Alexandru Callimachi

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Alexandru Callimachi

Also Known As: "Alexandru Callimachi Voievod"
Birthdate:
Death: December 12, 1821 (83-84)
Bolu (executed by the Turks)
Immediate Family:

Son of Ioan Teodor Callimachi, Prince of Moldavia 1758-1761 and Ralita Callimachi
Husband of Ruxandra Callimachi
Father of Ioan Callimachi; Eufrosina Sutzu; Scarlat Callimachi and Ralou Callimachi
Brother of Grigore Callimachi, Voivode of Moldavia 1761-1769; Sevastita Soutzos and Maria Mavrocordatos

Occupation: Prince of the Principality of Moldova
Managed by: Nicholas A Nicolaides
Last Updated:

About Alexandru Callimachi

Alexandru Callimachi (1737—12 December 1821) was Prince of Moldavia during the period of 6 May 1795 through 18 March 1799.

Alexandru Callimachi was born in Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire.[1] His family were an established Moldavian-Greek Phanariote boyar and princely house. He was the son of Ioan Teodor Callimachi, Prince of Moldavia, and Raliţa Chrisoscoleo. Alexandru had three siblings: Grigore Callimachi (1735-1769), Prince of Moldavia; sister, Sevastiţa (born 1736), who married Mihai Suţu, Prince of Moldavia; and sister, Maria (1740-1831). His uncle Gavriil Callimachi (1689—1786) was a monk at Putna Monastery before he founded the St. George Cathedral in Iaşi.

Callimachi served as Grand Dragoman of the Sublime Porte[2] from 1785 to 1794.[1] He gained the title of Prince of Moldavia in 1795.[3] After Callimachi was deposed,[4] he was succeeded by son-in-law Constantine Ypsilantis.

With his reign over, Callimachi retired to Constantinople.

Callimachi sealed a matrimonial alliance with his marriage to Elena Ghika, daughter of Scarlat Ghika Vodǎ, Prince of Moldavia and Prince of Wallachia.[1] They had four children. Their oldest was daughter, Ralu (1769-1797), who married Ypsilantis in 1783. Their first son, the hospodar Scarlat Callimachi, was Prince of Moldavia at three different times, while Scarlat's son Alexandros was conferred the Ottoman title of Bala in June 1861, the first Christian to be so honored. They had two younger children, daughter, Eufrosina (1776-1835), and son, Ioan (1775-1821).

Callimachi died in Bolu in 1821,[1] the same year that Phanariote rule ended with the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire.[5]

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandru_Callimachi

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Alexandru Callimachi's Timeline

1737
1737
1773
1773
Constantinople
1775
1775
Constantinople
1776
1776
Iaşi, Romania
1821
December 12, 1821
Age 84
Bolu
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