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.