wall. Lupu had held a high office under
Miron Barnovschi, and was subsequently selected
Prince as a sign of indigenous
boyars' reaction against
Greek and
Levantine competition. This was because Vasile Lupu had led a rebellion against
Alexandru Iliaș and his foreign
retinue, being led into
exile by
Moise Movilă (although he was backed by
Prince Matei Basarab and the powerful
Pasha of Silistra,
Abaza Mehmed Pasha). Despite having led the rebellion against Greek influence, Lupu maintained strong ties to the Greeks and the Patriarchate of Constantinople. He pursued a Greek-Orthodox policy and sought to become the new Byzantine Emperor. His rule was marked by splendor and pomp. He was a builder of notable monuments (the unique
Trei Ierarhi Monastery in
Iași and the
St. Paraskeva Church, Lviv, among others), a
patron of culture and arts founding the
Academia Vasiliană). These acts also had negative effects, the tax burdens being increased to an intolerable level. After relations between the two Princes soured, Vasile Lupu spent much of his reign fighting the
Wallachian Matei Basarab, trying to impose his son
Ioan to the throne in
Bucharest. His army was defeated twice in 1639 at Ojogeni and Nenișori and a third time, at
Finta, in 1653. After this last battle, the Moldavian boyars rebelled and replaced him with the Wallachian favorite,
Gheorghe Ștefan. Vasile Lupu went into exile and died while being kept in Turkish custody at
Yedikule prison in
Constantinople. Lupu built a strong alliance with
hetman Bohdan Khmelnytsky, arranging the marriage of his own daughter
Ruxandra Lupu to Khmelnytsky's son
Tymofiy (Tymish), who went on to fight alongside Lupu at Finta. Vasile Lupu made alliances with Ottoman officials, in particular with former
Grand Vizier Tabanıyassı Mehmed Pasha. Lupu's association with the latter relied on their common Albanian origin.
Laws and reforms Vasile Lupu introduced the first codified printed law in Moldavia, the
Carte Românească de învățătură ("
Romanian book of learning", 1646, published in Iași), known as the
Pravila lui Vasile Lupu ("Vasile Lupu's code"). The document follows
Byzantine tradition, being a translated review of
customs and almost identical to its Wallachian contemporary equivalent.
Endowments Lupu founded churches and monasteries throughout his lands. The liturgical language was described as "vulgar Greek" by
Robert Bargrave who travelled the lands.
Education Lupu founded the Princely High School of Trei lerarhi Church in 1640, which taught in Greek and Latin. ==Family==