Romanian general
Nicolae Dabija
(15 August 1837,
Hu?i
.
Vaslui County
,
Moldavia
– 1 December 1884,
Paris
) was a Romanian general and politician.
Born in
Hu?i
, in 1837, he attended the
Academia Mih?ilean?
in
Ia?i
. In 1858 he was sent to
France
to attend the
School of Applied Artillery
in
Metz
. After graduation, he returned to Romania, joining the army, initially with the artillery.
[1]
His military career advanced, and in 1864 he was appointed subdirector of the artillery. He participated in the
Romanian War of Independence
(1877–1878), as commander of the Infantry Division Artillery, taking part in the battles of the
Romanian Army
at
Plevna
and
Vidin
.
[1]
After the war, Col. Nicolae Dabija entered politics, being attracted by the liberal doctrine. He held several political and administrative functions in the governments that governed Romania after 1878: Minister of War (18 January – 10 July 1879), interim Minister of Finance (10–27 April 1881) and Minister of Public Works several times (24 October 1880 – 9 April 1881, 10 April – 8 June 1881, 9 June 1881 – 31 July 1884).
[1]
The English company "Danube and Black Sea Railway Kustenge Harbor" built between 1856 and 1862 the Constan?a-Cernavod? railway through
Dobrogea
. Per the
Treaty of Berlin (1878)
, Dobrogea was given to Romania, the English company requested the redemption of the railway by the Romanian state, demanding 18,752,706 golden lei. Dabija, as representative of the Romanian state, and the delegate of the English company signed on 9 November 1882, the repurchase agreement for the sum of 16,800,000 lei, ratified on 21 May 1882 by the Assembly of Deputies, and paid in a lump sum in 1882.
In 1883 Nicolae Dabija was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. He died only one year later (1 December 1884) in Paris, aged 47.
[1]
References
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