|
PHANARIOTES , a name derived from Phanar, the chiefSee also: Greek quarter at Stamboul, where the oecumenical patriarchate is situated, and applied to those members of families See also: resident in the Phanar quarter who between the years 1711 and 1821 were appointed hospodars of the Danubian principalities; that See also: period of Moldo-Wallachian See also: history is also usually termed the Phanariote epoch
.
It is not to be understood as marking the introduction into the principalities of the Greek See also: element, which had already established itself firmly in both provinces, to both of which Greek princes had been appointed before the 18th century
.
But whereas the Greek families of earlier introduction gradually became merged in their country of adoption, the later immigrants retained their See also: separate See also: nationality and See also: grew to be powerful agents for furthering the spread of Graecism in the principalities
.
The See also: person raised to the princely dignity was usually the chief dragoman of the See also: Sublime See also: Porte, and was consequently well versed in contemporary politics and the statecraft of the See also: Otto-See also: man See also: government
.
The new See also: prince, who was compelled to See also: purchase his See also: elevation with a heavy bribe, proceeded to the country which he was selected to govern, and of the language of which he was in nearly every See also: case totally ignorant, accompanied by a See also: horde of needy hangers-on; he and his acolytes counted on recouping themselves in as See also: short a See also: time as possible for their initial outlay and in laying by a sufficiency to live on after the termination of the prince's brief authority
.
It was the See also: interest of the Porte to change the princes as often as possible, as the accession donation thus became due more frequently
.
When, owing to the numerous cases of treachery among the princes, the choice became limited to a few families the See also: plan was See also: hit upon of frequently shifting the prince from one province to the other: the prince of Wallachia, the richer of the two principalities, was always ready to pay a handsome douceur to avert his transfer to Yassy; the prince of See also: Moldavia was equally ready to bribe his supporters at Constantinople to secure his See also: appointment to Wallachia
.
To raise funds to satisfy the rapacity of the Porte the princes became past masters in the See also: art of spoliation, and the inhabitants, liable to every See also: species of tax which the ingenuity of their Greek rulers could devise, were reduced to the last stage of destitution
.
The active See also: part taken by the Greek princes in the revolt of 1820—21 induced the Porte to revert to the appointment of native princes
.
|
|
|
[back] PHALTAN |
[next] PHANIAS |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.