Ypsilantis enjoys the support of some Greek…
June 1821 CE
Ypsilantis enjoys the support of some Greek and Romanian boyars in the principalities; after more than a century of extortion, however, most Romanians resent the Phanariotes and crave the end of Greek control.
The autonomist movement in Serbia has influenced Wallachian voivode Tudor Vladimirescu, a peasant-born Romanian whose wits and military skill have elevated him to boyar rank.
He had initially allied himself with Filiki Etaireia, but with the Etairist rising in Moldavia under Ypsilantis in March, he disavows the Greek leadership of the revolution in the Romanian principalities.
He organizes a popular rising in Wallachia to evict the predominantly Greek administration of the Turkish government and end the depredations of the native Romanian aristocracy (boieri).
His eventual accommodation to the provisional aristocratic government at Bucharest, however, erodes his considerable initial support.
Tsar Alexander I does not approve of his actions, and Vladimirescu falls out of favor with the Russian Empire.
When Ypsilantis suspects Vladimirescu of conspiring with the Turks to cut off the retreat of the Greek revolutionary forces from the Bucharest region, he orders the arrest of the Romanian leader, ...