Constantin Stamati (1786 – 12 September 1869) was a Moldavian writer and translator. Born in the Principality of Moldavia, he settled in ChiÃÂinÃÂu, Bessarabia (presently in Moldova) after the 1812 partition of Moldavia by the Russian Empire at the end of the Russo-Turkish War.
Stamati became a civil servant and official translator under the first Russian administration of the region. He was rewarded by the Russian emperor with the Medal of Saint Anne and became a knight of that order.
He made the acquaintance of the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin at the time of latter's exile to ChiÃÂinÃÂu in 1820âÂÂ1823. Stamati's most important work, Povestea poveÃÂtilor ("The Tale of Tales"), an idealized description of Moldavia's beginnings in verse, was published in IaÃÂi in 1843. His other works include contemporary satires and glorifications of Moldavia's past.
In 1866, he became one of the founding members of the Romanian Academy.