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  1. 6 de abr. de 2016 · Whereas in January 1990, the Romanian elite was still traumatised by communism, and the potentates of the day treated the members of the Romanian Royal Family with undisguised hostility, in 2016, the year in which Romanians celebrate the 150th anniversary of the founding of the Romanian Dynasty, Her Royal Highness the Crown Princess has been named by Forbes magazine as the most influential ...

  2. Cantacuzino family. Coat of arms of Gheorghe Cantacuzino, Great Ban of Craiova in 1719–1726. The House of Cantacuzino ( French: Cantacuzène) is a Romanian aristocratic family of Greek origin. [1] [2] The family gave a number of princes to Wallachia and Moldavia, and it claimed descent from a branch of the Byzantine Kantakouzenos family ...

  3. Family and education. In 1918, the crown prince of Romania (the future King Carol II) married Zizi Lambrino. The wedding was annulled the following year because it contravened the royal house's statute—Lambrino was both a Romanian and a commoner, and the marriage took place without the consent of the king.

  4. The coat of arms of Romania was adopted in the Romanian Parliament on 10 September 1992 as a representative coat of arms for Romania.The current coat of arms is based on the lesser coat of arms of interwar Kingdom of Romania (used between 1922 and 1947), which was designed in 1921 by the Transylvanian Hungarian heraldist József Sebestyén from Cluj, at the request of King Ferdinand I of ...

  5. The Romanian royal family (Romanian: Familia regală a României) was the ruling dynasty of the Kingdom of Romania, a constitutional monarchy in Central-Eastern Europe. The kingdom existed from 1881, when Carol I of Romania was proclaimed king, until 1947, when the last king, Michael I of Romania, was forced to abdicate and the Parliament proclaimed Romania a republic. Soon after, upon the ...

  6. Political family. The Sturdza family, a Moldavian princely family, has been long and intimately associated with the government first of Moldavia and afterwards of Romania. Its members belong to two main branches, which trace their descent from either Ioan Sturdza or Alexandru Sturdza, the sons of Chiriac Sturdza, who lived in the 17th century ...

  7. Order of Carol I. The Order of Carol I ( Romanian: Ordinul Carol I) was the highest ranking of the Romanian honours of the Kingdom of Romania until the founding of the Order of Michael the Brave in 1916 by King Ferdinand I of Romania. It was instituted on 10 May 1906 [1] by King Carol I to celebrate the Ruby Jubilee of 40 years of his reign.