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      • Alexăndrel or Alexandru II (1429 – 25 May 1455), son of Iliaș of Moldavia, was the prince (or voivode) of Moldavia in 1449, from 1452 to 1454, and in 1455.
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  2. Alexandru of Moldavia. Alexandru (born between 1464 and 1466 - died on 26 July 1496) was the first-born son of Stephen III of Moldavia and his first wife Evdochia of Kiev. He participated in his father's fights against the Ottoman Empire and Wallachia from the late 1470s.

  3. Alexander I, commonly known as Alexander the Good (Romanian: Alexandru cel Bun; c. 1375 – 1 January 1432) was Voivode of Moldavia between 1400 and 1432. He was the son of Roman I and succeeded Iuga to the throne. As ruler he initiated a series of reforms while consolidating the status of the Principality of Moldavia.

  4. Son of Alexandru I; Deposed by Stefan II, joined his rule in 1435. Stephen II: October 1433 – 13 July 1447 Unmarried: Illegitimate son of Alexandru I; Only de facto monarch till September 1434. Peter III: May 1444 – 1445 22 August – 23 December 1447 5 April – 10 October 1448 An unknown sister of John Hunyadi before 1445 no children

  5. May 11, 2024 · Alexandru Ioan Cuza (born March 20, 1820, Huşi, Moldavia [now in Romania]—died May 15, 1873, Heidelberg, Germany) was the first prince of united Romania, architect of national rural reform and peasant emancipation. The scion of an old boyar family, Cuza studied in Paris, Pavia, and Bologna, participated in revolutionary agitation against ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Alexander the Good (Romanian: Alexandru cel Bun pronounced [alekˈsandru t͡ʃel bun] or Alexandru I Mușat; c. 1375 – 1 January 1432) was a Voivode (Lord) of Moldavia, reigning between 1400 and 1432, son of Roman I Mușat.

  7. In one of them Alexandru voivod, the future lord of Moldavia, is mentioned (DRH, 1975: 11–13). 2 About his reign see (Panaitescu, 1996). 1 10 | must not neglect the Tartar one, which had a very important role in establishing the conception and form of power, especially in Moldavia1.

  8. Alexander I, commonly known as Alexander the Good (Romanian: Alexandru cel Bun; c. 1375 – 1 January 1432) was Voivode of Moldavia between 1400 and 1432. He was the son of Roman I and succeeded Iuga to the throne.

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