Constantin I. Brătescu

He then entered the letters and philosophy faculty of the University of Bucharest in 1901, transferred to geography and graduated in 1906.

His 1920 thesis dealt with the origins and evolution of the Danube Delta from a morphological and chronological perspective.

From 1916 to 1924, except for two years during World War I, he taught at the normal school in Constanța, beginning to develop a reputation as a scientist.

He helped found the magazines Arhiva Dobrogei and Analele Dobrogei, bringing the latter to Cernăuți and continuing to edit it until his departure for the University of Bucharest,[2] where he taught general and human geography.

[3] He was involved in the cultural and scientific life of Bukovina, helping found a local chapter of the Romanian Geographic Society.

Constantin I. Brătescu