
History of town
There
are towns or cities which have a real vocation for history. Iasi, the
former capital of Moldavia, is one of them.
Iasi is the most important political, economic and cultural centre of
Moldavia and one of the oldest cities in Romania. Situated in the
North-East of Romania, between the Moldavian Plateau and Jijia Plain, on
the River Bahlui, it used to be the crossing place of the most important
commercial roads that passed through Moldavia coming from Poland,
Hungary, Russia and Constantinopole.
Archaelogical investigations attest the presence of human communities on
the present territory of the city and around it as far back as the
prehistoric age. But the beginnings of urban life in lasi are to be
found in the second half of the 14th century, the name of the city being
mentioned for the first time in a document about commercial privilege
granted by the Moldavian ruler Alexandru cel Bun to the Polish merchants
of Lvov in 1408.
Major events in the political and cultural history of Moldavia are
connected with the name of the city of Iasi. Thus it is here that we can
trace the roots of the Romanian national historiography. The great
scholars of the 17th century - "the golden age" of Romanian
culture - namely Grigore Ureche, Miron Costin and later Ion Neculce,
wrote most of their works in the city or not far from it and the great
European fame scholar Dimitrie Cantemir also linked his name to the
capital of Moldavia.
At the beginning of the 19th century, the many-sided scholar Gheorghe
Asachi laid the foundation of the national school in the Romanian
language and, in 1829, he published the first newspaper in Romanian. And
it was also here that the first superior institute in the country was
founded in 1835 (The "Mihăileană" Academy).
In 1600, Mihai Viteazul sanctioned here the union of the three Romanian
principalities and in 1848 the Revolution which was to spread all over
the country burst out here. This same town was the place where Alexandru
loan Cuza was elected ruler of Moldavia (January 5th, 1859), the first
step in fulfilling the Romanians' desire of forming a single unified
country named Romania.
Iasi continued to be the most important cultural centre of the country
even after Bucarest became the capital of Romania in 1862. It is in Iasi
that the first Romanian university was founded in 1860 during the reign
of Al.I. Cuza and in 1867 there appeared the review "Convorbiri
literare" in which Ion Creangă's "Memories from My
Boyhood" and the best poems by Eminescu, the "Morning
Star" of Romanian poetry, were published. The reviews "Contemporanul"
and "Viata românească" appearead in 1871, respectively in
1906 and had a great contribution to promoting our national cultural
values.
Many great personalities of Romanian culture are connected to Iasi: the
chronicler Nicolae Milescu, the historian and political man Mihail Kogălniceanu,
the poet Vasile Alecsandri, the writer Mihail Sadoveanu, the poet George
Topârceanu, the writer Alecu Russo, the writer Ionel Teodoreanu, the
literary critic Titu Maiorescu, the geographer Grigore Cobălcescu, the
chemist Petru Poni, the historian A.D. Xenopol, the philosopher Vasile
Conta, the sociologist Dimitrie Gusti, the geographer Emil Racovită,
the philosopher Petru Andrei, the painter Octav Băncilă and many
others.
Iasi, "the city of great loves", represents a symbol of
Romanian history about which Nicolae lorga
rightly said "there should be no Romanian who does not know
it". |