Theodor Paleologu Explained

Theodor Paleologu
Office:Minister of Culture
Term Start:22 December 2008
Term End:23 December 2009
Primeminister:Emil Boc
Predecessor:Adrian Iorgulescu
Successor:Hunor Kelemen
Office2:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start2:30 November 2008
Term End2:20 December 2016
Office3:Ambassador of Romania to Denmark
Term Start3:2005
Term End3:2008
Birth Date:15 July 1973
Birth Place:Bucharest, Socialist Republic of Romania
Party:None
Citizenship:Romanian, French[1]
Spouse:Sarah Nassif (divorced)
Children:Mihail
Father:Alexandru Paleologu

Theodor Paleologu (in Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan pronounced as /teˈodor ˌpale.oˈloɡu/; born July 15, 1973) is a Romanian historian, diplomat and politician. An independent who was formerly a member of the National Liberal Party (PNL), the People's Movement Party (PMP) and the Democratic Liberal Party (PD-L), he was a member of the Romanian Chamber of Deputies for Bucharest from 2008 to 2016. Additionally, in the first Emil Boc cabinet (December 2008 to December 2009) he was Minister of Culture, Religious Affairs and Cultural Heritage.

Early life

The son of Olimpia and Alexandru Paleologu, he was born in Bucharest and completed secondary studies at the city's German High School.[2] He then attended University of Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne from 1992 to 1998, where he obtained undergraduate and master's degrees in philosophy. He also attended the École normale supérieure from 1996 to 2001, and from 1998 to 2001, worked on a doctorate in political sciences at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences and the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. He was a lecturer at Boston College from 1999 to 2000, a visiting professor at Deep Springs College in 2003, and a research fellow at the University of Notre Dame (2001–2002), New York University (2002), Harvard University (2002–2003) and the Institute for Advanced Study, Berlin (2005). He was an external lecturer at the University of Copenhagen in 2007 and 2008, and since 2003 has been assistant professor and director of the summer university at the European College of Liberal Arts in Berlin. Between 2005 and 2008, he served as Romania's ambassador to Denmark and Iceland;[3] he resigned from the office in order to pursue his successful parliamentary campaign.[4]

Political activity

In the Chamber, he sat on the Arts, Culture and Mass Media Committee.[5] As minister, his top priority was the preservation of Romania's historic monuments.[6] His ministerial term ended when he was not reappointed to a new cabinet under Boc at the end of 2009.[7] At the 2012 local election, he ran for mayor of Bucharest's Sector 1, finishing second with 14.1% of the vote.[8] Running in the legislative election later that year, he placed second in his district, but won another term through the redistribution mechanism specified by the electoral law.[9] In February 2014, he followed Elena Udrea in resigning from the PD-L and joining the People's Movement Party (PMP).[10] A year later, he entered the National Liberal Party (PNL), proclaiming that the PMP had degenerated into a "total fiasco".[11] In June 2016, the PNL expelled him after he criticized the party leadership for its disrespect toward Save Bucharest Union leader Nicușor Dan.[12] Paleologu ran as an independent in the December election and won some 8,000 votes, well short of the approximately 25,000 needed to secure a seat.[13] He was the PMP candidate in the 2019 presidential election,[14] placing fifth with 5.7% of the vote.[15]

Presidential elections

Private life

Paleologu was married to Sarah Nassif, a French opera singer of Lebanese origin.[16] The two are divorced and have one son, Mihail.[17] [18]

He wrote two books, one on Carl Schmitt (2004) and one on the year 2004 in Romanian politics (2005).[3] In 2013, he began holding private courses on the humanities and diplomacy in his family home.[19]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alegeri in Franța: Theodor Paleologu, care are cetățenie franceză, a votat. ro. Ziare.com. May 6, 2012. March 26, 2023.
  2. About Me, retrieved March 3, 2009
  3. Profile at the Romanian Government site, retrieved March 3, 2009
  4. "Theodor Paleologu - biografie" ("Theodor Paleologu - Biography"), Adevărul, 18 December 2008, retrieved March 3, 2009
  5. Profile at the Romanian Chamber of Deputies site, retrieved March 3, 2009
  6. "Paleologu spune că va îmbunătăți legislația pentru protejarea patrimoniului național" ("Paleologu Says He Will Improve Legislation for Protecting the Nation's Cultural Heritage"), Adevărul, 23 January 2009, retrieved March 3, 2009
  7. Monica Iordache Apostol, "Guvernul Boc, zero barat" ("Boc Government, Total Zero"), Jurnalul Național, 31 August 2010; retrieved September 4, 2010
  8. "Chiliman a obținut un nou mandat" ("Chiliman Wins New Term"), România liberă, 11 June 2012; retrieved June 13, 2012
  9. Carmen Vintilă, "Cine câștigă la loteria redistribuirii: Blaga, Anastase, Udrea, Boagiu, Stănișoară" ("Who Wins the Redistribution Lottery: Blaga, Anastase, Udrea, Boagiu, Stănișoară"), Evenimentul Zilei, 11 December 2012; retrieved December 11, 2012
  10. "Theodor Paleologu a demisionat din PDL pentru a se alătura PMP" ("Theodor Paleologu Resigns from PDL in order to Join PMP"), România Liberă, 3 February 2014; retrieved April 2, 2014
  11. "Theodor Paleologu trece la PNL" ("Theodor Paleologu Switches to PNL"), 22, 4 February 2014; retrieved June 15, 2016
  12. Cătălina Mănoiu, "Conducerea PNL a decis să îi excludă din partid pe Theodor Paleologu și Cristian Bodea" ("PNL Leadership Decides to Expel Theodor Paleologu and Cristian Bodea"), Mediafax, 15 June 2016; retrieved June 15, 2016
  13. Iulia Iancu, "Elena Udrea, Remus Cernea și Theodor Paleologu au pierdut alegerile parlamentare" ("Elena Udrea, Remus Cernea and Theodor Paleologu Lost Parliamentary Elections"), România liberă, 12 December 2016; accessed 13 December 2016
  14. Daniel Budescu, "Theodor Paleologu este candidatul PMP la alegerile prezidențiale" ("Theodor Paleologu Is the PMP Candidate in the Presidential Election"), G4 Media, 25 August 2019; retrieved August 25, 2019
  15. "Rezultate provizorii vot alegeri prezidențiale 2019" ("Provisional Results of the Presidential Election"), Digi24, 11 November 2019; retrieved November 12, 2019
  16. "Paleologu jr. - amintirile unui tânăr ambasador" ("Paleologu, Jr. - Memories of a Young Ambassador"), Evenimentul Zilei, 21 May 2006, retrieved March 3, 2009
  17. Cezar Paul-Bădescu, "Theodor Paleologu, ministrul Culturii: 'Duc o luptă de gherilă în domeniul patrimoniului'" ("Theodor Paleologu, Minister of Culture: 'I Am Leading a Guerrilla Fight in the Cultural Heritage Field'", Adevărul, 3 February 2009, retrieved March 3, 2009
  18. "Paleologu: 'Să te ferească Dumnezeu de furia mielului'" ("Paleologu: 'May God Protect You from the Lamb's Wrath'", Evenimentul Zilei, 27 January 2009, retrieved April 2, 2014
  19. "Theodor Paleologu predă cursuri de 'Understanding Romanian Mentality', la domiciliu" ("Theodor Paleologu Teaches Courses on 'Understanding Romanian Mentality', at Home"), Jurnalul Național, 4 December 2012; retrieved April 2, 2014