John Mavrocordatos

John Mavrocordatos (Greek: Ιωάννης Μαυροκορδάτος, Romanian: Ioan A. Mavrocordat), born in Constantinople on 23 July 1684 and died in Bucharest on 23 February 1719, was caimacam of Moldavia (7 October 1711 – 16 November 1711) and Prince of Wallachia between 2 December 1716 and 23 February 1719.[1] He was a member of the Mavrocordatos family.

John Mavrocordatos
Prince of Wallachia
Reign2 December 1716 – 23 February 1719
PredecessorNicholas Mavrocordatos
SuccessorNicholas Mavrocordatos
Born23 July 1684
Constantinople
Died23 February 1719
Bucharest
ReligionOrthodox

Life

Youngest son of Alexander Mavrocordatos, he was a faithful assistant to the political rise of his brother Nicholas Mavrocordatos. He replaced him as Grand Logothete of the Patriarchate of Constantinople and then as Grand Dragoman of the Sublime Porte from 1710 to 1717.

In 1711 with the simple title "Caimacam" he held the interregnum in Moldavia after Dimitrie Cantemir's flight and before his brother's restoration. He then replaced Nicholas Mavrocordatos on the throne of Wallachia, during his captivity in Austria, from November 1716 to February 1719.

John Mavrocordatos had married in 1709 Zaphira Guliano, daughter of Demetrius Guliano, Grand Logothete of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, with issue including :

  • Alexander (1710–1738)

He is not to be confused with his nephew John (Ioannes) Mavrocordatos (1712-1747), Prince of Moldavia between 1743 and 1747

Sources

  • Sturdza, Alexandre A.C. (1913). L'Europe Orientale et le rôle historique des Maurocordato (1660-1830) [Eastern Europe and the historic role of the Mavrocordato]. Paris: Plon. pp. 119–126.
  • Legrand, Emile (1900). Généalogie des Maurocordatos de Constantinople. Paris: J. Maisonneuve. pp. 14, 26.
gollark: Doing OO, I mean.
gollark: Java basically enforces it?
gollark: Well, if you look at java projects then... yes?
gollark: I've seen a bunch of non-object-oriented projects.
gollark: You can do procedural code in most higher-ish-level languages if you want to.

References

  1. Emile Legrand Généalogie des Maurocordatos de Constantinople, Paris 1900 p. 14
Preceded by
Nicholas Mavrocordatos
Grand Dragoman of the Porte
1709–1717
Succeeded by
Grigore II Ghica
Preceded by
Lupu Costachi
Caimacam of Moldavia
7 October 1711 – 16 November 1711
Succeeded by
Nicholas Mavrocordatos
Preceded by
Nicholas Mavrocordatos
Prince/Voivode of Wallachia
2 December 1716 – 6 March 1719
Succeeded by
Nicholas Mavrocordatos



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