This feature explores controversial and profound memoir, România și sfârșitul Europei: Amintiri din țara pierdută (often titled The Suicide of Europe in English).
Sturdza’s narrative is less a traditional autobiography and more a scathing critique of the "conspiracy" he believed led to World War II. Mihail-Sturdza-Romania-si-sfarsitul-Europei-Ami...
The book is deeply biased, portraying the Iron Guard and its leader, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu , as the only true defenders of Romanian national interests against a corrupt political class. His political alignment with the (the Legionary Movement)
His political alignment with the (the Legionary Movement) and his role in the government during the Axis alliance ultimately led to his conviction as a war criminal in absentia. He spent his later years in exile, primarily in Madrid, where he wrote these memoirs as a defense of his actions and a warning to the West. Core Themes: "The Suicide of Europe" primarily in Madrid