History of Bucharest


The history of Bucharest covers the time from the early settlements on the locality's territory until its modern existence as a city, capital of Wallachia, and present-day capital of Romania.

Prehistory

The territory of present-day Bucharest has been inhabited since the Palaeolithic age - the earliest evidence of human life tracing back to this era. The general area where Bucharest is situated was primarily forestland.
Settlements appeared as well later during the Neolithic period along the Dâmbovița and Colentina rivers. The oldest Neolithic dwellings on the territory of the capital have been discovered in the Dudești neighbourhood, at Fundeni, and at Roșu. Later archaeological research also revealed later Neolithic settlements, situated at Pantelimon, Cățelu, Bucureștii Noi or at Giulești, or around Bucharest, at Jilava or Vidra. During the Neolithic, Bucharest saw the presence of the Glina culture, and, before the 19th century BC, was included in areas of the Gumelnița culture. During the Bronze Age, a third phase of the Glina culture and, later, on the Tei culture, evolved on Bucharest's soil.

Antiquity

During the Iron Age, the area was inhabited by a population identified with the Getae and the Dacians, who spoke an Indo-European language. The view that the two groups were the same is disputed, while the culture's latter phase can be attributed to the Dacians; small Dacian settlements—such as Herăstrău, Radu Vodă, Dămăroaia, Lacul Tei, Pantelimon, and Popești-Leordeni—were found around Bucharest. These populations had commercial links with the Greek cities and the Romansancient-Greek coins were found at Lacul Tei and Herăstrău, and jewels and coins of Roman origin in Giulești and Lacul Tei.
Bucharest was never under Roman rule, with an exception during Muntenia's brief conquest by the troops of Constantine I in the 330s; coins from the times of Constantine, Valens, and Valentinian I etc. were uncovered at various sites in and around Bucharest. It is assumed that the local population was Romanized after the initial retreat of Roman troops from the region, during the Age of Migrations.

Foundation

Beginnings

founded several settlements in the Bucharest region, as pointed out by the Slavic names of Ilfov, Colentina, Snagov, Glina, Chiajna, etc. According to some researches, the Slavic population was already assimilated before the end of the Dark Ages. While maintaining commercial links with the Byzantine Empire, the area was subject to the successive invasions of Pechenegs and Cumans and conquered by the Mongols during the 1241 invasion of Europe. It was probably later disputed between the Magyars and Second Bulgarian Empire.
According to a legend first attested in the 19th century, the city was founded by a shepherd named Bucur. Like most of the older cities in Muntenia, its foundation has also been ascribed to the legendary Wallachian prince Radu Negru. The theory identifying Bucharest with a "Dâmbovița citadel" and pârcălab mentioned in connection with Vladislav I of Wallachia is contradicted by archaeology, which has shown that the area was virtually uninhabited during the 14th century.

Early development

Bucharest was first mentioned on September 20, 1459, as one of the residences of Prince Vlad III Dracula. It soon became the preferred summer residence of the princely court – together with Târgoviște, one of the two capitals of Wallachia – and was viewed by contemporaries as the strongest citadel in its country. In 1476, it was sacked by the Moldavian Prince Stephen the Great, but was nonetheless favoured as a residence by most rulers in the period that immediately followed and was subject to important changes in landscape under Mircea Ciobanul, who built the palace and church in Curtea Veche, equipped the town with a stockade, and took measures to provide Bucharest with fresh water and produce.
When Mircea Ciobanul was deposed by the Ottoman Empire in the spring of 1554, Bucharest was ravaged by Janissary troops; violence again occurred after Mircea returned to the throne and attacked those who had been loyal to Pătrașcu the Good, during the 1574 conflict between Vintilă and Alexandru II Mircea, and under the rule of Alexandru cel Rău.

17th century

Growth and decline

In tune with the increasing demands of the Ottomans and the growing in importance of trade with the Balkans, the political and commercial center of Wallachia began gravitating towards the south; before the end of the 17th century, Bucharest became Wallachia's most populous city, and one of the largest ones in the region, while its landscape became cosmopolitan. This was, however, accompanied by a drastic decrease in princely authority, and a decline of state resources.
On November 13, 1594, the city witnessed widespread violence, upon the start of Michael the Brave's uprising against the Ottomans, and the massacre of Ottoman creditors, who held control over Wallachia's resources, followed by a clash between Wallachians and the Ottoman troops stationed in Bucharest. In retaliation, Bucharest was attacked and almost completely destroyed by Sinan Pasha's forces. It was slowly rebuilt over the following two decades, and again surfaced as a successful competitor to Târgoviște under Radu Mihnea in the early 1620s. Matei Basarab, who divided his rule between Târgoviște and Bucharest, restored the decaying court buildings.
Bucharest was again ravaged, after only 15 years, by the 1655 rebellion of seimeni mercenaries against the rule of Constantin Șerban – the rebel troops arrested and executed a number of high-ranking boyars, before being crushed by Transylvanian troops in June 1655. Constantin Șerban added important buildings to the landscape, but he was also responsible for a destructive fire which was meant to prevent Mihnea III and his Ottoman allies from taking hold of an intact citadel. According to the traveler Evliya Çelebi, the city was rebuilt as rapidly as it was destroyed: "houses of stone or brick are few and unfortunate, given that their gavur masters rebel once every seven-eight years, and the Turks and the Tatars consequently set fire to the city; but the inhabitants, in the space of the same year, restore their small one-storeyed, but sturdy, houses". Bucharest was touched by famine and the bubonic plague in the early 1660s.

Late 1600s

Between Gheorghe Ghica's rule and the end of Ștefan Cantacuzino's, Bucharest saw a period of relative peace and prosperity.
The climactic moment was reached under Șerban Cantacuzino and Constantin Brâncoveanu, when the city embraced the Renaissance under the original form known as the Brâncovenesc style and was expanded, furnished with inns maintained by princes, and given its first educational facilities. Brâncoveanu developed Curtea Veche, and added two other palaces, including the Mogoșoaia Palace, built in Venetian style and noted for its loggia; this was also the time when the future Calea Victoriei was carved out through Codrii Vlăsiei.

Phanariote era

Early Phanariotes

In 1716, following the anti-Ottoman rebellion of Ștefan Cantacuzino in the context of the Great Turkish War, Wallachia was placed under the more compliant rules of Phanariotes, inaugurated by Nicholas Mavrocordatos. These decisively marked Bucharest's development in several ways– the city was the unrivalled capital, being favoured by the decrease in importance of manorialism and rural centers, cumulated with the progress witnessed by the monetary economy.
Prince Nicholas' rule coincided with a series of calamities– a major fire, the first Habsburg occupation during the Austro-Turkish War of 1716–1718, and another plague epidemic– but witnessed major cultural achievements inspired by The Enlightenment, such as the creation of a short-lived princely library. Grigore II Ghica and Constantine Mavrocordatos maintained the commercial infrastructure, and the city became the site of a large market and customs. In 1737, during the Austro-Turkish War of 1737–39, the city was again attacked by Habsburg troops and ransacked by the Nogais, before suffering another major plague outbreak, accompanied by a relative economic decline brought about by the competition between Greek, Levantine and locals for official appointments.

Russo-Turkish Wars

Bucharest was twice occupied by Imperial Russian troops during the War of 1768–74 ; the subsequent Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca was partly negotiated in the city.
Under Alexander Ypsilantis, large-scale works to provide the city with fresh water were carried out, and Curtea Veche, destroyed by the previous conflicts, was replaced by a new residence in Dealul Spirii ; his legacy was carried out by Nicholas Mavrogenes. The Russo-Turkish–Austrian War erupted in 1787, and Mavrogenes retreated in front of a new Habsburg invasion, led by Prince Josias of Coburg. Despite other epidemics, coupled with the immense taxes imposed by Constantine Hangerli, and the major earthquake of October 14, 1802, the city's population continued to increase. During the Russo-Turkish War of 1806–12, Russian troops under Mikhail Andreyevich Miloradovich entered the city to reinstate Constantine Ypsilantis in late December 1806; it was under the latter's rule that Manuc's Inn had been built by Emanuel Mârzaian.
After the peace signed in Bucharest, the rule of John Caradja brought a series of important cultural and social events, but also witnessed the devastating Caragea's plague in 1813–1814 – which made between 25,000 and 40,000 casualties. Sources of the time indicate that the city alternated dense agglomerations with large privately owned gardens and orchards, a pattern which made impossible the task of calculating its actual area.
The Greek War of Independence and the contemporary Wallachian uprising brought Bucharest under the brief rule of the pandur leader Tudor Vladimirescu, and was then occupied by the Filiki Eteria forces of Major General Alexander Ypsilantis – before seeing the violent Ottoman reprisals.