Global Information Lookup Global Information

Alexandrina Cantacuzino information


Alexandrina Cantacuzino
Cantacuzino, photographed ca. 1925
Vice President of the International Council of Women
In office
1925–1936
Delegate of the Kingdom of Romania to the League of Nations
In office
1929–1938
Personal details
Born
Alexandrina Pallady

20 September 1876
Ciocănești, Ilfov County, Kingdom of Romania (present-day Dâmbovița County, Romania)
Died1944 (aged 67 or 68)
Political partyIron Guard
SpouseGrigore Gheorghe Cantacuzino (widowed 1930)
ChildrenGheorghe Cantacuzino (died 1977)
Alexandru "Alecu" Cantacuzino (died 1939)
DistinctionsMeritul Cultural
Order of Queen Marie
Order of the Holy Sepulchre
Order of St. Sava
Croix de guerre
Croce al Merito di Guerra
NicknameDidina Cantacuzino

Alexandrina "Didina" Cantacuzino (née Pallady; also known as Alexandrina Grigore Cantacuzino and (Francized) Alexandrine Cantacuzène; 20 September 1876 – 1944) was a Romanian political activist, philanthropist and diplomat, one of her country's leading feminists in the 1920s and 1930s. A leader of the National Council of Romanian Women and the Association of Romanian Women, she served as Vice President of the International Council of Women, representing the International Alliance of Women, as well as Romania, to the League of Nations. However, her feminist beliefs and international profile clashed with her national conservatism, her support for eugenics, and eventually her conversion to fascism.

Cantacuzino was a member of Romanian nobility, and, after her marriage to the wealthy landowner Grigore Gheorghe Cantacuzino, claimed the title of "Princess". Her elitism and her feminism led her to join the upper-class charity SONFR, of which she became President after World War I. A wartime nurse, she became a herald of war remembrance initiatives (responsible, in large part, for the Mausoleum of Mărășești).

After her involvement with the National Council of Romanian Women, she supported limited women's suffrage within a corporatist framework, losing the support of liberal women, but also building connections with fascist politicians. Cantacuzino's policies within the Association of Romanian Women were mirrored in the legislation of World War II fascist regimes, beginning with the National Renaissance Front.

Sympathetic toward the revolutionary fascist Iron Guard, of which her son Alecu was also an affiliate, Cantacuzino switched her support toward Ion Antonescu's government in early 1941. Having earlier reported to the League of Nations on the damages caused by the Spanish Civil War, she was also critical of Antonescu over the 1941 Odessa massacre. This was her last known public cause. Cantacuzino died, in relative obscurity, not long after Antonescu's downfall.

and 19 Related for: Alexandrina Cantacuzino information

Request time (Page generated in 1.0033 seconds.)

Alexandrina Cantacuzino

Last Update:

Alexandrina "Didina" Cantacuzino (née Pallady; also known as Alexandrina Grigore Cantacuzino and (Francized) Alexandrine Cantacuzène; 20 September 1876...

Word Count : 6930

Gheorghe Grigore Cantacuzino

Last Update:

the father-in-law of Alexandrina Pallady-Cantacuzino.[citation needed] Gaster, Moses (1911). "Cantacuzino s.v. Gheorge Cantacuzino" . In Chisholm, Hugh...

Word Count : 174

Cantacuzino family

Last Update:

Gheorghe Cantacuzino (1872–1930), Mayor of Bucharest; married to Alexandrina Cantacuzino (1876–1944), political activist Alexandru Cantacuzino (1901–1939)...

Word Count : 1690

Grigore Gheorghe Cantacuzino

Last Update:

Gheorghe Grigore Cantacuzino and brother of Mihail G. Cantacuzino, he married Alexandrina Pallady. One of his sons, Alexandru Cantacuzino, became a prominent...

Word Count : 102

Albanians in Romania

Last Update:

lawyer. Albert Ghica – Albanian-Romanian writer and socialite. Alexandrina Cantacuzino - Romanian political activist, philanthropist and diplomat, one...

Word Count : 2986

FIDAC

Last Update:

Auxiliary: in 1928 Adalin Wright Macauley (USA), in 1929 Princess Cantacuzino (Alexandrina Cantacuzino) from Romania, then Princess Marie-Louise de Merode of Belgium...

Word Count : 1240

National Renaissance Front

Last Update:

formed by Alexandrina Cantacuzino (Gruparea Națională a Femeilor Române, the National Grouping of Romanian Women). Although Cantacuzino's ideology remained...

Word Count : 4735

Iacob Lahovary

Last Update:

whom he had a daughter, Elena. Divorced in 1883, he remarried Alexandrina Cantacuzino, with whom he had two sons, Iacob and Leon. He served as Minister...

Word Count : 527

Henric Streitman

Last Update:

supported the Allies: Ciurcu, Constantin Antoniade, Alexandrina Cantacuzino, Constantin Cantacuzino-Pașcanu, Nicolae Malaxa, Mina Minovici, and Constantin...

Word Count : 10485

Grigore IV Ghica

Last Update:

then to Eufrosina Săvescu, with whom he had two daughters (Maria and Alexandrina). Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grigore IV Ghica. Gaster, Moses...

Word Count : 280

Little Entente of Women

Last Update:

movement, which characterized them as backward and undeveloped. Alexandrina Cantacuzino was the driving force behind forming the alliance and became its...

Word Count : 1460

Adela Xenopol

Last Update:

featured portraits of prominent feminists like Maria Baiulescu, Alexandrina Cantacuzino, Elena Văcărescu and published works by prominent male literary...

Word Count : 1300

Constantin Beldie

Last Update:

and essays. With Rădulescu-Motru, Beldie frequented the salon of Alexandrina Cantacuzino. They joined her Union of Intellectuals club in 1926, but Beldie...

Word Count : 3292

Nicolae Constantin Batzaria

Last Update:

Tzigara-Samurcaș (the other members of this panel being female activist Alexandrina Cantacuzino, actress Maria Giurgea, politician Alexandru Mavrodi, novelist...

Word Count : 12343

Ella Negruzzi

Last Update:

she ran for office in Bucharest. Along with Calypso Botez and Alexandrina Cantacuzino, Negruzzi became one of the first six women elected to serve as...

Word Count : 1039

1944 in Romania

Last Update:

17 November – Magda Isanos, poet (born 1916). Date unknown – Alexandrina Cantacuzino, political activist, philanthropist and diplomat (born 1867). Scurtu...

Word Count : 1600

Elena Alistar

Last Update:

Women Orthodox Society which operates under the patronage of Mrs. Alexandrina Cantacuzino. After the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina...

Word Count : 852

Avra Theodoropoulou

Last Update:

of the Greek LEW from 1925 to 1927, following the presidency of Alexandrina Cantacuzino. She was extremely active in this period with international conferences...

Word Count : 1330

Ghica family

Last Update:

socialite and pretender to the Albanian throne Alexandrina Pallady (1876–1944), adopted Ghica and married Cantacuzino, Romanian feminist and fascist activist...

Word Count : 1727

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net