Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
people/1670s

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Nicholas Mavrocordatos

Phanariote Prince of Wallachia (1670–1730)

Nicholas Mavrocordatos

Summary

Phanariote Prince of Wallachia (1670–1730)

FieldValue
nameNicholas Mavrocordatos
imageNicolaeMavrocordat.gif
captionPortrait by unknown, early 18th century
successionPrince of Moldavia
(1st reign)
reign125 January – 21 November 1710
predecessor1Mihai Racoviță
successor1Dimitrie Cantemir
succession2Prince of Moldavia
(2nd reign)
reign28 November 1711 – 25 December 1715
predecessor2John Mavrocordatos
successor2Mihai Racoviță
succession3Prince of Wallachia
(1st reign)
reign326 December 1715 – 25 November 1716
predecessor3Ștefan Cantacuzino
successor3John Mavrocordatos
succession4Prince of Wallachia
(2nd reign)
reign4March 1719 – 3 September 1730
predecessor4John Mavrocordatos
successor4Constantine Mavrocordatos
spouse* Casandra Cantacuzino
issueConstantine and John
houseMavrocordatos
fatherAlexander Mavrocordatos
motherSoultana Chrusoskolaiou
birth_date3 May 1670
birth_placeConstantinople, Ottoman Empire
death_date
death_placeBucharest, Wallachia
religionOrthodox

(1st reign) (2nd reign) (1st reign) (2nd reign)

  • Pulcheria Tzouki
  • Smaranda Stavropoleos | house-type =

Nicholas Mavrocordatos (, ; May 3, 1670September 3, 1730) was a Greek member of the Mavrocordatos family, Grand Dragoman to the Divan (1697), and consequently the first Phanariot Hospodar of the Danubian Principalities, Prince of Moldavia, and Prince of Wallachia (both on two occasions). He was succeeded as Grand Dragoman (1709) by his brother John Mavrocordato (Ioan), who was for a short while hospodar in both Wallachia and Moldavia.

Reigns

Imperial]] gazette of the time.

Mavrocordatos was born in Constantinople. Deposed as Prince (Hospodar & Voievode) of Moldavia in favor of Dimitrie Cantemir, owing to the suspicions of his Ottoman overlord, Sultan Ahmed III, he was restored in 1711 (after Cantemir's rebellion during the Russo-Turkish War of 1710-1711), and, for this second rule, is considered the first in a line of Phanariotes in Moldavia (indicating that the election by the traditional Moldavian council of boyars was no longer enforced).

Soon afterwards, he was replaced by Mihai Racoviță and became ruler of Wallachia, being thus the first Phanariot in that country – after the Porte decided to regulate the same system following the rebellion of Ștefan Cantacuzino. According to Anton Maria Del Chiaro, the Florentine secretary to Constantin Brâncoveanu (predecessor and rival of Ștefan Cantacuzino), Mavrocordatos tortured and otherwise persecuted Wallachian boyars who had supported the Cantacuzinos, and also ordered the execution of Ștefan's son. He was also noted for awarding tax exemptions to the majority of high-ranking boyars, as one of the first rulers to concede to the growth of monetary economy and the decay of manorialism.

In 1716, during the Austro-Turkish War, Mavrocordatos attempted to resist Habsburg invasion, but was betrayed by his boyars and had to flee to the Ottoman-held town of Rousse. He returned to Bucharest with Ottoman assistance, and executed a number of his adversaries, including Lupu Costachi, but was deposed by the troops of Prince Eugene of Savoy after the raid on Bucharest, and was held prisoner in Braşov and Sibiu.

Replaced by his brother John until 1719, he was restored after the Peace of Passarowitz through which the country lost its westernmost part, Oltenia, to the Habsburgs; Nicholas' second ascension followed a period of major distress, including a bubonic plague outbreak and a major fire in Bucharest (it is possible that John himself had died as a result of the epidemic). Prince Nicholas died while in office in Bucharest; he was succeeded as prince of Wallachia in 1730 by his son Constantine Mavrocordatos, who would rule Wallachia six times and Moldavia five times until 1769.

Through his mother, Soultana Chrysoskolaiou, who was a member of the Greek Phanariot family Chrisoscoleos, Mavrocordatos was distantly related to Alexandru Lăpușneanu.

Cultural achievements

thumb|upright|left|Engraving of Nicholas Mavrocordatos by [[Johann Georg Wolfgang]], 1721 Nicholas Mavrocordatos was the first in a line of rulers appointed directly by the Porte. He introduced Greek manners, the Greek language and Greek costume, and set up a splendid court on the Byzantine model. At the same time, Mavrocordatos was influenced by the Age of Enlightenment, the founder of libraries, the builder of the monumental Văcărești Monastery and of the Stavropoleos Church, and himself the author of an original work entitled Peri kathekonton / Liber de Officiis (Bucharest, 1719). He wrote also the first Greek novel, Philotheou Parerga / The Leisures of Philotheos.

A polyglot, he surrounded himself with savants from several parts of Europe, including the Daniel de Fonseca and Stephan Bergler; his library was among the continent's most treasured. Mavrocordatos engaged in a correspondence with major religious figures of his time, including Jean Leclerc, William Wake, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Chrysanthus, Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem; the first volume written by an author from the Danubian Principalities to be published in England was Mavrocordatos', and it is during his last rule in Wallachia that a more intimate knowledge of politics and society in the Kingdom of Great Britain became evident in historical records kept by locals (the chronicler Radu Popescu recorded the accession of George II as King of Great Britain). He died in Bucharest, aged 60.

Image:Stavropoleos-evanghelie-1723-p02.pngPage two of the Holy and Godly Gospel Book (1723, now in the Stavropoleos Monastery library) printed during the reign of Nicholas Mavrocordatos. It shows the coat of arms of Moldavia (left) and Wallachia (right). Image:Stavropoleos Preziosi.jpg|Stavropoleos Church, in an 1868 lithograph by Amadeo Preziosi Image:Flickr - fusion-of-horizons - stavropoleos (273).jpg|Nicholas Mavrocordatos and family, votive painting in Stavropoleos Monastery

Literature

  • Constantin C. Giurescu, Istoria Bucureștilor. Din cele mai vechi timpuri pînă în zilele noastre. Ed. Pentru Literatură, Bucharest, 1966, p. 94-96.
  • Neagu Djuvara, Între Orient și Occident. Țările române la începutul epocii moderne. Humanitas, Bucharest, 1995, p. 31, 47f., 69, 92.
  • Paul Cernovodeanu, "București-Canterbury via Amesterdam" , in Magazin Istoric, September 1997.
  • Anton Maria Del Chiaro, Revoluțiile Valahiei .

References

References

  1. Irmscher, Johannes. (1999). "XII. Türk Tarih Kongresi : Ankara, 12–16 Eylül 1994 : Kongreye sunulan bildiriler.". [[Turkish Historical Society]].
  2. Mavrocordatos, Nicholas. (2017). "Φιλοθέου Πάρεργα". [[Filothei-Psychiko.
  3. "Nicolae Mavrocordat". Galeria Portretelor.
  4. {{Cite EB1911
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Nicholas Mavrocordatos — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report