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- A child prodigy, polymath and polyglot, Iorga produced an unusually large body of scholarly works, establishing his international reputation as a medievalist, Byzantinist, Latinist, Slavist, art historian and philosopher of history.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolae_Iorga
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Nicolae Iorga was a scholar and statesman, Romania’s greatest national historian, who also served briefly as its prime minister (1931–32). Appointed professor of universal history at Bucharest (1895), Iorga early established his historical reputation with his two-volume Geschichte des rumänischen.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Holding teaching positions at the University of Bucharest, the University of Paris and several other academic institutions, Iorga was founder of the International Congress of Byzantine Studies and the Institute of South-East European Studies (ISSEE).
Nicolae Iorga (nē´kōlī yôr´gä), 1871–1940, Romanian historian and statesman. A professor at the Univ. of Bucharest, he founded (1910) and later led the National Democratic party; after World War I he was president of the Romanian national assembly.
When at only 19, Nicolae Iorga (1871-1940) defended his university degree examinations one of his examining professors characterized him as "a true phenomenon both in point of memory and power of ratiocination." Then Iorga worked hard in Paris and in Germany, obtaining a diploma from the prestigious école Pratique des Hautes études and his ...
Nicolae Iorga (1871-1940) was Romania's best-known historian and public intellectual between the two world wars, both at home and abroad. He is seen as the father of Romanian nationalism, as well as the main provider of historical continuity and legitimacy for the new Greater Romania of 1918.
- Georgiana Taranu
Nicolae Iorga was born on 5 June 1871 and was murdered on 27 November 1940 — a fate from which we academics are usually exempt: the most we risk is character assassination by our colleagues in the professional journals. Iorga was killed, however, not so much in...
In 1934, Nicolae Iorga published a three-volume Histoire de la vie byzantine subtitled “Empire and Civilization,” the book represented a synthesis of decades-long research in the field. The seed had already been planted in 1907, when the Romanian historian wrote The Byzantine Empire.