based on the that of [[Belgium]]), Carol had the right to "dissolve the legislature" and to appoint the Cabinet. Restrictions on the franchise based on income meant that the [[nobility|boyars]], the traditional nobility "who were intent on maintaining their political and economic dominance."<ref>Keith Hitchins, ''Rumania, 1866-1947'' (Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1994, ISBN 9780585215105), 20.</ref> Carol found himself acting as a "kind of arbiter between rival political factions."<ref>Hitchins, 21.</ref> He was skillful in managing the two-party system of Conservatives and Liberals.<ref>Boia and Brown, 103.</ref> These two parties alternated in power and when "he observed that a government was getting rusty, he summoned the opposition to power." In power, "the new government would organize elections, which it invariably won."<ref>Boia and Brown, 90.</ref> Yet, despite the ''boyars'' determination to retain their privileges, Carol has been credited with "developing [[democracy]]" as well as "[[education]], [[industry]], railways, and a strong army."<ref>Ellsworth Raymond and John Stuart Martin, ''A Picture History of Eastern Europe'' (New York, NY: Crown Publishers, 1971), 188.</ref>
  
Boris Crǎciun - "''Regii şi Reginele României''", Editura Porţile Orientului, Iaşi
+
In contrast, when [[Otto of Greece]] had become the first sovereign of the newly independent [[nation-state]] of [[Greece]], also a foreigner invitee to the throne, Otto failed to nurture democracy, trying to rule Greece as an absolute monarchy. Otto also failed to fully embrace Greek [[culture]], and remained "foreign." Carol made neither mistake; he fully embraced his adopted state and tried to emulate the developing constitutional monarchies of Western Europe. Unfortunately, his namesake and grandson, Carol II (king 1930-1940) saw democracy as "foreign" to Romania, and in the 1930s abrogated to the monarchy powers from [[parliament]]. In this, he parted company from Carol I and from his own father, Ferdinand.<ref>Steven D. Roper, ''Romania: The Unfinished Revolution'' (Amsterdam, NL: Harwood Academic, 2000, ISBN 9789058230287), 6.</ref> This weakening of democracy prepared the ground for the growth of [[communism]] in Romania. After [[World War II]], the monarchy was abolished and Romania joined the Soviet-bloc until 1989, when the communist regime collapsed. Carol I had a sense of duty towards his people. He wanted to lay solid foundations on which the new nation could build its economy, preserve freedom and secure a stable future. Carol has been compared with Michael the Brave because they both reunified Romania, although Carol's was no "fragile unification for one year but a reunification for all time."<ref>Boia and Brown, 233.</ref> Prior to Carol's reign, "there was a succession of revolutions, war, and foreign occupations." Subsequent to his reign "were two world wars, political instability, authoritarian regimes, more foreign occupation and, finally, the darkest years of Communism." Thus, the most "balanced" period of Romania's history "remains the 48-year reign of Carol I."<ref>Boia and Brown, 96.</ref> Now that Romania is once more free and democratic, it can once again celebrate Carol's legacy, which was excluded from the national consciousness by the Communist regime.<ref>Boia and Brown, 233.</ref>
  
==Ancestors==
 
 
<center>{{ahnentafel-compact5
 
|style=font-size: 90%; line-height: 110%;
 
|border=1
 
|boxstyle=padding-top: 0; padding-bottom: 0;
 
|boxstyle_1=background-color: #008080;
 
|boxstyle_2=background-color: #00c0c0;
 
|boxstyle_3=background-color: #40ffff;
 
|boxstyle_4=background-color: #80ffff;
 
|1= 1. '''Carol I of Romania'''
 
|2= 2. [[Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]
 
|3= 3. [[Josephine of Baden]]
 
|4= 4. Karl, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
 
|5= 5. Antoinette Murat
 
|6= 6. [[Karl, Grand Duke of Baden]]
 
|7= 7. [[Stéphanie de Beauharnais]]
 
|8= 8. Anton Aloys, Prince of [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]
 
|9= 9. [[Amalie Zephyrine of Salm-Kyrburg]]
 
|10= 10. Peter Murat
 
|11= 11. Katharina of [[Hohenlohe-Waldenburg-Schillingsfürst]]
 
|12= 12. [[Karl Ludwig, Hereditary Prince of Baden]]
 
|13= 13. [[Amalie of Hesse-Darmstadt]]
 
|14= 14. Claude de Beauharnais
 
|15= 15. Claude Françoise de Lezay
 
}}</center>
 
 
{{s-start}}
 
{{s-hou|[[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen|House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]|April 20|1839|October 10|1914|[[House of Hohenzollern]]}}
 
{{s-reg|}}
 
{{s-bef|before=[[Alexander John Cuza]]}}
 
{{s-ttl|title=[[Domnitor|Prince of Romania]]
 
|years=1866-1881}}
 
{{s-non|reason=Became King}}
 
{{s-new|reason=}}
 
{{s-ttl|title=[[King of Romania]]
 
|years=1881-1914}}
 
{{s-aft|after=[[Ferdinand of Romania|Ferdinand]]}}
 
{{end}}
 
 
<br clear=both>
 
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{reflist}}
+
<references/>
 
 
 
 
===Other references===
 
*[http://www.tboyle.net/Royalty/Royalty_Links.html ''Elizabeth, Queen of Roumania, From Memory's Shrine: The Reminiscences of Carmen Sylva.'', Translated by Edith Hopkirk, J. B. Lippincott Co Publ.: Philadelphia, 1911.]
 
 
 
* http://www.tboyle.net/Royalty/Royalty_Links.html :Eugen Wolbe., ''Carmen Sylva:Der Lebensweg einer einsamen Königin''. Koehler & Amelang: Leipzig, 1933.
 
 
 
*[http://www.tboyle.net/Royalty/Royalty_Links.html Elizabeth Burgoune., ''Carmen Sylva: Queen and Woman.,'' Thornton: London, 1940.]
 
  
*[http://www.tkinter.smig.net/CarmenSylva/References.htm  CARMEN SYLVA – REGINA ELISABETA OF ROMANIA: BIBLIOGRAPHY]
+
==References==
 +
* Bobango, Gerald J. ''The Emergence of the Romanian National State.'' East European monographs, no. 58. Boulder, CO: East European Quarterly, 1979. ISBN 9780914710516.
 +
* Boia, Lucian, and James Christian Brown. ''Romania: Borderland of Europe.'' Topographics. London, UK: Reaktion Books, 2001. ISBN 9781861891037.
 +
* Gelardi, Julia P. ''Born to Rule: Five Reigning Consorts, Granddaughters of Queen Victoria.'' New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 2005. ISBN 9780312324230.
 +
* Hitchins, Keith. ''Rumania, 1866-1947.'' Oxford history of modern Europe. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1994. ISBN 9780585215105.
 +
* Kellogg, Frederick. ''The Road to Romanian Independence.'' West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1995. ISBN 9781557530653.
 +
* Michelson, Paul E. ''Romanian Politics, 1859-1871: From Prince Cuza to Prince Carol.'' Iași, RO: Center for Romanian Studies, 1998. ISBN 9789739809191.
 +
* Raymond, Ellsworth, and John Stuart Martin. ''A Picture History of Eastern Europe''. New York, NY: Crown Publishers, 1971.
 +
* Roper, Steven D. ''Romania: The Unfinished Revolution.'' Postcommunist states and nations. Amsterdam, NL: Harwood Academic, 2000. ISBN 9789058230287.
 +
* Whitman, Sidney. ''Reminiscences of the King of Roumania''. Palala Press, 2015. ISBN 1342610660
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{commonscat-inline|Carol I of Romania}}
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All links retrieved November 28, 2023.
* [http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/romania.html Royal House of Romania]
 
* [http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/hohenzollern.html Princely House of Hohenzollern]
 
* [http://pages.prodigy.net/ptheroff/gotha/wied.html Princely House of Wied]
 
* [http://www.archive.org/details/reminiscencesofk00kremiala Online edition of Carol I' s 1899 Authorized Edition book entitled ''Reminiscences of the King of Roumania'']
 
  
{{redirect-acronym|Prince Carol II of Romania|[[Carol Lambrino]]}}
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* [http://www.archive.org/details/reminiscencesofk00kremiala Online edition of Carol I's 1899  ''Reminiscences of the King of Roumania''].
{{Heads of State of Romania}}
 
  
[[Category:1839 births]]
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[[Category:History]]
[[Category:1914 deaths]]
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[[Category:Politicians and reformers]]
[[Category:People from Baden-Württemberg]]
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[[Category:Biography]]
[[Category:Field Marshals of Germany]]
 
[[Category:House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]]
 
[[Category:Knights of the Garter]]
 
[[Category:Knights of the Golden Fleece]]
 
[[Category:Romanian monarchs]]
 
[[Category:Roman Catholic monarchs]]
 
[[Category:Romanian Roman Catholics]]
 
[[Category:Field Marshals of Russia]]
 
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of the Black Eagle]]
 
[[Category:Heads of state of Romania]]
 
[[Category:Kings of Romania]]
 
[[Category:Burials at Curtea de Argeş Cathedral]]
 
  
[[bg:Карол I (Румъния)]]
 
[[ca:Carles I de Romania]]
 
[[da:Carol 1. af Rumænien]]
 
[[de:Karl I. (Rumänien)]]
 
[[et:Carol I]]
 
[[es:Carlos I de Rumanía]]
 
[[fr:Charles Ier de Roumanie]]
 
[[ko:루마니아의 카롤 1세]]
 
[[hr:Karlo I., rumunjski kralj]]
 
[[it:Carlo I di Romania]]
 
[[lt:Karolis I Rumunas]]
 
[[hu:I. Károly román király]]
 
[[mr:चार्ल्स पहिला, रोमेनिया]]
 
[[nl:Carol I van Roemenië]]
 
[[ja:カロル1世 (ルーマニア王)]]
 
[[pl:Karol I (Rumunia)]]
 
[[pt:Carlos I da Romênia]]
 
[[ro:Carol I al României]]
 
[[ru:Кароль I]]
 
[[fi:Kaarle I (Romania)]]
 
[[sv:Carol I av Rumänien]]
 
[[zh:卡罗尔一世 (罗马尼亚)]]
 
 
{{Credit|244700344}}
 
{{Credit|244700344}}

Latest revision as of 00:37, 29 November 2023

Carol of Romania.

Carol I of Romania, original name Prince Karl Eitel Friedrich Zephyrinus Ludwig of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, later simply of Hohenzollern (April 20, 1839 - October 10, 1914) German prince, was elected Domnitor (Prince) of Romania on April 20, 1866, following the overthrow of Alexandru Ioan Cuza, and proclaimed king on March 26, 1881, with the acquiescence of the Turkish Sultan whose armies were defeated in Romania's 1877 Independence War by the Romanian-Russian army under the command of Prince Charles I. He was, then, the first ruler of the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen dynasty which would rule the country until the imposition of a Stalin-directed republic, dictated at gun point in a coup d'etat devised by Dr. Petru Groza, whose government was backed up by the Soviet armies of occupation in 1947; this forced abdication (and later exile) of King Michael I of Romania by his former Soviet allies occurred shortly after the soviet dictator Joseph (Vissarionovich Dzhugashvili) Stalin bestowed the Soviet Order of Victory upon King Michael I for his central role in the overturn of the Germans in Roumania in late August 1944.

During the Independence War of 1877-1878, Prince Charles personally led Romanian troops, and also assumed command of the Russo-Romanian army during the siege of Pleven, (in Romanian, Plevna) with the acquiescence of Russia's Czar Alexander II. The country achieved full independence from the Ottoman Empire (Treaty of Berlin, 1878), acquired access to the Black Sea, and later also acquired the Southern part of the Dobruja from Bulgaria in 1913, but lost Bessarabia in 1878 to its Russian "allies." Domestic political life, still dominated by the country's wealthy landowning families organized around the rival Liberal and Conservative]] parties, was punctuated by two widespread peasant uprisings, in Walachia (the southern half of the country) in April 1888 and in Moldavia (the Northern half) in March 1907.

Unlike Otto of Greece who, also a foreigner, had been installed as the king of Greece after independence from Ottoman rule, Carol I fully embraced his new country and tried to emulate the developing constitutional monarchies of Western Europe. Under Carol, democracy was nurtured, the economy thrived and stability was achieved. From 1947 until 1989, the Communists suppressed his memory but now that Romania is once more free and democratic, this can be celebrated again.

Early life

Carol was born in Sigmaringen as Prince Karl von Hohenzollern Sigmaringen. He was the second son of Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and his wife, Princess Josephine of Baden. After finishing his elementary studies, Karl entered the Cadet School in Münster. In 1857, he was attending the courses of the Artillery School in Berlin. Up to 1866 (when he accepted the crown of Romania), he was a German officer. He took part in the Second War of Schleswig, particularly at the assault of the Fredericia citadel and Dybbøl, experience which would be very useful to him later on in the Russian-Turkish war.

Although he was quite frail and not very tall, prince Karl was reported to be the perfect soldier, healthy, disciplined, and also a very good politician with liberal ideas. He was familiar with several European languages. His family being closely related to the Bonaparte family (one of his grandmothers was a Beauharnais and the other a Murat), they enjoyed very good relations with Napoleon III.

Romania: The search for a ruler

Romania, throwing off Ottoman rule, had chosen Alexandru Ioan Cuza as prince (Domnitor) in 1859. Now, they wanted to replace him with a new ruler. Cuza had proven both too authoritarian, as well as having alienated the elite through proposed land-reforms. Romanians thought that a foreign prince, who was already a member of a ruling house, would both "enhance the country's prestige" and "put an end to internal rivalry for the throne."[1] They "began searching Europe for a suitable prince."[2]

Romania was, at the time, under the influence of French culture, so when Napoleon decided to recommend of Prince Karl of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, this weighed heavily in the eyes of Romania's politicians, as did his blood relation to the ruling Prussian family. Ion Brătianu was the leading Romanian statesman who was sent to negotiate with Karl and his family about the possibility of installing Karl on the Romanian throne. Ion Brătianu met privately with Prince Karl at Dusseldorf, where he arrived on Good Friday 1866. The next day he submitted the proposition that Karl become the official ruler ("Domnitorul Romaniei") and Prince of Romania, that is, of both Vallachia and Moldavia (but not Transylvania, which was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire at the time). Although Prince Karl may have been favorably inclined, he needed the approval or nodding consent of Otto von Bismark, Napoleon III, and Wilhelm II before providing a definitive and positive answer. He replied that while he had enough courage to accept the offer, he had to decline until he had permission to accept from the Kaiser as head of the family. When a letter from the King arrived on April 16, it was not encouraging. In addition to asking whether such a position was sufficiently dignified for a member of the House of Hohenzollern, two issues remained undecided:

(a) Is there to be a union or not? (b) Is there to be a foreign Prince or not? Russia and the Porte are against the union, but it appears that England will join the majority, and if she decides for the union the Porte will be obliged to submit. In the same way both the former States are opposed to the election of a foreign Prince as the ruler of the Danubian Principalities. I have mentioned this attitude to the Porte, and yesterday we received a message from Russia to say that it was not disposed to agree to the project of your son's election, and that it will demand a resumption of the Conference… All these events prevent the hope of a simple solution. I must therefore urge you to consider these matters again… and we must see whether the Paris Conference will reassemble again. Your faithful Cousin and Friend, WILLIAM. P.S.—A note received today from the French Ambassador proves that the Emperor

Napoleon (III) is favorably inclined to the plan. This is very important.[3]

"The position will only be tenable if Russia agrees…on account of her professing the same religion and owing to her geographical proximity and old associations… If you are desirous of prosecuting this affair your son must, above all things, gain the consent of Russia. It is true that up to now the prospect of success is remote…." A "most important interview then took place between Count Bismark and Prince Charles (Karl) at the Berlin residence of the former, who was at the time confined to his house by illness. Bismark opened the conversation with the words:

I have requested your Serene Highness to visit me, not in order to converse with you as a statesman, but quite openly and freely as a friend and an adviser, if I may use the expression. You have been unanimously elected by a nation to rule over them. Proceed at once to the country, to the government of which you have been called! …Ask the King for leave—leave to travel abroad. The King (I know him well) will not be slow to understand, and to see through your intention. You will, moreover, remove the decision out of his hands, a most welcome relief to him, as he is politically tied down. Once abroad, you resign your commission (in the Prussian army of the King), and proceed to Paris, where you will ask the Emperor (Napoleon III) for a private interview.[4]

Ironically, the branch of the Hohenzollern that Carol established in Romania outlasted the German dynasty, which ended in 1918, with Wilhelm's abdication.

On the way to Romania

Kingdom of Romania

The former Romanian ruler, Alexander Joan Cuza, had been banished from the country and Romania was in chaos. Since his double election had been the only reason the two Romanian countries (Wallachia and the Principality of Moldavia) were allowed to unite by the European powers of the time, the country was in danger of dissolving. These two states had not been united since the time of Michael the Brave, who very briefly had united all three of the Romanian principalities. The third, Transylvania, did not join until after World War I.

Young Karl had to travel incognito on the railroad Düsseldorf-Bonn-Freiburg-Zürich-Vienna-Budapest, due to the conflict between his country and the Austrian Empire. He traveled under the name of Karl Hettingen. As he stepped on Romanian soil, Brătianu bowed before him and asked him to join him in the carriage (at that time, Romania did not have a railroad system).

On May 10, 1866, Karl entered Bucharest. The news of his arrival had been transmitted through telegraph and he was welcomed by a huge crowd eager to see its new ruler. In Băneasa he was handed the key to the city. As a proverbial sign, on the same day it had rained for the first time in a long period of time. He pledged his oath in French: "I swear to guard the laws of Romania, to maintain its rights and the integrity of its territory."[5]

The constitution

Medal of Carol I

Immediately after arriving in the country, the Romanian parliament adopted, on June 29, 1866, the first Constitution of Romania, one of the most advanced constitutions of its time. This constitution allowed the development and modernization of the Romanian state. In a daring move, the Constitution chose to ignore the country's current dependence on the Ottoman Empire, which paved the way for Independence.

Silver coin of Carol I, struck 1880
Carol I of Romania Coin.jpg
Obverse: (Romanian) CAROL I DOMNUL ROMANIEI or in English, "Carol I, Prince of Romania" Reverse: (Romanian) ROMANIA 5 L 1880, or in English, "Romania, 5 Leu, 1880"

Article 82 said, "The ruler's powers are hereditary, starting directly from His Majesty, prince Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, on male line through the right of first-born, with the exclusion of women and their issue. His Majesty's descendants will be raised in the Eastern Orthodox Religion."

After the proclamation of the Independence (1877), Romania was effectively a kingdom. From 1878, Carol held the title of Royal Highness (Alteţă Regală). On March 15, 1881, the Constitution was modified to state, among other things, that from then on the head of state would be called king, while the heir would be called royal prince. The same year he was crowned King.

The basic idea of all the royalist constitutions in Romania was that the King rules without governing.

Romanian War of Independence with the Ottoman Empire (1877-1878)

On the 31st, a report was received

that the Russians had suffered a severe defeat at Plevna, and were retiring panic-stricken on Sistow; this was confirmed at 9 P.M. by the following dispatch… (i.e., to Prince Carol) in cipher:

'WEDNESDAY, July 19-31, 1877, 3.35 P.M. 'PRINCE CHARLES OF ROUMANIA. 'Headquarters of the Roumanian Army.:

'The Turks having assembled in great force at Plevna are crushing us. Beg you to join, make a demonstration, and, if possible, cross the Danube, as you wish. This demonstration between Jiul and Corabia is indispensible to facilitate my movements.

NICHOLAS" (the Russian Commander, General Nicholas, appointed by Czar Alexander II).[6]

"Prince Charles replied that the Fourth... (i.e., Roumanian) Division would hold Nikopoli, and that the Third occupy the position quitted by the Fourth";... "Prince Charles refused to allow the Third Division to cross, as he had no intention of allowing his army to be incorporated with the Russian."[6]

As king

King Carol was mistakenly reported to be a "cold" person. He was, however, permanently concerned with the prestige of the country and of the dynasty that he had founded. Although he was entirely devoted to his position as a Romanian Prince, and later King, he never forgot his German roots. Very meticulous, he tried to impose his style on everyone that surrounded him. This style was very important for the thorough and professional training of a disciplined and successful Romanian army. This army, under his command, gained Romania's independence from both the Turks and the Russians.

After victory and the subsequent peace treaty, King Carol I raised the country's prestige with the Ottomans, Russia, and Western European countries, procured funding from Germany, arranged for Romania's first railway system, successfully boosted Romania's economy to unprecedented levels in its history, and also initiated the development of the very first Romanian sea fleet and navy with the port at ancient Tomis (Constantza). In the beginning, some of his efforts to encourage economical prosperity in Romania encountered strong opposition from a large section of his government, and in 1870, he even offered to abdicate if his leadership continued to be challenged to a stalemate by such Romanian political, dissenting factions and their continuous bickering. During his reign, Romania became the "agricultural supplier" of both Western Europe and Russia, exporting huge quantities of wheat and corn. It was the second largest exporter of cereal and the third of oil.[7] Carol also succeeded in rewarding with farmland many of the surviving Romanian veterans who had fought with him in Romania's Independence War.

Following his coronation on March 26, 1881, as the first King of Romanians, he firmly established a Hohenzollern-family based dynasty. His main purpose was to make his new, adopted country sustainable and permanent, well-integrated with Western Europe. King Carol I's true intent in establishing his dynasty was to allow the Romanian nation to exist free and independent of its militarily powerful neighbor states to the east and west, by preventing the former from reversing after his death what he had accomplished in his lifetime. By a rather strange (but perhaps meaningful) coincidence, his former Russian "ally" in the Independence War, the Czar (Tsar) Alexandr II Nykolaevich died, assassinated by the "russified" Polish-Lithuanian Ignacy Hryniewiecki—known as "Ignaty Grinevitzky," only two weeks before Carol coronation. The Tsar's assassination had been meant to ignite revolution in Russia, whereas in neighboring Romania, the crowning of its first, independent King was received with great enthusiasm by most Romanians, who were looking forward to a much brighter future as free, liberated descendants of an ancient people.

After leading Romania's (and also allied Russia's) armies to victory in its Independence War, King Carol I received repeatedly similar offers to rule over two other countries as well, Bulgaria and Spain, but he courteously declined such serious propositions as he saw these as a conflict of interest which he could not accept. In the Carpathian Mountains, he built Peleş Castle, still one of Romania's most visited touristic attractions. The castle was built in an external, German style, as a reminder of the King's origin, but its interior was, and is, decorated in various elegant styles, including art objects of neighboring nations, both East and West. After the Russo-Turkish war, Romania gained Dobruja and King Carol I ordered the first bridge over the Danube, between Feteşti and Cernavodă, linking the new acquired province to the rest of the country.

King Carol I left Romania a rich legacy, unprecedented in its entire history of more than a thousand years (claimed, in fact, by some historians to go as far back as two millennia to the established Roman Empire colony of Roman Dacia), which his follower at the throne, King Ferdinand I would build upon, to what was called before World War II, the "Greater Romania" (in Romanian: România Mare), that will also include the other three Romanian principalities of: Transylvania, Bukovina (Bucovina), and Bessarabia (Bassarabia—now the Republic of Moldova).

The end of the reign

The long rule of 48 years by King Carol I allowed both the rapid establishment and the strong economical development of the Romanian state. Towards the very end of his reign in 1913, and close to the start of the World War I, the German-born king was in favor of entering the war on the side of the Central Powers, whereas the majority of the Romanian public opinion sided with the Triple Entente because of the traditional, Romanian cultural (and historical) links with France. However, King Carol I had signed a secret treaty, in 1883, that linked Romania with the Triple Alliance (formed in 1882), and although the treaty was to be activated only in case of attack from Imperial Russia towards one of the treaty's members, Carol I thought that the honorable thing to do was to enter the war on the side of the German Empire. An emergency meeting was held with members of the government where the King told them about the secret treaty and shared his opinion with them. The strong disagreement that ensued is said by some to have brought on the 75-year old King's sudden death on October 10, 1914. The future King Ferdinand I, under the influence of his Parliament and also of his wife, Marie of Edinburgh, a British Princess, will be much more willing to listen to public opinion and join instead the Triple Entente treaty; as Carol I might have anticipated in his thorough considerations of the European balance of military power, King Ferdinand's decision resulted in several years of misery for the Romanian population, and also millions of Romanian soldiers dying in the war by fighting the very well-equipped German army; however, King Ferdinand's and his government's gamble surprisingly pay off when the Triple Entente finally won World War I, and the Greater Romania was established (with Transylvania joining Romania) under King Ferdinand I at the Treaty of Versailles, signed on June 28, 1919.

Life and family

King Carol I (right) and Queen Elizabeth of Romania

When he was elected prince of Romania, Carol was not married and, according to the Romanian Constitution he himself had approved, he was not allowed to marry a woman of Romanian origin. In 1869, the prince started a trip around Europe and mainly Germany, to find a bride. During this trip he met and married at Neuwied on November 15, 1869, princess Elizabeth of Wied. Their marriage was said to be "one of the most unfitted matches" in history, with Carol being a "cold" and calculating man, whereas Elizabeth was a notorious dreamer and a poet at heart. They had only one child, Princess Maria, born in 1871, who died on March 24, 1874. This is said to have led to the further estrangement of the royal couple, Elizabeth never completely recovering from the trauma of losing her only child.

After the proclamation of the Kingdom of Romania in 1881, the succession became a very important matter of state. Since Carol I's brother, Leopold, and his oldest son, William, declined their rights to succession, the second son of Leopold, Ferdinand, was named Prince of Romania, and also heir to the throne. Elizabeth tried to influence the young Prince into marrying her favorite lady in waiting, Elena Văcărescu, but according to the Romanian Constitution the heir was forbidden from marrying any Romanian lady. As a result of her attempt, Elizabeth was exiled for two years, until Ferdinand's marriage to Princess Marie of Edinburgh.

Towards the end of their lives, though, Carol I and Elizabeth are said to have finally found a way to understand each other, and were reportedly to have become good friends. He died in his wife's arms.[8] He was buried in the Church at Curtea de Arges Monastery. His son, Ferdinand was king from 1914 until 1927.

Legacy

Under the 1866 Constitution (based on the that of Belgium), Carol had the right to "dissolve the legislature" and to appoint the Cabinet. Restrictions on the franchise based on income meant that the boyars, the traditional nobility "who were intent on maintaining their political and economic dominance."[9] Carol found himself acting as a "kind of arbiter between rival political factions."[10] He was skillful in managing the two-party system of Conservatives and Liberals.[11] These two parties alternated in power and when "he observed that a government was getting rusty, he summoned the opposition to power." In power, "the new government would organize elections, which it invariably won."[12] Yet, despite the boyars determination to retain their privileges, Carol has been credited with "developing democracy" as well as "education, industry, railways, and a strong army."[13]

In contrast, when Otto of Greece had become the first sovereign of the newly independent nation-state of Greece, also a foreigner invitee to the throne, Otto failed to nurture democracy, trying to rule Greece as an absolute monarchy. Otto also failed to fully embrace Greek culture, and remained "foreign." Carol made neither mistake; he fully embraced his adopted state and tried to emulate the developing constitutional monarchies of Western Europe. Unfortunately, his namesake and grandson, Carol II (king 1930-1940) saw democracy as "foreign" to Romania, and in the 1930s abrogated to the monarchy powers from parliament. In this, he parted company from Carol I and from his own father, Ferdinand.[14] This weakening of democracy prepared the ground for the growth of communism in Romania. After World War II, the monarchy was abolished and Romania joined the Soviet-bloc until 1989, when the communist regime collapsed. Carol I had a sense of duty towards his people. He wanted to lay solid foundations on which the new nation could build its economy, preserve freedom and secure a stable future. Carol has been compared with Michael the Brave because they both reunified Romania, although Carol's was no "fragile unification for one year but a reunification for all time."[15] Prior to Carol's reign, "there was a succession of revolutions, war, and foreign occupations." Subsequent to his reign "were two world wars, political instability, authoritarian regimes, more foreign occupation and, finally, the darkest years of Communism." Thus, the most "balanced" period of Romania's history "remains the 48-year reign of Carol I."[16] Now that Romania is once more free and democratic, it can once again celebrate Carol's legacy, which was excluded from the national consciousness by the Communist regime.[17]

Notes

  1. Lucian Boia and James Christian Brown, Romania: Borderland of Europe (London, UK: Reaktion Books, 2001, ISBN 9781861891037), 79.
  2. Boia and Brown, 87.
  3. Sidney Whitman, Reminiscences of the King of Roumania (Palala Press, 2015, ISBN 1342610660), 16.
  4. Whitman, 18.
  5. Whitman, 31.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Whitman, 275.
  7. Boia and Brown, 96-97.
  8. Julia P. Gelardi, Born to Rule: Five Reigning Consorts, Granddaughters of Queen Victoria (New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 2005, ISBN 9780312324230), 204.
  9. Keith Hitchins, Rumania, 1866-1947 (Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1994, ISBN 9780585215105), 20.
  10. Hitchins, 21.
  11. Boia and Brown, 103.
  12. Boia and Brown, 90.
  13. Ellsworth Raymond and John Stuart Martin, A Picture History of Eastern Europe (New York, NY: Crown Publishers, 1971), 188.
  14. Steven D. Roper, Romania: The Unfinished Revolution (Amsterdam, NL: Harwood Academic, 2000, ISBN 9789058230287), 6.
  15. Boia and Brown, 233.
  16. Boia and Brown, 96.
  17. Boia and Brown, 233.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Bobango, Gerald J. The Emergence of the Romanian National State. East European monographs, no. 58. Boulder, CO: East European Quarterly, 1979. ISBN 9780914710516.
  • Boia, Lucian, and James Christian Brown. Romania: Borderland of Europe. Topographics. London, UK: Reaktion Books, 2001. ISBN 9781861891037.
  • Gelardi, Julia P. Born to Rule: Five Reigning Consorts, Granddaughters of Queen Victoria. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press, 2005. ISBN 9780312324230.
  • Hitchins, Keith. Rumania, 1866-1947. Oxford history of modern Europe. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press, 1994. ISBN 9780585215105.
  • Kellogg, Frederick. The Road to Romanian Independence. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 1995. ISBN 9781557530653.
  • Michelson, Paul E. Romanian Politics, 1859-1871: From Prince Cuza to Prince Carol. Iași, RO: Center for Romanian Studies, 1998. ISBN 9789739809191.
  • Raymond, Ellsworth, and John Stuart Martin. A Picture History of Eastern Europe. New York, NY: Crown Publishers, 1971.
  • Roper, Steven D. Romania: The Unfinished Revolution. Postcommunist states and nations. Amsterdam, NL: Harwood Academic, 2000. ISBN 9789058230287.
  • Whitman, Sidney. Reminiscences of the King of Roumania. Palala Press, 2015. ISBN 1342610660

External links

All links retrieved November 28, 2023.

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