- Elena Văcărescu
Elena Văcărescu or Hélène Vacaresco (
September 21 1864 ,Bucharest -February 17 1947 ,Paris ) was aRomania n-French writer, twice a laureate of theAcadémie française .Life
Through her father,
Ioan Văcărescu , she descended from a long line ofboyar s ofWallachia (theVăcărescu family ), includingIenăchiţă Văcărescu , thepoet who wrote the firstRomanian grammar . She was also a granddaughter of Romanian poetIancu Văcărescu . Through her mother, Eufrosina Fălcoianu, she descended from the Fălcoianu family, a prominent group in the times of PrinceMichael the Brave .She spent most of her youth on the Văcărescu estate near
Târgovişte . Elena first got acquainted with theEnglish literature through her English governess, Miss Allan. She also studiedFrench literature in Paris, where she metVictor Hugo , whom she later mentioned in her memoirs. She attended courses of philosophy, aesthetics and history, and also studied poetry under the guidance ofSully Prudhomme .Another influence on her early life thwas the
Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878 that also involved Romania - the country declared independence from theOttoman Empire , and joinedImperial Russia 's camp. Elena's father fought in the war, experience which influenced her first book (published in 1886).The meeting that changed her life was that wi
Elisabeth of Wied , Queen of Romania, wife of King Carol I. The Queen invited her to the palace in 1888. Interested in Elena Văcărescu's literary achievements, she became much more interested in the person of the poet. Having not yet recovered from the death of her only daughter in 1874, Elizabeth transferred all her maternal love on Elena.In 1889, due to the lack of heirs to the Romanian throne, the King had adopted his nephew Ferdinand of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen who, due to his loneliness in a strange country, grew close to Elena, fell in love with her, and eventually expressed the desire to marry her. But, according to the
1866 Constitution of Romania , the heir to the throne was not allowed to marry a Romanian. The result of the affair was that the Queen (who had encouraged the romance) was exiled toNeuwied for two years, Elena was exiled to Paris for life, while Ferdinand was sent off in search for a new bride (which he eventually found in Marie of Edinburgh).Văcărescu was the Substitute Delegate to the
League of Nations from 1922 to 1924. She was a permanent delegate from 1925 to 1926. She was again a Substite Delegate to the League of Nations from 1926 to 1938. She was the only woman to serve with the rank of ambassador (permanent delegate) in the history of the League of Nations.In 1925 she was welcomed as a member of the Romanian Academy. She translated into French, works of Romanian poets such as
Mihai Eminescu ,Lucian Blaga ,Octavian Goga ,George Topîrceanu ,Ion Minulescu andIon Vinea .Just before her death, Văcărescu was a member of the
Gheorghe Tătărescu -headed Romanian delegation to the Paris Peace Conference at the end ofWorld War II . She is interred in the Văcărescu family crypt in theBellu cemetery in Bucharest.Published books
Original poetry
*"Chants d'Aurore" (1886)
*"L'âme sereine" (1896)
*"Lueurs et Flammes" (1903)
*"Le Jardin passioné" (1908)
*"La Dormeuse éveillée" (1914)Folklore themes interpreted
*Le Rhapsode de la Dâmboviţa (1889)
*"Nuits d'Orient" (1907)
*"Dans l'or du soir" (1927)Novels
*"Amor vincit" (1908)
*"Le Sortilege" (1911)Memoirs
*"Memorial sur le mode mineur" (1945)
*"Le Roman de ma vie"Theatre
*"Stana" (1904)
*"Pe urma dragostei"
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.