Date Compiled: 2026-04-12
related articles:
- romanian-greek-bilingualism
- for-the-mind-standard
- index
- SOURCES

Phanariot Period

Period: 1711–1821 (Moldavia); 1716–1821 (Wallachia)
Type: Historical period — Romanian Principalities under Greek-speaking rulers

Definition

The Phanariot period refers to the era when the Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia were governed by rulers (hospodars) drawn from the Greek Phanariot families of Constantinople. Named after the Phanar district of Constantinople, seat of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

Key Characteristics

  • Greek-speaking rulers from Constantinopolitan elite families
  • Divisive rule — rulers appointed by Ottoman Porte, often with short reigns focused on personal enrichment
  • Bilingual Greek-Romanian culture — Greek intellectuals, merchants, and church figures formed an influential class
  • Court of Constantinople — Phanariot families controlled trade, church appointments, and political power
  • End: 1821 — Tudor Vladimirescu's uprising and Greek War of Independence

Cultural-Linguistic Impact

  • Massive influx of Greek vocabulary into Romanian (see byzantine-greek-vocabulary)
  • Stylistic depreciation of many Greek borrowings after 1821, as Greek influence became associated with foreign domination
  • Greek as language of prestige, administration, and church — Romanian scholars often wrote in Greek before the 19th century national awakening

See Also