Dincă Brătianu


Constantin Brătianu, also known as "Dincă", was a Vlach boyar and politician. He was the father of the Romanian Prime Ministers Dumitru Brătianu and Ion Brătianu.
There are different legends about the origin of the Brătianus. According especially to national liberal historians and politicians the female line of the family history goes back to the Vlădescu boyars of the Argeș County. By the end of the 18th century Constantin's father Iane Brătianu, a minor boyar, has married into the Vlădescu family. However, contrary to that, a certain Dr. Georgiyev, linguist at Oriental Academy of Vienna, claimed that Constantin Brătianu has been of Bulgarian descent and immigrated from Gorna Oryahovitsa into Wallachia not before the Russo-Turkish wars when Wallachia was temporarily occupied by the Russians. Following another Russo-Turkish war Wallachia was occupied again and the Organic Regulation was imposed there. Based on that Regulament the Russians installed a parliament-like assembly of boyars. From 1831 on Constantin Brătianu, meanwhile the wealthiest of all boyars of the county, represented Argeș in the Wallachian assembly. Additionally in 1835 he became the county administrator of Argeș and in 1839 the Wallachian prince Alexandru Dimitrie Ghica honored him with the rank of a clucer. Allegedly until that time Constantin Brătianu was "knowing neither how to write nor to read, barely even able to sign his name".
With his wife Anastasia Tigveanu, who died in 1838, Constantin Brătianu had three sons and four daughters. The oldest son became a general. Despite their boyaric origin, the two other sons founded the National Liberal Party to end the rule of the conservative boyar's party – at least until the moment, when Dumitru allied himself with the boyar's party to overthrow his brother Ion.

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