Elena Cuza

Elena Cuza (17 June 1825 – 2 April 1909), also known under her semi-official title Elena Doamna, was a Moldavian, later Romanian noblewoman and philanthropist. She was princess consort of the United Principalities and the wife of Alexander John Cuza.

Elena Cuza
Princess of the United Principalities
Tenure24 January 1859 – 11 February 1866
Born(1825-06-17)17 June 1825
Iaşi, Moldavia
Died2 April 1909(1909-04-02) (aged 83)
Piatra Neamț, Romania
Burial
SpousePrince Alexandru Ioan Cuza
HouseCuza (by marriage)
FatherIordache Rosetti
MotherEcaterina Sturdza
ReligionEastern Orthodoxy

Biography

Royal Monogram of Princess Elena Cuza of Romania

The daughter of postelnic Iordache Rosetti, a high-ranking boyar of the Rosetti family, she was also closely related to the Sturdzas and other families of boyars. Born in Iaşi, she married Cuza in 1844 their relationship soured soon after, as Elena was not able to bear a child. However, she later raised as her own children his two sons by his mistress, Elena Maria Catargiu-Obrenović.

She remained, however, very devoted to her husband in their public life, and was responsible for securing his flight from the country in 1848, after Prince Mihail Sturdza began arresting participants in the Moldavian revolutionary movement. They returned after the start of Grigore Alexandru Ghica's rule, but Elena suffered from depression after Cuza began engaging in adulterous affairs and left for Paris, France until 1853. After her return, she became almost completely estranged from her husband, who kept as his mistress Elena Maria Catargiu-Obrenović, the mother of Milan Obrenović (future Prince of Serbia).

The Cuza family Palace in Ruginoasa

Elena left for Paris and remained there until 1862, long after the ad hoc Divan had elected Cuza ruler; she had been persuaded to do so by the writer and political figure Vasile Alecsandri, who tried to extinguish the scandal provoked by Cuza's marital neglect. As wife of the head of state, she became noted for her charity work (the building of the Elena Doamna Asylum in Cotroceni, Bucharest) and adopted orphans, including the illegitimate children of her husband Alexandru Al. Ioan Cuza and Dimitrie Cuza; Elena Cuza took over, furnished, and maintained the private residence in Ruginoasa, Iaşi County, and was responsible for the Neo-gothic style of its decorations.

During the coup d'état against her husband (22 February 1866), she was isolated in her apartments by the conspirators, who burst in on Cuza as he was spending the night with Maria Catargi-Obrenović. Both she and Maria joined Cuza in his European exile. After her husband's death in 1873, she took care of their children, and lived to see the death of her two adoptive sons (Alexandru, was the husband of Maria Moruzi - she was later married, for just one day, with the National Liberal leader Ion I. C. Brătianu, and gave birth to the historian and politician Gheorghe I. Brătianu).

gollark: No, matrices aren't sets of sets.
gollark: Um. Well, possibly, but that's... not something which is used, as far as I know.
gollark: Sets aren't exactly important for 3D stuff; that involves, I believe, matrices and vector thingies.
gollark: So what's your native language? We do have people who know other languages on here.
gollark: Tables aren't really a core component of maths.

References

  • (in Romanian) Radu R. Florescu, "Elena Cuza - dincolo de legendă", in Magazin Istoric, January 1998
  • Petre Otu,"«Adevărul rămâne oricare ar fi soarta celor care l-au servit». Gh.I.Brătianu un istoric printre politicieni", in Dosarele Istoriei, 1/VI, 2001

Media related to Elena Cuza at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.