Nicolae Titulescu
Nicolae Titulescu , Rumanian diplomat (1882 Craiova - 1941 Paris), twice president of the Company of the Nations before the Second world war.
Celebrate freemason, Titulescu obtains its license in right to Paris, and returns in Romania in 1905, where he works as International law professor with Iasi and Bucharest.
He is elected with the Rumanian Parlement in 1912, member of the Party Conservative-Democrat led by Take Ionescu and takes an active part in the peace negotiations of Trianon. After the First World War it is named Minister for the Finance S of the government Ion I.C. Brătianu, station where he is noticed by his tax reform.
In summer 1918, it founds with Paris, with others Rumanian important (Take Ionescu, Octavian Goga, Traian Vuia, Constantin Thousand), the Rumanian National committee , with like objective promoting in the international public opinion the right of the Rumanian people to the national unit, the committee being officially recognized like de facto plenipotentiary body of the Rumanian nation.
During the years 1920 and 1930, he becomes a political character of European scale, favoured process largely by his position of Ambassadeur in the United Kingdom and thereafter of Ministre of the Foreign affairs. During its mandates with the presidency of the Company of the Nations, it made constant efforts to prevent the conflicts between the new states resulting from the disappearance of the Austrian Empire and to improve as much as possible the relations with the Soviet Union.
In 1936, the king Carol II resigns Titulescu of all official positions, and asks him to leave the country. It is established initially in Suisse, then comes in France. Even in exile, Titulescu continues through conferences and articles of newspapers to propagate the idea of conservation of peace.
He dies of the continuations of a long illness in 1941.
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