Dimitrie Cantemir
| Dimitrie Cantemir | |
|---|---|
| Portrait from the first edition of the Descriptio Moldaviae, 1716 | |
| Prince of Moldavia | |
| Reign | March 1693 – April 1693 | 
| Predecessor | Constantin Cantemir | 
| Successor | Constantin Duca | 
| Reign | January 1710 – August 1711 | 
| Predecessor | Nicholas Mavrocordatos | 
| Successor | Lupu Costachi | 
| Born | 26 October 1673 Silișteni (now Dimitrie Cantemir), Vaslui County, Principality of Moldavia | 
| Died | 21 August 1723 (aged 49) Dmitrovsk, Oryol Oblast, Russian Empire | 
| Burial | |
| Spouse | Casandra Cantacuzino Anastasiya Trubetskaya | 
| Issue | Matei Șerban Maria Cantemir Constantin Antiochus Kantemir Ekaterina Golitsyna | 
| House | Cantemirești | 
| Father | Constantin Cantemir | 
Dimitrie or Demetrius Cantemir (Romanian pronunciation: [diˈmitri.e kanteˈmir] ⓘ; Russian: Дмитрий Кантемир, romanized: Dmitry Kantemir; 26 October 1673 – 21 August 1723), also known by other spellings, was a Moldavian prince, statesman, and man of letters. He twice served as voivode of Moldavia (March–April 1693 and 1710–1711). During his second term, he allied his state with Russia in a war against Moldavia's Ottoman overlords; Russia's defeat forced Cantemir's family into exile and the replacement of the native voivodes by Greek phanariots. Cantemir was also a prolific writer, variously a: philosopher, historian, composer, musicologist, linguist, ethnographer and geographer. His son, Antioch, Russia's ambassador to Great Britain and France and a friend of Montesquieu and Voltaire, would become known as "the father of Russian poetry".