Radu Golescu-Știrbei, historically known as Radul or Răducanul Golescul, was a Wallachian statesman, entrepreneur and philanthropist; he was the maternal grandson of Spatharios Radu Leurdeanu Golescu, as well as the father of the writers Iordache and Dinicu Golescu. His life, as well as his participation in government, coincided with the Phanariote reigns, by Greek or Hellenized Princes acting under Ottoman suzerainty. Himself educated in Greek, Golescu was a native boyar, and, like his sons, tended to side with the early manifestations of Romanian nationalism; he was especially prone to economic nationalism—though he alternated this commitment with episodes of participation in Phanariote spoliation, and was vilified as such by Wallachia's taxpayers. Before his political ascent, he established reputation as a businessman and early capitalist, investing in lucrative exports and helping to expand his family manor in Golești. Especially in his final decade, Golescu reinvested much of his wealth into the social uplift of peasant communities, building several rural schools and sponsoring the printing of books.
John Chrysostom appearing inside a clinic, showing treatment of the sick in 18th-century Wallachia. From a 1706 manuscript, Cronica Frățietății
Pitești in the late 18th century, by Luigi Mayer
Great Ban Radu's fountain, and dedicated epigram in Greek, at the family manor in Golești
Wallachian military forces
The military of Wallachia existed throughout the history of the country. Starting from its founding to 1860, when it was united with the Moldavian army into what would become the Romanian Army.
The Battle of Posada depicted in Chronica Hungarorum (1488)
Scale model of an 1845 Quarter Șaică
The Battle of Posada as depicted in Chronicon Pictum
Battle of Șelimbăr in 1599, engraving by Georg Keller [de]