Racoviță

The Racoviță (anglicized Racovitza) was a family of Moldavian and Wallachian boyars which gave the Danubian Principalities several hospodars, becoming influential within the Ottoman Empire and the Phanariote kinship network. Their ancestors became boyars under Alexandru Lăpușneanu (r. 1552–61; 1564–68).[1] A member of the family was mentioned in a chrysobull dated 7 October 1487.[2] The name is Slavic (Rakovica, meaning "crab").[3] The family was partially Hellenized. One of its branches remained present inside Romania. By the 17th century, the family was one of the leading families in the region. It later managed to penetrate into the Phanariote nucleus in Constantinople, which facilitated and increased their chances to occupy the thrones in their native country, and later to successfully maintain their positions. It remained influential in the Kingdom of Romania.

Notable members

gollark: oh no.
gollark: That can't go wrong, I'm pretty sure, I stuck the three laws of robotics in as a comment above the core reasoning logic and that definitely counts.
gollark: There's actually going to be an experimental AI system hooked up to it with authority to execute remote debugging commands based on incoming incident reports.
gollark: SPUDNET went from managing access to potatOS remote debugging services to controlling laser systems and handling high-volume incident report data.
gollark: The power of scope creep is unlimited.

References

  1. Rumanian Review. Europolis. 2004. p. 98.
  2. Magazin istoric. 23. 1989. p. 10.
  3. Georgeta Raţă (14 December 2009). Language Education Today: Between Theory and Practice. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 43–44. ISBN 978-1-4438-1797-4.

Sources

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