Scarlat Vârnav

Scarlat Vasile Vârnav, or Sofronie Vârnav (also known as Charles Basile Varnav,[2] Charles de Wirnave,[3] Varnavu or Vîrnav; ?–January 6, 1868 [O.S. December 25, 1867]), was a Moldavian and Romanian political figure, philanthropist, collector, and Orthodox clergyman. The scion of an aristocratic family, he was made to study for a career in the church, but fled Moldavia and studied abroad. Acquainted with the Romanian liberal movement, and an ardent Romanian nationalist, he helped establish bodies of intellectuals dedicated to cultural and political cooperation across the Danubian Principalities and beyond—including, in 1846, the Romanian library of Paris. His purchase of mainly Baroque paintings, donated by him to Academia Mihăileană, forms the core of the Iași Museum of Art.

Scarlat Vasile Vârnav
(Sofronie Vârnav)
Portrait of Vârnav in monastic clothes
Member of the Assembly of Deputies of Romania
In office
December 26, 1867[1]  January 6, 1868
ConstituencyTutova County
Personal details
Bornca. 1801–1813
Hilișeu, Dorohoi County, Moldavia
DiedJanuary 6, 1868
Bârlad, Principality of Romania
NationalityMoldavian (to 1859)
Romanian (1859–1868)
Political partyFree and Independent Faction
(Tutova National Liberal Party)
Other political
affiliations
Frăția (1847–1848)
National Party (ca. 1849–1859)
RelationsVasile Vârnav (father)
Constantin Vârnav (brother)
Gheorghe Bibescu (in-law)
Scarlat C. Vârnav (nephew)
ProfessionLandowner, librarian, philanthropist, revolutionary, monk, civil servant

With Nicolae Bălcescu and C. A. Rosetti, Vârnav also managed the Society of Romanian Students in Paris, whose revolutionary agenda brought him into conflict with European governments. He then played a small part in the French Revolution of 1848, before returning to take orders at Neamț Monastery, a Hieromonk and Starets. Throughout the 1850s, he and his brother Constantin, who was the son-in-law of Gheorghe Bibescu, took part in the nationalist movement that established the United Principalities, and was especially active as an electoral campaigner. However, his support of modernization in schools and the church was not welcomed by the religious establishment, and his stand-off with the conservative monks of Neamț resulted in the establishment of a dissident monastery. Subsequently, Vârnav lost the backing of Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza, although he still approved of Cuza's authoritarian agenda.

After campaigning nationally in support of Carol I, Vârnav ended his career in Tutova County. Active in antisemitic circles, he was allied with the Free and Independent Faction. On this basis, he contested a seat in the Assembly of Deputies during December 1867, but died after sudden illness just days after winning. Rumors of his poisoning by the Romanian Jews sparked a riot, which had to be quelled by armed intervention, and an official inquiry. He was survived by his brother Constantin and a nephew, engineer and politician Scarlat C. Vârnav.

Biography

Early activities

It is known that Vârnav was a native of Hilișeu (or Silișeu), Dorohoi County, but other details remain sketchy, with his year of birth given as far back as 1801[4] or as recent as 1813.[5] He belonged to a large family of the Moldavian boyar nobility, attested back to 1621; he was distantly related to Teodor Vârnav, the Bessarabian writer.[6] His immediate ancestors had taken up liberal causes, inspired by the Carbonari.[7] One relative, Petrachi, also led the Moldavian resistance to the "Sacred Band" during the civil war of 1821, alongside Gavril Istrati.[8] Scarlat's father, Ban Vasile (died 1824), was a book collector and translator to Romanian, noted in particular for his renditions of Dimitrie Cantemir's Descriptio Moldaviae,[9] Condillac's Logique,[10] Dionisie Fotino's Istoria tis palai Dakias,[11] and Cesare Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments.[12] Scarlat had a younger brother, Constantin (also known as Costandin or Costache), who trained himself as a surgeon. Together, the two inherited Hilișeu estate and part of Liveni.[13]

After an early education provided by his father,[14] Scarlat was selected by his mother to take orders in the Moldavian Church. While tutored by Sofronie Miclescu, he escaped to his relatives in the Duchy of Bukovina, and later made his way to Paris.[4][15] These events are tentatively dated to 1834 or 1836.[16] Vârnav lived in France until 1848, attending Paris Law Faculty and probably also hearing literature courses at the College of Sorbonne.[17] With his own private funds, he purchased the art collection of Aguado de las Marismas on the recommendation of Gheorghe Panaiteanu Bardasare.[15] It included paintings by Caravaggio, Philippe de Champaigne, Egbert van Heemskerck, Eustache Le Sueur, Pietro Liberi, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, and François Stella;[18] Vârnav also owned a copy of Philippoteaux's La Retraite de Russie, which was probably done by the artist himself, and which he may have purchased at the Exposition nationale des beaux-arts of Brussels, in 1842.[19] In 1847, he donated all artworks in his possession to the Moldavian state, which took little interest in the offer. The collection was left to deteriorate at a shipyard in Galați.[20]

Taking up the cause of Romanian nationalism, Vârnav established in 1846 a Romanian library, which he dedicated to the "new era" of European liberalism,[21] and also set the foundation for a Romanian Orthodox chapter in Paris.[4][22] According to the Moldavian liberal writer Gheorghe Sion, Vârnav was good friends with a Rom, Dincă, born into slavery at Pașcani. He tried to persuade Dincă not to return to his owners to Moldavia, offering to employ him as a secretary of the library.[23] In the mid 1840s, Vârnav was also in contact with the agronomist and political thinker Ion Ionescu de la Brad, sponsoring his attempts to set up a model farm in southern Moldavia, and also offering to employ Ionescu as a trainer of peasants.[24]

Vârnav family coat of arms

In his address to the library's patrons, he explained that he regarded the Romanian language and the church as the two "protective genii of our nationhood."[25] Vârnav's manifesto also chided Westernized Romanians for forgetting their modernizing mission, and even their native language, suggesting that the two were inextricably linked. He proposed that the emerging Romanian literature needed to keep cosmopolitan tendencies in check: the predominant themes needed to display "originality and Romanianism" rather than the "illusions of the senses" and "chimeras of individual hurdles."[26] His focus was on providing young intellectuals with a cultural training that was already in their vernacular language; this included efforts to discard the Cyrillic orthography as "foreign", and familiarize students with the various adaptations from Latin.[27]

His own experiments resulted in what historian Nicolae Iorga deems a "bizarre personal orthography".[28] While the nationalist movement was struggling to popularize the name "Romanian" for the shared ethnicity and culture, and trying to settle on a spelling of that word, Vârnav suggested the variant Roumén(é), later replaced by român and română.[29] He also proposed that linguists from the Danubian Principalities (Moldavia and Wallachia), as well as from other Romanian-speaking regions, meet up in congress "somewhere central to the Romanian lands".[30]

Student activist

In Vârnav's own definition, the political unification of Moldavia and Wallachia could originate from the cultural "fusion" that he was promoting in the Romanian student colony; his letters of the time opened with the slogan Vivat Unirea ("Long Live Union").[31] His campaigning led to the establishment of a Society of the Romanian Students in Paris, which met at his house in Quartier de la Sorbonne (Place de la Sorbonne, 3, where the library was also housed).[32] Its triumvirate leadership comprised Ion Ghica and C. A. Rosetti of Wallachia, with the Moldavian Vârnav as cashier.[33] However, Rosetti and Vârnav handled most of daily business, with Ghica effectively absent from Paris after August 1846; in later months, Rosetti also left, to be replaced by Nicolae Bălcescu. This and other concerns prompted the Society to seek patronage from conservative figures in both Principalities—Nicolae Ghica-Comănești, Roxanda Roznovanu, Alexandru Sturdza-Miclăușanu, and various others.[34] Vârnav also offered honorary presidency to the French poet Alphonse de Lamartine who, as he recalled, accepted with "the greatest joy and affection".[35]

From about 1845, Vârnav had been accepted into the Athénée des Etrangers, a Masonic lodge of the Grand Orient de France.[36] Despite his public overture to the conservative boyars, he had also joined the Wallachians' secret society, Frăția ("The Brotherhood"), which was repressed at home but maintained a presence in the diaspora; the Society itself may have been a front for Rosetti's revolutionary conspiracy.[37] Privately, he expressed his dislike for the patronage, noting that Ghica-Comănești and the others had surrendered the Society to "backbiters".[38] The Society was still highly popular, and, according to ledgers published by Vârnav, made a yearly profit of 21,200 francs in subscriptions and donations.[39] He was able to sponsor scholarships for new recruits to the nationalist cause, including Nicolae Ionescu,[40] N. Chinezu, and Ianache Lecca.[41]

Vârnav's brother Constantin

In Moldavia, Constantin became famous for his advocacy of balneotherapy, and also for his work during the 1848 cholera epidemic: he was the only doctor of Iași to have survived the calamity.[4] This was particularly unusual, as he did not believe that cholera was contagious, and relied on folk medicine in his attempts to cure it.[42] He shared some of Scarlat's views about modernization, publishing his plans to set up a sanitary service and medical schools.[43] From 1844, he was also son-in-law of the Wallachian Prince Gheorghe Bibescu,[44] a conservative figure. Nonetheless, the Students' Society revolutionary connections irritated Bibescu, and also caused concern in Russia, which, at the time, shared custody of the Principalities. Despite Lamartine's support, these developments also worried the French monarchy, which was transitioning to conservatism. The Guizot government chose not to give any recognition to the Society, pushing it into the underground.[45]

Revolutionary

By November 1847, Vârnav, Bălcescu, Lecca and Chinezu, alongside Grigore Arghiropol, Dimitrie Brătianu, Ion C. Brătianu and Mihail Kogălniceanu, founded the semi-legal Însocierea Lazariană ("Lazarian Association"). Named in honor of Gheorghe Lazăr, it had a political project to unify and standardize education in both Principalities.[46] This agenda was seen as untimely by other intellectuals, including Alexandru G. Golescu, who refused to participate.[47] Now openly drawn to radical politics, Vârnav became an active participant in the February Revolution, serving in the National Guard.[4] He reportedly tried to cross the border into Moldavia that March, just days before of the abortive liberal revolution; the conservative Prince Mihail Sturdza ordered the border guards to prevent him from doing so. One of his companions, Teodor Râșcanu, managed to pass through, but soon after had to flee for Wallachia.[48]

Vârnav made a return to Bukovina, where other Moldavian radicals had found temporary refuge. He proposed that the library funds be used to sponsor selective clandestine returns to the country; when other Society members argued against this initiative, he promised to pay back the money using his personal assets.[49] He himself eventually returned to his native country alongside Claude Thions, Consul to Moldavia of the French Second Republic.[4] According to Ion Nistor, Vârnav received the title of Postelnic and was advanced to Sublieutenant in the Moldavian Militia;[50] however, Iorga indicates, these were bestowed upon another Scarlat Vârnav, who had remained in Moldavia.[51] Upon arrival, Moldavian officials asked him to pay storage fees for the Marismas collection, but he was also able to recover it from Galați in 1850.[52] He ordered its restoration, and assigned it to Bardasare and Gheorghe Asachi at Academia Mihăileană.[53] It was the basis of the Iași Museum of Art, which opened for the public in 1860.[54]

In 1850, after only a few months' novitiate,[55] the former revolutionary was ordained a monk at Neamț Monastery, taking the name Sofronie Vârnav (transitional alphabet: Sofрonie Вaрnaвꙋ̆). Described by Iorga as intelligent, charitable and industrious, he was for a while the community's Starets,[4] but apparently also returned to Hilișeu, where he enjoyed living among the peasants.[56] He still maintained contacts with the Paris Orthodox circles, donating 5,000 ducats to the Romanian chapel,[57] and, with Constantin, ceded a Czernowitz townhouse to the Romanian library of Bukovina, which opened in 1852.[58] In 1851, both brothers also sponsored the establishment of a boys' school in Dorohoi.[59] The Vârnavs sold their Dorohoi estate over the late 1850s, with Scarlat liquidating all his assets there in December 1857; his land was sold to Eugeniu Alcaz.[60] As argued by Iorga, the monk was adamantly "democratic", and from the 1840s proudly listed himself a taxpayer (birnic).[61] Similarly, historian Nicolae Isar argues that, by using birnic as his title, Vârnav highlighted at once his ideas of self-sacrifice for the greater good and his critique of the boyar class as a drain on Moldavia's budget.[62]

From before 1850, Vârnav had been affiliated with the National Party, which supported the unification of Moldavia and Wallachia. This prompted speculation that his turn to religion was a ruse for nationalists to have an agent of influence in the clergy.[63] He was again visible in political life shortly after the Crimean War, which inaugurated a series of major changes in Moldavian society. At the time, he openly celebrated Captain G. Filipescu for his defiance of the invading Russian Army, and later sent him a stallion.[40] By June 1856, Vârnav was one of the Roman County clergymen who adhered to the National Party's Unionist Committee, which openly advocated the Principalities' merger, and later signed petitions for union's international recognition.[64] Before the election of July 1857, as "Hieromonk Varnav", he was a registered elector for the clergy estate in the Diocese of Huși, while Constantin was registered with the boyars' college at Dorohoi.[65] He endorsed an old friend, Vasile Mălinescu, who became a county delegate to the ad-hoc Divan.[66]

The younger Vârnav brother published the short-lived gazette Timpul ("Times"),[67] and eventually ran in the elections of 1858, representing Dorohoi in the Divan.[4] His campaign was organized by Scarlat, who rallied the peasant voters of Hilișeu in church and re-baptized the village rallying point as "Union Square".[68] The Divan's subsequent election of Alexandru Ioan Cuza as Domnitor of the United Principalities was saluted as a major fulfillment in Scarlat's letters to Constantin Hurmuzachi.[50] Described as an "independent unionist", he agitated in the streets, mocking his 1848 adversary Prince Sturdza, who had stood as a Moldavian-and-separatist candidate for the throne. Vârnav quipped that Strudza's royal cypher, M.S.V., stood for Mai Stăi Voinice ("Whoa There Fella"), and thus launched an urban legend.[69] He introduced several slogans for the unionist cause, which appeared on painted banners; his favorite was: Viața, averea, onorul, / Patriei prosternă Românul! ("The Romanian to his Motherland / Pledges his life, his fortune, his honor!"). This was also featured on his 1859 testament, by which he donated all his belongings to the Paris library.[70]

Church conflicts

1859 cartoon mocking the censorship laws enforced under Alexandru Ioan Cuza

Returning to live among the monks of Neamț, Vârnav involved himself in the controversy over the secularization of monastery estates. Moldavia's Education Minister, Alexandru Teriachiu, assigned him to a reform committee which uncovered great irregularities at Neamț, including a dysfunctional seminary and an inhumane ward for the insane.[71] Vârnav refurbished the seminary, and then also organized the peasant schools of Neamț County, serving as inspector. Proposed innovations he "learned at Paris", now included the establishment of a printing press and the demolition of new additions to the historical site.[72] However, he was also suspected of giving away boons, including the monastery's cloth factory and a large press, to his patron Kogălniceanu and to the government itself.[73]

Such activism, and also his harsh temper,[74] led to numerous complaints. The new minister, Dimitrie Rosăt, protected Vârnav. He scolded those monks who wanted him tried by church tribunal,[75] calling them the "hirelings of Russia".[76] Vârnav himself had a long-standing feud with Hieromonk Andronic Popovici, whom he accused of using sermons to promote anti-Cuza sentiments and Russophilia. In September 1861, he obtained Popovici's demotion,[77] prompting the latter to cross over into the Bessarabia Governorate and set up Noul Neamț Monastery outside Kitskany. Andronic claimed that this establishment was merely a lavra for the old one. Vârnav, who kept the monastery seal on him, did not validate this in writing, but his adversaries either forged or obtained permission from other administrators.[78]

Eventually, by 1862, Alexandru A. Cantacuzino took over at the ministry and had Vârnav arrested.[79] Vârnav pleaded for his case and petitioned the Divan with letters also taken up in Tribuna Română gazette. Archimandrite Timotei Ionescu dismissed his defense as fantasy, depicting Vârnav as a persecutor of his monks, who had loosely interpreted Cuza's policies in order to suppress dissent at the monastery.[80] According to church historian Melchisedec Ștefănescu, Vârnav, being "detested by the public and disgraced by prince Cuza", settled in Bucharest, "providing his services to whoever would need them." He sees the former Starets as an extremist and a heretic, "formed in the school of Blanqui, Pyat [and] Rochefort".[81]

Vârnav returned to favor in January 1864, when Dimitrie Bolintineanu, who chaired the unified ministry of education, appointed him to a commission that was tasked with assessing calendar reform. However, his name was immediately flagged and stricken out by the Metropolitan Bishop, Nifon Rusailă.[81] Vârnav, who was reportedly a delegate to the Elective Assembly in 1864, supported Cuza's anti-parliamentary coup.[82] During the incident, he lived in a rented townhouse at Sfântul Dumitru–Poștă Church in Lipscani, shared with Cuza's uncle Grigore. During the plebiscite of June 1864, organized by the Domnitor, he put up a "lit sign" reading: Popa Vârnav zice da ("Father Vârnav Says [to Vote] Yes").[82] Also a Cuza loyalist, Constantin Vârnav continued to serve on the Princely Court of Justice, where he notably enforced censorship laws against Ionescu de la Brad.[83]

1867 campaign and death

In early 1866, Cuza and his authoritarian regime were deposed by a "monstrous coalition", with Carol of Hohenzollern presented as the new Domnitor. There was a plebiscite on his acceptance, during which Vârnav traveled as far south as Ploiești and as far north as Bacău, persuading Wallachians and Moldavians alike to vote for Carol (and thus, for a cemented union).[84] As Calinic Miclescu and others put up separatist resistance in Iași, he also took an emergency trip there, effectively acting as a negotiator between the two camps.[85] He ultimately settled in Bârlad in 1867,[86] and his last months were spent in Tutova County politics, but also in efforts to furnish the local hospital.[50] According to Melchisedec Ștefănescu, he also continued to "propagate his political and religious heresies".[81] With Ion and Constantin Codrescu, P. Chenciu, A. V. Ionescu, and Ioan Popescu, he established a "National Liberal Party", which functioned as the provincial affiliate of the Moldavian-wide Free and Independent Faction.[87] Like other Factionalists, Vârnav also involved himself in the debates over the issue of Jewish emancipation, and is described by biographer Dimitrie R. Rosetti as a "firebrand antisemite".[4] According to a Jewish man's letter, published in L'Echo Danubien, his "preaching against the Israelites [was] of the most barbaric kind", disturbing the otherwise tolerant mood of Tutova.[88]

Vârnav put himself up as a candidate for the Assembly of Deputies in the election of December 1867, winning a mandate at Tutova's Fourth College. Without ever taking his seat, he died at Bârlad, on January 6, 1868 [O.S. December 25, 1867],[89] after illness that lasted "just one day".[90] The mysterious circumstances led to an autopsy, which found nothing of relevance. His stomach and intestines were dispatched to Bucharest, for a more in-depth toxicological inquest.[90] Already before his death, rumor spread that his Jewish enemies had poisoned the Starets, and a riot (or attempted pogrom) erupted in the city. As noted by Rosetti, "the excitement of the population required intervention of troops sent in from bordering counties, as a safeguard for the Jews, whose lives were being threatened."[4] The same is noted by Iorga: "His death was found suspicious, and military measures were taken to curb the anti-Jewish movements."[84]

The conspiracy theory was shunned as "infamy" by the left-liberal daily Românul, which noted that "ignorance was exploited" by "the enemies of the country"—both in Tutova and Ialomița County (the scene of a scandal over allegations of blood libel). However, the paper also played down the riot, reporting that only the local synagogue and a few Jewish houses had been damaged.[90] According to a note of protest signed by 200 notables of Bârlad, the riot was started by mourners gathering in front of Vârnav's home, located opposite a Jewish establishment; altercations, they claimed, had been provoked by the Jews, who "insulted [...] the agonizing patient" and "threw boiling water before the audience". The petitioners asked the Interior Minister Ion Brătianu not to punish the populace for what it viewed as "calumnies by the adversaries of the national cause".[89] Alliance Israélite Universelle (AIU) sources tell that Vârnav himself had incensed the crowds earlier in the campaign, with endorsement from the Ștefan Golescu government.[91] The pogrom, they argue, was attempted by some of the petitioners themselves, and higher authorities, who "arrested all the Jews, supposedly to protect them", actually "facilitated things for the rioters"; the investigation of the riot "was opened, but carried no effect."[92] On February 25, Brătianu spoke in the Assembly to announce that "solely Jews" had participated in the riot.[93]

As noted by the AIU, Vârnav's death was likely caused by "some rather particular disease."[94] Eventually, he was buried at Bârlad later that month,[86] but his belongings, including itemized lists of donations for the Transilvania Cultural Society, were still in police custody by February.[95] Constantin, who served several terms in the Assembly and Senate, survived his brother by nine years, dying shortly after Romanian independence was achieved.[4][67] His own son, Scarlat C. Vârnav, was by then becoming distinguished as a civil and military engineer. After managing the School of Bridges, Roads and Mines, he also pursued a career in politics with the Junimea constitutionalists in the 1890s.[4] By then, Iorga claims, both his father and uncle had been unduly forgotten.[51] In the interwar period, Iorga took over and revived Vârnav's student library, which became the nucleus of a Romanian School in Fontenay-aux-Roses.[96]

Notes

  1. George D. Nicolescu, Parlamentul Romîn: 1866–1901. Biografii și portrete, p. 30. Bucharest: I. V. Socecŭ, 1903
  2. Nistor, pp. 534, 535
  3. Ghibănescu (1915), p. 350
  4. Dimitrie R. Rosetti, Dicționarul contimporanilor, p. 190. Bucharest: Editura Lito-Tipografiei Populara, 1897
  5. Dimitrescu, p. 65; Isar, p. 1442
  6. Arthur Gorovei, Monografia Orașului Botoșani, pp. 142–153. Botoșani: Ediția Primăriei de Botoșani, 1938. See also Iorga, pp. 170–175; Nistor, p. 531; Stino, p. 88
  7. Xenopol, pp. 100–102
  8. Iorga, pp. 173–175
  9. Iorga, p. 172; Stino, p. 88
  10. Iuliu Bud, "Cartea românească și străină de istorie. Antonie Plămădeală, Lazăr-Leon Asachi în cultura română", in Revista de Istorie, Nr. 4/1988, p. 456
  11. Nistor, p. 531
  12. Cristian Preda, Rumânii fericiți. Vot și putere de la 1831 până în prezent, p. 25. Iași: Polirom, 2011. ISBN 978-973-46-2201-6
  13. Ghibănescu (1929), pp. 35–36. See also Iftimi & Iftimi, p. 102
  14. Dimitrescu, pp. 65–66
  15. Dimitrescu, p. 66
  16. Isar, p. 1433
  17. Isar, pp. 1433–1434. See also Dimitrescu, p. 66
  18. Ichim, pp. 318–319
  19. Grigorescu, pp. 256–257
  20. Dimitrescu, p. 66; Ichim, pp. 318–319, 325
  21. Nistor, p. 532; Stino, pp. 85–86
  22. Dimitrescu, p. 66; Pocitan Ploeșteanu, pp. 83, 89
  23. Gheorghe Sion, Suvenire contimporane, p. 38. Bucharest: Editura Minerva, 1915. OCLC 7270251
  24. Bogdan-Duică, p. 103. See also Isar, pp. 1440, 1441–1442
  25. Stino, p. 86
  26. Isar, pp. 1438–1439
  27. Stino, pp. 86–88. See also Iorga, pp. 175–179
  28. Iorga, p. 175
  29. Pocitan Ploeșteanu, p. 26
  30. Iorga, p. 176; Stino, pp. 87–88
  31. Isar, p. 1440
  32. Bodea, pp. 79, 297–298, 309; Dimitrescu, p. 66; Iorga, pp. 176–177; Isar, pp. 1436–1437; Nistor, pp. 531, 534; Pocitan Ploeșteanu, pp. 25–26
  33. Xenopol, pp. 236–237. See also Isar, p. 1436
  34. Bodea, pp. 78–80, 82, 85
  35. Bodea, p. 83; Stino, p. 85
  36. Marian Dulă, "Francmasoneria și Biserica", in Revista Nouă, Nr. 3/2011, p. 63
  37. Bodea, pp. 50–51
  38. Bodea, p. 80
  39. Pocitan Ploeșteanu, p. 26. See also Iorga, pp. 178–179
  40. Iorga, p. 179
  41. Bodea, pp. 114
  42. Iorga, pp. 185–187
  43. Iorga, pp. 182–186
  44. Bodea, p. 268
  45. Bodea, pp. 90–91. See also Isar, p. 1437
  46. Bodea, pp. 91–94. See also Isar, pp. 1437–1439
  47. Bodea, pp. 91–94
  48. Gh. Ungureanu, "Framîntări social-politice premergătoare mișcării revoluționare din 1848 în Moldova", in Studii. Revistă de Istorie, Nr. 3/1958, p. 19. See also Ghibănescu (1915), p. 373
  49. Isar, p. 1442
  50. Nistor, p. 535
  51. Iorga, p. 186
  52. Ichim, pp. 318–319, 325
  53. Dimitrescu, pp. 66–67
  54. Dimitrescu, pp. 66–67; Grigorescu, p. 257; Ichim, pp. 318–319
  55. Rosetti, p. 692
  56. Iorga, pp. 179–181
  57. Pocitan Ploeșteanu, p. 83
  58. Nistor, pp. 529, 531
  59. Gh. Amarandei, "Vechi instituții culturale dorohoiene", in Hierasus. Anuar '78, 1979, p. 414
  60. Ghibănescu (1929), p. 36
  61. Iorga, pp. 175–176, 180
  62. Isar, pp. 1441–1442
  63. Rosetti, pp. 692–693
  64. Nistor, pp. 534–535. See also Xenopol, pp. 332–335
  65. Iftimi & Iftimi, pp. 97–98, 100–102
  66. Isar, pp. 1440–1441
  67. Iorga, p. 187
  68. Iorga, pp. 179–180
  69. N. Petrașcu, Scriitori români contemporani, I: Vasile Alecsandri, pp. 35–36. Bucharest: Tipografia Bucovina I. E. Torouțiu, 1930. OCLC 65579046
  70. Isar, p. 1441
  71. Rosetti, pp. 690–693
  72. Iorga, p. 181
  73. Rosetti, p. 693
  74. Rosetti, pp. 693, 885
  75. Bîrzu, p. 104
  76. Rosetti, p. 885
  77. Bîrzu, pp. 104–105
  78. Rosetti, p. 897
  79. Iorga, pp. 180–182
  80. Timotei Ionescu, Рeспȣnсꙋ̆ лa пetiцiȣnea Sf-saлe monaхȣлȣĭ Sofрonie Вaрnaвꙋ̆. Iași: Tiparĭul Tribuneĭ Romăne, 1862
  81. Melchisedec Ștefănescu, "Biseric'a Ortodoxa si Calindariulu", in Biseric'a si Scól'a, Nr. 28/1882, p. 290
  82. Ioan C. Filitti, Biserica Sf. Dumitru din București (Strada Carol), p. 22. Bucharest: Tipografia Cărților Bisericești, 1932
  83. Bogdan-Duică, pp. 69–70
  84. Iorga, p. 182
  85. Iorga, pp. 181–182
  86. Antonovici, p. XIV
  87. Antonovici, pp. XIV–XV
  88. Loeb, pp. 298–299
  89. "D–luĭ Redactore alŭ d̦iaruluĭ Românulŭ", in Romanulu, January 1–3, 1868, p. 3. Isar (p. 1442) proposes December 26
  90. "Bucurescĭ 28 Îndrea 1867/9 Cărindariŭ 1868", in Romanulu, December 25–29, 1868, p. 1
  91. Loeb, pp. 167–168, 298–299
  92. Loeb, pp. 167–168, 298–300
  93. Loeb, p. 300
  94. Loeb, p. 167
  95. "Romani'a. Adunarea Societâtiei Transilvani'a procesu-vorbale (Urmare.)", in Federatiunea, Nr. 28/1868, p. 108
  96. Nicolae Liu, "Cartea și biblioteca, mijloace de cunoaștere și de apropiere în istoria relațiilor româno-franceze", in Revista de Istorie, Nr. 3/1985, pp. 293, 299

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