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Nicolae Bălcescu's Propaganda in England: His Meetings with Cobden and Palmerston

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

E. D. Tappe*
Affiliation:
University of London

Extract

Propaganda in England on behalf of the Rumanian exiles of 1848 is chiefly associated with the name of Dumitru Brătianu. But the revolutionary politician and historical scholar, Nicolae Bălcescu, also played a part in it. His activities, which are here studied on the basis of the correspondence published by his friend, Ion Ghica (the first Ambassador of the Kingdom of Rumania in London), are especially interesting because they brought him into contact with Cobden and Palmerston.

Bălcescu had been one of the leaders of the 1848 revolution in Wallachia. After his mission to the Hungarian revolutionary government, he escaped from Transylvania and, coming by Pest and Vienna, reached Paris on October 16, 1849. Within a few days he had seen the other Rumanian émigrés there, and on October 26 he suggested to Ion Ghica, who was in exile at Constantinople, that he ask on his behalf for a post as an attache or secretary at the Turkish Embassy in London.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1954

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References

1 Ion Ghica, Amintiri din Pribegia după 1848.

2 See “Carpathinus,” “1848 and Roumanian Unification,” Slavonic and East European Review, XXVI, 416-19.

3 Al. G. Golescu.

4 The Polish general, M. Czaikowski (later known as Sadie Pasha).