Preface. Introduction. 1821: A Turning Point in Balkan History. Cristian Ploscaru, Ioannis Capodistrias and the 1821 Uprising in Moldo-Wallachia. Cosmin Mihuț, A Question of Peace or War. Lord Strangford and the Military Occupation of the Principalities (1821-1822). Gabriel Leanca, The French Occupation of the Morea and the Russian Occupation of Moldavia and Wallachia (1828-1834): A Comparative Perspective. 1821 in the Romanian Principalities. Gheorghe Cliveti, A Note on Russia, Etairia and Tudor Vladimirescu. Lia Brad Chisacof, Tudor Vladiminescu in English. Gheorghe Gorun, Hadrian Gorun, Tudor Vladimirescu’s Relations with the ’Patriotic’ Boyars: Politics and Power in the Initial Phase of the Uprising. Constantin Ardeleanu, The Moldavian Boyars and the Pasha of Brăila in 1821. Ligia Livadă-Cadeschi, ’De viscolia Patriei nu sânt în neștiință’: 1821 as seen by the Romanian Students Abroad. Florea Ioncioaia, Children of the Insurrection: Subversive Sociability and Greco-Romanian Educational Mobility in Paris in the Third Decade of the 19th Century. Remembrance, Historiographical Readings and Celebration. Liviu Brătescu, The year 1821 – Posterity and Social Memory. Mircea-Cristian Ghenghea, Mihai-Bogdan Atanasiu, The Flag of the 1821 Revolution – Historiography and Significations. Ștefan Petrescu, A Visit to the Working Laboratory of C. D. Aricescu, the Author of the First Monograph on the 1821 Revolution in the Romanian Principalities. Bogdan Popa, On the Academic, Political, and Social Context of the 1921 Tudor Vladimirescu Centennial. Gabriel Moisa, Between Politics and Science. Solomon Știrbu: Proletarianism and the Legacy of Tudor Vladmirescu’s Revolution in Communist Romania. Ela Cosma, 25 March 1821, the National Celebration Day of Greece in Romania in the Mirror of the Periodical ’Ελπίς’/’Hope’. Alexandru Mamina, The Uprising of 1821 in Post-Communist Historiography: A Bibliographical Perspective.