Alexandru Marghiloman
Alexandru Marghiloman | |
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Prime Minister of Romania | |
In office March 5, 1918 – October 23, 1918 | |
Monarch | Ferdinand I |
Preceded by | Alexandru Averescu |
Succeeded by | Constantin Coandă |
Personal details | |
Born |
July 4, 1854 Buzău, |
Died |
May 10, 1925 70) Buzău, Romania | (aged
Nationality | Romanian |
Political party | Conservative Party |
Spouse(s) | Elisa Știrbei |
Religion | Romanian Orthodox |
Alexandru Marghiloman (July 4, 1854 – May 10, 1925) was a Romanian conservative statesman who served for a short time in 1918 (March–October) as Prime Minister of Romania, and had a decisive role during World War I.
Early career
Born in Buzău, he entered the Saint Sava National College in Bucharest, and then studied Law in Paris. Marghiloman was elected to the Romanian Parliament in 1884, and joined the government in 1888.
A member of the Conservative Party, he supported cooperation with the German Empire and Austria-Hungary in the Triple Alliance, and, at the beginning of World War I, he favoured neutrality. Romania remained neutral until 1916, when she entered on the Allied side and this was the reason he refused a seat in the Ion Brătianu's liberal government.
After the Germans occupied Bucharest, he remained there as the president of the Romanian Red Cross, and acted as a mediator between the German occupation authorities and the Romanian population. He rejected the ideas of the German side of forming a parallel administration to King Ferdinand I's government that was moved to Iaşi.
Cabinet and later years
However, since Bolshevist Russia withdrew from the war and the Germans could occupy the rest of Romania, king Ferdinand requested Marghiloman to become a Prime Minister, hoping that with a pro-German Prime Minister it would be easier to make peace with the Germans, and knowing that Germany would consider the Western Front to be much more important.
Indeed, Marghiloman negotiated and signed a peace treaty (known as the Treaty of Bucharest) with the Central Powers on May 7, 1918, which proved to be very punitive and restrictive for Romania. However, this treaty was never ratified. Marghiloman's cabinet fell after the Compiègne armistice, and it was replaced quickly with the pro-Allied General Constantin Coandă on November 6 and re-entered the war against Germany on November 10, a day before the end of the war. Retreated from public life following the collapse of Conservative politicians in post-war Greater Romania, Marghiloman died in his native town.
Trivia
In his private life, Marghiloman was also an enthusiastic horse breeder: horses owned by him won the Romanian Derby 28 times. His large estate, the Albatros Villa in Buzău, was for a long time a meeting place for Conservative politicians.
Marghiloman gave his name to Marghiloman coffee, Turkish coffee boiled in rum.
References
- (Romanian) George D. Nicolescu, Parlamentul Român (1866–1901) ("Romanian Parliament (1866–1901)"), I. V. Socecu, Bucharest, 1903
- (Romanian) Mircea Dumitriu, "Alexandru Marghiloman, omul nemtilor sau omul providential?" ("Alexandru Marghiloman, the German's man or the man of providence?"), in România Liberă, October 13, 2007; accessed September 3, 2010
- (Romanian) "DOSARE DECLASIFICATE / Perchezitionarea premierului Marghiloman" ("Declassified files/Search of prime minister Marghiloman"), in Ziarul Financiar, January 29, 2009; accessed September 3, 2010
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