Proclamation of Islaz explained

The Proclamation of Islaz was the program adopted on 9 June 1848 by Romanian revolutionaries during the Wallachian Revolution of 1848. It was written by Ion Heliade Rădulescu and publicly read at the small port town of Islaz in southern Wallachia. On 11 June, under pressure from the masses, Domnitor Gheorghe Bibescu was forced to accept the terms of the proclamation and recognise the provisional revolutionary government.[1]

Provisions

The Proclamation of Islaz has the form and value of a constitutional act. Between these 22 provisions are notably:

The location of Islaz (now in Teleorman County, then in Romanați County) was a small port on the Danube with some commercial significance, which, unlike the ports of Turnu Măgurele, Giurgiu and Calafat, was not under the direct control of the Turks.

Notes and References

  1. Lindenbauer . Petrea . 2010 . Die Entstehung des rumänischen konstitutionellen Diskurses im 19. Jahrhundert . de . The emergence of Romanian constitutional discourse in the 19th century . https://web.archive.org/web/20220331225232/https://homepage.univie.ac.at/Petrea.lindenbauer/Monographie.Verfassungsdiskurs.pdf . 31 March 2022 . Dr. habil. . VII.2 . 21 June 2024 .