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The Romanian Academy was founded on 1/13 April 1866 under the name of
the Romanian Literary Society. Thus was achieved one of the main projects in the program
of modernization adopted after the 1859 Union of the two Romanian Principalities,
Wallachia and Moldavia, the nucleus of present-day Romania.
Academies in the older sense
- meaning schools of higher learning - had existed in these principalities since the 16th century. The most active and
long-lasting were the academies of the princedom instituted in Bucharest (around 1689) and
Iasi (in 1707) which trained the Christian intellectual elite in South Eastern Europe and
the Near East and would become the first universities in Romania in the 19th century.
However, in order to further its modernization, Romanian society needed
a different kind of academy, after the model of Western Europes academies: an
institution that would gather the preeminent personalities of the nations
intellectual life as a group of reflection and action toward the general progress through
science and culture. At first, this idea took the form of learned societies with literary
and more generally cultural goals, such as those started locally in Brasov (1821),
Bucharest (1844), Sibiu (1861), Cernauti (1862). Their success encouraged the notion of a
central institution to promote literary and scientific creation, animate the traditions of
world literature, and compile an exhaustive dictionary of Romanian literature. This was
the institution founded in 1866, which would begin its activity the following year, under
the name of Societatea Academica Romāna (The Romanian Academic Society).
The newly founded institution was from the very beginning a national,
encyclopedic and active society. Why national? Because it was representative of culture
not only on the territory of what was then Romania but also on territories under foreign
domination by the Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and Russian Empires. Hence, the 21 founding
members were scholars and literati not only from Wallachia and Moldavia, but also from
Transylvania, Banat, Maramures, Bukovine, Bessarabia (today the Republic of Moldavia) and
the Balkan Peninsula.
In 1879, through a special law, the Romanian Academic Society was
promulgated a national institution with the name of Academia Romāna - The Romanian
Academy, a "moral and independent entity in all of its undertakings of whatever
nature." The Academy was encyclopedic because its preoccupations embraced all domains
of the arts, letters, and sciences. The Code of bylaws of 1867 established three sections:
philology-literature (also including the plastic arts), history-archeology and natural
sciences. New sections were added later on, in accordance with the general progress of
science. Finally, the Romanian Academy was not conceived by its founders only as a forum
of national recognition but as an active center of scientific research and literary and
artistic creation.
In the 134 years since its inception, the Academy has crossed both
luminous and somber periods, has known both success and defeat, and throughout all has
enjoyed the admiration of the nation, the respect of scholarly circles worlwide, and the
generosity of many donors who have thus ensured, next to government funding, the necessary
resources for the activity and development of a scientific center of such breadth.
Conversely, the Academy has also tasted the humiliations of political enslavement and
marginalization imposed by the totalitarian communist regime.
During the longest part of its activity, the Academy achieved the goals
set by its founders, and succeeded in being the main forum of reflection and intellectual
creation, both literary and artistic, of the Romanian people. The kings of the country
were the honorary presidents and protectors of the Academy; its acting and associate
members were the most representative personalities in sciences, arts, and letters in
Romania; its honorary members were important figures of national and international repute,
tied through research, contribution and affection to the realities of Romania. Its
prestige and tireless work in the service of sciences and of the nation had earned it the
authority to proclaim "immortals."
The quality of academician was synonymous with absolute intellectual
preeminence in modern Romanian society. The members of the Academy promoted scientific,
cultural and social progress. Educated in the great intellectual centers of Western
Europe, they were by their training, activity and relationships - determined
and determining agents of modernization in Romania. They organized research centers in
diverse domains; they wrote and published works of reference in Romanian or European
scientific literature; they founded and endowed museums and libraries; they provided the
solutions to national problems in economy, technology, medicine or education; finally,
through courses and theoretical as well as practical guidance, they trained young scholars
which would rise to both national and international fame, illustrating excellence both as
scientists and as university professors. The development of each domain of activity in the
program of the Romanian Academy, summarized in the pages of this book, coincides with the
very history of modern and contemporary Romanian culture.
The excellence of the Romanian Academy also explains the special
attention paid to it, with such mixed results, by the communist government in the period
between 1948-1989. Its plan to turn Romania into a "multilaterally developed
socialist state" after the Soviet model required on one hand a considerable growth of
the scientific potential, especially in the domains of fundamental research and
technology, as instruments of the economic and material progress of society, and on the
other a reshaping of ideas and culture to make them conform to the Marxist doctrine of
historic and dialectic materialism. As in the Soviet Union, the Academy was to play a main
part in this program, of course under the watchful and severe direction of the Romanian
Communist Party. Consequently, the law of June 9, 1948 turned the Romanian Academy into
the Academy of the Peoples Republic of Romania, reorganized it into 6 sections and
25 subsections, and gave priority to the exact and applied sciences, placing the
socio-human sciences last in rank of importance. On this occasion, more than 90 acting,
associate and honorary members were expelled from the Academy, since they were deemed
unfit to the new cultural orientations and hostile to the communist regime, on the
strength of their ideas, works and political convictions. Purges of this sort were
extended to the staff of the Academys institutes. At the same time, the assets of
the Academy were nationalized, and the institution became in all respects enslaved to the
state. Later on, the Academy was to be parted from many of its various possessions, often
without even a minimum of legal formality, as its collections of documents, coins,
archeological finds and artworks were being abusively shipped to other state institutions.
The Academy, restructured by the new regime, had 66 members nominated
by presidential decree and dispersed into 6 scientific sections. From amongst the former
members of the Academy, 19 had been kept as acting members and 15 as honorary members;
most were specialists in theoretical and applied sciences.
As far as the selection of new members went, their political attitude
was a necessary criterion but only seldom also a sufficient one. Totalitarian regimes have
always used science as a political weapon, adducing its superiority as evidence of their
superiority, and for this reason most of those nominated members of the Academy were
scholars of great renown, although exceptions could be and were made in the case of those
with weighty political functions.
In the first two decades of the communist regime, the Academy and its
scientific network grew considerably, from 7 research facilities with nearly 400
scientific collaborators in 1948 to 56 institutes or centers with about 2,500 employees in
1966. Their activity was checked both scientifically, to ensure conformity with the
research plans drawn and followed up by the Academys sections and by the boards of
the institutes, and politically, this time to ensure that the ideological priorities and
the correlation with the major interests of the society, which science was supposed to
serve, were always safeguarded. However, the main preoccupation of the Academys
scientists was to be constantly in touch, beyond or despite these limitations, with
worldwide science, by keeping informed, corresponding professionally, and participating in
international meetings held abroad. Every domain of scientific research progressed during
this time; yet every advancement was obtained not only with effort and devotion, but also
with daring and at personal risk for those involved. During that time, there existed not
only laureates of the state science prizes, but also scientists publicly exposed for
ideological errors, "cosmopolitanism," etc.
In the second half of the totalitarian regime, as the discretionary
rule of Romania increased, the Academy gradually lost its relative credit as well as its
former prerogatives, being for all practical purposes simply pushed aside. In 1969, a
decision of the Council of Ministers removed 12 institutes and centers of medical research
in Bucharest, Cluj, Iasi, Timisoara and Tārgu Mures from the system of the Academy and
placed them under the direction of the Academy of Medical Sciences. After 1970, a newly
founded Academy of Social and Political Sciences swallowed up all of the Academys
institutes of socio-human sciences. In 1974, the modifications of the Academys code
of bylaws put it under the direction of the National Council for Science and Technology,
and in the course of the same year, the Academy was stripped of all of its remaining
institutes in Bucharest and other major cities - institutes of mathematics,
statistics, geography, linguistics, literary history, folklore, the Astronomical
Observatory and others - which were redistributed to the ministries of education and
culture. Thus the Academy ceased to be the national fountainhead of creation and research
in science, letters and arts intended by its founders, although it had played this role
successfully for over a century. Nevertheless, even during this period of
marginalization,
under various guises and in diverse structures of organization and hierarchy, the creative
and research activities of this national institution continued, through the efforts of
scholars and scientists belonging to the academic tradition.
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The ten years since the fall of the communist regime in Romania have meant for the
Romanian Academy a period of restoration and reinstatement in the vocation, dignity and
fundamental role the institution had cultivated from its very beginning, and of which it
had been abusively stripped. Through the law-decree of January 5, 1990, regarding its
organization and operation, the Romanian Academy recovered not only its name but also its
status as "the highest scientific authority in the country, bringing together the
worthiest personalities in science, technology, education, culture and art in Romania, as
representing the creative spirituality of the nation." At the same time, the law
recognizes the Academys prerogatives as an independent institution, financed by the
state and governed by the General Assembly of its acting and associate members, as well as
its right to its own network of "science facilities for advanced and fundamental
research." These rights - also included in the new Code of bylaws, adopted
February 2, 1990 - took effect immediately. As early as January 22 of the same year,
the Academy elected new acting members, a prerogative it had been denied for 15years,
since 1974. The next step was the election of a new administration of the Academy through
secret ballot (for the first time in 42 years!). The Academy recognized the quality of
uninterrupted membership of all its members who had been excluded for political reasons by
the communist dictatorship in 1948. The associate members of the Romanian Academy who
during the totalitarian regime had lost this quality because they had permanently left the
country were also reinstated. Great personalities of Romanian cultural life who had been
set aside as politically incorrect during communist rule were granted posthumous
membership to the Academy. Internationally renowned scholars among whom Romanian natives
living abroad were elected as new honorary members. The scientific network of institutes
that had been dismantled after 1969 was put back together again, as the 63 institutes,
centers and other research facilities of the Academy throughout the country came once more
under its direction.
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