- The
Paharnic (plural: Paharnici; also
known as
Păharnic, Paharnec, or Păharnec;
Moldavian dialect: ceașnic, Gr****: παχάρνικος, pakharnikos, Russian: пахарник...
- Gr****, Latin, and
Turkish etymology;
several are
original (such as armaș,
paharnic,
jitnicer and vistiernic).
Various boier titles correspond to
various honorary...
-
dictionary definition of
cupbearer at
Wiktionary Bartender Food
taster Paharnic Pinkernes Sommelier compare Xenophon. ****enica. vii.1, 38. Nehemiah. Book...
-
higher offices, and thus
earned Cuza's
enduring political support. He was
Paharnic before and
during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768,
returning as Spatharios...
- than
Great Boyars,
occupied posts in the
administration such as Clucer,
Paharnic, and Stolnic.
Second and
third rank
boyars were not
entitled to having...
- poet, playwright,
translator and memoirist. He was born in Mamornița to
paharnic (royal cup-bearer) Ioniță Sion and his wife
Eufrosina (née Schina), the...
- and his wife Eufrosina, the
daughter of
Alexander Mourousis. He
became a
paharnic in 1840 and an Aga in 1850.
Plagino was
prefect of the
Bucharest police...
- a Moldavian-born
Romanian politician. Born in Bacău, he was the son of
paharnic (royal cup-bearer)
Gheorghe Lecca (reportedly a
descendant of Leca of Cătun)...
-
servicing the more
powerful boyar Teodor "Frederic" Balș, and
became a
Paharnic in Botoșani city, near Moldavia's
border with the
Austrian Empire. An exponent...
-
offices of Spatharios, in
charge of the
Wallachian military forces, and
Paharnic,
before being won over by the
rebellious Seimeni mercenaries. He issued...