Barbu Lăzăreanu

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Barbu Lăzăreanu
Barbu Lăzăreanu.jpg
Portrait of Barbu Lăzăreanu
Born
Avram "Bubi" Lazarovici, also rendered Bercu Leizerovici

(1881-10-05)October 5, 1881
DiedJanuary 19, 1957(1957-01-19) (aged 75)
Other namesAlex. Bucur, Arald, Barbou Lazareano, Barbu Lăzărescu, Bélé, Mathieu H. Rareșiu, Trubadur, Trubadurul
Academic background
Academic work
School or traditionMarxist historiography
Marxist literary criticism
Main interestsRomanian literature, Romanian folklore, historical linguistics, phonoaesthetics, labor history, history of medicine

Barbu Lăzăreanu (born Avram Lazarovici,[1] or Bercu Leizerovici,[2] also known as Barbou Lazareano[3] or Barbu Lăzărescu;[4] October 5, 1881 – January 19, 1957) was a Romanian literary historian, bibliographer, and left-wing activist. Of Romanian Jewish background, he became noted for both his social criticism and his lyrical pieces while still in high school, subsequently developing as a satirist and printing his own humorous magazine, Țivil-Cazon. Lăzăreanu's youthful sympathies veered toward the anarchist underground, prompting him to associate with Panait Mușoiu.

Lăzăreanu's socialist-and-anarchist advocacy also made him a target of the conservative establishment, which expelled him from the country in 1907. He spent five years studying at the École des Hautes Études in Paris, all the while remaining attacked to socialist organizations. He returned to Romania as a publicist, columnist, and workers' educator. During World War I, Lăzăreanu drifted leftward alongside the Social Democratic Party, joining the Socialist Party. He also earned the reputation of a highly focused literary researcher and biographer, noted as the editor of works by Ion Luca Caragiale and Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea. His series of monographs on Romanian literature was well received by other literary professionals, though his attention for detail and his political bias were both ridiculed.

By 1933, Lăzăreanu was a public critic of fascism, a fact which contributed to his persecution by the antisemitic far-right in the 1940s. He still managed to write and publish under the National Renaissance Front, but was afterwards marginalized. Having narrowly escaped a deportation to Transnistria and a likely death in 1942, he returned to public life after the 1944 Coup and subsequent democratization. He rose to prominence post-1948, under the Romanian communist regime, first as a rector of Ștefan Gheorghiu Academy, then as a member of the Romanian Academy and its Presidium.

Lăzăreanu spent his final decade as a decorated and lionized writer and political forerunner of the regime. As a librarian, he collected, preserved, and censored works left by Panait Istrati. He was also marginally involved in the orthographic reform. Lăzăreanu's final assignments included a steering position on the Jewish Democratic Committee, which functioned as a platform for anti-Zionism. His political activity was complemented by his son Alexandru, who had a high-ranking position in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Biography[]

Early life[]

The future author, primarily known in his early years as "Bubi" Lazarovici,[5] was born in Botoșani as the son of Herschel Lazarovici.[1] As later noted by Traian Săvulescu, his first home was the southern, poorer part of town, where Avram grew up "revolted by injustice and with a burning desire to rectify it."[6] He attended primary school and A. T. Laurian High School in his native town,[1] where he was benchmates with another literary man, the translator and critic Constantin Iordăchescu.[2] It was at this stage that he became acquainted with Marxism through his perusing of Contemporanul review and, as noted by his official obituary of 1957, making a name for himself as a "propagandist of such ideas."[7] His first contribution to the was taking part in a bakers' strike at Botoșani,[6] and, in early 1899, the Laurian High School expelled him for his socialist agitation.[1][8]

Lazarovici debuted as a poet in his own magazine, Victor Hugo,[1] where he also printed a manifesto in verse against aestheticism.[9] Only published as a single issue in 1902, this journal was named after the French poet, a "moving but solitary act of [Hugolian] veneration" in the Romanian landscape.[10] Lăzăreanu's first work in satirical prose was hosted by George Ranetti's paper, Zeflemeaua,[11][12] after which he became a regular contributor to the left-wing review România Muncitoare.[13] After Victor Hugo, he persisted in trying to establish a lasting newspaper of his own, putting out Gândul ("The Thought", 1902), then Inima și Mintea ("Heart and Mind", 1903).[14] By 1905, he was in Bucharest, co-opted by Constantin Mille to write for Adevărul, with a series of rhyming columns that he signed as "Trubadur".[15]

With his Romanian-sounding adoptive surname, Lăzăreanu had poems hosted in A. D. Xenopol's Arhiva of Iași.[16] Contemplative and rustic, such pieces brought him to the attention of A. C. Cuza, a traditionalist and antisemitic poet-doctrinaire, who was unaware of Lăzăreanu's Jewishness. Cuza traveled to Botoșani just to greet the "national troubadour", only to be informed that "it is the Jew's Lazarovici's boy [...] who is as shriveled as a raisin, and who looks at the moon like a somnambulist".[5] His other poetry included stanzas honoring those killed in the 1905 Russian Revolution, published in Viitorul Social of Iași.[17] Participating in socialist shows of solidarity with the Russian workers,[18] he was by then drawn into anarchist circles, and for a while co-publisher of Panait Mușoiu's newspaper, Revista Ideei.[19] As an ally of Mușoiu's, by 1907 he was tutoring Bucharest workers, giving them lessons in Romanian grammar and literature, and also "educating them politically".[15]

Țivil-Cazon, Issue 5, 1906. Cover art by Nicolae Petrescu Găină

In 1906, he founded the satirical weekly Țivil-Cazon ("Civilian-Conscript"),[20] for which he used the pseudonym "Bélé".[4] The magazine hosted the work of , Ioan Dragomirescu-Dragion, Leon Wechsler-Vero, and Victor Eftimiu,[21] who was also a pseudonymous co-editor. Eftimiu and Lăzăreanu's work for it included rhyming quatrains that parodied or mocked the more serious literary reviews.[22] Eftimiu noted, years later, that Bélé was "very talented".[23] Țivil-Cazon became the first Romanian journal of its kind to feature colored prints, and included artwork by Iosif Iser, Nicolae Petrescu Găină, and . Heavily inspired by Ion Luca Caragiale and his , it mainly targeted Romanian Army personnel, depicted as slow-witted and (especially if cavalry officers) as sex objects.[24]

Exile and return[]

Lăzăreanu was eventually deported from the country shortly after the 1907 peasants' revolt.[5][25][26] According to a detailed account of this incident, published in , Premier Dimitrie Sturdza had read Lăzăreanu's work in Zeflemeaua, and had decided to punish his insolence.[25] Săvulescu has it that Lăzăreanu "had merely helped the peasants" of Gorbănești petition King Carol I, and that this was read as "anarchist propaganda against throne and religion".[6] Lăzăreanu was allegedly arrested at ,[25] having suffered a nervous breakdown.[5] The expulsion was facilitated by Lăzăreanu's Jewish ethnicity: under the still-restrictive laws of the Romanian Kingdom, he was classified as heimatlos.[27]

From 1907 to 1912, he lived in France, where he was admitted by examination to the Paris-based École des Hautes Études. There, he took courses with Sylvain Lévi and Charles Diehl, and between 1908 and 1909 was a classmate of the future historian .[1] He was published in the French socialist press,[7] as well as, back home, in Christian Rakovski's Viitorul Social[28] and in Barbu Nemțeanu's Pagini Libere.[20] Lăzăreanu helped establish a socialist association of Romanian guest workers,[29] and, with fellow Botoșani exile , joined the Romanian socialist students' society in Paris.[30] On May 10, 1908 (Romania's royal holiday), he and the worker Radu Florescu directed an intentional protest against King Carol, later hosting and giving exposure to their fellow socialist exile, Rakovsky.[31] On May 28, 1910, Lăzăreanu stood on the "revolutionary jury" which "tried" the Romanian anarchist , suspected of being an agent provocateur. He deemed Reichmann not guilty.[32]

Upon his return to Romania, Lăzăreanu, sometimes passing himself off as "Matei Rareș", "Trubadurul", or "Alexandru B. Trudă",[33] was an editor at the magazines Înfrățirea, Viitorul Social, Lupta Zilnică, and Adevărul Literar. He was still a contributor to the left-wing dailies Adevărul and ,[1] and eventually also their cultural editor.[20] In 1915, using the pen name "Arald", he was featured in the pages of magazine.[4] Shortly before World War I, he was again involved in the Romanian labor movement. With I. C. Frimu of the Social Democratic Party (PSDR), he established a "workers' university" in Bucharest, where he then taught literature and the history of socialism.[34] His first book of literary portraits appeared in 1917, as Constantin Radovici, Agatha Bârsescu, Nora Marinescu.[1][35] Despite his growing reputation, Lăzăreanu, like other Jewish professionals, was barred from joining the Romanian Writers' Society.[5]

Lăzăreanu, noted for a while as a publisher of anti-war literature,[36] remained in German-occupied Bucharest after 1916. He was a member of the underground PSDR and guest speaker at its defiant Labor Day picnic (May 1, 1917),[37] and reportedly became a Leninist shortly after the October Revolution in Russia.[38] Meanwhile, writing for Scena review, usually as "Alex. Bucur" or "Mathieu H. Rareșiu",[39] he met and befriended writer I. Peltz, who recalled that his "little essays" on literature, "of greatest interest to the reading public", took up most of Lăzăreanu's time, preventing him from publishing his poetry. Peltz also recalls Lăzăreanu's satire of "the oligarchy", noting him as an "elegant polemicist" of "fine humor".[40] His tireless glossing of texts earned accolades from Perpessicius, who described Lăzăreanu as "all-knowing" and "without rival".[1] A posthumous reviewer, Marin Bucur, was unimpressed. He describes Lăzăreanu as a scholar who missed out on "the general layout", focused on documenting "infinitesimal" aspects of history, including "trifles" and "bromides".[41]

Cu privire la... period[]

Following the war and the creation of Greater Romania, Lăzăreanu maintained a profile in the labor and socialist movements. A speaker at the funeral of Marxist doyen Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea,[42] he was closely followed by agents of the Siguranța, who noted his association with labor organizer , "a very dangerous element".[43] Joining the postwar Socialist Party, he returned to his native region during the 1919 paper mill workers' strike, which Aroneanu assisted, and again during the 1920 commemoration of the Paris Commune.[44] Lăzăreanu also became editor of the Socialist Party organ, ,[1] putting out its cultural pages.[7] He still contributed biographies of socialist leaders as the newspaper became official organ of the new Romanian Communist Party (May 1921), before the both the party and newspaper were outlawed.[45] He also had contributions as a poet and scholar in the magazines Progresele Științei and Presa Dentară.[20] His other work appeared in Flacăra, Viața Românească, , Contimporanul, , , Adam, Luptătorul, Curierul, and Revista Idealistă.[1][46]

From 1919 to 1930, Lăzăreanu resumed his work in popular education, reestablishing the workers' university, joining the Căile Ferate Române unions' school in Grivița,[45] and becoming staff member for the Union of Romanian Jews People's University.[20] Although he worked in political and trade-union journalism, as well as a philologist and bibliographer, he was primarily a commentator on Romanian literature. Writing about numerous authors who included Caragiale, Mihai Eminescu, Gheorghe Asachi, Ion Heliade Rădulescu, Anton Pann, and Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu, his book titles for the early 1920s usually began Cu privire la... ("With a Look at...").[1][47] In 1922, Lăzăreanu annotated, prefaced and edited Caragiale's satiric verses, grouped into poetic cycles.[12][48] The work was poorly reviewed by his colleagues in the literary press, who noted that Caragiale himself had made efforts to erase all memory of his work in verse. Lăzăreanu defended himself with chronicles in , arguing that the Caragiale poems had documentary and, "sometimes", artistic value.[49] Some 12 years after, Lăzăreanu received public thanks from Paul Zarifopol, Caragiale's friend and biographer: "neither the richness and exactitude of his knowledge, nor the kindness with which he imparts it, have an end."[50]

Writing mainly for Adevărul Literar și Artistic, Lăzăreanu discovered and published poetry by politicians such as Take Ionescu, , and Constantin Istrati, also republishing 19th-century tracts by Jean Alexandre Vaillant and physician Alcibiade Tavernier, and documenting the minutae of Hasdeu's literary and political activity.[51] He also held a column on phonaesthetics,[52] and completed in print a historical review of the Romanian Communards and their sympathizers.[3] Known to his Romanian peers as an "incidental" but noteworthy medical historian,[53] his 1924 collection of essays bridged philology and health historiography, as: Lespezi și moloz din templul lui Epidaur ("Slabs and Debris from Epidaurus' Temple").[54] He also studied folkloristics and historical linguistics, focusing especially on "the destiny of some words",[7] and involved himself in literary and political polemics with liberal conservatives—Mihail Dragomirescu, Constantin Rădulescu-Motru, and the writers.[55]

Over the following years, he researched and edited several volumes of essays by Dobrogeanu-Gherea, issuing, as part of the "Dobrogeanu-Gherea Collection", the socialist poetry of Dumitru Theodor Neculuță and Anton Bacalbașa, and the biography of Ottoi Călin (Doctorul Ottoi).[56] His 1924 review of "various raconteurs" (Câțiva povestitori) included monographs on Ion Creangă and N. D. Popescu-Popnedea. His critical verdicts were dismissed by Bucur, who described the book as "puerile" and "glib",[57] and later by Ioana Pârvulescu, who sees Lăzăreanu as "a minor, socialist literato [who] did not shy away from distorting literary reality".[12] In 1927, he published at Adevărul an overview of Hasdeu's humorous writings (Umorul lui Hajdeu). Originally a report to the Romanian Academy,[58] it was noted for its satirical tinges and a slight mockery of its protagonist.[59] Also that year, Lăzăreanu put out an ethnographic study of courtship (Ursitul fetelor și al vădanelor).[35] His contributions also included a 1926 note on the life and activity of a Jewish journalist, Sigismund Carmelin.[60]

Anti-fascism and 1940s persecution[]

In the 1930s, Lăzăreanu became a committed anti-fascist, and one of the main contributors to 's left-wing review, .[61] In 1935, he had a polemic with journalist Ioan Alexandru Bran-Lemeny, who backed the far-right Romanian Front, over the issue of positive discrimination for Romanians. Lăzăreanu described the Front's ideology as "narrow and crooked", emphasizing its role as a Jewish quota; Bran-Lemeny, who still viewed his Jewish colleague as a "beloved friend", defended the notion. He posited that Lăzăreanu's belief in universal fraternity was respectable, but optimistic, as long as Romania suffered under the "slavery of alienism".[62] Lăzăreanu returned to Botoșani for a conference in April 1936, at exactly the same time as another guest speaker, Nelu Ionescu, who was a member of the antisemitic Iron Guard. As recounted by folklorist Arthur Gorovei, the Gendarmerie sent in troops and imposed a new schedule, making sure that the speakers and their respective audience never interacted with each other.[63]

That same year, the Communist Party attracted Lăzăreanu into a semi-legal National Antifascist Committee, where he became colleagues with Iorgu Iordan, , and .[64] His other focus was on researching Romanian folklore, touring the country to lecture the public on related topics, billed alongside Peltz and S. Podoleanu.[65] Also in 1936, he wrote in Adevărul an homage to the Romanian Jewish linguist Moses Gaster.[66] Lăzăreanu was sidelined during the antisemitic ascendancy of the National Christian Party (1937), but returned to favor under the National Renaissance Front (1938): although fascist in nature, the latter stipended leftist and Jewish intellectuals, protected by Mihai Ralea, the Labor Minister.[67] Like other men from Ralea's circle, he remained a regular contributor to Adevărul Literar și Artistic, the sole leftist review still tolerated by the regime.[68] Nevertheless, having since obtained Romanian citizenship, he was stripped of it during the passage of racial laws.[55]

Published under contract with Cartea Românească, Cu privire la... was celebrated by reviewers as still having "great significance". According to such reports, by mid 1937 Lăzăreanu had prepared some 240 biographies for future editions.[69] Appearing late that year, his two brochures on Eminescu were chronicled in as restorative, in that they brought focus back on Eminescu's genius and passionate work.[70] The series ended in 1938, with a final volume focusing on George Coșbuc; in 1940, Lăzăreanu's introduction to the work of and a monograph on the Libertatea socialist club came out as separate brochures.[71] By 1939, he was frequenting Petre V. Haneș's Preocupări Literare society, where he lectured about early Romanian translations from Molière.[72]

As the country plunged into World War II alongside the Axis powers, Lăzăreanu was again exposed to racial and political persecution. He was placed under constant surveillance by the Ion Antonescu regime,[7] and his collection of documents in Botoșani was presumed looted.[73] Publication and circulation of his work was explicitly banned,[74] but, reportedly, he continued to "speak passionately and resolutely at intimate reunions", condemning war on the Eastern Front.[55] In October 1942, he was arrested with other Jews and scheduled to be deported to Transnistria Governorate, but was spared thanks to the interventions of Queen Helen and a Romanian physician, Victor Gomoiu.[75]

After the fall of Antonescu in August 1944, Lăzăreanu became a visible associate (later member)[7][76] of the Communist Party, contributing to its main organs: România Liberă, Scînteia, Studii.[33] From 1945 to 1948, he served as the inaugural rector of the new Workers' University in Bucharest, which became the Ștefan Gheorghiu Academy under his tenure.[1][77] In his inaugural speech, Lăzăreanu declared the school to be one of a fundamentally new type, with a mission to create the "new man"; its curriculum was to be based on the four "great educators of mankind": Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Vladimir Lenin, and Joseph Stalin.[78] In May 1945, he was finally elected to the Romanian Writers' Society, one of seven Jewish members enlisted on that occasion.[79] On September 18, 1947, he joined Gala Galaction, Victor Eftimiu, and others on the leadership board of the Bucharest Atheneum.[80]

He returned to writing with a Creangă monograph, put out by the ,[81] focusing his research on that writer's debt to Russian fairy tales.[7][12] The communist party's Section for Political Education hosted his lectures on the "poets of labor and poets as laborers", which placed focus on laborite themes in the work of Eminescu or Creangă, and introduced the public to works by , Dumitru Corbea, and Alexandru Toma.[82] The party also printed his brochure, Despre alegeri censitare ("On the Census Suffrage"), which reviewed literary documents (principally by N. T. Orășanu) on fraudulent electoral practices during the previous century.[83]

Communist period[]

Lăzăreanu in a 1950s photograph

In 1948, the new communist regime had honored Lăzăreanu by naming a Dudești street after him.[84] That year, the revamped the Romanian Academy elected him a titular member.[1][85] His contributions to its bulletin included a 1949 piece which explored Eminescu's mental alienation and death—according to Lăzăreanu, both had been caused by Eminescu's inability to thrive under the "bourgeois-landowning regime", and by the failure of the old, "reactionary", Academy to offer him any material protection.[86]

Though a card-carrying communist, Lăzăreanu also took a seat on the executive council of the Jewish Democratic Committee (CDE), which also included his party colleagues M. H. Maxy, , Arthur Kreindler, and .[76] During a reshuffle ordered by the communists on April 18, 1948, he took over as CDE Chairman.[87] Shortly after the Arab–Israeli War, he gave public endorsement to the CDE-and-communist platform of anti-Zionism and anti-cosmopolitanism.[88] Foreign policy was also shaped by the writer's son, Alexandru Lăzăreanu,[89] who was reportedly a close collaborator of Foreign Minister Ana Pauker; a staff member of the Romanian Embassy in Washington, D. C. in 1947, he reported on the activities of anticommunist exiles such as Viorel Tilea and Brutus Coste,[90] and tried to coax Peter Neagoe into writing a series of pro-communist novels.[91] A likely agent of the Securitate, he was involved in sponsoring an alleged spy ring, which included Detroit journalist Harry Făinaru.[92] In December 1948, the US State Department demanded that Ambassador Grigore Preoteasa and Lăzăreanu Jr be recalled to Bucharest.[93]

Lăzăreanu Sr headed the Academy's library, from 1948 to 1957.[1][94][89] In 2013, mathematician-writer recalled that he himself was actually in charge of that institution, Lăzăreanu's presidency being otherwise "symbolic".[95] Nevertheless, Lăzăreanu is alleged to have obtained for the Academy the letters of left-wing novelist Panait Istrati, having coaxed his widow into handing them over.[96] In 1956, he promised to allow Marie Rolland access to the letters exchanged between Istrati and Romain Rolland, though these were never released during his tenure.[97] Lăzăreanu was similarly involved, in 1952, with the Romanian orthographic reform, voted in as a member of the , and nominally implementing locally the objectives stated in Marxism and Problems of Linguistics.[98] He published in 1950 an anthology of anti-monarchic literature, which went through two more editions by 1957.[81] He returned to socialist historiography and reissued as a book his earlier study on the Romanian Communards.[99] His other work was in early-readers' literature, with the book Dan inimosul ("Hearty Dan").[100] Although a representative of the new regime, in 1950 he signed a public protest in support of his friend Peltz, who had been exposed as a Siguranța informant and was facing communist imprisonment.[101]

In January 1952, his 70th anniversary was marked by an official ceremony at the Academy. Săvulescu, the Academy president, saluted him as a Romanian version of Milkman Tevye and Till Eulenspiegel, noting his "kind and open heart" and his ability to versify any situation; his speech also doubled as an attack on cosmopolitanism, praising Lăzăreanu's "socialist patriotism".[102] Before his death, Lăzăreanu served several times in the Academy Presidium. He was also a recipient of the Star of the People's Republic of Romania, Second Class, and , First Class.[94] Lăzăreanu died of a heart attack[103] in Bucharest, on January 19, 1957.[104] Incinerated at Cenușa crematorium, his funeral, including the speeches, was held on the premises and closed with the singing of "The Internationale", the highest mark of adherence to the communist ideal.[105]

His ashes were deposited near the mausoleum in Carol Park, but his and all other remains at the complex were removed after the Romanian Revolution of 1989.[106] Found and preserved by the World Jewish Congress, his documentary collection is housed in New York City.[107] The writer was survived by son Alexandru. In 1956, he had been the Deputy Foreign Minister, in charge during the absence of Minister Preoteasa. He became noted for his unorthodox response to the Hungarian anticommunist revolt, which he described as a "necessary process of democratization",[108] though both he and Preoteasa were involved in the effort to contain its spread into Romania.[109] Later a Head of Department, Lăzăreanu Jr was instrumental in obtaining Romania's affiliation to UNESCO and the United Nations.[89] He died in Bucharest in October 1991,[110] almost two years after the fall of Romanian communism.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Valentin Chifor, "Lăzăreanu Barbu", in Aurel Sasu (ed.), Dicționarul biografic al literaturii române, Vol. I, pp. 839–840. Pitești: , 2004. ISBN 973-697-758-7
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b Constantin Iordăchescu, "Intre Pușchin și profetul Isaia", in , Vol. I, 1936–1937, p. 720
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b , "Lettres roumaines", in Mercure de France, Issue 627, August 1924, p. 818
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Straje, pp. 390, 391
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Leon Feraru, "The Mendacity of Roumania. How the Government Persecutes Its Jewish Men of Letters", in The Reform Advocate, Vol. XLVII, Issue 23, July 1914, p. 857
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Săvulescu, p. 22
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247
  8. ^ Bejenaru, p. 361
  9. ^ Săvulescu, pp. 22–23
  10. ^ Angela Ion, "Centenar Victor Hugo", in Victor Hugo, Mizerabilii, Vol. V, p. 11. Bucharest: , 1985
  11. ^ Săvulescu, p. 23; Straje, p. 391
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b c d (in Romanian) Ioana Pârvulescu, "Nimeni nu poate sări peste umbra epocii lui", România Literară, Issue 23/2009
  13. ^ "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247; Săvulescu, pp. 23, 24
  14. ^ Ioan Maximiuc, "Posibile și necesare corective și completări la o (posibilă) istorie a presei locale", in Hierasus, Vol. X, 1997, pp. 226–227
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b Săvulescu, p. 23
  16. ^ Feraru, p. 857; Săvulescu, p. 25
  17. ^ Haupt & Slivăț, p. 37; Săvulescu, p. 25
  18. ^ Haupt & Slivăț, p. 33
  19. ^ "Matin Veith: Panait Musoiu. Zu Leben und Publizistik des rumänischen Anarchisten", in Syfo – Forschung & Bewegung, Abstracts No. 2, 2002, p. 6
  20. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Podoleanu, p. 159
  21. ^ Straje, pp. 89, 233, 248–249, 420, 773
  22. ^ Eftimiu, pp. 127–131
  23. ^ Eftimiu, p. 127
  24. ^ Horia Vladimir Șerbănescu, "Caricatura militară în presa umoristică românească, de la Unire până la Războiul cel Mare (1859–1916)", in Studii și Cercetări de Istoria Artei. Artă Plastică, Vol. 3 (47), 2013, pp. 34–40
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b c Paul de Coks, "Expulzarea unui trubadur", in , Issue 139/1907, p. 7
  26. ^ "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247; Petrescu, p. 201; Săvulescu, pp. 22, 23–24; Tănăsescu & Ștefan, p. 8
  27. ^ J. L. "La Réaction en Roumanie", in L'Humanité, May 23, 1928, p. 2; Petrescu, p. 201
  28. ^ "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247; Săvulescu, p. 24
  29. ^ Săvulescu, p. 24; Tănăsescu & Ștefan, pp. 8–10
  30. ^ Bejenaru, p. 362
  31. ^ Tănăsescu & Ștefan, pp. 9–10
  32. ^ "Dernière heure. Tribunal Révolutionnaire. Le Roumain Reichmann a été jugé la nuit dernière par les anarchistes réunis à Paris", in Le Journal, May 29, 1910, p. 4.
  33. ^ Jump up to: a b Straje, p. 391
  34. ^ Săvulescu, p. 25. See also "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247
  35. ^ Jump up to: a b Podoleanu, p. 160
  36. ^ , "Lettres roumaines", in Mercure de France, Issue 576, June 1922, p. 803
  37. ^ Ion Toacă, "Locuri și case memoriale care evidențiază rezistența maselor populare românești împotriva regimului de ocupație (decembrie 1916 – noiembrie 1918)", in Revista de Istorie, Issue 1/1977, p. 117
  38. ^ Săvulescu, p. 25
  39. ^ Straje, p. 390
  40. ^ Peltz, pp. 23–25
  41. ^ Bucur, pp. 249–250
  42. ^ Cioculescu et al., p. 602; Petrescu, p. 339
  43. ^ Leon Eșanu, "Doctor H. Aroneanu și mișcarea muncitorească din Bacău în anii 1918—1920", in Carpica. Publicația Muzeului de Istorie și Artă Bacău, Vol. VI, 1973–1974, p. 183
  44. ^ Leon Eșanu, "Activitatea secțiunilor din Moldova ale Partidului Socialist în anii premergători înființării P.C.R." and Elisabeta Ioniță, Gheorghe Grivețeanu, "Casa în care a fost votată constituirea Partidului Comunist Român", in Cercetări Istorice, Vol. II, 1971, pp. 271, 376
  45. ^ Jump up to: a b Săvulescu, pp. 25–26
  46. ^ Podoleanu, pp. 159–160; Straje, p. 391
  47. ^ "Acad. B. Lăzăreanu", p. 247; Bucur, p. 250; Săvulescu, p. 26
  48. ^ Podoleanu, pp. 159, 160
  49. ^ Pușcariu, pp. 1033–1035
  50. ^ Leon Feraru, "Reviews. I. L. Caragiale, Opere, Tomul III", in The Romanic Review, Issue 1/1934, p. 70
  51. ^ Pușcariu, pp. 994–995, 1000–1002, 1045
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