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・ Alexei Cherepanov
・ Alexei Chizhov
・ Alexandru Neagu
・ Alexandru Nicolau
・ Alexandru Nicolescu
・ Alexandru Nicolschi
・ Alexandru Nilca
・ Alexandru Nyisztor
・ Alexandru Obedenaru
・ Alexandru Odobescu
・ Alexandru Odobescu, Călărași
・ Alexandru Oleinic
・ Alexandru Ologu
・ Alexandru Onică
・ Alexandru Orăscu
Alexandru Paleologu
・ Alexandru Papadopol
・ Alexandru Papadopol-Calimah
・ Alexandru Papană
・ Alexandru Papiu Ilarian
・ Alexandru Pașcenco
・ Alexandru Pena
・ Alexandru Penciu
・ Alexandru Pesamosca
・ Alexandru Philippide
・ Alexandru Pițurcă
・ Alexandru Plămădeală
・ Alexandru Pop
・ Alexandru Popa
・ Alexandru Popovici


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Alexandru Paleologu : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexandru Paleologu

Alexandru Paleologu ((:alekˈsandru pale.oˈloɡu); March 14, 1919 – September 2, 2005) was a Romanian essayist, literary critic, diplomat and politician. He is the father of historian Theodor Paleologu.
==Biography==
Paleologu was born in Bucharest, into an ancient Romanian boyar family that claimed its origins in the last dynasty (Palaiologos) that ruled the Byzantine Empire. They had moved from Lesbos Island to the Danubian Principalities at the beginning of the 18th century. Paleologu was also, through various marriages, a descendant of the Wallachian Prince Constantin Brâncoveanu. Alexandru Paleologu's father, Mihail Paleologu was a lawyer and National Liberal Member of Parliament, later general secretary in the Ministries of Justice and of Finance, who was known for his association with Grigore Iunian.
He graduated from the Spiru Haret High School in Bucharest and then he studied Law at the University of Bucharest. In 1944, after the Royal Coup that overthrew Ion Antonescu's dictatorship and took Romania out of the Axis, Paleologu took part in the Romanian committee of the armistice with the Allies and, between 1946 and 1948, worked for the Romanian Royal Ministry of External Affairs. After the Communists regime was established, he was under surveillance by the Securitate, and he lived hidden and under a false name in Câmpulung until 1956, when he began working as a researcher at the Romanian Academy in the Institute of Ancient Art History.
In 1959, Paleologu was arrested and sentenced to 14 years of forced labour. In prison, he met many other important people in Romanian culture such as Constantin Noica and Alexandru Ivasiuc. He was freed in 1964, and he worked at the same Institute in the Theatre section. He was the literary secretary of the Constantin Nottara Theatre of Bucharest and, in 1967, he became a member of the Romanian Writers' Union. Between 1970 and 1976 he was a writer for the Cartea Românească publishing house.
After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, he was named ambassador of Romania to France (starting February 1, 1990), but he was replaced in June 1990 because he was a sympathiser of the Golaniad movement of University Square (he was the self-styled "ambassador of the hooligans" - ''ambasadorul golanilor''), as well due to his pro-monarchist views.
He later became a member of the Civic Alliance Party, founded by Nicolae Manolescu and he was elected a senator for Argeș during the 1992 election. He was a National Liberal senator for Vrancea (on Romanian Democratic Convention lists) following the 1996 election, and reelected for Bucharest during the 2000 suffrage (serving until 2004).
In the years after 1989 he admitted in a book of interviews with historian and novelist Stelian Tănase that during the communist period he eventually ended up collaborating with the Securitate and asked Romanians to forgive him.

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