Roumania Past and Present
Post Tenebras Lux
There is no country in Europe which at the present time possesses greater interest for Englishmen than does the Kingdom of Roumania, and there is none with whose present state and past history, nay, with whose very geographical position, they are less familiar.
Only about nine years since Consul-General Green, the British representative there, reported to his Government as follows: 'Ignorance seems to extend even to the geographical position of Bucharest. It is not surprising that letters directed to the Roumanian capital should sometimes travel to India in search of Bokhara, but there can be no excuse for the issue of a writ of summons by one of the superior law courts of the British metropolis, directed to Bucharest in the Kingdom of Egypt, as I have known to happen.' The reader may perhaps attribute such mistakes as these to our insular ignorance of geography, or to the fact that the proverbial blindness of justice prevented her from consulting the map before issuing her process; but the fact remains, that notwithstanding the occurrence of a great war subsequent to the date above specified, which completely changed the map of Europe, wherein Roumania took a very prominent part and England assisted at the settlement, there are few intelligent readers in this country who could say off-hand where precisely Roumania is situated.
And yet, as already remarked, the country possesses an absorbing interest for us as a nation. Placed, to a large extent through English instrumentality, as an independent kingdom, of daily increasing influence, between Russia and Turkey, for whom she served for centuries as a bone of contention, she is now a formidable barrier against the aggressions of the stronger power upon her weaker neighbour, and it is satisfactory to reflect that, so far, the blood and money of England have not flowed in vain. Then, again, the question of the free navigation of the great stream that serves as her southern boundary is at present occupying the serious consideration of many leading European statesmen, and the solution of the Danubian difficulty will materially affect our trade with the whole of Eastern Europe; whilst the peaceable creation of a peasant proprietary in Roumania about sixteen years since, and the advantages which have accrued to her from this social and political reform, present features of peculiar interest for those who favour the establishment of a similar class of landholders in Ireland.
James Samuelson
---
JAMES SAMUELSON
PREFACE.
CONTENTS.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
CHAPTER I.
GEOGRAPHICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE.
CHAPTER II.
GEOGRAPHICAL—ARCHÆOLOGICAL.
CHAPTER III.
THE NAVIGATION OF THE DANUBE.
CHAPTER IV.
TOPOGRAPHICAL, ETC.
CHAPTER V.
TOPOGRAPHICAL—COMMERCIAL.
CHAPTER VI.
AGRICULTURAL AND PASTORAL—THE PEASANT PROPRIETARY OF ROUMANIA.
CHAPTER VII.
EDUCATIONAL—ETHNOGRAPHICAL.
CHAPTER VIII.
JUDICIAL AND PENAL.
CHAPTER IX.
FROM THE GETÆ (ABOUT 335 B.C.) TO THE CLOSE OF THE ROMAN DOMINATION IN DACIA TRAJANA (ABOUT A.D. 274).
CHAPTER X.
FROM THE EVACUATION OF DACIA BY AURELIAN (ABOUT 274 A.D.) TO THE END OF THE BARBARIAN RULE (ABOUT THE CLOSE OF THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY).
CHAPTER XI.
FROM THE FOUNDATION OF THE PRINCIPALITIES, BETWEEN THE MIDDLE OF THE THIRTEENTH AND OF THE FOURTEENTH CENTURIES TO THE ACCESSION OF MICHAEL THE BRAVE, A.D. 1593.
CHAPTER XII.
THE TIMES AND CAREER OF MICHAEL THE BRAVE.
CHAPTER XIII.
FROM THE DEATH OF MICHAEL THE BRAVE (A.D. 1601) TO THE DEPOSITION OF PRINCE COUZA (A.D. 1866).
CHAPTER XIV.
FROM THE DEPOSITION OF PRINCE COUZA (1866) TO THE CORONATION OF KING CHARLES (1881).
CHAPTER XV.
PRESENT ROUMANIAN LEADERS AND THEIR POLICY.
APPENDICES.
APPENDIX I.
APPENDIX II.
The 'Capitulations.'
APPENDIX III.
The Roumanian Constitution.
APPENDIX IV.
The Peasant Proprietary of Roumania.
APPENDIX V.
List of Works.
INDEX.
A.
B.
C
E.
G.
H.
L.
M.
P.
S.
T.
Z.
GENERAL LISTS OF WORKS
BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS.
MENTAL and POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY.
DICTIONARIES and OTHER BOOKS of REFERENCE.
ASTRONOMY and METEOROLOGY.
NATURAL HISTORY and PHYSICAL SCIENCE.
CHEMISTRY and PHYSIOLOGY.
The FINE ARTS and ILLUSTRATED EDITIONS.
RELIGIOUS and MORAL WORKS.
WORKS of FICTION.
POETRY and THE DRAMA.
WORKS of UTILITY and GENERAL INFORMATION.
INDEX.
FOOTNOTES: