- Ion I. C. Brătianu
Infobox_Prime Minister
name =Ion (Ionel) I. C. Brătianu
nationality =
small
imagesize =170px
caption =
order =Prime Minister of Romania
term_start =9 January 1909 –10 January 1911 16 January 1914 –9 February 1918 14 December 1918 –1 October 1919 17 January 1922 –30 March 1926 22 June 1927
term_end =24 November 1927
vicepresident =
deputy =
predecessor =Dimitrie Alexandru Sturdza Titu Maiorescu Constantin Coandă Take Ionescu Barbu Ştirbey
successor =Petre P. Carp Alexandru Averescu Artur Văitoianu Alexandru Averescu Vintilă Brătianu
birth_date =birth date|1864|8|20|mf=y
birth_place =Ştefăneşti,Romania
death_date =death date and age|1927|11|24|1864|8|20|mf=y
death_place =Bucharest ,Romania
constituency =
party =National Liberal Party
spouse =Maria Moruzi
Eliza Ştirbey
profession =engineer
religion =Romanian Orthodox
footnotes =|Ion I. C. Brătianu or Ionel Brătianu (
August 20 ,1864 —November 24 ,1927 ) was aRomania n politician, leader of the National Liberal Party (PNL), thePrime Minister of Romania for five terms, and Foreign Minister on several occasions; he was the eldest son of statesman and PNL leaderIon Brătianu , the brother of Vintilă andDinu Brătianu , and the father ofGheorghe I. Brătianu . Ion I. C. Brătianu's political activities afterWorld War I , including part of his third and fourth term, saw the unification of theOld Romanian Kingdom withTransylvania ,Bukovina andBessarabia ("see:Greater Romania "). In 1923, he was elected an honorary member of theRomanian Academy .Biography
Early life
Born on his father's estate of "Florica", in Ştefăneşti,
Argeş County , he completed his secondary education at theSaint Sava National College inBucharest (1882), and volunteered for theRomanian Army 'sartillery - serving for six months before becoming aSecond lieutenant . During his military service, Brătianu attended classes ofengineering . He left forParis in 1883, and attended theCollège Sainte-Barbe , then took classes (without being a registered student) at theÉcole Polytechnique (1884-1889). Brătianu received an engineer's diploma, but not a licence to practice.In 1889, he returned to the country and was assigned orders by the Army, being promoted to
Lieutenant . Later in that year, he joined the Romanian Railways as an engineer, working under the leadership ofAnghel Saligny .Early politics
He became a member of the PNL in 1895, the same year he ran in elections and was elected to the
Parliament of Romania by the Ist College (of the landed gentry) inGorj County . In early 1899, he was in the majority that voted in favor of the entry of former members of theRomanian Social-Democratic Workers' Party into the PNL. He served as Minister of Public Works (March 31 ,1897 -March 30 ,1899 ;February 14 ,1901 -July 18 ,1902 ) and Minister of the Interior (March 12 ,1907 -December 27 ,1908 ) - the latter assignment was prompted by the effects of the 1907 Peasants' Revolt. In 1909, he was elected head of the National Liberals, a position he was to hold until his death; he first became Prime Minister in January 1909, and kept the office untilJanuary 10 ,1911 .Brătianu's policies moved the PNL towards an acceptance of
land reform , but deliberations over the project continued until afterWorld War I , with Brătianu himself showing reserves over projects that aimed to replace the1866 Constitution of Romania with a fully democratic one. In 1913, he convinced his party to accept a moderate version of land reform, as well as the creation of a single electoral college - a measure which would have given more accurate representation to the peasant majority. Over the following months, these policies were approved on principle by King Carol I, and even by the Conservative Party.World War I
The outbreak of the world conflict in 1914 brought a major polemic in Romanian society. The Conservatives oscillated between a neutral stance and participation alongside the
Central Powers (to which Romania had committed itself); instead, the PNL called for an alignment with the Entente Forces. Despite the fact that Brătianu was again Prime Minister fromJanuary 16 ,1914 toFebruary 9 ,1918 , his policies in this respect were procrastinated. Initially, a decision on the matter was blocked by King Carol, until his death in October 1914. Afterwards, with the ascension of Ferdinand I (who was to remain a political ally of Brătianu for the rest of his life), the government started secret negotiations with the Entente, meant to condition Romania's participation with the granting of Austro-Hungarian lands with a majority Romanian population. In August 1916, Romania declared war on Austria-Hungary.Minor advances into Transylvania were met with a Central Powers counter-offensive that swept through
Oltenia andWallachia , occupiedBucharest , and forced all governmental structures to take refuge inIaşi . WhileMoldavia remained the only region under Romanian administration and the country increased its reliance onImperial Russia - and then on theRussian Provisional Government , the Romanian Army was able to block further Central Powers' offensives in the battles of Mărăşeşti, Mărăşti, and Oituz. This situation was ended by theOctober Revolution in Russia and theTreaty of Brest-Litovsk between theBolshevik government and the Central Powers: Romania saw itself without reinforcements, agreed to anarmistice , and then signed the Treaty of Bucharest in May 1918.In the meantime, Brătianu's had been replaced with the crisis government of General
Alexandru Averescu , and this was soon followed byAlexandru Marghiloman 's (chosen to negotiate the peace, as theGerman Empire was thought to be friendly towards Marghiloman). Nonetheless, Romania never did ratify the signed treaty, and denounced it in October 1918, immediately re-entering the conflict on the Entente's side. In November, the Compiègne armistice with Germany removed all legal value of the Bucharest Treaty.Third cabinet and support for Averescu
The spectre of socialist agitation, which had led to incidents such as a major
strike action in Bucharest in December 1918, brought about the fall of theConstantin Coandă cabinet, and Brătianu again occupied the position. He led the Romanian delegation to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, where he was a vocal supporter of the union with Transylvania andBukovina . Although successful in the negotiations for both, he resigned in 1919 since he would not accept a compromise on the disputed territories inhabited byRomanians that had become part of theKingdom of Yugoslavia . However, Romania had registered other successes - notably, Russia's exit from the war had led to the union withBessarabia (theMoldavian Democratic Republic ).Soon, the PNL found itself threatened by the political realities of a
Greater Romania . The policy of alliances of theRomanian National Party (a mainly Transylvanian group) had brought the rapid formation of the cabinet ofAlexandru Vaida-Voevod in December 1919; this cabinet, and especially itsPeasants' Party group, supported a radical version of theland reform , leading to endless debates in parliament. At the same time, the People's Party, a new and strong populist movement under General Averescu, had begun a campaign for both an urgent land reform and for bringing about the prosecution of PNL politicians as agents of the economic hardships. Faced with a choice, Brătianu approached Averescu and offered PNL support for a People's Party cabinet in return for moderation.Fourth and fifth cabinet
The PNL retreated its backing after finding a more convenient option in a
Take Ionescu -led cabinet, and Brătianu became Prime Minister again fromJanuary 17 ,1922 toMarch 30 ,1926 . The fourth Brătianu cabinet adopted the constitution of 1923, a document which confirmeduniversal suffrage andminority rights as first defined by the laws of 1918; because of the highly centralised model it favored, it drew suspicion from the Transylvanian politicians that it served the goal of a National Liberal-dominated Old Kingdom (especially after the constitution was approved of through a simple vote in Parliament). At the same time, the PNL cabinet began carrying out a national-level land reform.As the elections of 1926 confirmed the rise of the
National Peasants' Party (created as the union of the Romanian National and Peasants' parties), King Ferdinand again called on Averescu to form the government. By that moment, the general was thought by the PNL to be a convenient agent of its own policies, but Averescu's negotiations for a return of the disinherited Prince Carol after his father's imminent death made Brătianu switch his support to a broad coalition government underBarbu Ştirbey .On
June 21 ,1927 , Brătianu returned with his fifth and final cabinet. He died inBucharest , from complications oflaryngitis , and was replaced as Prime Minister by his brotherVintilă Brătianu until the calling of elections.External links
* [http://www.firstworldwar.com/bio/bratianu.htm Ion I.C. Brătianu's biography at Firstworldwar.com]
* [http://www.punctecardinale.ro/oct_2004/oct_2004_16.html Florian Bichir, "Alegerile de altădată"] (an account of the very first universal elections in Romania)
* [http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/14-9.htm Ioan Scurtu, "Personalitatea lui Ion I. C. Brătianu"]
*Constantin Xeni , [http://www.itcnet.ro/history/archive/mi2001/current7/mi5.htm "Ion I. C. Brătianu"] , in "Magazin Istoric", July 2001 (a rather critical essay written by a Conservative contemporary of Brătianu)
* [http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/2-1.htm Ion I. C. Brătianu on the Paris Peace Conference (December 1919)]
* [http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/4-7.htm National Liberal Party program of January 1922]
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