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  1. Neagoe Basarab (Romanian pronunciation: ['ne̯aɡo.e basaˈrab]; c.1459 – 15 September 1521) was the Voivode of Wallachia between 1512 and 1521.

  2. Neagoe Basarab (n. 1482 – d. 15 septembrie 1521, Curtea de Argeș, Argeș, România) a fost domnul Țării Românești între 1512 și 1521. Soția sa a fost doamna Despina, din familia sârbă Brancovici. În 2008, Biserica Ortodoxă Română l-a canonizat „pentru faptele sale sfinte și înflorirea vieții spirituale și duhovnicești ortodoxe din Țara Românească”.

  3. Oct 2, 2021 · By Alice Isabella Sullivan. 2021 marks 500 years since the death of Prince Neagoe Basarab who ruled the principality of Wallachia (now part of modern Romania) between 1512 and 1521. Although his reign was relatively short, he contributed to the political, economic, religious, and especially cultural growth of his domain.

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  5. By Alice Isabella Sullivan | University of Michigan. Description. Between 1512 and 1521, Prince Neagoe Basarab was the ruler of Wallachia—the Romanian principality extending to the south of the Carpathian Mountains and north of the Danube River in modern Romania. In 1505, Neagoe married Milica Despina of Serbia—a descendant of the houses of ...

  6. Neagoe Basarab ( Romanian pronunciation: ['ne̯aɡo.e basaˈrab]; c.1459 – 15 September 1521) was the Voivode ( Prince) of Wallachia between 1512 and 1521. Born into the boyar family of the Craiovești (his reign marks the climax of the family's political influence) as the son of Pârvu Craiovescu or Basarab Țepeluș cel Tânăr, Neagoe ...

  7. The descendants of Basarab ruled Wallachia for at least two centuries. Examples of his descendants include Mircea the Old and Vlad Dracula. Neagoe Basarab, a member of the Craiovești boyar family, forged a genealogy to prove that he was a descendant of Basarab, and adopted "Basarab" as his family name after his accession in 1512.

  8. After 80 years of logos effervescence, since the middle of the XVth century, after the battle of Kossovopolje (1447), the design of Basarab arms has not change anymore, apparently due to political and military contribution od a power which, ironically, disliked completely the heraldic art: the Ottoman Empire.

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