. . . . . . "Gheorghe Popovici (politik)"@cs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "George Popovici"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "49737385"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "George Popovici (German: Georg Popovici; November 20 [O.S. November 8] 1863 \u2013 July 11/12, 1905) was an Austro-Hungarian and Romanian agrarian politician, jurist and poet. He took to politics as a youth, participating in the nationalist movement as a member of Societatea Academic\u0103 Junimea and Concordia Society. He won a seat in the Austrian House of Deputies in 1897, and, during his mandate, co-founded the , which he also represented in the . Popovici and Iancu Flondor led the party's autonomist wing, which rejected compromise with the Austrian administration and demanded national rights for the Romanian Bukovinians."@en . . . "15261"^^ . . . "1109979862"^^ . . "Gheorghe Popovici (12. listopadu 1863 \u010Cernovice \u2013 26. \u010Dervence 1905 Muka\u010Devo) byl rakousk\u00FD pr\u00E1vn\u00ED historik a politik rumunsk\u00E9 n\u00E1rodnosti z Bukoviny, na konci 19. stolet\u00ED poslanec \u0158\u00ED\u0161sk\u00E9 rady."@cs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Gheorghe Popovici (12. listopadu 1863 \u010Cernovice \u2013 26. \u010Dervence 1905 Muka\u010Devo) byl rakousk\u00FD pr\u00E1vn\u00ED historik a politik rumunsk\u00E9 n\u00E1rodnosti z Bukoviny, na konci 19. stolet\u00ED poslanec \u0158\u00ED\u0161sk\u00E9 rady."@cs . . . . . . "George Popovici (German: Georg Popovici; November 20 [O.S. November 8] 1863 \u2013 July 11/12, 1905) was an Austro-Hungarian and Romanian agrarian politician, jurist and poet. He took to politics as a youth, participating in the nationalist movement as a member of Societatea Academic\u0103 Junimea and Concordia Society. He won a seat in the Austrian House of Deputies in 1897, and, during his mandate, co-founded the , which he also represented in the . Popovici and Iancu Flondor led the party's autonomist wing, which rejected compromise with the Austrian administration and demanded national rights for the Romanian Bukovinians. Popovici lost the parliamentary election of 1900, during which time he ran into heavy debt. He left for the Kingdom of Romania, renouncing Austrian citizenship and focusing on his career as a historian of law. He eventually committed suicide at Munk\u00E1cs, which was at the time part of Hungarian Transleithania."@en . . . . . . . .