Hurmuzachi
Hurmuzachi (Hurmuzaki, Hurmuzache) is a noble Romanian family from Bukovina of Greek origin. During the 17th-19th centuries they were associated with the Cernauca estate in Bukovina.
The most prominent members were the Hurmuzachi brothers:
- Constantin (1811–1869),
- Eudoxiu (1812–1878),
- Gheorghe (1817–1882),
- Alexandru (1823–1871),
- Nicolae (1826–1909).
Their father was Doxaki (Doxachi, Doxache, Doxaki) Hurmuzaki (d. April 1857), who eventually re-acquired Cernauca after the documents of the ownership of the estate by the family had been lost and built a new boier palace and church and planted park there. Doxaki married Iuliana (Ilinka, Olena) Murguleţ (d.1858), daughter of a Romanian boier (stolnic), and they had 12 children, of whom 7 survived: the five brothers and two sisters, Eufrozina and Eliza.
Doxaki was son of medelnicer Constantin Hurmuzachi and Roksana (d. August 12, 1818) from Moldavia.
- Constantin Hurmuzachi
- Eudoxiu Hurmuzachi
- Alexandru Hurmuzachi
See also
- Hurmuzachi Psalter (Psaltirea Hurmuzachi), an early (16th century) manuscript in the Romanian language
- Anatol Hurmuzaki (b. 1937), academician, governmental functionary of Moldova (chief of the department of mechanization, state technical control and labour protection, Ministry of Agriculture of Moldova & other positions) [1]
References
- Anatol Hurmuzaki Archived 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine (in Russian)