Jump to content

Anton Novakov: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m removed Category:Romanian people of Russian descent using HotCat; no source, not even a mention
Tag: Reverted
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 35: Line 35:
[[Category:Romanian people of Bulgarian descent]]
[[Category:Romanian people of Bulgarian descent]]
[[Category:Moldovan people of Bulgarian descent]]
[[Category:Moldovan people of Bulgarian descent]]
[[Category:Romanian politicians of Gagauz descent]]
[[Category:Moldovan politicians of Gagauz descent]]
[[Category:Romanian people of Russian descent]]
[[Category:People from Bendersky Uyezd]]
[[Category:People from Bendersky Uyezd]]

Revision as of 12:42, 17 April 2023

Anton Novakov or Novacov (Template:Lang-bg; fl. before 1940) was a Bessarabian industrialist and legislator of the Moldavian Democratic Republic, of Bulgarian and Gagauz background. He was originally active in the Russian Empire's Bessarabia Governorate, where he organized credit unions. In late 1917, the co-operative network elected him to the Bessarabian council, or Sfatul Țării, which proclaimed the Moldavian Republic in December. Novakov served on the Commission to Combat Anarchy and helped organize a republican militia. His absence during the vote on Bessarabia's unification with Romania in March 1918 was partly explained by his missions in the field, though allegations later surfaced that he had actively conspired against the union's recognition. He lived the remainder of his life in Romanian Bessarabia, and integrated into the political life of Greater Romania: originally a member of the People's Party, he subsequently became a National Liberal. In the late 1920s, Novakov was involved in a legal battle with the Romanian state, over benefits he claimed were owed to him as a former member of the Sfatul.

Biography

Novakov's origins are credited as belonging to either of two intertwined communities of the Governorate: scholars refer to him as a Bulgarian[1] or a Gagauz;[2] at least one archival record has "Gagauz-Bulgarian".[3] As historian Ivan Duminică noted in 2019, the only known facts about Novakov's early life in the Russian Empire are his status as a cashier for the credit unions in Bender County and his listing as an "industrialist".[4] He was sent to Sfatul Țării by a transnational guild, the Union of Credit Co-operatives, alongside four "Moldavians": Gheorghe Buruiană, Teodor Corobceanu, Ion Cazacliu, and Vladimir Chiorescu.[5] The Union had been assigned the five seats at a Sfatul session on November 6, 1917, with Chiorescu's mandate being recorded as beginning on November 15.[6] According to Duminică, Novakov was a Bulgarian-and-Gagauz delegate inasmuch as he specifically represented co-operatives formed in the Budjak.[7]

On November 22, Novakov was elected to a 12-member Validation Commission, chaired by Nicolae Bosie-Codreanu, which verified the legality of his colleagues' mandates.[8] He later also served on Commission to Combat Anarchy, and the Commission for Statements and Charters.[9] His tenure saw the Moldavian Republic's absorption into the Kingdom of Romania. He was one of the thirteen deputies who absented during the actual vote on unification, which took place on March 27, 1918. Most other Bulgarian-and-Gagauz delegates abstained, while Novakov and Dumitru Topciu explained that they were on official duty to Tighina, helping to resupply the Bessarabian troops against Bolshevik insurgents (the Rumcherod).[10] Allegations that he had in fact opposed the union resurfaced later, when the Bolsheviks established a Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic on Romania's new eastern border. In early 1925, Bolshevik historian A. Ryabinin-Sklyarevski claimed to have recovered from Odessa an autographed "protest against Bessarabia's union", carrying Novakov's signature as a "delegate of the co-operatives"; other signatories reportedly included Jacob Bernstein-Kohan, Alexander N. Krupensky, Alexander Schmidt, Pantelimon V. Sinadino, and Vasily Yanovsky.[11]

As noted by historian (and former Moldavian Premier) Petru Cazacu, Novakov and most alleged signatories of the Odessa letter "became Romanian citizens and live peacefully under Romania's protection".[11] He continued to reside and work in Chișinău, at 15 Alecsandri Street, and joined the local Chamber of Commerce and Industry.[2][4] He organized and helped steer the Tighina section of the People's Party, but defected in September 1925 to join the National Liberals.[12] Also that month, he supported, and ran on, an Independent List of Chamber candidates,[13] being voted in as a junior member of the unified council.[14] In June 1926, Novakov was Chamber delegate on the Board of Review for Foreign Nationals, advising the Labor Inspectorate.[2][4] His parallel delegation to the Tighina County council was vetoed by the Prefect.[4]

Novakov joined a club of former Sfatul deputies, and, like the vast majority of its members, voted to attend the union's 10-year anniversary on April 29, 1928.[15] By then, he was litigating over the issue of his not being allocated land reserved for Sfatul delegates who had supported the union, but lost his case when presented in court.[16] In 1930, after defaulting on outstanding debt, his wife Maria was forced to sell her home in Mereni.[4] In August 1940, weeks after the Soviet invasion of Bessarabia, she was recorded, as an old-age pensioner from Tighina, among the "Romanian refugees who have crossed from Bessarabia to Romania at Ungheni checkpoint". The authorities granted her a new home in Buzău.[17]

Notes

  1. ^ Popovschi, p. 372
  2. ^ a b c Ivan Duminică, "Bulgarii Chișinăului interbelic (1918–1940)", in Sergiu Musteață, Alexandru Corduneanu (eds.), Identitățile Chișinăului: Orașul interbelic. Materialele Conferinței Internaționale, Ediția a 5-a, 1–2 noiembrie 2018, p. 243. Chișinău: Editura ARC, 2020. ISBN 978-9975-0-0338-4
  3. ^ Duminică (2019), p. 312; Țurcanu, p. 374
  4. ^ a b c d e Duminică (2019), p. 305
  5. ^ Popovschi, p. 372. See also Duminică (2019), pp. 295–296; Țurcanu, p. 374
  6. ^ Popovschi, pp. 368, 372
  7. ^ Duminică (2019), pp. 291, 295–296
  8. ^ Țurcanu, p. 27. See also Duminică (2019), p. 298
  9. ^ Duminică (2019), pp. 298, 300
  10. ^ Duminică (2019), pp. 300, 305–306
  11. ^ a b Petru Cazacu, "Recenzii. A. Reabinin-Sclearevsky, Ocuparea Basarabiei de cătră România, (după notele fiului generalului Șcerbacev)", in Viața Romînească, Vol. XVII, Issue 9, September 1925, p. 463
  12. ^ "Ultima oră. Descompunerea organizațiilor averescane în Basarabia", in Lupta, September 24, 1925, p. 4
  13. ^ "În jurul alegerilor pentru Camera de Comerț din Chișinău. De vorbă cu un fruntaș comerciant", in Dimineața, September 10, 1925, p. 4
  14. ^ "Informațiuni", in Universul, October 2, 1925, p. 2
  15. ^ "Escrocheria d-lui Pan Halippa. — Procesul-verbal al ședinței dela 11 Martie a foștilor deputați ai Sfatului Țărei. — D. Pan Halippa povățuit de prietenii politici să-și îngrijească sănătatea", in Viitorul, March 16, 1928, p. 5
  16. ^ Duminică (2019), pp. 305–307
  17. ^ "Tablou de refugiați români trecuți din Basarabia în România prin punctul de frontieră Ungheni, în ziua de 21 august 1940 și plecați la Buzău", in Universul, August 28, 1940, p. 2

References

  • Ivan Duminică, "К вопросу о болгарах и гагаузах в Сфатул Цэрий", in Ivan Duminică et al. (eds.), Буджак: от прошлого к настоящему. Сборник статей к 80-летию Ивана Федоровича Грека, pp. 289–314. Chișinău: Lexon-Prim, 2019. ISBN 978-9975-3344-2-6
  • Valeriu Popovschi, "Documente noi privind activitatea desfășurată de Biroul de organizare a Sfatului Țării în vederea constituirii primului parlament al Basarabiei", in Nicolae Enciu (ed.), In honorem Alexandru Moșanu: Studii de istorie medievală, modernă și contemporană a românilor, pp. 363–373. Cluj-Napoca: Romanian Academy & Presa Universitară Clujeană, 2012. ISBN 978-973-7784-78-0
  • Ion Țurcanu, Sfatul Țării. Istoria zbuciumată a unei importante instituții politice basarabene din anii 1917–1918. Chișinău: Editura Arc, 2018. ISBN 978-9975-0-0124-3