Constantin Coandă


Constantin Coandă was a Romanian general and politician who briefly served as Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Romania in 1918.

Biography

Constantin Coandă was born in Craiova. He reached the rank of general in the Romanian Army, and later became a mathematics professor at the National School of Bridges and Roads in Bucharest. Among his seven children was Henri Coandă, the discoverer of the Coandă effect.
During World War I, for a short time, he was the Prime Minister of Romania and the Foreign Affairs Minister. He participated in the signing of the Treaty of Neuilly between the Allies of World War I and Bulgaria.
On 8 December 1920, during his term as President of the Senate of Romania, he was badly wounded by a bomb set up by the terrorist and anarchist Max Goldstein.

Military functions

Other positions

Writings

Artillery Course Projectiles and Missiles.

Death

Constantin Coandă died on 30 September 1932, aged 75, in Bucharest.