V. A. Urechia
![Urechia in [[Sinaia]], 1890](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/32/Vasile_Alexandrescu_Urechia_-_Foto02.jpg)
As an ideologue, Urechia developed "Romanianism", which offered a template for cultural and political cooperation among Romanians from several historical regions, and formed part of a Pan-Latinist campaign. An activist in favor of the Moldavia's union to Wallachia and a representative of the liberal wing, he was briefly Moldavian Minister of Religious Affairs, and later a prominent member of the National Liberal Party. For more than three decades, Urechia represented Covurlui County in the Romanian Kingdom's Chamber of Deputies and Senate. He was Education Minister under two successive National Liberal administrations, and, during the 1890s, he founded the Cultural League for the Unity of All Romanians, which focused on encouraging the aspirations of Romanians living in Austria-Hungary.
Urechia was involved in a decade-long controversy with ''Junimea'', a conservative literary society which advocated professionalization. Among those involved on the ''Junimist'' side were literary critic Titu Maiorescu and poet Mihai Eminescu. Like other contributors to the liberal magazine ''Revista Contimporană'', Urechia was a notorious target of Maiorescu's campaign against "inebriation with words", and ultimately sided with the anti-''Junimist'' author Alexandru Macedonski, becoming a contributor to magazine. The polemics touched on his private life, after claims surfaced that he was secretly leading a polygynous lifestyle. Provided by Wikipedia