• Thumbnail for Grigore IV Ghica
    Grigore IV Ghica or Grigore Dimitrie Ghica (Albanian : Gjika) (June 30, 1755 – April 29, 1834) was Prince of Wallachia between 1822 and 1828. A member...
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    Scarlat Ghica: 1758–1761 and 1765–1766 Alexandru Ghica: 1766–1768 Grigore III Ghica: 1768–1769 Grigore IV Ghica: 1822–1828 Alexandru II Ghica: 1834–1842...
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  • Grigore Ghica may refer to: Grigore I Ghica, Prince of Wallachia (1660–1664; 1672–1673) Grigore II Ghica, Prince of Moldavia (1726–1733; 1735–1739; 1739–1741;...
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  • Thumbnail for Dimitrie Ghica
    and 1870. Dimitrie Ghica was born in Bucharest into the Albanian Ghica family, as the son of the Wallachian Prince Grigore IV Ghica by his first wife,...
    6 KB (156 words) - 13:35, 25 August 2024
  • Thumbnail for Grigore III Ghica
    Grigore III Ghica (1724 – 12 October 1777) was a prince of Moldavia and of Wallachia. He was the son of Alexandru Matei Ghica, with the position of dragoman...
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    He was son of Demetriu Ghica and Eufrosine Caradja. His brothers were Grigore IV Ghica and Michai Ghica, father of Elena Ghica (pen-name Dora d'Istria)...
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  • Constantinople in 1674. Grigore I Ghica's children, most notably Matei (Grigore) Ghica, assured the continuation of the lineage. Matei Ghica lived exclusively in Greek...
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  • Ruler Portrait Years Family Notes Grigore IV Ghica 1822–1828 Ghica Russian occupation (1828-1834) Military commanders: Fyodor Pahlen, Pyotr Zheltukhin...
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  • Thumbnail for Barbu Dimitrie Știrbei
    to Bucharest and took on several offices with the administration of Grigore IV Ghica. After Wallachia was occupied by Imperial Russia following the Russo-Turkish...
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  • Tudor Vladimirescu, Prince (1821) Scarlat Callimachi, Prince (1821) Grigore IV Ghica, Prince (1822–1828) Fyodor Pahlen, Pyotr Zheltukhin, and Pavel Kiseleff...
    180 KB (17,776 words) - 22:34, 16 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for Teiul Doamnei Ghica Church
    structure. The latter was built in 1833 by Grigore IV Ghica, the former Prince of Wallachia, and his son Grigore. After the completion of construction, supervised...
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    which made over 800 victims). The following non-Phanariote reign of Grigore IV Ghica, acclaimed by the Bucharesters upon its establishment, saw the building...
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  • Thumbnail for Ion Heliade Rădulescu
    This re-establishment came as a result of ordinances issued by Prince Grigore IV Ghica, who had just been assigned by the Ottoman Empire to the throne of...
    71 KB (8,274 words) - 19:45, 10 November 2024
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    ensuring safety for the boyars. He returned to prominence under Prince Grigore IV Ghica, but sabotaged the monarch's political reform effort and also seduced...
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  • Thumbnail for Wallachian uprising of 1821
    registered its anti-Phanariote message, appointing an assimilated boyar, Grigore IV Ghica, as Prince of Wallachia. The ascent of nationalist boyars was enhanced...
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    rule were crushed by the troops of Mehmed IV in 1658–1659. The reigns of Gheorghe Ghica and Grigore I Ghica, the sultan's favourites, signified attempts...
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    philanthropist, patron of the arts and sciences (b. 1757) April 29 – Grigore IV Ghica, prince of Wallachia (b. 1755) May 9 – Turki bin Abdullah bin Muhammad...
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    what was happening. The public marketplace executions were banned by Grigore IV Ghica (1822–1828). The first debates on complete abolition had taken place...
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    pisanie. The high Clucer Nicolae Trăsnea, a trusted adviser to Prince Grigore IV Ghica, was responsible, at the same time adding a second dedication, to the...
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    the Wallachian Olga Ghica. By most accounts, she was the daughter of the Wallachian intellectual Mihalache Ghica, making Grigore a brother-in-law of writer...
    131 KB (17,689 words) - 04:36, 24 November 2024
  • Thumbnail for St. Nicholas in-a-Day Church
    roof replaced by tiles. The process, lasting until 1827, rendered Grigore IV Ghica as another ktetor. The church was in very poor shape by 1909, undergoing...
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  • Thumbnail for Dora d'Istria
    Dora d'Istria (redirect from Elena Ghica)
    a member of the Ghica family and was the daughter of Mihai Ghica and the niece of the reigning Prince of Wallachia Grigore IV Ghica. She received a thorough...
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  • Thumbnail for Vladimir Ghika
    1873 in Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey). His father was Ioan Grigore Ghica, diplomat, minister plenipotentiary in Turkey; his mother Alexandrina...
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  • Thumbnail for Tudor Vladimirescu
    returned the two Principalities to rule by and through locals (in 1822): Grigore IV Ghica in Wallachia, Ioan Sturdza (Ioniţă Sandu Sturdza) in Moldavia. The...
    15 KB (1,820 words) - 02:34, 4 September 2024
  • Thumbnail for Scarlat Callimachi (hospodar)
    Scarlat Callimachi (hospodar) (category Ghica family)
    Callimachi family, he was the son of Alexandru Callimachi and Ruxandra Ghica, and married Smaragda Mavrogheni. In 1810, during the Russo-Turkish War...
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  • Alexandru Ghika (category Ghica family)
    Bucharest, into the Ghica family, the son of Ioan Ghika (1873–1949) and Elena Metaxa (1870–1951), and great-great-grandson of Grigore IV Ghica, Prince of Wallachia...
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  • consented in 1822 to the nomination of two native boyars, Ioan Sturdza and Grigore IV Ghica as hospodars of Moldavia and Wallachia. 1848 saw rebellion in both...
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  • Thumbnail for Tocile Church
    Construction began in 1824, with the ktetor list being headed by Grigore IV Ghica, Prince of Wallachia. Completed the following year, the church was...
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    reigns through locals—Ioniță Sandu Sturdza as Prince of Moldavia and Grigore IV Ghica as Prince of Wallachia—were, in essence, short-lived: although the...
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  • Thumbnail for Gugiuman
    Grigore IV Ghica wearing the princely white-topped gugiuman...
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