Ferdinand I of Romania
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| Ferdinand I | |
| King of the Romanians | |
| Reign | 10 October [O.S. 27 September] 1914-20 July 1927 |
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| Full name | Ferdinand Victor Albert Meinrad of Hohenzollern |
| Born | 24 August 1865 |
| Birthplace | Sigmaringen, Germany |
| Died | 20 July 1927 (aged 61) |
| Place of death | Sinaia, Romania |
| Buried | Curtea de Argeş, Romania |
| Predecessor | Carol I |
| Successor | Mihai I |
| Consort | Queen Maria (Marie of Edinburgh) |
| Issue | Prince Carol Elisabeth, Queen of Greece Marie, Queen of Yugoslavia Prince Nicholas Ileana, Archduchess Anton of Austria Prince Mircea |
| Royal House | Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen |
| Father | Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen |
| Mother | Antónia of Portugal and Kohary |
Ferdinand I (August 24, 1865 – July 20, 1927) was the King of the Romanians from October 10, 1914 until his death.
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[edit] Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Crown Prince of Romania
Born in Sigmaringen in southwestern Germany, the Roman Catholic Prince Ferdinand of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen was a son of Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and princess Antonia of Portugal and Kohary (1845-1913), daughter of Queen Maria II and her consort, Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha of Kohary, himself from that Slovakian-originated family.
Following the renunciations of his father and elder brother Prince Wilhelm of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, young Ferdinand became the heir to the throne of his childless uncle, King Carol I of Romania in November 1888. The Romanian government did not require his conversion to Eastern Orthodoxy from Catholicism, allowing him to continue with his born creed, but it was required that his children be raised Orthodox, then the state religion of Romania.
Ferdinand's mother's first cousin Ferdinand I of Bulgaria, originally a prince of Kohary, sat on the throne of the neighboring Bulgaria since 1889 and was to become the greatest opponent of the kingdom of his Romanian cousins. The neighboring Emperor Francis Joseph, monarch of Austria-Hungary and as such, ruler of Transylvania, a province with a clear ethnic Romanian majority, was Ferdinand's grandmother's first cousin.
In 1893, Crown Prince Ferdinand married his distant cousin, Princess Marie of Edinburgh, daughter of Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh and the Orthodox Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna of Russia. Marie and Ferdinand were third cousins in descent from Franz Frederick Anton, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. Marie's paternal grandparents were Victoria of the United Kingdom and Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Her maternal grandparents were Alexander II of Russia and Marie of Hesse and by Rhine. The reigning Emperor of the neighboring Russia was Marie's first cousin Nicholas II.
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Their marriage produced three sons (one of whom Mircea died in infancy) and three daughters, his wife being reportedly adulterous in later stages of the marriage, so Mircea is surmised children of Barbu Ştirbey. Ferdinand reportedly wanted to avoid scandal and did not repudiate the legal paternity.
[edit] King of Romania
Ferdinand succeeded his uncle as King of Romania on 10 October 1914, reigning until his death on 20 July 1927.
[edit] World War I
Though a member of a cadet branch of Germany's ruling Hohenzollern imperial family, Ferdinand presided over his country's entry into World War I on the side of the Triple Entente powers against the Central Powers on August 27, 1916. Thus he gained the nickname the Loyal, respecting his oath when sworn in before the Romanian Parliament in 1914:
| “ | I will reign as a good Romanian. | ” |
Also as a consequence of this "betrayal" of his German roots, the Kaiser Wilhelm II had his name erased from the Hohenzollern House register.
Despite the setbacks after the entry into war, when Dobruja and Wallachia were occupied by the Central Powers, Romania fought on in 1917 and stopped the German advance into Moldavia. When the Bolsheviks sued for peace in 1918, Romania was surrounded by the Central Powers and forced to conclude the Treaty of Bucharest, 1918. However, Ferdinand refused to sign the treaty. When the Allied advance on the Thessaloniki front knocked Bulgaria out of the war, Ferdinand ordered the re-mobilization of the Romanian Army and Romania re-entered the war on the Triple Entente side.
The outcome of Romania's war effort was the union of Bessarabia, Bukovina and Transylvania with the Kingdom of Romania in 1918. Ferdinand became the ruler of a greatly enlarged Romanian state in 1918-1920 following the Entente's victory over the Central Powers, a war between the Kingdom of Romania and the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and the civil war in Russia, and was crowned King of Romania in a spectacular ceremony on October 15, 1922 at the historic princely seat of Alba Iulia in Transilvania.
[edit] After the war
Domestic political life during his reign was dominated by the conservative National Liberal party led by the brothers Ion and Vintilă Brătianu. The acquisition of Transylvania ironically enlarged the electoral base of the opposition, whose principal parties united in January 1925-October 1926 to form the National Peasant Party.
Ferdinand died in 1927, and was succeeded by his grandson Michael I, under a regency. The regency had three members, one of whom was Ferdinand's second son, Prince Nicholas.
[edit] Ancestry
| Styles of King Ferdinand I of Romania |
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| Reference style | His Majesty |
| Spoken style | Your Majesty |
| Alternative style | Sir |
| Ferdinand I, King of Romania | Father: Leopold, Prince of Hohenzollern |
Paternal Grandfather: Karl Anton, Prince of Hohenzollern |
Paternal Great-Grandfather: Karl, Prince of Hohenzollern |
| Paternal Great-Grandmother: Marie Antoinette Murat |
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| Paternal Grandmother: Josephine of Baden |
Paternal Great-Grandfather: Karl, Grand Duke of Baden |
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| Paternal Great-Grandmother: Stéphanie de Beauharnais |
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| Mother: Antonia of Portugal |
Maternal Grandfather: Ferdinand II of Portugal |
Maternal Great-Grandfather: Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha |
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| Maternal Great-Grandmother: Maria Antonia Koháry de Csábrág |
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| Maternal Grandmother: Maria II of Portugal |
Maternal Great-Grandfather: Pedro I of Brazil |
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| Maternal Great-Grandmother: Maria Leopoldina of Austria |
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- (Romanian) Wolbe, Eugen:Ferdinand I - Întemeietorul României Mari (Ferdinand I, founder of Greater Romania), Humanitas, 2006.
[edit] External links
The Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ferdinand I of Romania.- A short biography mainly about his role in WW1
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Ferdinand I of Romania
Cadet branch of the House of Hohenzollern
Born: August 24 1865 Died: July 20 1927 |
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| Regnal titles | ||
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| Preceded by Carol I |
King of Romania 1914-1927 |
Succeeded by Michael I |
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