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- Nikolae Iorga (January 17th 1871 – November 27th 1940) was a Romanian historian and Albanologist. He founded an archeologic institute in Saranda and discovered the first record of written Albanian, dating back to 1462. His monument can be found on Saranda’s beachfront boulevard.
www.visitsaranda.net/see/nicolae-iorga-monument/
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Nicolae Iorga [alt 1] [a] (17 January 1871 – 27 November 1940) was a Romanian politician who held top posts, including prime minister and president of the Senate. He was also a historian, literary critic, memoirist, albanologist, poet and playwright.
Nikolae Iorga (January 17th 1871 – November 27th 1940) was a Romanian historian and Albanologist. He founded an archeologic institute in Saranda and discovered the first record of written Albanian, dating back to 1462. His monument can be found on Saranda’s beachfront boulevard.
Nicolae Iorga (născut Nicu N. Iorga, [ 5 ] n. 5 iunie 1871, Botoșani – d. 27 noiembrie 1940, Strejnic, județul Prahova) a fost un istoric, critic literar, documentarist, dramaturg, poet, enciclopedist, memorialist, ministru, parlamentar, cel de-al 34-lea prim-ministru, profesor universitar și academician român.
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
The house where the great romanian historic Nicolae Iorga, lived and created his opera. If you are in Vălenii de Munte go for it !!!
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- Str. George Enescu nr. 3, Valenii de Munte
Feb 26, 2020 · This monument is located at the eastern end of the beach promenade of Sarandë. It is a larger than life bust of Nicolae Iorga with a text in Romanian, Albanian and English on the pedestal.
London: 29&30 Bedford Street, 1907. This is Iorga’s first history of Byzantium, with a focus on the development of Byzantine life “in all its length and breadth and wealth.”. Iorga, Nicolae. Byzantium after Byzantium, introduction by Virgil Cândea, translated by Laura Treptow.