- S****̦a, and
Stourza (also
known as
Muklis Pasha,
George Mukhlis, and
Beizadea Vițel; May 11, 1821 –
January 26, 1901), was a Moldavian,
later Romanian...
-
Begzada (Kurdish),
Beyzade (Turkish), and Begzadići (Slavic),
Beizadea (Romanian),
Begzadi (female) "Bəyzadə" (Azerbaijani) are
titles given within the...
- at the Iași Conservatory. Harţă Răzeşul (1872)
Hatmanul Baltag (1884)
Beizadea Epaminonda (1885) Fata răzeşului (1885)
Petru Rareş (1889)
Violin Concerto...
- Phanariotes"),
Editura Dacia, Cluj-Napoca, 1974; glossary; pp. 308-323 "
beizadea". Dicționarul
explicativ al
limbii române (in Romanian).
Academia Română...
- beç) bei "guvernor" (<
Turkish bey)
belea "misfortune" (<
Turkish bela)
beizadea "son of gentle" (<
Turkish beyzade) boi "to paint" (<
Turkish boy) bre...
- France, he
returned to
Wallachia during his father's
princely mandate, as a
Beizadea and
aspiring politician.
Fleeing his
country during the
Crimean War, he...
-
continued to
parade its o****nce—in late 1817, Caradja's first-born son,
Beizadea Konstantinos,
created a stir by
driving around in a deer-drawn sled which...
- son was killed. Later, one of
Constantin Brâncoveanu's sons,
Constantin Beizadea,
replaced the
wooden cross with one of stone,
still preserved, with an...
-
became fluent in
Ottoman Turkish in Istanbul,
where he also
befriended Beizadea Dimitrie Cantemir. In 1711,
following the
Pruth River Campaign, the Cantemirs...
-
issued do****ents
formally addressing the
newly adopted Sașa as
Principe or
Beizadea ("Prince").
Among those who
suggest that Cuza
intended to make Sașa his...