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See also: ancient Rumanian See also: family, of unknown origin, which probably came from See also: Trebizond and settled in See also: Moldavia
.
The See also: Sturdza family has been long and intimately associated with the See also: government first of Moldavia and afterwards of Rumania
.
Its members belong to two See also: main divisions, which trace their descent respectively from See also: John (Ioan) or from
See also: Alexander (Sandu), the sons of Kirak Sturdza, who lived in the 17th century, and may be regarded as the founder of the family
.
1
.
To the first division belongs MICHAEL [Michail] STURDZA (1795-1884), who was
See also: prince of Moldavia from 1834 to 1849
.
A See also: man of liberal See also: education, he established the first high school, a kind of university, in See also: Jassy
.
He brought scholars from See also: foreign countries to See also: act as teachers, and gave a very powerful stimulus to the educational development of the country
.
In 1844 he decreed the emancipation of the See also: gipsies
.
Until then the gipsies had been treated as slaves and owned by the See also: Church or by private landowners; they had been bought and sold inthe open market
.
Michael Sturdza also attempted the secularization of monastic establishments, which was carried out by Prince Cuza in 1864, and the utilization of their endowments for
See also: national purposes
.
He quelled the attempted revolution in 1848 without bloodshed by arresting all the conspirators and expelling them from the country
.
Under his- See also: rule the See also: internal development of Moldavia made immense progress; roads were built, industry See also: developed, and Michael is still gratefully remembered by the See also: people
.
See Michel Stourdza et son administration (Brussels, 1834) ; Michel Stourdza, ancien prince regnant de Moldavie (See also: Paris, 1874) ; A
.
A
.
C
.
Sturdza, Regne de Michel Sturdza, prince de Moldavie 1834-1849 (Paris, 1907)
.
2
.
See also: GREGORY [Grigorie] STURDZA (1821-1901), son of the above, was educated in See also: France and See also: Germany, became a general in the See also: Ottoman army under the name of Muklis See also: Pasha, and afterwards attained the same See also: rank in the Moldavian' army
.
He was a See also: candidate for the Moldavian See also: throne in 1859, and subsequently a prominent member of the Russophil party in the Rumanian parliament
.
He wrote Lois fondamentales de l'univers (Paris 1891)
.
3
.
JOHN [Ioan] STURDZA, prince of Moldavia (1822-1828), was the most famous descendant of Alexander Sturdza
.
Immediately after the See also: Greek revolution, Prince John Sturdza took an active See also: part in subduing the roving bands of Greek Hetairists in Moldavia; he transformed the Greek elementary See also: schools into Rumanian schools and laid the foundation for that scientific national development which Prince Michael Sturdza continued after 1834
.
In 1828 the Russians entered the country and took Prince John prisoner
.
He died in exile . 4 . ALEXANDER [Alexandru] STURDZA (1791-1854),See also: Russian publicist and diplomatist, was a member of the same family, See also: born in See also: Bessarabia and educated in Germany
.
After entering the Russian See also: diplomatic service, he wrote .8etrachtungen caber die Lehre and den Geist der orthodoxen Kirche (See also: Leipzig, 1817)
.
His Memoire sur l'etat actuel de l'Allemagne, written at the re-quest of the See also: tsar during the congress of See also: Aix-la-Chapelle, was an attack on the See also: German See also: universities, repeated in Coup d'reil sur See also: les universites de l'Allemagne (Aix, 1818)
.
His other important See also: works are La Grece en 1821 (Leipzig, 1822) and tEuvres posthumes religieuses, historiques, philosophiques et litteraires (5 vols., Paris, 1858-1861)
.
5
.
See also: DEMETRIUS [Dimitrie] STURDZA, Rumanian statesman, was born in 1833 at Jassy, and educated there at the Academia Michaileana
.
He continued his studies in Germany, took part in the See also: political movements of the See also: time, and was private secretary to Prince Cuza
.
Demetrius afterwards turned against Cuza, joined John See also: Bratianu, and became a member of the so-called Liberal government
.
In 1899 he was elected See also: leader of the party in succession to Bratianu and was four times See also: prime See also: minister (see RUMANIAN See also: History)
.
Though a man of See also: great capacity for See also: work, he represented the narrowest nationalism, and through his enmity to all that was " See also: alien " did more than any other man to retard the political and See also: industrial development of the country
.
He was appointed permanent secretary of the Rumanian See also: Academy, and became a recognized authority on Rumanian See also: numismatics
.
As secretary of the academy he was instrumental in assisting the publication of the collections of historic documents made by Hurmuzaki (30 vols., See also: Bucharest, 1876-1897), and other acts and documents (Bucharest, 1900 sqq.), besides a number of minor political See also: pamphlets of transitory value
.
(M
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