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Vlad Georgescu

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Name
  
Vlad Georgescu


Vlad Georgescu VladGeorgescu vlad georgescu DeviantArt


Died
  
November 1988, Munich, Germany

Books
  
The Romanians, Political Ideas and the Enlightenment in the Romanian Principalities, 1750-1831

Education
  
University of Bucharest

Ediție specială - 10 ani de la moartea lui Vlad Georgescu (13 noiembrie 1998)


Vlad Georgescu (1937–1988), Romanian historian, was the director of the Romanian-language department of Radio Free Europe between 1983 and 1988.

Contents

Vlad Georgescu Interviu Vlad Georgescu Despre deontologia Europei Libere i

Interviu vlad georgescu despre deontologia europei libere i memoriile generalului pacepa 1988


Biography

Born in Bucharest, Georgescu studied history at the University of Bucharest, and worked at the Romanian-Russian Museum until it was closed down in 1963, when he was transferred to the Institute of Southeastern European Studies in Bucharest.

He got a PhD in history from the University of Bucharest in 1970 and published works on 18th and 19th century Romanian history. Georgescu taught in 1967 and 1968 at the University of California, Los Angeles and in 1973 at Columbia University.

In 1977, Georgescu was jailed for two months for disputing the role of the Communist Party in history in the manuscript of a book which he had sent abroad. Two years later he left the country, becoming a fellow at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. and teaching at the University of Maryland and at Rutgers University. Georgescu then returned to Europe and worked for the Radio Free Europe.

In 1987, a week after Georgescu announced that he would broadcast fragments from Ion Mihai Pacepa's Red Horizons, he received a warning from a Securitate general that he would not live more than a year if he went on to broadcast it. Georgescu ignored the warning and went ahead and broadcast it.

A year after that, he died of a brain tumor at the age of 51, presumably having been irradiated by the Securitate. In 2007, Cotidianul published informative notes sent by Constantin Bălăceanu-Stolnici to the Securitate, which included a sketch of Georgescu's Munich apartment, drawn after a visit to his place, which might have helped in his possible assassination.

He was married to Mary, with whom he had a son, Tudor.

References

Vlad Georgescu Wikipedia