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Ion Buzdugan

Ion Alion Buzdugan[1] (Romanian Cyrillic and Russian: Ион Буздуган, born Ivan Alexandrovici Buzdâga;[2][3][4] March 9, 1887 – January 29, 1967) was a Bessarabian-Romanian poet, folklorist, and politician. A young schoolteacher in the Russian Empire by 1908, he wrote poetry and collected folklore emphasizing Bessarabia's links with Romania, and associated with various founding figures of the Romanian nationalist movement, beginning with Ion Pelivan. Buzdugan was a far-left figure during the February Revolution, but eventually rallied with the National Moldavian Party in opposition to the socialists and the Bolsheviks. He vehemently supported the union of Bessarabia with Romania during the existence of an independent Moldavian Democratic Republic, and, as a member of its legislature (Sfatul Țării), worked to bring it about. Threatened by the Bolsheviks, he fled to Romania and returned with an expeditionary corps headed by General Ernest Broșteanu, being one of the delegates who voted for the union, and one of dignitaries who signed its proclamation.

Ion Alion Buzdugan
Buzdugan, ca. 1914
Member of Sfatul Țării
In office
November 1917 – November 1918
ConstituencyBălți County
Member of the Assembly of Deputies
In office
November 1919 – May 1925
In office
June 1926 – July 1932
Personal details
Born
Ivan Alexandrovici Buzdâga

(1887-03-09)March 9, 1887
Brînzenii Noi, Bessarabia Governorate, Russian Empire
DiedJanuary 29, 1967(1967-01-29) (aged 79)
Bucharest, Communist Romania
NationalityRomanian
Political partyNational Moldavian Party (1917)
Socialist Revolutionary Party (1917)
Bessarabian Peasants' Party (1918)
Peasants' Party (1921)
National Peasants' Party (1926)
Peasants' Party–Lupu (1927)
Democratic Nationalist Party (ca. 1933)
Romanian Front (1935)
ProfessionPoet, folklorist, translator, schoolteacher, journalist, lawyer
NicknameNică Romanaș

In interwar Greater Romania, Buzdugan received mixed reviews as a neo-traditionalist poet, while also serving terms as a Bălți County representative in the Assembly of Deputies. There, he advocated decentralization and a system of zemstva, but opposed Bessarabian autonomy, while also becoming noted for his hawkish stance against the Soviet Union, his radicalized nationalism, and his antisemitic outbursts. He was successively a member of the Bessarabian Peasants' Party, the Peasants' Party, the National Peasants' Party, the Peasants' Party–Lupu, and the Democratic Nationalists. For a while, he was employed as a civil administrator, before delving in fascist politics with the Romanian Front.

His political activity made him a target of repression under the Romanian communist regime, but he avoided arrest by going into hiding during the late 1940s and early '50s. Protected by the literary critic Perpessicius, he later reemerged, but, until the time of his death, was only allowed to publish pseudonymous translations from Russian literature, culminating with a posthumous rendition of Eugene Onegin. Since the 1990s, his poetic work has been recovered and reassessed in both Romania and Moldova.

Biography edit

Early years edit

According to updated reference works, the future Ion Buzdugan was born in 1887 in Brînzenii Noi (now in Telenești District, Moldova), the son of peasants Alexandru and Ecaterina Buzdâga,[5] who also had seven daughters.[6] One 1936 entry claims that he was born in 1889 in Buzdugeni.[7] Both villages were at the time included in the Russian Empire's Bessarabian Governorate, and the young man was educated at a teachers' seminary in Bayramcha. He later studied agriculture, law and literature in Russian schools in Kamianets-Podilskyi and Moscow.[8] Buzdugan, who claimed to have lodged with, and befriended, the Ukrainian poet Ivan Franko,[9] eventually took a license to practice law from Moscow University.[10]

Influenced to some degree by the work of Mihai Eminescu,[11] he began writing his own poetry, published in Bessarabian magazines from 1905, under the pseudonym Nică Romanaș (or Românaș, "Nică the Romanian Fella").[12][13] Other pen names he used include B. Cogâlnic, Ion Câmpeanu, and I. Dumbrăveanu.[14] He became involved with the groups of Romanian nationalists then forming in the Governorate, writing for their newspaper Basarabia, and, while in Kamianets, establishing contacts with the Romanians east of Bessarabia.[15]

In 1907–1909, a schoolteacher in Bursuceni, he associated the Romanian national club founded by judge Ion Pelivan. His activity there brought him under the watch of the Okhrana, and, during the subsequent clampdown, he received a punishment for having taught his students in Romanian.[16] Nevertheless, he remained active in the nationalist circles and, by 1913, was in contact with Cuvânt Moldovenesc journal,[17] which he also edited for a while, again as N. Romanaș.[7] He also began a lifetime work of collecting Romanian folklore, and, despite such work being repressed by the Russian authorities, documented the folkloric links between Bessarabia and other Romanian-inhabited regions.[13] The folk songs of his collections also pointed to the Bessarabians' dissatisfaction with Tsarist autocracy, against claims that they enjoyed that regime more than they supported Romania.[18]

Buzdugan volunteered as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army,[7] engaged in the Romanian theater of war. At some point during the events of the Russian Revolution, he and his Bessarabian colleague, Gherman Pântea, rallied with the revolutionary far-left, joining the Socialist Revolutionary Party;[19] according to other sources, they may have even been involved with the Bolsheviks.[20] By the time of the February Revolution, Buzdugan had entered the Moldavian Soldiers' Organization in Odessa, and took up the task of propaganda work among the Bessarabian units of the Imperial Russian Army.[21] He was still active as a writer, networking with his colleagues from Western Moldavia. By February 1917, he had joined the literary circle Academia Bârlădeană, becoming close friends with George Tutoveanu and Alexandru Vlahuță.[22] While on the front lines, he helped save the life of the Romanian officer and fellow writer Camil Petrescu.[23]

National Moldavian Party edit

After March 13, 1917, both Buzdugan and Pântea became members of Paul Gore's National Moldavian Party (PNM), the driving force of Romanian nationalism in the former Governorate, and were co-opted on its steering committee.[24] However, as later noted by the party colleague Pan Halippa, Buzdugan was categorically opposed to the PNM's right-wing, which looked to "Bessarabia's secession from Russia and her Union with Romania."[25] Taken by the Russian army to Iași, the provisional Romanian capital, he befriended Mihail Sadoveanu and other contributors to România newspaper. His mailing address was the paper's headquarters, which was also the domicile of playwright Barbu Ștefănescu Delavrancea.[26] He therefore kept contact with the Romanian nationalists, including the historian Nicolae Iorga. Iorga recalled that Buzdugan was agitated in favor of socialist reforms and critical of the Romanian King Ferdinand I, somewhat supportive of a Russian-backed uprising, and favoring mass desertion.[27] At the time, he spoke a "picturesque" Moldavian dialect, mixed with Russian neologisms.[28]

On April 10, Buzdugan attended the Bessarabian Schoolteachers' Congress, presided upon by Alexandr K. Schmidt and comprising educators of all nationalities. There, he agitated in favor of a split, calling on Romanian teachers to form their own "cleanly Moldavian" congress, and supporting the idea of intensive courses to formalize and standardize their language.[3] Buzdugan sought to convince his public that what they called "Moldavian" was the same as Romanian, and to prove his point he read them fragments from the 1688 Cantacuzino Bible.[29] He also advocated the introduction of the Latin alphabet, to replace Cyrillic everywhere, including in zemstva schools.[30] In May, with such autonomist goals in mind, Buzdugan, Pântea and Anton Crihan founded the newspaper Pământ și Voe, styled "Organ of the Moldavian Socialist Revolutionary Party".[31] Additionally, together with the playwright Sergiu Victor Cujbă, he founded a people's university and a peasants' theater.[32]

Buzdugan, Grigore Cazacliu, Vasile Țanțu and Andrei Scobioală soon set up a Moldavian Committee of the Romanian War Front, which began collecting Romanian church literature and primers, to be used in the struggle against Russification.[33] The committee watched with alarm as the Ukrainian People's Republic made overtures to incorporate Bessarabia into her borders. The Ukrainian Rada received a letter of protest written for the Bessarabian soldiers' organization by Buzdugan. It argued that, "on the basis of historical, ethnographic rights, of her distinct customs and of her economic situation", Bessarabia had "an imprescriptible right to complete autonomy."[34] Buzdugan was also one of the founders of the PNM-and-Committee tribune, Soldatul Moldovan, and returned to his career in the Bessarabian press.[35]

According to Iorga, Buzdugan was already going through a "taming" process, and warned the Romanians that Russian radicals were plotting a coup.[36] Buzdugan himself claimed to have met a congratulatory King Ferdinand, using the occasion to press him for a nationwide land reform.[26] In late October 1917, he participated in the Moldavian Soldiers' Congress of Chișinău, where it was decided to form Sfatul Țării, the Bessarabian legislature. During the proceedings, Buzdugan and Toma Jalbă insisted in favor of annexing to Bessarabia the Romanian-speaking areas east of the river Dniester (Nistru); although this failed to occur, their speeches were welcomed with applause by other delegates.[37] The Congress appointed him to an Organizational Bureau that also comprised Halippa, Ion Inculeț, Teofil Ioncu, and Pantelimon Erhan. It was the provisional governing body of the region, and wrote down that laws and regulations for the legislative election of that month.[38]

Buzdugan himself was elected to Sfatul Țării, representing Bălți County,[39] and joined the Moldavian Bloc, a parliamentary club reuniting former PNM members (informally: "Pelivan's godsons") with the other Romanian nationalists.[40] Buzdugan and Erhan supported Pelivan as leader of Sfatul, clashing with the left-wing "Peasants' Faction", the Mensheviks led by Eugen Kenigschatz, and non-Romanian deputies such as Krste Misirkov. This coalition preferred the leftist Inculeț, who did not approve of Bessarabia's secession from the Russian Republic.[41] Against Buzdugan's protests, Pelivan asked his followers to also support Inculeț.[42]

In November 1917, during the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia, Buzdugan was one of the secretaries of Bessarabian Soldiers' Congress, part of a presidium headed by Vasile Cijevschi. This assembly voted favorably on the region's emancipation, referencing the right to self-determination.[43] In December, Sfatul proclaimed the Moldavian Democratic Republic, a quasi-independent state. Pelivan and his "godsons", who were pushing for the union with Romania, found themselves harassed by Bolshevik groups such as Front-Odel (confederated with the Rumcherod and loyal to the new Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic). They began preparing for an armed confrontation.[44] Buzdugan and Scobioală also acted as liaisons between the Romanian Land Forces, under Constantin Prezan, and the White Russians, represented locally by Dmitry Shcherbachev of the 7th Army.[45]

Union process edit

 
The Act of Union of the Moldavian Democratic Republic, carrying Buzdugan's name

Eventually, disguised as Russian soldiers, and accompanied by sailor Vasile Gafencu, the "godsons" left Chișinău and headed for Iași, where they contacted the Romanian Army.[46] On January 12, the Romanians, under General Ernest Broșteanu, crossed the border to suppress the Bolshevik uprising (see Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia). Buzdugan, with Crihan, Pelivan, Gafencu, Țanțu and Gheorghe Buruiană, followed them closely.[47] Later sources suggest that Buzdugan and his Moldavian Committee set up a unit of the Republican Army, which reportedly fought against the Bolsheviks during subsequent skirmishes.[48]

When the act of union as put up for debate in the Sfatul session of April 9 [O.S. March 27], 1918, Buzdugan was among the 86-member majority who voted in favor.[49] During the preliminary talks, he had seconded the Romanian Prime Minister, Alexandru Marghiloman, reassuring the Peasant Faction, and Inculeț, that land reform would be enacted in Romania.[50] By then a leader of the Moldavian Bloc, he urged his colleagues to support union as stemming from "the principle of self-determination", and "the most revolutionary act in the history of our people".[51] As Sfatul Secretary, together with Inculeț, the President of the Republic, and Halippa, the Vice President, he signed into law the union proclamation.[52] Buzdugan was also the one selected to read the proclamation in the plenum session.[4][13][29]

Buzdugan was working on a volume of patriotic poetry, which came out that year as Țara mea ("My Country").[53] In October 1918, Sfatul Țării's eponymous journal put out his monograph on the history of boyardom and peasantry in Bessarabia.[54] Late that November, he was reelected Secretary of Sfatul, in circumstances that were deemed illegal by the anti-unionist opposition; under his watch, unconditional union (which excluded the regionalist provisions of the March document) was put to the vote.[55] Buzdugan joined Halippa, Pelivan, and Cazacliu on a Sfatul mission to Cernăuți, in Bukovina, and Alba Iulia, in Transylvania, where they were to attend popular assemblies confirming the establishment of Greater Romania.[56] In Bukovina, Buzdugan expressed his enthusiasm for "our national cause, the awakening of the entire nation between the Nistru and the Tisa."[57] However, bedridden with the Spanish flu in Cernăuți, he was unable to follow Pelivan to Alba Iulia, and failed to witness Transylvania's incorporation into Romania on December 1 ("Great Union").[58]

In his last days as a Sfatul deputy, Buzdugan signed a protest addressed to the Romanian government of Ion I. C. Brătianu, citing cases of abuse by the Gendarme "satraps", including their alleged embezzlement of welfare supplies. The document warned that the nation was "nowhere near to moral unity, to the one guarantee that formal union would be strengthened".[59] From January 1919, he was among the founders of a credit union, formed to assist Bessarabian peasants in view of the land reform. Its steering committee also included Halippa, Buruiană, Crihan, Vasile Bârcă, Teofil Ioncu, Vasile Mândrescu, Mihail Minciună, and Nicolae Suruceanu.[60]

Beginnings in Greater Romania edit

On April 27, Buzdugan and many of his credit union colleagues rallied with the PNM's successor, the Bessarabian Peasants' Party (PȚB). He was voted, with Pântea, a member of its Central Committee.[61] He served continuously in Romania's Assembly of Deputies, where he represented Bălți County, from November 1919 to July 1932.[7] During his first term, he embraced leftist causes and "leaned toward class struggle",[18] backing the Alexandru Vaida-Voevod-led coalition against the National Liberal Party. In March 1920, days after Vaida had been recalled by King Ferdinand, Buzdugan read out the PȚB's protest against this coup.[62]

He shared his party's opposition to the policies of the new People's Party government, and spoke out against its interventions in the local administration of Bessarabia. In July 1920, he took the rostrum to address the sacking of A. Crudu, the Prefect of Hotin County, claiming that the latter had been abused and humiliated by the authorities.[63] Buzdugan rallied with the Halippa faction of the PȚB, which sought integration within the nationwide Peasants' Party (PȚ); the other wings, comprising Inculeț, Pântea and Pelivan, preferred independence. He was one of 9 parliamentarians who, together with Halippa and the non-PȚB agrarian theorist Constantin Stere, joined the PȚ in on July 18, 1921.[64] Under Inculeț's presidency, the PȚB excluded him on July 22.[65]

His literary career took off, and his subsequent poetic work was soon taken up in literary newspapers and magazines all across Greater Romania. These include: Viața Romînească, Adevărul Literar și Artistic, Convorbiri Literare, Cuget Românesc, Gândirea, Luceafărul, Sburătorul, Convorbiri Literare, Flacăra, Lamura, and Drum Drept.[14] He also became one of the staff poets at Sandu Teleajen's review, Gând Românesc, in December 1921.[66] Buzdugan was inducted into the Romanian Writers' Society, and co-founded the Bessarabian Writers' Society.[14] Completing his studies at the University of Iași, he took a Doctorate in Political Economy from Cernăuți University.[7][67]

 
Buzdugan in the 1920s

Made a Commander of both the Order of the Crown and the Star of Romania, as well as a recipient of the Ferdinand Medal, he took up practice as a lawyer, based in Bucharest and Bălți.[7] His work in letters and folkloristics was collected in five retrospective volumes: Cântece din războiu ("Songs from the War", 1921),[68] Cântece din stepă ("Songs from the Steppe", 1923),[69] Cântece din Basarabia ("Songs from Bessarabia", two volumes: 1921, 1928), Miresme din stepă ("Scents of the Steppe", 1922), and a reprint of Țara mea (1928).[70] In 1923, he won a national prize for poetry, granted by the Romanian Ministry of Arts.[71] With Gheorghe Bogdan-Duică, C. S. Făgețel and N. A. Constantinescu, he also contributed a Festschrift for Iorga, published in 1921.[72]

His poems, several of which dealt with themes of national fulfillment addressed to "Mother-Country",[73] were often in dialect. According to literary historian George Călinescu, they "sound to us like the French-Canadian language must sound to the French."[74] Iorga described them as an expression of the "primitive but powerful soul", with rhymes of "patient naivete", and overall "vastly superior" to those of Alexei Mateevici.[75] Eugen Lovinescu, the modernist doyen, found Miresme din stepă to be almost entirely "un-literary", only valid as "proofs of Romanian cultural continuity during a time of alienation": "we can only approach [the book] for its cultural interest and while numbing our aesthetic scruples."[76] A similar point was made by Șerban Cioculescu: "I. Buzdugan's poems cannot be said to be attractive in their beauty. All elements are lacking: no sensitivity, no imagination, no originality of ideas or artistic forms." He described Cântece din stepă as derivative from the works of Octavian Goga or Vasile Alecsandri, and instructive as to the comparative underdevelopment of Bessarabian literature. Cioculescu also noted that Buzdugan had not mastered Romanian grammar, his spelling errors "all too numerous to be disregarded."[69]

As noted by critic Răzvan Voncu, Buzdugan's lyrical contribution stands for neo-traditionalism, in the manner of Gândirea writers, but is "spontaneous" and without influence from Expressionism. Voncu rates Buzdugan as a "second-shelf" traditionalist—ranking below Adrian Maniu or Aron Cotruș, but more valuable than Sandu Tudor, Radu Gyr, or Vintilă Ciocâlteu.[13] According to writer Ion Țurcanu, his sonnet Păstorii ("The Shepherds") is "of exceptional quality", with its "expression of the rustic universe" and its grasp of "the unsuspected materialness of silence." However, "it is hard to comprehend why this literary phenomenon, that is a credit to Romanian literature, remains rather singular in Buzdugan's work, and why he never made it as greater-caliber poet."[77]

PNȚ and PȚ–L edit

Reelected to the Assembly as one of the PȚ representatives for Bessarabia, Buzdugan focused on agrarian issues such as the liquidation of the zemstva, and defended the latter as tools of peasants' self-management.[78] He and Halippa were also asked to respond in the Assembly about how they had carried out the land reform. He fought over the matter with Alexandru C. Constantinescu of the National Liberals,[79] but also with more radical Bessarabian agrarianists such as Ludovic Dauș.[80] His other focus was Romania's defense against a hostile Soviet Union, which had not recognized Bessarabia as part of Romania. His speeches applauded by all political camps, Buzdugan depicted Romania as a bastion of Christendom and Western civilization. Unlike other PȚ deputies, he did not see Romania's social backwardness as an impediment, and suggested that making Romanians "healthy and strong" would ensure that the country fulfilled her cultural mission.[81] Documenting the Comintern links of the Romanian Communist Party, he also suggested that the PȚ itself was being infiltrated by the Krestintern.[82] In December 1924, Buzdugan had a public row with Artur Văitoianu, Minister of Transport in the new Brătianu cabinet—at stake was the issue of the state railways, which Buzdugan deemed unfit for an imminent war with the Soviets.[83]

His later speeches about Bessarabian unionism "universally ignored",[84] Buzdugan continued to point out cases of abuse and corruption in his native region, protesting against the sentencing by a court-martial of his fellow deputy Gheorghe Zbornea,[85] and warning that such displays weakened anti-communism in the region.[86] His conflict with the Brătianu government became acute, with Buzdugan fully supporting Stere, who was sidelined by the majority deputies: reportedly, the poet-politician Goga threatened Buzdugan with a revolver during the session of May 4, 1925.[87] On May 17, he took part in the opposition congress at Dacia Hall, alongside Peasantist and Democratic Nationalist figures, with Communist Party men present in the audience. This meeting was broken up by the army, and Buzdugan, although defended by Iorga, found himself stripped of his deputy's seat on May 19.[88]

Buzdugan followed Halippa and Pelivan into National Peasants' Party (PNȚ), formed from the PȚ's merger with the Romanian National Party. Reelected in June 1926, he became noted for his antisemitic outbursts, taking the rostrum to address the issue of anti-Jewish disturbances at Cernăuți. Scholar Irina Livezeanu describes Buzdugan's speech as one "studded with anti-Semitic buzzwords" and "racist commonplaces". He accused the Jews of provoking vague acts of violence to "harm Romania"; however, taking sides with the National-Christian Defense League students, he warned that the Jews could expect pogroms to occur.[89] In February 1927, he defected to the Peasants' Party–Lupu (PȚ–L), serving on its executive committee alongside figures such as Nicolae L. Lupu and Ioan Pangal.[90]

During the 10th anniversary of the Bessarabian union, Buzdugan showed himself optimistic about the prospects of the region, against Halippa and Ioncu, who shared a bleaker outlook.[91] In November 1928, at another festive meeting of the former Sfatul deputies, he clashed with Stere, who demanded that a resolution be adopted in support of "people's liberties", and against the "exceptional laws". Buzdugan reproached Stere: "So you came here for politicking."[92] In his new term in the Assembly after the 1928 election, he took a position against Bessarabian autonomism, describing it as a "Russian formula" and a "worrisome" threat.[93] Buzdugan also questioned the PNȚ government over its alleged tolerance of communist and pro-Soviet activities in Bessarabia.[94] Nevertheless, he endorsed decentralization of the lesser government bodies, "for it won't do that someone should have to travel back and forth from Bessarabia to Bucharest".[95]

Iorga cabinet and Romanian Front edit

Buzdugan was active with Pântea within the Union of Reserve Officers, which collaborated with the Siguranța agency in combating communism, "finding out and unmasking those who carried out revolutionary propaganda";[96] a rough equivalent of the old regime's gentry assembly, it also demanded pay raises for Bessarabians in the military.[97] In 1930, he sided with the nationalist groups in the Assembly against the PNȚ government, which had promised to ethnic Bulgarians to enact a liberal land law in Southern Dobruja, thus limiting Romanian colonization attempts.[98] As noted by Iorga, Buzdugan, "babbling as usual", attacked the Dobrujan Bulgarian deputies as proxies of the Bulgarian Tsardom.[99] Buzdugan also had a verbal bout with Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu of the far-left Peasant Workers' Bloc, calling him "a parasite of the working class".[100]

Co-opted by Iorga during his technocratic administration of 1931–1932, he served as Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. As Iorga recounts, Buzdugan and Vladimir Cristi were imposed on him by a Bessarabian "bloc" of deputies, "who wished to have their representative in Government"—this was against rumors that he was personally close to Buzdugan and intended to make him his son-in-law.[101] In order to join the government in January 1932, Buzdugan quarrelled with Lupu and the PȚ–L, who remained in the opposition.[102] He also defeated Pântea for the position, although the latter was a favorite of the new king, Carol II. Buzdugan depicted Pântea as an unreliable former Bolshevik, and also as a pawn of the National Liberals.[103] At the time, Pamfil Șeicaru and Curentul daily mounted a campaign against Buzdugan, alleging that he had illegally pocketed money from the industrial concern in Bălți. He responded by suing Șeicaru.[104]

By May 1932, Buzdugan had been singled out by Carol II as one of the "ridiculous" government members whom Iorga was ordered to replace; he handed in his resignation "dignified, without any expectations."[105] After Iorga's fall in the elections of 1932, Buzdugan dedicated himself to another calling: supporting anti-Soviet and White émigré circles in Romania. According to the reports of Siguranța spies, he intended to relaunch the Golos Bukharesta, a Russian anti-communist newspaper, and to obtain support for the Whites from the cabinet of Gheorghe Tătărescu.[106] By January 1934, he had joined Iorga's Democratic Nationalists, heading their organization in Bălți County.[107] In 1935, Buzdugan veered to the far-right, joining the PNȚ's "semi-fascist"[108] splinter group, the Romanian Front, and heading its own Bălți County chapter.[7]

After introducing the Romanian public to the Russian avant-garde (with translations that Iorga deems "very good"),[109] Buzdugan focused on the works of Pushkin, publishing in Gândirea a rendition of his "Gypsies" (1935). At the time, scholar Eufrosina Dvoichenko described it as "the best" of several Romanian attempts to translate the poem.[110] In 1937, he produced a new volume of his own poems, Păstori de timpuri ("Time-herders").[13][70] A contributor to Halippa's Viața Basarabiei magazine, in 1939 he became a co-founder of the Bessarabian Writers' Society.[111] However, according to sociologist Petru Negură, Buzdugan's verse was entirely backward and irrelevant by 1930: "Just as agriculturalists were facing the devastating effects of the Great Depression, the peasants depicted in poems by Pan Halippa or Ion Buzdugan [...] continued to cultivate their land with love and judiciousness."[112]

Buzdugan escaped Bessarabia following the first Soviet occupation of 1940, while former members of the Union of Reserve Officers, including Emanoil Catelli, were jailed or deported.[97] Reconciling with Inculeț and Pântea, he joined their Bessarabian Circle, an advocacy group based in Bucharest.[113] In 1942, at the height of World War II, his Metanii de luceferi ("Genuflections of the Evening Stars") came out. It was to be his final published work in poetry, although three others exist as manuscripts.[13] During the Soviet push into Bessarabia at the start of 1944, Buzdugan was offered a temporary home in Brezoi, Vâlcea County (southwestern Romania). With the help of Alexandru Leca Morariu, his verse continued to see print in magazines like Gazeta de Transilvania and Revista Bucovinei.[4]

Repression and death edit

Even before the official establishment of a Romanian communist regime in 1948, Buzdugan came to the attention of the Soviet occupation forces, which began procedures to arrest or deport him as a political undesirable.[13] In 1945, he was hiding in monastic clothes at Bistrița Monastery, where he met the medical assistant and monk-in-training Valeriu Anania. In his memoirs, Anania describes Buzdugan as a mediocre poet, his Orthodox devotional pieces comparable to Lord's Army hymns, adding: "He grew old with the impression of him being a great poet, and I became awfully sad at the thought that I might grow old with that same impression of myself." According to Anania, Buzdugan also angered the starets with his urban demeanor, and left for Bucharest when "times changed for the better".[114]

From 1948, Buzdugan escaped threats of arrest by hiding in an attic at Blaj, where he was protected by Ioan Suciu, a bishop of the Greek-Catholic Church.[6] When the Church itself was dissolved, he hid in private homes,[13] or dressed up as a traveling monk and sought refuge in monasteries—at Tăuni and Târgu Mureș, later at Bujoreni and Polovragi.[6] In 1950, he had returned to Bucharest, living with his mother, who was in her nineties, and four of his sisters on Vlad Județul Street, Vitan.[115] That year, Buzdugan began writing to the literary critic Perpessicius. The latter arranged for Buzdugan to heal a fractured right arm with help from the poet-doctor Virgiliu Moscovici-Monda.[116] In 1951, commissioned by Perpessicius to translate Eugene Onegin, Buzdugan announced that he was working on his own epic poem, retelling the death of Miron Costin—the latter, if it exists, was never published. In April 1953, he wrote again to announce his "hurried departure" to Bazna, Transylvania, where his sister ran a summer camp.[117] With the onset of de-Stalinization in the Soviet Union, Romanian literati could hope for a more tolerant regime. In this climate, Buzdugan began frequenting a literary circle in the Bucharest home of Ion Larian and Paraschiva Postolache, where he met young writers such as Eugen Barbu and C. D. Zeletin. Other senior guests included Virgil Carianopol, N. Crevedia, and Radu D. Rosetti.[118]

From ca. 1955, when Romanian communism turned increasingly nationalist and anti-Soviet, Buzdugan was allowed a quiet return to publishing, but had to limit himself to translation work.[13] His earlier volumes had been taken out of the public libraries, along with many other books referencing Bessarabia.[119] In 1956, Steaua magazine hosted Buzdugan's version of Pushkin's "To Ovid".[120] Reportedly, he claimed to have authored a translation of Boris Godunov, stolen from him by the regime's poet-laureate, Victor Eftimiu.[121] Using the pseudonym B. I. Alion, he published in 1962 a version of Maxim Gorky's tale, "A Girl and Death".[14] His other contributions were renditions from Blok, Bunin, Kotsiubynsky, Lermontov, Shevchenko, and Yesenin.[13]

Terminally ill with cancer,[6] Buzdugan spent his final months at Filantropia Hospital, where he was visited by C. D. Zeletin, who recorded his memoirs.[122] He died on January 27, 1967, in Bucharest,[4][123] and was buried at Bellu cemetery.[124] His funeral was attended by Halippa and Pântea, and saw them speaking publicly for the reincorporation of Bessarabia into Romania; reportedly, the speech was tolerated by the authorities, which were allowing non-politicized expressions of nationalist fervor.[125] However, fearing a backlash, several guests left when Pântea began describing Buzdugan's career in politics.[126] Later that year, Buzdugan's Eugene Onegin appeared under his real name, with a foreword by Perpessicius.[127] According to philologist Ioana Pârvulescu, it was a "good translation".[128] The last of his surviving sisters, Eleonora, died in 1995.[6]

Despite the mood of liberalization in the 1950s and '60s, Buzdugan's name was rarely invoked in print before the Romanian Revolution of 1989, and only two new books of literary criticism mentioned his work.[13] In the Moldavian SSR, his name was banned from all reference.[13][122] This stance changed after 1989. In independent Moldova, his work saw print in anthologies, including Literatura din Basarabia în secolul XX[77] and Poeți din Basarabia.[129] In Romania, Zeletin reprinted Miresme din stepă[130] and published his correspondence; his collected works appeared as 2 volumes, in 2014, at Chișinău.[13][131] In 2012, the editor had noted that Buzdugan, his friend, "is nonetheless forgotten, [...] even today, when the history of our stolen provinces is being combed through."[29]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Full variant given by Buzdugan himself in the 1950s. See N. Scurtu, p. 86
  2. ^ Călinescu, p. 1036; Colesnic, pp. 409, 438; Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 65; Sasu, p. 244
  3. ^ a b Onisifor Ghibu, "Trei luni din viața Basarabiei", in Societatea de Mâine, Nr. 13/1924, p. 283
  4. ^ a b c d Constantin Poenaru, "Viața bucovineană în Rîmnicu-Vâlcea postbelic (II)", in Revista Română (ASTRA), Nr. 4/2009, p. 14
  5. ^ Sasu, p. 244
  6. ^ a b c d e Zeletin (2012), p. 41
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Politics and Political Parties in Roumania, p. 419. London: International Reference Library Publishers Co., 1936. OCLC 252801505
  8. ^ Sasu, pp. 244–245. See also Basciani, p. 100; Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 188; Grigurcu, pp. 123–124
  9. ^ Zeletin (2012), p. 42
  10. ^ Basciani, p. 100
  11. ^ (in Romanian) Cassian Maria Spiridon, }, in Convorbiri Literare, January 2004
  12. ^ Iorga, O viață..., p. 270
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m (in Romanian) Răzvan Voncu, "O revelație: Ion Buzdugan", in România Literară, Nr. 25/2015
  14. ^ a b c d Sasu, p. 245
  15. ^ Constantin & Negrei (2009), pp. 65, 188
  16. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 70–73
  17. ^ Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 188
  18. ^ a b "Însemnări literare", in Sburătorul, Nr. 14/1921, p. 344
  19. ^ Colesnic, pp. 248, 407, 438–439, 443
  20. ^ Suveică, p. 68
  21. ^ Constantin & Negrei (2009), pp. 88–89
  22. ^ Zeletin (2012), pp. 40–43
  23. ^ Grigurcu, p. 124; Zeletin (2012), p. 41
  24. ^ Cemârtan, p. 123
  25. ^ Colesnic, p. 438
  26. ^ a b Zeletin (2012), p. 43
  27. ^ Iorga, O viață..., pp. 270–272, 276
  28. ^ Iorga, O viață..., p. 271
  29. ^ a b c Zeletin (2012), p. 39
  30. ^ Basciani, p. 81; Zeletin (2012), p. 39
  31. ^ Colesnic, p. 248
  32. ^ Sasu, p. 433
  33. ^ Constantin, p. 37
  34. ^ Constantin, pp. 43–44
  35. ^ Colesnic, p. 250; Constantin, pp. 43–44, 355; Sasu, p. 245
  36. ^ Iorga, O viață..., pp. 270, 272. See also Grigurcu, p. 124; Zeletin (2012), pp. 43–44
  37. ^ Constantin, p. 54
  38. ^ Constantin, pp. 53–56; Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 87–90
  39. ^ Clark, p. 151
  40. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 89–90, 92–94. See also Colesnic, p. 407
  41. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 92–93
  42. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 93–94
  43. ^ Paweł Henryk Rutkowski, "Zjednoczenie Besarabii z Królestwem Rumunii w 1918 roku", in Marcin Kosienkowski (ed.), Spotkania polsko‑mołdawskie. Księga poświęcona pamięci Profesora Janusza Solaka, p. 143. Lubin: Episteme, 2013. ISBN 978-83-62495-28-3
  44. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 115–116
  45. ^ Pantelimon V. Sinadino, "Cu Sfatul țării, în vremuri grele", in Magazin Istoric, March 2008, p. 13
  46. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 116–119
  47. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), p. 122
  48. ^ G. Spina, "Astra subversivă", in Revista Română (ASTRA), Nr. 1/2015, pp. 28–29
  49. ^ Basciani, pp. 100–101; Clark, pp. 150–157; Măcriș, pp. 101–103
  50. ^ Basciani, pp. 100–101
  51. ^ Măcriș, p. 101
  52. ^ The Roumanian Occupation..., pp. 64–66; Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 134; Măcriș, pp. 102–103
  53. ^ Călinescu, p. 1029
  54. ^ Suveică, pp. 140, 318
  55. ^ The Roumanian Occupation..., p. 105
  56. ^ Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 3; Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 130–142
  57. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), p. 134
  58. ^ Constantin et al. (2011), pp. 137; Iorga (1930), p. 126
  59. ^ Basciani, pp. 107–108
  60. ^ "Informațiuni", in Unirea. Ziar Național, Nr. 17/1919, p. 2
  61. ^ Cemârtan, pp. 127–128, 138
  62. ^ Iorga (1930), p. 375
  63. ^ Suveică, p. 87
  64. ^ Cemârtan, pp. 137, 140–141
  65. ^ Cemârtan, p. 138. See also Basciani, pp. 170–171
  66. ^ Iorga, Istoria..., p. 262
  67. ^ Basciani, p. 100; Sasu, p. 245
  68. ^ Iorga Istoria..., pp. 293–294
  69. ^ a b (in Romanian) "O uitată recenzie a lui Șerban Cioculescu despre Cântece din stepă de Ion Buzdugan", in Litere, Nr. 11–12/2013, pp. 41–42
  70. ^ a b Călinescu, p. 1029; Sasu, p. 245
  71. ^ "Cronici. Premiile literare", in Gândirea, Nr. 6/1923, p. 130
  72. ^ (in Romanian) Leonidas Rados, "Un proiect interbelic eșuat: Mélanges Russo (1929–1930)", in Anuarul Institutului de Istorie George Barițiu. Series Historica, 2010, p. 266
  73. ^ Grigurcu, pp. 214–215
  74. ^ Călinescu, p. 941
  75. ^ Iorga, Istoria..., p. 293
  76. ^ Eugen Lovinescu, Istoria literaturii române contemporane, II. Evoluția poeziei lirice, pp. 84–85. Bucharest: Editura Ancona, 1927
  77. ^ a b (in Romanian) Ion Țurcanu, , in Convorbiri Literare, June 2006
  78. ^ Suveică, p. 230
  79. ^ Iorga (1939, IV), pp. 113–114
  80. ^ Colesnic, p. 213
  81. ^ Filipescu (2009), pp. 241, 250
  82. ^ Filipescu (2006), pp. 74, 79–80
  83. ^ Filipescu (2009), p. 242. See also Grigurcu, p. 124
  84. ^ Iorga (1939, IV), pp. 45–46
  85. ^ Basciani, p. 210
  86. ^ Filipescu (2006), pp. 76–77
  87. ^ Iorga (1939, V), pp. 18–20
  88. ^ Iorga (1939, V), pp. 24–26
  89. ^ Irina Livezeanu, Cultural Politics in Greater Romania, pp. 126–127. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-8014-8688-2
  90. ^ Ioan Scurtu, "Întemeierea și activitatea Partidului Țărănesc — dr. N. Lupu (1927—1934)", in Revista de Istorie, Nr. 5/1976, p. 699
  91. ^ Basciani, pp. 254–255
  92. ^ Dinu Poștarencu, "Date inedite din biografia lui Constantin Stere", in Anuarul Muzeului Literaturii Române Iași, Vol. III, 2010, pp. 58–59
  93. ^ Suveică, pp. 199–200
  94. ^ Iorga (1939, V), pp. 329–330
  95. ^ Suveică, p. 199
  96. ^ Colesnic, pp. 390–391
  97. ^ a b (in Romanian) Igor Cașu, "Arhivele comunismului. Cum era urmărită elita militară a Basarabiei de poliția politică sovietică", in Adevărul Moldova, January 19, 2011
  98. ^ Dietmar Müller, Staatsbürger auf Widerruf Juden und Muslime als Alteritätspartner im rumänischen und serbischen Nationscode. Ethnonationale Staatsbürgerschaftskonzepte. 1878—1941 (Balkanologische Veröffentlichungen. Band 41), p. 367. Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz Verlag, 2005. ISBN 3-447-05248-1
  99. ^ Iorga (1939, VI), p. 12
  100. ^ "Adunarea Deputaților. Sesiunea Extraordinară 1931", in Înfrățirea Românească, Nr. 21/1931, p. 205
  101. ^ Nicolae Iorga, Doi ani de restaurație. Ce a fost, ce am vrut, ce am putut, p. 91. Vălenii de Munte: Datina Românească, 1932. OCLC 45882093
  102. ^ Iorga (1939, VI), p. 99
  103. ^ Iorga (1939, VI), pp. 284–285, 288
  104. ^ Iorga (1939, VI), pp. 286, 288, 290–291
  105. ^ Iorga (1939, VI), pp. 385–386, 390
  106. ^ Vadim Guzun, Comandorul Sablin. Liderul monarhiștilor ruși urmărit de Siguranță și de Securitate, 1926–1959, pp. 189–190. Bucharest: Editura Filos, 2014. ISBN 978-606-8619-03-3
  107. ^ "Asistența", in Nicolae Iorga, Cuvântarea ținută la Întrunirea Comitetului executiv al Partidului Naționalist-Democrat de la 21 Ianuarie 1934, p. 26. Bucharest: Democratic Nationalist Party & Tipografia Ziarului Universul, 1934
  108. ^ Adrian Webb, The Routledge Companion to Central and Eastern Europe since 1919, p. 145. Abingdon: Routledge, 2008. ISBN 0-203-92817-2
  109. ^ Iorga Istoria..., p. 294
  110. ^ E. Dvoicenco, "Influența lui Pușkin asupra scriitorilor români", in Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Nr. 10/1937, pp. 70–71
  111. ^ Aliona Grati, "Magda Isanos: 'Între minutu-acesta care bate/și celălalt...'", in Akademos, Nr. 1/2016, pp. 147, 148, 151
  112. ^ Petru Negură, "Les «idéologies bessarabiennes». Les écrivains bessarabiens des années 1930, entre régionalisme culturel et quête d'identité nationale", in Pontes. Review of South East European Studies, Vol. 5, 2009, p. 171
  113. ^ Constantin, p. 91
  114. ^ Valeriu Anania, Memorii, Chapter "Generația academică Cluj '46", [n. p.]. Iași: Polirom, 2008. ISBN 978-973-46-2065-4
  115. ^ Zeletin (2012), pp. 40, 41
  116. ^ N. Scurtu, pp. 85–86, 88
  117. ^ N. Scurtu, pp. 87–88
  118. ^ C. D. Zeletin, "O carte de excepție privitoare la Ion Barbu (I)", in Ateneu, Nr. 10/2011, p. 8
  119. ^ (in Romanian) Liliana Corboca, "R. S. S. Moldovenească și cenzura românească", in Contrafort, Nr. 11–12/2008
  120. ^ (in Romanian) Mircea Tomuș, "O Junime clujeană", in Convorbiri Literare, August 2010
  121. ^ C. D. Zeletin, "Amintirea lui Victor Eftimiu", in Acolada, Nr. 7–8/2010, p. 6
  122. ^ a b Grigurcu, p. 124
  123. ^ Sasu, p. 245; N. Scurtu, p. 85
  124. ^ Constantin, pp. 31, 192
  125. ^ Constantin & Negrei (2009), p. 238
  126. ^ Constantin, pp. 31, 192–193
  127. ^ Sasu, p. 245; Zeletin (2012), p. 41
  128. ^ (in Romanian) Ioana Pârvulescu, "Cartea din ecran", in România Literară, Nr. 34/2005
  129. ^ Aliona Grati, "Constelația 'Poeți din Basarabia' prin telescop sociologic", in Philologia, Vol. LIII, Nr. 1–2, January–April 2011, p. 165
  130. ^ Zeletin (2012), p. 44
  131. ^ Grigurcu, p. 123

References edit

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  • Alberto Basciani, La difficile unione. La Bessarabia e la Grande Romania, 1918–1940. Rome: Aracne Editore, 2007. ISBN 978-88-548-1248-2
  • George Călinescu, Istoria literaturii române de la origini pînă în prezent. Bucharest: Editura Minerva, 1986.
  • Andrei Cemârtan, "Le Parti des Paysans de Bessarabie et la rivalité entre Pantelimon Halippa et Ion Inculeț", in Codrul Cosminului, Vol. XVII, Issue 2, 2011, pp. 121–145.
  • Charles Upson Clark, Bessarabia. Russia and Roumania on the Black Sea. New York City: Dodd, Mead and Company, 1927. OCLC 1539999
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  • Ion Constantin, Gherman Pântea între mit și realitate. Bucharest: Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor, 2010. ISBN 978-973-8369-83-2
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  • Ion Constantin, Ion Negrei, Gheorghe Negru, Ion Pelivan, părinte al mișcării naționale din Basarabia. Bucharest: Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor, 2011. ISBN 978-606-8337-04-3
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    • "Partidele parlamentare și problema comunismului (1919–1924)", in Annales Universitatis Apulensis, Series Historica, Vol. 10, Issue I, 2006, pp. 67–83.
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  • Nicolae Iorga,
    • Memorii, Vol. II: (Însemnări zilnice maiu 1917–mart 1920). Războiul național. Lupta pentru o nouă viață politică. Bucharest: Editura Națională Ciornei, 1930. OCLC 493897808
    • Istoria literaturii românești contemporane. II: În căutarea fondului (1890–1934). Bucharest: Editura Adevĕrul, 1934.
    • O viață de om. Așa cum a fost. Vol. II: Luptă. Bucharest: Editura N. Stroilă, 1934.
    • Memorii. Vol. IV: Încoronarea și boala regelui. Bucharest: Editura Națională Ciornei, 1939. OCLC 493904950
    • Memorii. Vol. V: Agonia regală și regența. Bucharest: Editura Naționala Ciornei, 1939. OCLC 935564396
    • Memorii. Vol. VI: Încercarea guvernării peste partide: (1931–2). Vălenii de Munte: Datina Românească, 1939. OCLC 493905114
  • Anatol Măcriș, Conspecte de istorie. Bucharest: Editura Agerpres, 2008. ISBN 978-973-88768-4-2
  • Aurel Sasu (ed.), Dicționarul biografic al literaturii române, Vol. I. Pitești: Editura Paralela 45, 2004. ISBN 973-697-758-7
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  • Svetlana Suveică, Basarabia în primul deceniu interbelic (1918–1928): modernizare prin reforme. Monografii ANTIM VII. Chișinău: Editura Pontos, 2010. ISBN 978-9975-51-070-7
  • C. D. Zeletin, "Taina poetului Ion Buzdugan", in Metaliteratură, Vol. 12, Issues 1–2, 2012, pp. 39–45.

buzdugan, alion, buzdugan, romanian, cyrillic, russian, Ион, Буздуган, born, ivan, alexandrovici, buzdâga, march, 1887, january, 1967, bessarabian, romanian, poet, folklorist, politician, young, schoolteacher, russian, empire, 1908, wrote, poetry, collected, f. Ion Alion Buzdugan 1 Romanian Cyrillic and Russian Ion Buzdugan born Ivan Alexandrovici Buzdaga 2 3 4 March 9 1887 January 29 1967 was a Bessarabian Romanian poet folklorist and politician A young schoolteacher in the Russian Empire by 1908 he wrote poetry and collected folklore emphasizing Bessarabia s links with Romania and associated with various founding figures of the Romanian nationalist movement beginning with Ion Pelivan Buzdugan was a far left figure during the February Revolution but eventually rallied with the National Moldavian Party in opposition to the socialists and the Bolsheviks He vehemently supported the union of Bessarabia with Romania during the existence of an independent Moldavian Democratic Republic and as a member of its legislature Sfatul Țării worked to bring it about Threatened by the Bolsheviks he fled to Romania and returned with an expeditionary corps headed by General Ernest Broșteanu being one of the delegates who voted for the union and one of dignitaries who signed its proclamation Ion Alion BuzduganBuzdugan ca 1914Member of Sfatul ȚăriiIn office November 1917 November 1918ConstituencyBălți CountyMember of the Assembly of DeputiesIn office November 1919 May 1925In office June 1926 July 1932Personal detailsBornIvan Alexandrovici Buzdaga 1887 03 09 March 9 1887Brinzenii Noi Bessarabia Governorate Russian EmpireDiedJanuary 29 1967 1967 01 29 aged 79 Bucharest Communist RomaniaNationalityRomanianPolitical partyNational Moldavian Party 1917 Socialist Revolutionary Party 1917 Bessarabian Peasants Party 1918 Peasants Party 1921 National Peasants Party 1926 Peasants Party Lupu 1927 Democratic Nationalist Party ca 1933 Romanian Front 1935 ProfessionPoet folklorist translator schoolteacher journalist lawyerNicknameNică RomanașIn interwar Greater Romania Buzdugan received mixed reviews as a neo traditionalist poet while also serving terms as a Bălți County representative in the Assembly of Deputies There he advocated decentralization and a system of zemstva but opposed Bessarabian autonomy while also becoming noted for his hawkish stance against the Soviet Union his radicalized nationalism and his antisemitic outbursts He was successively a member of the Bessarabian Peasants Party the Peasants Party the National Peasants Party the Peasants Party Lupu and the Democratic Nationalists For a while he was employed as a civil administrator before delving in fascist politics with the Romanian Front His political activity made him a target of repression under the Romanian communist regime but he avoided arrest by going into hiding during the late 1940s and early 50s Protected by the literary critic Perpessicius he later reemerged but until the time of his death was only allowed to publish pseudonymous translations from Russian literature culminating with a posthumous rendition of Eugene Onegin Since the 1990s his poetic work has been recovered and reassessed in both Romania and Moldova Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 National Moldavian Party 1 3 Union process 1 4 Beginnings in Greater Romania 1 5 PNȚ and PȚ L 1 6 Iorga cabinet and Romanian Front 1 7 Repression and death 2 Notes 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly years edit According to updated reference works the future Ion Buzdugan was born in 1887 in Brinzenii Noi now in Telenești District Moldova the son of peasants Alexandru and Ecaterina Buzdaga 5 who also had seven daughters 6 One 1936 entry claims that he was born in 1889 in Buzdugeni 7 Both villages were at the time included in the Russian Empire s Bessarabian Governorate and the young man was educated at a teachers seminary in Bayramcha He later studied agriculture law and literature in Russian schools in Kamianets Podilskyi and Moscow 8 Buzdugan who claimed to have lodged with and befriended the Ukrainian poet Ivan Franko 9 eventually took a license to practice law from Moscow University 10 Influenced to some degree by the work of Mihai Eminescu 11 he began writing his own poetry published in Bessarabian magazines from 1905 under the pseudonym Nică Romanaș or Romanaș Nică the Romanian Fella 12 13 Other pen names he used include B Cogalnic Ion Campeanu and I Dumbrăveanu 14 He became involved with the groups of Romanian nationalists then forming in the Governorate writing for their newspaper Basarabia and while in Kamianets establishing contacts with the Romanians east of Bessarabia 15 In 1907 1909 a schoolteacher in Bursuceni he associated the Romanian national club founded by judge Ion Pelivan His activity there brought him under the watch of the Okhrana and during the subsequent clampdown he received a punishment for having taught his students in Romanian 16 Nevertheless he remained active in the nationalist circles and by 1913 was in contact with Cuvant Moldovenesc journal 17 which he also edited for a while again as N Romanaș 7 He also began a lifetime work of collecting Romanian folklore and despite such work being repressed by the Russian authorities documented the folkloric links between Bessarabia and other Romanian inhabited regions 13 The folk songs of his collections also pointed to the Bessarabians dissatisfaction with Tsarist autocracy against claims that they enjoyed that regime more than they supported Romania 18 Buzdugan volunteered as an officer in the Imperial Russian Army 7 engaged in the Romanian theater of war At some point during the events of the Russian Revolution he and his Bessarabian colleague Gherman Pantea rallied with the revolutionary far left joining the Socialist Revolutionary Party 19 according to other sources they may have even been involved with the Bolsheviks 20 By the time of the February Revolution Buzdugan had entered the Moldavian Soldiers Organization in Odessa and took up the task of propaganda work among the Bessarabian units of the Imperial Russian Army 21 He was still active as a writer networking with his colleagues from Western Moldavia By February 1917 he had joined the literary circle Academia Barlădeană becoming close friends with George Tutoveanu and Alexandru Vlahuță 22 While on the front lines he helped save the life of the Romanian officer and fellow writer Camil Petrescu 23 National Moldavian Party edit After March 13 1917 both Buzdugan and Pantea became members of Paul Gore s National Moldavian Party PNM the driving force of Romanian nationalism in the former Governorate and were co opted on its steering committee 24 However as later noted by the party colleague Pan Halippa Buzdugan was categorically opposed to the PNM s right wing which looked to Bessarabia s secession from Russia and her Union with Romania 25 Taken by the Russian army to Iași the provisional Romanian capital he befriended Mihail Sadoveanu and other contributors to Romania newspaper His mailing address was the paper s headquarters which was also the domicile of playwright Barbu Ștefănescu Delavrancea 26 He therefore kept contact with the Romanian nationalists including the historian Nicolae Iorga Iorga recalled that Buzdugan was agitated in favor of socialist reforms and critical of the Romanian King Ferdinand I somewhat supportive of a Russian backed uprising and favoring mass desertion 27 At the time he spoke a picturesque Moldavian dialect mixed with Russian neologisms 28 On April 10 Buzdugan attended the Bessarabian Schoolteachers Congress presided upon by Alexandr K Schmidt and comprising educators of all nationalities There he agitated in favor of a split calling on Romanian teachers to form their own cleanly Moldavian congress and supporting the idea of intensive courses to formalize and standardize their language 3 Buzdugan sought to convince his public that what they called Moldavian was the same as Romanian and to prove his point he read them fragments from the 1688 Cantacuzino Bible 29 He also advocated the introduction of the Latin alphabet to replace Cyrillic everywhere including in zemstva schools 30 In May with such autonomist goals in mind Buzdugan Pantea and Anton Crihan founded the newspaper Pămant și Voe styled Organ of the Moldavian Socialist Revolutionary Party 31 Additionally together with the playwright Sergiu Victor Cujbă he founded a people s university and a peasants theater 32 Buzdugan Grigore Cazacliu Vasile Țanțu and Andrei Scobioală soon set up a Moldavian Committee of the Romanian War Front which began collecting Romanian church literature and primers to be used in the struggle against Russification 33 The committee watched with alarm as the Ukrainian People s Republic made overtures to incorporate Bessarabia into her borders The Ukrainian Rada received a letter of protest written for the Bessarabian soldiers organization by Buzdugan It argued that on the basis of historical ethnographic rights of her distinct customs and of her economic situation Bessarabia had an imprescriptible right to complete autonomy 34 Buzdugan was also one of the founders of the PNM and Committee tribune Soldatul Moldovan and returned to his career in the Bessarabian press 35 According to Iorga Buzdugan was already going through a taming process and warned the Romanians that Russian radicals were plotting a coup 36 Buzdugan himself claimed to have met a congratulatory King Ferdinand using the occasion to press him for a nationwide land reform 26 In late October 1917 he participated in the Moldavian Soldiers Congress of Chișinău where it was decided to form Sfatul Țării the Bessarabian legislature During the proceedings Buzdugan and Toma Jalbă insisted in favor of annexing to Bessarabia the Romanian speaking areas east of the river Dniester Nistru although this failed to occur their speeches were welcomed with applause by other delegates 37 The Congress appointed him to an Organizational Bureau that also comprised Halippa Ion Inculeț Teofil Ioncu and Pantelimon Erhan It was the provisional governing body of the region and wrote down that laws and regulations for the legislative election of that month 38 Buzdugan himself was elected to Sfatul Țării representing Bălți County 39 and joined the Moldavian Bloc a parliamentary club reuniting former PNM members informally Pelivan s godsons with the other Romanian nationalists 40 Buzdugan and Erhan supported Pelivan as leader of Sfatul clashing with the left wing Peasants Faction the Mensheviks led by Eugen Kenigschatz and non Romanian deputies such as Krste Misirkov This coalition preferred the leftist Inculeț who did not approve of Bessarabia s secession from the Russian Republic 41 Against Buzdugan s protests Pelivan asked his followers to also support Inculeț 42 In November 1917 during the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia Buzdugan was one of the secretaries of Bessarabian Soldiers Congress part of a presidium headed by Vasile Cijevschi This assembly voted favorably on the region s emancipation referencing the right to self determination 43 In December Sfatul proclaimed the Moldavian Democratic Republic a quasi independent state Pelivan and his godsons who were pushing for the union with Romania found themselves harassed by Bolshevik groups such as Front Odel confederated with the Rumcherod and loyal to the new Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic They began preparing for an armed confrontation 44 Buzdugan and Scobioală also acted as liaisons between the Romanian Land Forces under Constantin Prezan and the White Russians represented locally by Dmitry Shcherbachev of the 7th Army 45 Union process edit nbsp The Act of Union of the Moldavian Democratic Republic carrying Buzdugan s nameEventually disguised as Russian soldiers and accompanied by sailor Vasile Gafencu the godsons left Chișinău and headed for Iași where they contacted the Romanian Army 46 On January 12 the Romanians under General Ernest Broșteanu crossed the border to suppress the Bolshevik uprising see Romanian military intervention in Bessarabia Buzdugan with Crihan Pelivan Gafencu Țanțu and Gheorghe Buruiană followed them closely 47 Later sources suggest that Buzdugan and his Moldavian Committee set up a unit of the Republican Army which reportedly fought against the Bolsheviks during subsequent skirmishes 48 When the act of union as put up for debate in the Sfatul session of April 9 O S March 27 1918 Buzdugan was among the 86 member majority who voted in favor 49 During the preliminary talks he had seconded the Romanian Prime Minister Alexandru Marghiloman reassuring the Peasant Faction and Inculeț that land reform would be enacted in Romania 50 By then a leader of the Moldavian Bloc he urged his colleagues to support union as stemming from the principle of self determination and the most revolutionary act in the history of our people 51 As Sfatul Secretary together with Inculeț the President of the Republic and Halippa the Vice President he signed into law the union proclamation 52 Buzdugan was also the one selected to read the proclamation in the plenum session 4 13 29 Buzdugan was working on a volume of patriotic poetry which came out that year as Țara mea My Country 53 In October 1918 Sfatul Țării s eponymous journal put out his monograph on the history of boyardom and peasantry in Bessarabia 54 Late that November he was reelected Secretary of Sfatul in circumstances that were deemed illegal by the anti unionist opposition under his watch unconditional union which excluded the regionalist provisions of the March document was put to the vote 55 Buzdugan joined Halippa Pelivan and Cazacliu on a Sfatul mission to Cernăuți in Bukovina and Alba Iulia in Transylvania where they were to attend popular assemblies confirming the establishment of Greater Romania 56 In Bukovina Buzdugan expressed his enthusiasm for our national cause the awakening of the entire nation between the Nistru and the Tisa 57 However bedridden with the Spanish flu in Cernăuți he was unable to follow Pelivan to Alba Iulia and failed to witness Transylvania s incorporation into Romania on December 1 Great Union 58 In his last days as a Sfatul deputy Buzdugan signed a protest addressed to the Romanian government of Ion I C Brătianu citing cases of abuse by the Gendarme satraps including their alleged embezzlement of welfare supplies The document warned that the nation was nowhere near to moral unity to the one guarantee that formal union would be strengthened 59 From January 1919 he was among the founders of a credit union formed to assist Bessarabian peasants in view of the land reform Its steering committee also included Halippa Buruiană Crihan Vasile Barcă Teofil Ioncu Vasile Mandrescu Mihail Minciună and Nicolae Suruceanu 60 Beginnings in Greater Romania edit On April 27 Buzdugan and many of his credit union colleagues rallied with the PNM s successor the Bessarabian Peasants Party PȚB He was voted with Pantea a member of its Central Committee 61 He served continuously in Romania s Assembly of Deputies where he represented Bălți County from November 1919 to July 1932 7 During his first term he embraced leftist causes and leaned toward class struggle 18 backing the Alexandru Vaida Voevod led coalition against the National Liberal Party In March 1920 days after Vaida had been recalled by King Ferdinand Buzdugan read out the PȚB s protest against this coup 62 He shared his party s opposition to the policies of the new People s Party government and spoke out against its interventions in the local administration of Bessarabia In July 1920 he took the rostrum to address the sacking of A Crudu the Prefect of Hotin County claiming that the latter had been abused and humiliated by the authorities 63 Buzdugan rallied with the Halippa faction of the PȚB which sought integration within the nationwide Peasants Party PȚ the other wings comprising Inculeț Pantea and Pelivan preferred independence He was one of 9 parliamentarians who together with Halippa and the non PȚB agrarian theorist Constantin Stere joined the PȚ in on July 18 1921 64 Under Inculeț s presidency the PȚB excluded him on July 22 65 His literary career took off and his subsequent poetic work was soon taken up in literary newspapers and magazines all across Greater Romania These include Viața Rominească Adevărul Literar și Artistic Convorbiri Literare Cuget Romanesc Gandirea Luceafărul Sburătorul Convorbiri Literare Flacăra Lamura and Drum Drept 14 He also became one of the staff poets at Sandu Teleajen s review Gand Romanesc in December 1921 66 Buzdugan was inducted into the Romanian Writers Society and co founded the Bessarabian Writers Society 14 Completing his studies at the University of Iași he took a Doctorate in Political Economy from Cernăuți University 7 67 nbsp Buzdugan in the 1920sMade a Commander of both the Order of the Crown and the Star of Romania as well as a recipient of the Ferdinand Medal he took up practice as a lawyer based in Bucharest and Bălți 7 His work in letters and folkloristics was collected in five retrospective volumes Cantece din războiu Songs from the War 1921 68 Cantece din stepă Songs from the Steppe 1923 69 Cantece din Basarabia Songs from Bessarabia two volumes 1921 1928 Miresme din stepă Scents of the Steppe 1922 and a reprint of Țara mea 1928 70 In 1923 he won a national prize for poetry granted by the Romanian Ministry of Arts 71 With Gheorghe Bogdan Duică C S Făgețel and N A Constantinescu he also contributed a Festschrift for Iorga published in 1921 72 His poems several of which dealt with themes of national fulfillment addressed to Mother Country 73 were often in dialect According to literary historian George Călinescu they sound to us like the French Canadian language must sound to the French 74 Iorga described them as an expression of the primitive but powerful soul with rhymes of patient naivete and overall vastly superior to those of Alexei Mateevici 75 Eugen Lovinescu the modernist doyen found Miresme din stepă to be almost entirely un literary only valid as proofs of Romanian cultural continuity during a time of alienation we can only approach the book for its cultural interest and while numbing our aesthetic scruples 76 A similar point was made by Șerban Cioculescu I Buzdugan s poems cannot be said to be attractive in their beauty All elements are lacking no sensitivity no imagination no originality of ideas or artistic forms He described Cantece din stepă as derivative from the works of Octavian Goga or Vasile Alecsandri and instructive as to the comparative underdevelopment of Bessarabian literature Cioculescu also noted that Buzdugan had not mastered Romanian grammar his spelling errors all too numerous to be disregarded 69 As noted by critic Răzvan Voncu Buzdugan s lyrical contribution stands for neo traditionalism in the manner of Gandirea writers but is spontaneous and without influence from Expressionism Voncu rates Buzdugan as a second shelf traditionalist ranking below Adrian Maniu or Aron Cotruș but more valuable than Sandu Tudor Radu Gyr or Vintilă Ciocalteu 13 According to writer Ion Țurcanu his sonnet Păstorii The Shepherds is of exceptional quality with its expression of the rustic universe and its grasp of the unsuspected materialness of silence However it is hard to comprehend why this literary phenomenon that is a credit to Romanian literature remains rather singular in Buzdugan s work and why he never made it as greater caliber poet 77 PNȚ and PȚ L edit Reelected to the Assembly as one of the PȚ representatives for Bessarabia Buzdugan focused on agrarian issues such as the liquidation of the zemstva and defended the latter as tools of peasants self management 78 He and Halippa were also asked to respond in the Assembly about how they had carried out the land reform He fought over the matter with Alexandru C Constantinescu of the National Liberals 79 but also with more radical Bessarabian agrarianists such as Ludovic Dauș 80 His other focus was Romania s defense against a hostile Soviet Union which had not recognized Bessarabia as part of Romania His speeches applauded by all political camps Buzdugan depicted Romania as a bastion of Christendom and Western civilization Unlike other PȚ deputies he did not see Romania s social backwardness as an impediment and suggested that making Romanians healthy and strong would ensure that the country fulfilled her cultural mission 81 Documenting the Comintern links of the Romanian Communist Party he also suggested that the PȚ itself was being infiltrated by the Krestintern 82 In December 1924 Buzdugan had a public row with Artur Văitoianu Minister of Transport in the new Brătianu cabinet at stake was the issue of the state railways which Buzdugan deemed unfit for an imminent war with the Soviets 83 His later speeches about Bessarabian unionism universally ignored 84 Buzdugan continued to point out cases of abuse and corruption in his native region protesting against the sentencing by a court martial of his fellow deputy Gheorghe Zbornea 85 and warning that such displays weakened anti communism in the region 86 His conflict with the Brătianu government became acute with Buzdugan fully supporting Stere who was sidelined by the majority deputies reportedly the poet politician Goga threatened Buzdugan with a revolver during the session of May 4 1925 87 On May 17 he took part in the opposition congress at Dacia Hall alongside Peasantist and Democratic Nationalist figures with Communist Party men present in the audience This meeting was broken up by the army and Buzdugan although defended by Iorga found himself stripped of his deputy s seat on May 19 88 Buzdugan followed Halippa and Pelivan into National Peasants Party PNȚ formed from the PȚ s merger with the Romanian National Party Reelected in June 1926 he became noted for his antisemitic outbursts taking the rostrum to address the issue of anti Jewish disturbances at Cernăuți Scholar Irina Livezeanu describes Buzdugan s speech as one studded with anti Semitic buzzwords and racist commonplaces He accused the Jews of provoking vague acts of violence to harm Romania however taking sides with the National Christian Defense League students he warned that the Jews could expect pogroms to occur 89 In February 1927 he defected to the Peasants Party Lupu PȚ L serving on its executive committee alongside figures such as Nicolae L Lupu and Ioan Pangal 90 During the 10th anniversary of the Bessarabian union Buzdugan showed himself optimistic about the prospects of the region against Halippa and Ioncu who shared a bleaker outlook 91 In November 1928 at another festive meeting of the former Sfatul deputies he clashed with Stere who demanded that a resolution be adopted in support of people s liberties and against the exceptional laws Buzdugan reproached Stere So you came here for politicking 92 In his new term in the Assembly after the 1928 election he took a position against Bessarabian autonomism describing it as a Russian formula and a worrisome threat 93 Buzdugan also questioned the PNȚ government over its alleged tolerance of communist and pro Soviet activities in Bessarabia 94 Nevertheless he endorsed decentralization of the lesser government bodies for it won t do that someone should have to travel back and forth from Bessarabia to Bucharest 95 Iorga cabinet and Romanian Front edit Buzdugan was active with Pantea within the Union of Reserve Officers which collaborated with the Siguranța agency in combating communism finding out and unmasking those who carried out revolutionary propaganda 96 a rough equivalent of the old regime s gentry assembly it also demanded pay raises for Bessarabians in the military 97 In 1930 he sided with the nationalist groups in the Assembly against the PNȚ government which had promised to ethnic Bulgarians to enact a liberal land law in Southern Dobruja thus limiting Romanian colonization attempts 98 As noted by Iorga Buzdugan babbling as usual attacked the Dobrujan Bulgarian deputies as proxies of the Bulgarian Tsardom 99 Buzdugan also had a verbal bout with Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu of the far left Peasant Workers Bloc calling him a parasite of the working class 100 Co opted by Iorga during his technocratic administration of 1931 1932 he served as Undersecretary of State in the Ministry of Commerce and Industry As Iorga recounts Buzdugan and Vladimir Cristi were imposed on him by a Bessarabian bloc of deputies who wished to have their representative in Government this was against rumors that he was personally close to Buzdugan and intended to make him his son in law 101 In order to join the government in January 1932 Buzdugan quarrelled with Lupu and the PȚ L who remained in the opposition 102 He also defeated Pantea for the position although the latter was a favorite of the new king Carol II Buzdugan depicted Pantea as an unreliable former Bolshevik and also as a pawn of the National Liberals 103 At the time Pamfil Șeicaru and Curentul daily mounted a campaign against Buzdugan alleging that he had illegally pocketed money from the industrial concern in Bălți He responded by suing Șeicaru 104 By May 1932 Buzdugan had been singled out by Carol II as one of the ridiculous government members whom Iorga was ordered to replace he handed in his resignation dignified without any expectations 105 After Iorga s fall in the elections of 1932 Buzdugan dedicated himself to another calling supporting anti Soviet and White emigre circles in Romania According to the reports of Siguranța spies he intended to relaunch the Golos Bukharesta a Russian anti communist newspaper and to obtain support for the Whites from the cabinet of Gheorghe Tătărescu 106 By January 1934 he had joined Iorga s Democratic Nationalists heading their organization in Bălți County 107 In 1935 Buzdugan veered to the far right joining the PNȚ s semi fascist 108 splinter group the Romanian Front and heading its own Bălți County chapter 7 After introducing the Romanian public to the Russian avant garde with translations that Iorga deems very good 109 Buzdugan focused on the works of Pushkin publishing in Gandirea a rendition of his Gypsies 1935 At the time scholar Eufrosina Dvoichenko described it as the best of several Romanian attempts to translate the poem 110 In 1937 he produced a new volume of his own poems Păstori de timpuri Time herders 13 70 A contributor to Halippa s Viața Basarabiei magazine in 1939 he became a co founder of the Bessarabian Writers Society 111 However according to sociologist Petru Negură Buzdugan s verse was entirely backward and irrelevant by 1930 Just as agriculturalists were facing the devastating effects of the Great Depression the peasants depicted in poems by Pan Halippa or Ion Buzdugan continued to cultivate their land with love and judiciousness 112 Buzdugan escaped Bessarabia following the first Soviet occupation of 1940 while former members of the Union of Reserve Officers including Emanoil Catelli were jailed or deported 97 Reconciling with Inculeț and Pantea he joined their Bessarabian Circle an advocacy group based in Bucharest 113 In 1942 at the height of World War II his Metanii de luceferi Genuflections of the Evening Stars came out It was to be his final published work in poetry although three others exist as manuscripts 13 During the Soviet push into Bessarabia at the start of 1944 Buzdugan was offered a temporary home in Brezoi Valcea County southwestern Romania With the help of Alexandru Leca Morariu his verse continued to see print in magazines like Gazeta de Transilvania and Revista Bucovinei 4 Repression and death edit Even before the official establishment of a Romanian communist regime in 1948 Buzdugan came to the attention of the Soviet occupation forces which began procedures to arrest or deport him as a political undesirable 13 In 1945 he was hiding in monastic clothes at Bistrița Monastery where he met the medical assistant and monk in training Valeriu Anania In his memoirs Anania describes Buzdugan as a mediocre poet his Orthodox devotional pieces comparable to Lord s Army hymns adding He grew old with the impression of him being a great poet and I became awfully sad at the thought that I might grow old with that same impression of myself According to Anania Buzdugan also angered the starets with his urban demeanor and left for Bucharest when times changed for the better 114 From 1948 Buzdugan escaped threats of arrest by hiding in an attic at Blaj where he was protected by Ioan Suciu a bishop of the Greek Catholic Church 6 When the Church itself was dissolved he hid in private homes 13 or dressed up as a traveling monk and sought refuge in monasteries at Tăuni and Targu Mureș later at Bujoreni and Polovragi 6 In 1950 he had returned to Bucharest living with his mother who was in her nineties and four of his sisters on Vlad Județul Street Vitan 115 That year Buzdugan began writing to the literary critic Perpessicius The latter arranged for Buzdugan to heal a fractured right arm with help from the poet doctor Virgiliu Moscovici Monda 116 In 1951 commissioned by Perpessicius to translate Eugene Onegin Buzdugan announced that he was working on his own epic poem retelling the death of Miron Costin the latter if it exists was never published In April 1953 he wrote again to announce his hurried departure to Bazna Transylvania where his sister ran a summer camp 117 With the onset of de Stalinization in the Soviet Union Romanian literati could hope for a more tolerant regime In this climate Buzdugan began frequenting a literary circle in the Bucharest home of Ion Larian and Paraschiva Postolache where he met young writers such as Eugen Barbu and C D Zeletin Other senior guests included Virgil Carianopol N Crevedia and Radu D Rosetti 118 From ca 1955 when Romanian communism turned increasingly nationalist and anti Soviet Buzdugan was allowed a quiet return to publishing but had to limit himself to translation work 13 His earlier volumes had been taken out of the public libraries along with many other books referencing Bessarabia 119 In 1956 Steaua magazine hosted Buzdugan s version of Pushkin s To Ovid 120 Reportedly he claimed to have authored a translation of Boris Godunov stolen from him by the regime s poet laureate Victor Eftimiu 121 Using the pseudonym B I Alion he published in 1962 a version of Maxim Gorky s tale A Girl and Death 14 His other contributions were renditions from Blok Bunin Kotsiubynsky Lermontov Shevchenko and Yesenin 13 Terminally ill with cancer 6 Buzdugan spent his final months at Filantropia Hospital where he was visited by C D Zeletin who recorded his memoirs 122 He died on January 27 1967 in Bucharest 4 123 and was buried at Bellu cemetery 124 His funeral was attended by Halippa and Pantea and saw them speaking publicly for the reincorporation of Bessarabia into Romania reportedly the speech was tolerated by the authorities which were allowing non politicized expressions of nationalist fervor 125 However fearing a backlash several guests left when Pantea began describing Buzdugan s career in politics 126 Later that year Buzdugan s Eugene Onegin appeared under his real name with a foreword by Perpessicius 127 According to philologist Ioana Parvulescu it was a good translation 128 The last of his surviving sisters Eleonora died in 1995 6 Despite the mood of liberalization in the 1950s and 60s Buzdugan s name was rarely invoked in print before the Romanian Revolution of 1989 and only two new books of literary criticism mentioned his work 13 In the Moldavian SSR his name was banned from all reference 13 122 This stance changed after 1989 In independent Moldova his work saw print in anthologies including Literatura din Basarabia in secolul XX 77 and Poeți din Basarabia 129 In Romania Zeletin reprinted Miresme din stepă 130 and published his correspondence his collected works appeared as 2 volumes in 2014 at Chișinău 13 131 In 2012 the editor had noted that Buzdugan his friend is nonetheless forgotten even today when the history of our stolen provinces is being combed through 29 Notes edit Full variant given by Buzdugan himself in the 1950s See N Scurtu p 86 Călinescu p 1036 Colesnic pp 409 438 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 65 Sasu p 244 a b Onisifor Ghibu Trei luni din viața Basarabiei in Societatea de Maine Nr 13 1924 p 283 a b c d Constantin Poenaru Viața bucovineană in Rimnicu Valcea postbelic II in Revista Romană ASTRA Nr 4 2009 p 14 Sasu p 244 a b c d e Zeletin 2012 p 41 a b c d e f g Politics and Political Parties in Roumania p 419 London International Reference Library Publishers Co 1936 OCLC 252801505 Sasu pp 244 245 See also Basciani p 100 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 188 Grigurcu pp 123 124 Zeletin 2012 p 42 Basciani p 100 in Romanian Cassian Maria Spiridon Eminescu la 1939 in Convorbiri Literare January 2004 Iorga O viață p 270 a b c d e f g h i j k l m in Romanian Răzvan Voncu O revelație Ion Buzdugan in Romania Literară Nr 25 2015 a b c d Sasu p 245 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 pp 65 188 Constantin et al 2011 pp 70 73 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 188 a b Insemnări literare in Sburătorul Nr 14 1921 p 344 Colesnic pp 248 407 438 439 443 Suveică p 68 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 pp 88 89 Zeletin 2012 pp 40 43 Grigurcu p 124 Zeletin 2012 p 41 Cemartan p 123 Colesnic p 438 a b Zeletin 2012 p 43 Iorga O viață pp 270 272 276 Iorga O viață p 271 a b c Zeletin 2012 p 39 Basciani p 81 Zeletin 2012 p 39 Colesnic p 248 Sasu p 433 Constantin p 37 Constantin pp 43 44 Colesnic p 250 Constantin pp 43 44 355 Sasu p 245 Iorga O viață pp 270 272 See also Grigurcu p 124 Zeletin 2012 pp 43 44 Constantin p 54 Constantin pp 53 56 Constantin et al 2011 pp 87 90 Clark p 151 Constantin et al 2011 pp 89 90 92 94 See also Colesnic p 407 Constantin et al 2011 pp 92 93 Constantin et al 2011 pp 93 94 Pawel Henryk Rutkowski Zjednoczenie Besarabii z Krolestwem Rumunii w 1918 roku in Marcin Kosienkowski ed Spotkania polsko moldawskie Ksiega poswiecona pamieci Profesora Janusza Solaka p 143 Lubin Episteme 2013 ISBN 978 83 62495 28 3 Constantin et al 2011 pp 115 116 Pantelimon V Sinadino Cu Sfatul țării in vremuri grele in Magazin Istoric March 2008 p 13 Constantin et al 2011 pp 116 119 Constantin et al 2011 p 122 G Spina Astra subversivă in Revista Romană ASTRA Nr 1 2015 pp 28 29 Basciani pp 100 101 Clark pp 150 157 Măcriș pp 101 103 Basciani pp 100 101 Măcriș p 101 The Roumanian Occupation pp 64 66 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 134 Măcriș pp 102 103 Călinescu p 1029 Suveică pp 140 318 The Roumanian Occupation p 105 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 3 Constantin et al 2011 pp 130 142 Constantin et al 2011 p 134 Constantin et al 2011 pp 137 Iorga 1930 p 126 Basciani pp 107 108 Informațiuni in Unirea Ziar Național Nr 17 1919 p 2 Cemartan pp 127 128 138 Iorga 1930 p 375 Suveică p 87 Cemartan pp 137 140 141 Cemartan p 138 See also Basciani pp 170 171 Iorga Istoria p 262 Basciani p 100 Sasu p 245 Iorga Istoria pp 293 294 a b in Romanian O uitată recenzie a lui Șerban Cioculescu despre Cantece din stepă de Ion Buzdugan in Litere Nr 11 12 2013 pp 41 42 a b Călinescu p 1029 Sasu p 245 Cronici Premiile literare in Gandirea Nr 6 1923 p 130 in Romanian Leonidas Rados Un proiect interbelic eșuat Melanges Russo 1929 1930 in Anuarul Institutului de Istorie George Barițiu Series Historica 2010 p 266 Grigurcu pp 214 215 Călinescu p 941 Iorga Istoria p 293 Eugen Lovinescu Istoria literaturii romane contemporane II Evoluția poeziei lirice pp 84 85 Bucharest Editura Ancona 1927 a b in Romanian Ion Țurcanu Poezia basarabeană din interbelic in Convorbiri Literare June 2006 Suveică p 230 Iorga 1939 IV pp 113 114 Colesnic p 213 Filipescu 2009 pp 241 250 Filipescu 2006 pp 74 79 80 Filipescu 2009 p 242 See also Grigurcu p 124 Iorga 1939 IV pp 45 46 Basciani p 210 Filipescu 2006 pp 76 77 Iorga 1939 V pp 18 20 Iorga 1939 V pp 24 26 Irina Livezeanu Cultural Politics in Greater Romania pp 126 127 Ithaca Cornell University Press 2000 ISBN 0 8014 8688 2 Ioan Scurtu Intemeierea și activitatea Partidului Țărănesc dr N Lupu 1927 1934 in Revista de Istorie Nr 5 1976 p 699 Basciani pp 254 255 Dinu Poștarencu Date inedite din biografia lui Constantin Stere in Anuarul Muzeului Literaturii Romane Iași Vol III 2010 pp 58 59 Suveică pp 199 200 Iorga 1939 V pp 329 330 Suveică p 199 Colesnic pp 390 391 a b in Romanian Igor Cașu Arhivele comunismului Cum era urmărită elita militară a Basarabiei de poliția politică sovietică in Adevărul Moldova January 19 2011 Dietmar Muller Staatsburger auf Widerruf Juden und Muslime als Alteritatspartner im rumanischen und serbischen Nationscode Ethnonationale Staatsburgerschaftskonzepte 1878 1941 Balkanologische Veroffentlichungen Band 41 p 367 Wiesbaden Harrasowitz Verlag 2005 ISBN 3 447 05248 1 Iorga 1939 VI p 12 Adunarea Deputaților Sesiunea Extraordinară 1931 in Infrățirea Romanească Nr 21 1931 p 205 Nicolae Iorga Doi ani de restaurație Ce a fost ce am vrut ce am putut p 91 Vălenii de Munte Datina Romanească 1932 OCLC 45882093 Iorga 1939 VI p 99 Iorga 1939 VI pp 284 285 288 Iorga 1939 VI pp 286 288 290 291 Iorga 1939 VI pp 385 386 390 Vadim Guzun Comandorul Sablin Liderul monarhiștilor ruși urmărit de Siguranță și de Securitate 1926 1959 pp 189 190 Bucharest Editura Filos 2014 ISBN 978 606 8619 03 3 Asistența in Nicolae Iorga Cuvantarea ținută la Intrunirea Comitetului executiv al Partidului Naționalist Democrat de la 21 Ianuarie 1934 p 26 Bucharest Democratic Nationalist Party amp Tipografia Ziarului Universul 1934 Adrian Webb The Routledge Companion to Central and Eastern Europe since 1919 p 145 Abingdon Routledge 2008 ISBN 0 203 92817 2 Iorga Istoria p 294 E Dvoicenco Influența lui Pușkin asupra scriitorilor romani in Revista Fundațiilor Regale Nr 10 1937 pp 70 71 Aliona Grati Magda Isanos Intre minutu acesta care bate și celălalt in Akademos Nr 1 2016 pp 147 148 151 Petru Negură Les ideologies bessarabiennes Les ecrivains bessarabiens des annees 1930 entre regionalisme culturel et quete d identite nationale in Pontes Review of South East European Studies Vol 5 2009 p 171 Constantin p 91 Valeriu Anania Memorii Chapter Generația academică Cluj 46 n p Iași Polirom 2008 ISBN 978 973 46 2065 4 Zeletin 2012 pp 40 41 N Scurtu pp 85 86 88 N Scurtu pp 87 88 C D Zeletin O carte de excepție privitoare la Ion Barbu I in Ateneu Nr 10 2011 p 8 in Romanian Liliana Corboca R S S Moldovenească și cenzura romanească in Contrafort Nr 11 12 2008 in Romanian Mircea Tomuș O Junime clujeană in Convorbiri Literare August 2010 C D Zeletin Amintirea lui Victor Eftimiu in Acolada Nr 7 8 2010 p 6 a b Grigurcu p 124 Sasu p 245 N Scurtu p 85 Constantin pp 31 192 Constantin amp Negrei 2009 p 238 Constantin pp 31 192 193 Sasu p 245 Zeletin 2012 p 41 in Romanian Ioana Parvulescu Cartea din ecran in Romania Literară Nr 34 2005 Aliona Grati Constelația Poeți din Basarabia prin telescop sociologic in Philologia Vol LIII Nr 1 2 January April 2011 p 165 Zeletin 2012 p 44 Grigurcu p 123References editThe Roumanian Occupation in Bessarabia Documents Paris Imprimerie Lahure 1920 OCLC 690481196 Alberto Basciani La difficile unione La Bessarabia e la Grande Romania 1918 1940 Rome Aracne Editore 2007 ISBN 978 88 548 1248 2 George Călinescu Istoria literaturii romane de la origini pină in prezent Bucharest Editura Minerva 1986 Andrei Cemartan Le Parti des Paysans de Bessarabie et la rivalite entre Pantelimon Halippa et Ion Inculeț in Codrul Cosminului Vol XVII Issue 2 2011 pp 121 145 Charles Upson Clark Bessarabia Russia and Roumania on the Black Sea New York City Dodd Mead and Company 1927 OCLC 1539999 Iurie Colesnic Chișinăul din inima noastră Chișinău B P Hașdeu Library 2014 ISBN 978 9975 120 17 3 Ion Constantin Gherman Pantea intre mit și realitate Bucharest Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor 2010 ISBN 978 973 8369 83 2 Ion Constantin Ion Negrei Pantelimon Halippa tribun al Basarabiei Bucharest Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor 2009 ISBN 978 973 8369 65 8 Ion Constantin Ion Negrei Gheorghe Negru Ion Pelivan părinte al mișcării naționale din Basarabia Bucharest Editura Biblioteca Bucureștilor 2011 ISBN 978 606 8337 04 3 Radu Filipescu Partidele parlamentare și problema comunismului 1919 1924 in Annales Universitatis Apulensis Series Historica Vol 10 Issue I 2006 pp 67 83 Percepția frontierei romano sovietice in parlamentul Romaniei 1919 1934 in Acta Moldaviae Septentrionalis Vols VII VIII 2009 pp 239 252 Gheorghe Grigurcu O conștiință a Basarabiei in Philologia Vol LVI Nr 5 6 September December 2014 pp 123 125 Nicolae Iorga Memorii Vol II Insemnări zilnice maiu 1917 mart 1920 Războiul național Lupta pentru o nouă viață politică Bucharest Editura Națională Ciornei 1930 OCLC 493897808 Istoria literaturii romanești contemporane II In căutarea fondului 1890 1934 Bucharest Editura Adevĕrul 1934 O viață de om Așa cum a fost Vol II Luptă Bucharest Editura N Stroilă 1934 Memorii Vol IV Incoronarea și boala regelui Bucharest Editura Națională Ciornei 1939 OCLC 493904950 Memorii Vol V Agonia regală și regența Bucharest Editura Naționala Ciornei 1939 OCLC 935564396 Memorii Vol VI Incercarea guvernării peste partide 1931 2 Vălenii de Munte Datina Romanească 1939 OCLC 493905114 Anatol Măcriș Conspecte de istorie Bucharest Editura Agerpres 2008 ISBN 978 973 88768 4 2 Aurel Sasu ed Dicționarul biografic al literaturii romane Vol I Pitești Editura Paralela 45 2004 ISBN 973 697 758 7 in Romanian Nicolae Scurtu Noi contribuții la bibliografia lui Ion Buzdugan in Litere Nr 1 2014 pp 85 88 Svetlana Suveică Basarabia in primul deceniu interbelic 1918 1928 modernizare prin reforme Monografii ANTIM VII Chișinău Editura Pontos 2010 ISBN 978 9975 51 070 7 C D Zeletin Taina poetului Ion Buzdugan in Metaliteratură Vol 12 Issues 1 2 2012 pp 39 45 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ion Buzdugan amp oldid 1165555275, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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