Alexandru Papadopol-Calimah | |
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Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Principality of Romania | |
In office October 17, 1865 – February 10, 1866 | |
Monarch | Alexandru Ioan Cuza |
Prime Minister | Nicolae Crețulescu |
Preceded by | Nicolae Rosetti-Bălănescu |
Succeeded by | Ion Ghica |
Minister of Culture and Public Instruction | |
In office November 16 – November 24, 1868 | |
Monarch | Carol I |
Prime Minister | Dimitrie Ghica |
Preceded by | Dimitrie Gusti |
Succeeded by | Alexandru Crețescu |
Personal details | |
Born | Tecuci, Moldavia | January 15, 1833
Died | June 6, 1898 Tecuci, Kingdom of Romania | (aged 65)
Political party | National Party Junimea Conservative Party |
Spouse | Amelia Plitos |
Relations | Scarlat Callimachi (grandfather) Constantine Mourouzis (uncle) Alexandros Kallimachis (uncle) |
Children | Elena Papadopol-Calimah Paul Papadopol-Calimah |
Occupation | Civil servant, jurist, historian, philologist, journalist, landowner |
Alexandru Papadopol-Calimah (with spelling variants Papadopolu, Papadopulo, Papadopul, as well as Callimach, Callimac, and Callimachi; January 15, 1833 – June 18, 1898) was a Moldavian-born Romanian historian, jurist, and journalist, who served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Culture of the Principality of Romania. As a maternal member of the Callimachi family, he had high aristocratic origins, but was a commoner on his father's side; he spent most of his life in the Moldavian town of Tecuci, whose history was a focus of his academic activity. He joined the Moldavian civil service in 1855, as a Spatharios in service to Prince Grigore Alexandru Ghica, and participated in applying Ghica's reforms. Papadopol-Calimah consequently discarded his Greek-and-Hellenized background to become an exponent of Romanian nationalism, supporting a political unification between Moldavia and Wallachia, which came about in 1859. He first served in the unified administration established by Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza, rising from Prefect to State Council member, then to cabinet minister. Throughout his career, he remained closely aligned with Vasile Alecsandri and Mihail Kogălniceanu, and later also with Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu.
Papadopol-Calimah's position as head of Foreign Affairs (1865–1866) saw attempts to break the Principality farther away from the Ottoman Empire, but also witnessed a final crisis of the Cuza regime. He opposed the "monstrous coalition" which deposed Cuza in February 1866, and considered withdrawing from politics altogether. He eventually returned to serve in the Assembly of Deputies as a perennial representative of Tecuci County—moving from left-wing Cuzism to a right-wing conservative position, fully consolidated when he became a follower of the Junimea club. During this transition, Papadopol-Calimah returned as Minister of Culture, serving as such for only eight days in 1868. He was fully reconciled with Domnitor Carol I in the 1870s, endorsing his establishment of a Romanian Kingdom, and following Junimea into the larger Conservative Party.
Known in the 1860s as one of Romania's first legal historians, and a co-author of the first Romanian Civil Code, Papadopol-Calimah diversified his scholarly contributions in the 1870s and '80s, when he was inducted by the Romanian Academy. His work is recognized as overall well researched and aesthetically pleasing, but also tinged by controversy regarding their cultural importance and their heavy reliance on other authors—allegedly, to the point of plagiarism. Papadopol-Calimah was a biographer, genealogist, medievalist, social historian, philologist and classical scholar, with pioneering contributions such as a sourcebook on the Dacians and their history. His promised work of political history explaining Cuza's reign never materialized, but he left manuscript memoirs covering that same period.