Elisabeth Ypsilantis Explained

Elisabeth Ypsilantis
Birth Name:Elisabeta Văcărescu
Birth Date:1768
Birth Place:Iași, Moldavia
Death Place:Odesa, Russian Empire
Nationality:Moldavian
Spouse:Constantine Ypsilantis
Children:Aikaterini
Alexandros
Dimitrios
Nikolaos
Maria
Georgios
Grigorios
Mother:Safta Kretzulescu
Father:Prince Constantin Văcărescu

Elisabeth Ypsilantis (el|Ελισάβετ Υψηλάντη|Elisavet Ypsilanti; 1768–1866), née Elisabeth Văcărescu (ro|Elisabeta Văcărescu, el|Ελισάβετ Βακαρέσκου), was a Greek aristocrat and an important figure during the period before the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence in 1821.

Biography

Elisabeth Ypsilantis was born in 1768 in Iași, Moldavia. She was the daughter of Prince Constantin Văcărescu and Safta Kretzulescu. She came from the Văcărescu family, an important family of Moldavia originally from Northern Epirus.

She became a second wife of the ruler of Moldavia Constantine Ypsilantis. Together they had 7 children, the first of whom were the members of the Filiki Etaireia and protagonists of the Greek War of Independence, Alexandros, Dimitrios and Nikolaos:[1]

Elisabeth was called the "First Lady of the Filiki Etaireia", as during the years of preparation for the Greek War of Independence, she was the person who organized the preliminary meetings of personalities of the time in her salons, under the guise of literary meetings, which eventually led to the establishment of the Etaireia, of which she herself was probably one of the first female members.

It is said that in the house of this particular family, in the presence of Elisabeth, the Etaireia members gathered in February 1821 to decide on the start of the revolution and to prepare the relevant declaration.[3]

After the death of her husband in 1816 and the confiscation of the property of the Ypsilantis family by the Sultan, Elisabeth was one of the main sponsors of the Greek Revolution,[4] for which she offered the rest of her property. The result was that she fell into great poverty. Despite all the privations, however, she continued to support the vision of national liberation in every way.

She died in Odesa, on 2 October 1866.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Σκαρλάτος ο Βυζάντιος, Δημήτριος. Κωνσταντινούπολις, Α'. Πελεκάνος. 2015. 537.
  2. Αρμονία: επιστημονικόν περιοδικόν σύγγραμμα. N. A.. Bees. Δημητρίου Σφήκα αναμνήσεις περι των εν Δακία γεγονότων του 1821. 1902. 3. 6–7. Athens. 335. 10797/26399 .
  3. Book: Ξηραδάκη, Κούλα. ΓΥΝΑΙΚΕΣ ΤΟΥ '21, Προσφορές, ηρωισμοί και θυσίες. ΔΩΔΩΝΗ. 1995. Αθήνα. 333.
  4. Book: Φρατζής, Αμβρόσιος. Επιτομή της Ιστορίας της Αναγγενηθείσης Ελλάδος, Α'. 1839. Εν Αθήναις . 229.