Djuvara later stated that, at the time, his political sympathies veered towards the far right: he became a supporter of the Romanian fascist movement, the Iron Guard, and took part in the February 1934 riot against the French Radical-Socialist government of Édouard Daladier.ĭuring World War II, he returned to Romania, where he married and fathered a child. He attended lycée in Nice, France, and graduated in Letters (1937) and Law (1940) from the University of Paris (his Law thesis dealt with the antisemitic legislation passed by the governments of King Carol II in Romania). Djuvara was born during World War I as an infant, he was taken by his family into refuge in Iaşi after the occupation of southern Romania by the Central Powers, and then, through Imperial Russia, into Belgium (where Trandafir Djuvara was Minister Plenipotentiary). Djuvara's uncles Trandafir and Alexandru Djuvara were notable public figures. His father, Marcel, a graduate of the Technical University of Berlin and a Captain in the Romanian Royal Army's Engineer Corps, died of Spanish flu in 1918 his mother, Tinca, was the last descendant of the Gradişteanu family of boyar origins (according to Djuvara, she was related to all boyar families in Wallachia). A native of Bucharest, he is descended from an aristocratic Aromanian family.
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