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Wallachian legislative election, 1857

Wallachian legislative election, 1857
Civil ensign of Wallachia, 1834–1861.svg
← 1846 September 1857 1859 →

All ≈100 eligible seats in the ad-hoc Divan
  First party Second party Third party
  Constantin Al. Creţulescu.jpg Paulus Petrovitz - Domnitorul Gheorghe Bibescu.jpg PrinceRegentBarbuStirbey1796-1868-lesroumainstomep00stiruoft.png
Leader Constantin A. Crețulescu Gheorghe Bibescu Barbu Dimitrie Știrbei
Party Unionist Committee (National Party) Unionist Committee (conservative) Unionist Committee (conservative)
Leader since 1857 1856 1856
Leader's seat Brăila County Dolj Dolj

Wallachia voting share, 1857.svg
Wallachian constituencies, by number of deputies sent to the ad-hoc Divan.

Elections for the ad-hoc Divan were held in Wallachia in September 1857. They restored a liberalizing trend that had been repressed following the 1848 revolution, also giving expression to the national awakening that was taking part among the Romanians. The toppling of the conservative Regulamentul Organic regime in both Danubian Principalities made them possible: following the 1856 Treaty of Paris, Wallachia and Moldavia functioned as a protectorates of the European powers; both were also clients of the Ottoman Empire. Excluding the spontaneous rallies of 1848, this was the first public consultation to be held in eleven years. It ran in conjunction with the Moldavian Divan elections, and, like them, had unusually lax criteria for participation, allowing peasants and guilds to vote by indirect suffrage.

The result in both countries was a sweep for parties which demanded the union. In Wallachia, the progressive National Party, chaired by Constantin A. Crețulescu, was on this topic indistinguishable from the conservative unionist factions, respectively led by brothers Gheorghe Bibescu and Barbu Dimitrie Știrbei. A fourth party, supporting Alexandru II Ghica and Dimitrie Ghica, cooperated with Crețulescu's Committee, although disagreeing over some core policies. These groups held an absolute majority in the Divan, with only some seats going to non-unionists. Together, they formulated demands for union and increased autonomy, postponing debates about universal suffrage; middle-class progressives and the boyar elite also dissuaded peasant deputies from demanding land reform.


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