Tudor Flondor (July 10, 1862–June 23, 1908) was an ethnic Romanian composer and politician in Austria-Hungary, in the Duchy of Bukovina.
Born into an Orthodox Christian family in Storojineț,[1] his parents were Gheorghe Flondor and his wife Isabela (née Dobrovolschi de Buchenthal).
From 1901 to 1908,[1] following an appointment by Emperor Franz Joseph, he was head of the Bukovina Commission on Agriculture, his second great passion.
He wrote a large number of compositions at his estate of Rogojești, where he spent most of his time;[2] he inherited the property after his father's death in 1892.
[1] His output had a patriotic, national character, extending beyond the borders of Bukovina, helping to spur Romanian activism there.