Cleante Davidoglu (1871–1947)[1][2] was a Romanian major general during World War I and its immediate aftermath, who served as commander of the Gendarmerie from 1927 to 1928.
[5] During the Romanian Campaign of 1916, lieutenant colonel Davidoglu commanded the 4th Roșiori Regiment at the battles of Transylvania, Oituz, and Robănești.
In October 1918, Prime Minister Alexandru Marghiloman ordered the Romanian Army to take control of Bukovina and Hotin, in the far-northern tip of Bessarabia.
[10] In March 1919 he was stationed in Satu Mare, where he helped Doctor Lükő Béla [hu] establish the surgery section of the city's hospital.
[1] In July 1927, Iuliu Maniu and Virgil Madgearu, representing the National Peasants' Party, wrote an open letter to Prime Minister Ion I. C. Brătianu, the leader of the National Liberal Party, protesting Davidoglu's alleged interference in the 1927 Romanian general election.