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{{Short description|Nation-state for all Romanian speakers}}
{{Otheruses3|România Mare}}
{{Other uses|România Mare (disambiguation){{!}}România Mare}}
]
]
The '''Greater Romania''' ({{lang-ro|România Mare}}) generally refers to the territory of ] in the years between the ] and the ] (WWI and WWII), the largest geographical extent of Romania up to that time and its largest peacetime extent ever (295,649 km²); more precisely, it refers to the territory of the ] between 1919 and 1940. In 1918, at the end of World War I, ], ] and ] united with the ].
The term '''Greater Romania''' ({{langx|ro|România Mare}}) usually refers to the borders of the ] in the ],<ref>Cas Mudde. </ref> achieved after the ]. It also refers to a ]<ref>Peter Truscott, , I.B.Tauris, 1997, p. 72</ref><ref name="GOMBOŞ and Mateescu">{{cite web |url=http://kms2.isn.ethz.ch/serviceengine/Files/ESDP/141520/ichaptersection_singledocument/72797071-d4e7-4f9c-bd3a-d34e3ba1b598/en/Article+02.pdf |title=Moldova's Political self and the energy Conundrum in the Context of the European neighbourhood Policy |publisher=ISN ETH Zurich |year=2012 |access-date=2014-05-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304000240/http://kms2.isn.ethz.ch/serviceengine/Files/ESDP/141520/ichaptersection_singledocument/72797071-d4e7-4f9c-bd3a-d34e3ba1b598/en/Article+02.pdf |archive-date=2016-03-04 |url-status=dead }}</ref> idea.


As a concept, its main goal is the creation of a nation-state which would incorporate all ].<ref name="Holocaust en Genocide Studies">{{cite web|url=http://dare.uva.nl/document/478015 |title=The Romanian Holocaust in Memory and Commemoration, The Jewish fate during World War II in postwar commemoration |publisher=University of Amsterdam |year=2012 |access-date=2014-05-21}}</ref><ref name="Livezeanu">Irina Livezeanu, , Cornell University Press, 2000, p. 4 and p. 302</ref><ref name="Ivan T. Berend"/><ref>Lavinia Stan, Lucian Turcescu, , Oxford University Press, 2007 p. 53</ref><ref name="Arbatov"/> In 1920, after the incorporation of ], ], ] and parts of ], ], and ], the Romanian state reached its largest peacetime geographical extent ever (295,049&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>). Today, the concept serves as a guiding principle for the ].
== Union of Bessarabia with Romania ==
{{Main|Union of Bessarabia with Romania}}


The idea is comparable to other similar conceptions such as the ], ], ], ] and ].<ref>Giuseppe Motta, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304185715/http://www.cambridgescholars.com/download/sample/59407 |date=2016-03-04 }}, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, p. 11</ref><ref>Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, , LIT Verlag Münster, 2008, p. 52</ref>
Bessarabia, having declared its sovereignty in 1917 by the newly formed "Council of the Country" ("]"), was faced with the disorderly retreat of disbanded ]n troops through its territory in January 1918. Romanian troops occupied the province<ref>Ray Egerton Henderson Mellor, "Eastern Europe: A Geography of the Comecon Countries", Macmillan, 1975, p. 79 </ref><ref> William Aylott Orton, "Twenty Years' Armistice, 1918-1938", Farrar & Rinehart, 1939, p. 41 </ref><ref> Volodymyr Kubiĭovych, "Ukraine: A Concise Encyclopaedia", University of Toronto Press, 1963, p.756,</ref> allegedly to protect it from the ]s who were spreading the ]. After declaring independence from Russia on 24 January 1918, the Romanian dominated "Sfatul Ţării" voted for union with Romania on 9 April 1918: of the 148 deputies, 86 voted for union, 3 against, 36 abstained (mostly the deputies representing the minorities, 36% at the time) <ref></ref> and 13 were not present.


==Ideology==
== Union of Transylvania with Romania ==
The theme of national identity had been always a key concern for Romanian culture and politics.<ref>Michael D. Kennedy, , University of Michigan Press, 1994, p. 121</ref> The Romanian national ideology in the first decades of the twentieth century was a typical example of ethnocentric nationalism.<ref name="icr"/> The concept of "Greater Romania" shows similarities to the idea of national state.<ref name="Berteanu">Petre Berteanu, Romanian nationalism and political communication: Greater Romania Party (Partidul Romania Mare), a case-study, In: Jaroslav Hroch, David Hollan, George F. McLean, , CRVP, 1998, pp. 161-176</ref> The Romanian territorial claims were based on ''"primordial racial modalities"'', the essential goal of them was to unify the biologically defined Romanians.<ref>], , Routledge, 2008, p. 75</ref> The nation-building based on the French model of a unitary nation-state became an all time priority especially in the interwar and the Communist periods.<ref name="divided nations"/>
{{Main|Union of Transylvania with Romania}}
]
Transylvania (the last of the three to do so) joined Romania by a "Proclamation of Union" of ] adopted by the Deputies of the Romanians from Transylvania, and supported one month later by the vote of the Deputies of the Saxons from Transylavania. The Hungarian-speakers from Transylavania, about 32% at the time (including a large Hungarian-speaking Jewish community), and the Germans in Banat did not elect Deputies at the official dissolution of ], since they were considered represented by the Budapest government of the Hungarian part of the Austro-Hungary. In Bukovina, after occupation by the Romanian Army,<ref>Volodymyr Kubijovyč, Arkadii Zhukovsky, , in "Encyclopedia of Ukraine", Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 2001</ref><ref>Sherman David Spector, "Rumania at the Paris Peace Conference: A Study of the Diplomacy of Ioan I. C. Brătianu", Bookman Associates, 1962, p. 70 </ref> a National Council voted for union with Romania. While the Romanian, German, Polish and Jewish deputies voted for, {{Citation needed|date=August 2007}} the Ukrainian deputies (representing 38% of the population at the time) <ref> Donald Peckham, Christina Bratt Paulston, "Linguistic Minorities in Central and Eastern Europe", Multilingual Matters, 1998, p. 190 </ref> voted against.


==Evolution==
===Interwar period===
{{main|Territorial evolution of Romania}}
The union of the regions of Transylvania, ], ] and ] with the Old Kingdom of Romania was ratified in 1920 by the ] which recognised Romanian sovereignty over these regions and settled the border between the independent Republic of ] and the ]. The union of Bukovina and Bessarabia with Romania was ratified in 1920 by the ]. Romania had also recently acquired the ] territory called the "Cadrilater" ("Quadrilateral") from ] as a result of its victory in the ] in 1913.


===Before World War I===
Romania retained these borders from 1918 to 1940. In that year, it lost Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina to the ] after the ], lost the considerable territory of ] to Hungary in the ], and lost the "Cadrilater" to Bulgaria in the ]. In the course of World War II, Romania (in alliance with the ]) took back Bessarabia and was awarded further territorial gains at the expense of the ] (] or western ] or western ]; these were lost again as the tide of the war turned.
] (1855)]]
After the war, Romania regained the Transylvanian territories lost to Hungary, but not those lost to either Bulgaria or the Soviet Union, and in 1948 the Treaty between the Soviet Union and Soviet-occupied ] also provided for the transfer of four uninhabited islands to the USSR, three in the ], and one in the ] (],
]]]
with the latter being used as a 'spy heaven' by the Soviet Union.
{{See also|National awakening of Romania|Unification of Moldavia and Wallachia}}
The union of ], who ruled over the three principalities with Romanian population (], ] and ]) for a short period of time,<ref name="Juliana Geran Pilon"/> was viewed in later periods as the precursor of a modern ], a thesis which was argued by ]. This theory became a point of reference for ], as well as a catalyst for various Romanian forces to achieve a single Romanian state.<ref>{{cite book | last = Giurescu | first = Constantin C. | author-link = Constantin C. Giurescu | title = Istoria Românilor | orig-year = 1935 | year = 2007 | location = Bucharest | publisher = Editura All }}, p. 211–13.</ref>


The ] in 1848 already carried the seeds of the national dream of a unified and united Romania,<ref name="Ivan T. Berend"/> though the "idea of unification" had been known from earlier works of Naum Ramniceanu (1802) and ] (1804).<ref name="Juliana Geran Pilon">Juliana Geran Pilon, ], Transaction Publishers, 1982, p. 56</ref> The concept owes its life to ], who introduced the term "Greater Romania" in 1852.<ref name="Juliana Geran Pilon"/> The first step in unifying Romanians was to establish the ] by ] in 1859,<ref>Pablo Cardona, Michael J. Morley, , Routledge, 2013, p. 119</ref> which became known as Romania since the ] and turned into a ] in 1881, after gaining ] from the ]. However, before the ], the elite of the Transylvanian Romanians did not support the concept of "Greater Romania", instead they wanted only equality with the other nations in Transylvania.<ref name="Ivan T. Berend">], , University of California Press, 2013, p. 112 and p. 252</ref> The concept became a political reality when, in 1881, the Romanian National Party of Transylvania gathered Romanians on a common political platform to fight together for Transylvania's autonomy.<ref name="Juliana Geran Pilon"/> According to Livezeanu the creation of Greater Romania with ''"a unifying concept of nationhood"'' started to evolve in the late 1910s.<ref name="divided nations">Tristan James Mabry, John McGarry, Margaret Moore, Brendan O'Leary, , University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013, p. 113 and p. 117</ref> World War I played a crucial part in the development of Romanian national consciousness.
==The name and its meanings==
The original ] term, ''"România Mare",'' or ''Great Romania'', did not carry the possibly ] or ] sense of its ] translation;{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} it is rather used in the sense of ''re-integration'' of the territories that share an alleged Romanian language and culture, as further described next (and also in the cited references). The term became more common after the ], when the re-attachment of ] to the ] occurred as a result of the ]; thus the ] under ] came to include all provinces with a large ethnic Romanian majority, by comparison with the previous ] under ], which did not include the provinces of ] and ], but included most of ]. An alternative name for "România Mare", coined at the same time, was in the Romanian language "România Întregită" (roughly translated in English as, "Integrated Romania", or "''Entire Romania''"). "România Mare" was seen (and is also now seen by the great majority of the Romanian people, both at home and abroad) as the 'true', ''whole'' Romanian state, or, as Tom Gallagher states, the "] of Romanian ]". <ref name= "Gallagher" > {{cite book |author=Gallagher, Tom | title= Modern Romania: the end of communism, the failure of democratic reform, and the theft of a nation | publisher= ] | location=New York |year= 2005 | pages= 28 | isbn= 0-8147-3172-4 | oclc= | doi=}}</ref>


===World War I===
When used in a political context it has an irredentist connotation, mainly concerning the territories that were ruled by Romania in the interwar, that are now either part of ] or the ].{{Citation needed|date=October 2008}} During the ], due to ] persecusion, large numbers (over half a million) of Romanians in Bessarabia and Bukovina were displaced or perished in executions, the ], and famine, while during the entire Soviet period a large number of ]s where invited to cement Soviet hold on the territories.{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}}
The ] was signed between ] and the ] on 4 (])/17 (]) August 1916 in ].<ref name=Kiritescu>], "''Istoria războiului pentru întregirea României: 1916-1919''", 1922, p. 179</ref> The treaty stipulated the conditions under which Romania agreed to join the war on the side of the Entente, particularly territorial promises in ]. The signatories bound themselves to keep secret the contents of the treaty until a general peace was concluded.


{{Blockquote|
== See also ==
''Romanians!''
*]

*]
''The war which for the last two years has been encircling our frontiers more and more closely has shaken the ancient foundations of Europe to their depths.
*]

*]
''It has brought the day which has been awaited for centuries by the national conscience, by the founders of the Romanian State, by those who united the principalities in the war of independence, by those responsible for the national renaissance.''

''It is the day of the union of all branches of our nation. Today we are able to complete the task of our forefathers and to establish forever that which Michael the Great was only able to establish for a moment, namely, a Romanian union on both slopes of the Carpathians.''

''For us the mountains and plains of Bukowina, where Stephen the Great has slept for centuries. In our moral energy and our valour lie the means of giving him back his birthright of a great and free Rumania from the Tisza to the Black Sea, and to prosper in peace in accordance with our customs and our hopes and dreams.''
(...)

Part of the proclamation by King Ferdinand, 28 August 1916<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.firstworldwar.com/source/romania_ferdinandproc1.htm|title=Primary Documents - King Ferdinand's Proclamation to the Romanian People, 28 August 1916|website=firstworldwar.com|access-date=22 March 2018}}</ref>
}}

Lucian Boia summarised the territorial extent of the nationalist dream as following:

:''The phrase "De la Nistru pana la Tisa" (From Dniester to Tisza) is well known to Romanians, it defines the limits of an ideal Romania, though we should note that the Romanian population extends in the east beyond the Dniester, while both banks of the Tisza are completely Hungarian for most of the river's length. To the south, the Danube completes the symbolic geography of Romania: an enclosed space between 3 rivers, with an area of 300.000 sq km, comparable to that of Italy or the British Isles. Rivers then are perceived as natural borders, separating Romanians from Others.''<ref>Lucian Boia, "Romania: Borderlands of Europe", Reaktion Books Publishing, 2001, p. 59</ref>

===Interwar Romania===
{{See also|Little Entente|Polish–Romanian alliance}}
]
]
The concept of ''"Greater Romania"'' materialized as a geopolitical reality after the ].<ref name="Berteanu"/> Romania gained control over ], ] and ]. The borders established by the treaties concluding the war did not change until 1940. The resulting state, often referred to as "România Mare" or, alternatively, as {{langx|ro|România Întregită}} (roughly translated in English as "Romania Made Whole," or "Entire Romania"), was seen as the 'true', ''whole'' Romanian state, or, as Tom Gallagher states, the "] of Romanian nationalism".<ref name="Gallagher" >{{cite book |author=Gallagher, Tom | title= Modern Romania: the end of communism, the failure of democratic reform, and the theft of a nation | publisher= ] | location=New York |year= 2005 | page= 28 | isbn= 0-8147-3172-4 }}</ref> Its constitution, proclaimed in 1923, "largely ignored the new ethnic and cultural realities".<ref name="Hitchins">], , Cambridge University Press, 2014, p. 183, {{ISBN|9781107782709}}</ref>

The Romanian ideology changed due to the demographic, cultural and social alterations, however the nationalist desire for a homogeneous Romanian state conflicted with the multiethnic, multicultural truth of Greater Romania.<ref name="Livezeanu"/> The ideological rewriting of the role of ''"spiritual victimization"'', turning it into ''"spiritual police''", was a radical and challenging task for the Romanian intellectuals because they had to entirely revise the national identity and the destiny of the Romanian nation.<ref name="icr">{{cite web|url=http://www.icr.ro/bucharest/identity-and-destiny-ideas-and-ideology-in-interwar-romania-29-2007/ideas-and-ideology-in-interwar-romania.html |title=Ideas And Ideology In Interwar Romania|publisher=www.icr.ro |year=2007 |access-date=2014-05-11}}</ref> In accordance with this view, Livezeanu states that the ] created a ''"deeply fragmented"'' interwar Romania where the determination of national identity met with great difficulties mainly because of the effects of the hundred years of political separation.<ref name="Conflicted Memories">Konrad Hugo Jarausch, Thomas Lindenberger, Annelie Ramsbrock, , Berghahn Books, 2007, pp. 39-42</ref> Due to the inability of the government to solve the problems of the Transylvanian Romanians' integration and the effects of the ], "the population gradually lost its faith in the democratic conception of Greater Romania".<ref name="Kührer-Wielach, Florian">{{cite web|url=http://othes.univie.ac.at/28458/ |title=Siebenbürgen ohne Siebenbürger? |publisher=University of Vienna |year=2013 |access-date=2014-05-11}}</ref>

The ], which started in 1929, destabilised the country. The early 1930s were marked by social unrest, high unemployment, and strikes. In several instances, the Romanian government violently repressed strikes and riots, notably the 1929 miners' strike in ] and the ]. In the mid-1930s, the Romanian economy recovered and the industry grew significantly, although about 80% of Romanians were still employed in agriculture. French economic and political influence was predominant in the early 1920s but then Germany became more dominant, especially in the 1930s.<ref>William A. Hoisington Jr, "The Struggle for Economic Influence in Southeastern Europe: The French Failure in Romania, 1940." ''Journal of Modern History'' 43.3 (1971): 468-482.</ref>

==== Territorial changes ====
]

=====Bessarabia=====
{{Main|Treaty of Paris (1920)|Union of Bessarabia with Romania}}
{{See also|Tatarbunary Uprising}}
Bessarabia declared its sovereignty as the ] in 1917 by the newly formed "Council of the Country" ("]"). The state was faced with the disorderly retreat through its territory of ]n troops from disbanded units. In January 1918, the "Sfatul Țării" called on Romanian troops to protect the province from the ]s who were spreading the ].<ref>], ''Istoria Basarabiei'', Cernăuți, 1923, reprinted Chișinău, Cartea Moldovenească, 1991 and ], Bucharest, 1991. {{ISBN|973-28-0283-9}}</ref><ref>Charles Upson Clark, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090112222907/http://depts.washington.edu/cartah/text_archive/clark/toc_pag.shtml |date=2009-01-12 }}</ref><ref>Pantelimon Halippa, Anatolie Moraru, ''Testament pentru urmași'', Munich, 1967, reprinted Chișinău, Hyperion, 1991, p. 143</ref> After declaring independence from Russia on 24 January 1918, the "Sfatul Țării" voted for union with Romania on 9 April 1918. Of the 138 deputies in the council, 86 voted for union, 3 against, 36 abstained (mostly the deputies representing minorities, 52% of the population at the time)<ref>, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160530135948/http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_lan_97.php?reg=31 |date=2016-05-30 }}</ref> and 13 were not present. The ], ], ] and ] recognized the incorporation of Bessarabia through the ]. The ] and the ] however refused to do so, the latter maintaining a claim to the territory for the whole interwar period. Furthermore, Japan failed to ratify the treaty, which therefore never entered into force.

=====Bukovina=====
{{Main|Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919)|Union of Bukovina with Romania}}
In ], after being occupied by the Romanian Army,<ref>Volodymyr Kubijovyč, Arkadii Zhukovsky, , in "Encyclopedia of Ukraine", Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 2001</ref><ref>Sherman David Spector, "Rumania at the Paris Peace Conference: A Study of the Diplomacy of Ioan I. C. Brătianu", Bookman Associates, 1962, p. 70</ref> a National Council voted for union with Romania. While the Romanian, German, and Polish deputies unanimously voted for union,<ref name="Livezeanu2000"/> the Ukrainian deputies (representing 38% of the population according to the 1910 Austrian census)<ref>Donald Peckham, Christina Bratt Paulston, "Linguistic Minorities in Central and Eastern Europe", Multilingual Matters, 1998, p. 190</ref> and Jewish deputies did not attend the council.<ref name="Livezeanu2000">{{cite book|author=Irina Livezeanu|title=Cultural Politics in Greater Romania: Regionalism, Nation Building, and Ethnic Struggle, 1918–1930|year=2000|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-8014-8688-3|page=59|author-link=Irina Livezeanu}}</ref> The unification was ratified in the ].

=====Transylvania=====
{{Main|Treaty of Trianon|Union of Transylvania with Romania}}{{See also|Hungarian-Romanian War of 1919}}

On 1 December 1918, the ] proclaimed the union of Transylvania and other territories with Romania in ], adopted by the Deputies of the Romanians of Transylvania, and supported one month later by the vote of the Deputies of the ].<ref name="Hupchick1995">{{cite book|author=Dennis P. Hupchick|title=Conflict and chaos in Eastern Europe|year=1995|publisher=Palgrave Macmillan|isbn=978-0-312-12116-7|page=|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/conflictchaosine00hupc/page/83}}</ref> The Hungarians of Transylvania, about 32% at the time (including the ] community), and the Germans of ] did not elect deputies upon the dissolution of ], since they were considered represented by the ] government of Hungary, nevertheless on 22 December 1918 the Hungarian General Assembly in ] (Kolozsvár) reaffirmed the loyalty of Hungarians from Transylvania to Hungary. In the 1920 ], Hungary was forced to give up all claims over Transylvania and the treaty set the new borders between the two countries.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wwi.lib.byu.edu/index.php/Treaty_of_Trianon|title=Text of the Treaty of Trianon|publisher=World War I Document Archive|access-date=31 August 2008}}</ref>

===World War II losses===
])]]
{{Main|Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina|Second Vienna Award|Treaty of Craiova|Romania during World War II}}
In 1940, the Romanian state agreed to cede Bessarabia to the ], as provided for by the ] between the Soviet Union and ]. It also lost ] and the ], which were not mentioned in the pact, to the Soviet Union. It lost ] to Hungary, through the ], and the ] to Bulgaria by the ]. In the course of World War II, Romania, which was allied with the ], not only re-annexed Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, but also took under administrative control lands to the east of Dniester (parts of recently formed ], and of ] and ] oblasts of ]), creating ]. ].]]Despite clear Ukrainian majority in the governorate's ethnic composition, demonstrated by ], Romanian government hoped to annex it eventually as a "compensation" for ] lost to ].{{cn|date=November 2024}}

These territories were lost again when the tide of the war turned. After the war, Romania regained the Transylvanian territories lost to Hungary, but not territory lost to Bulgaria or the Soviet Union. In 1948 a treaty between the Soviet Union and Soviet-occupied ] also provided for the transfer of four uninhabited islands to the Soviet Union, three in the ] and ] in the ].{{cn|date=November 2024}}

===After World War II===
{{See also|National Communism in Romania}}
After the war, the concept was interpreted as "obsolete" because of the Romanian defeat.<ref>Bernard A. Cook, , Taylor & Francis, 2001, p. 1074</ref> However, even the Communist politicians between 1944 and 1947 plainly supported the re-establishment of Greater Romania.<ref name="Roe"/> ]'s reminiscence strengthens the view for the nationalist argument of the Communists at the negotiations with Stalin about the future of Northern Transylvania.<ref name="Conflicted Memories"/> In contrast with this view, Romsics quotes ], one of the heads of the Romanian Communist Party, as writing in his memo of April 1944: ''"the two parts of Transylvania should be reunited as an independent state."''<ref>Ignác Romsics, The Paris Peace Treaty of 1947, In: , 2013, p. 18</ref>

The Romanian Communist politicians' behavior were depicted{{By whom|date=August 2015}} as nationalist, and this circumstance brought about the concept of ],<ref name="Roe"/> which amalgamated elements of ] and ].<ref>Costica Bradatan, Serguei Oushakine, , Lexington Books, 2010, p. 225</ref> According to Trond Gilberg the regime needed the strongly nationalist attitude because of the social, economic and political challenges.<ref name="Roe">Paul Roe, , Routledge, 2004, p. 128</ref> After the retreat of the ] troops from Romania in 1958, the national ideology was reborn, however it raises questions about its reconcilability with ].<ref name="Conflicted Memories"/> ] fancied the idea that the creation of Greater Romania was the fruit of the end of the nation-formation process.{{Blockquote|''The setting up of the (Romanian) unitary national state six and a half decades ago was a brilliant historic victory of the long heroic struggle of the masses for creating the Romanian nation and the coming true of the age old dream of all Romanians to live in unity within the borders of the same country, in one free and independent state.''|Ceaușescu, 1983<ref name="Conflicted Memories"/> }}

===Recent developments===
{{See also|Unification of Moldova and Romania|Bessarabia, Romanian land}}
], Moldova]]
The fall of the communist regimes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union and the economic downturn accompanying it led to a resurgence of nationalism in the region. Romania and Moldova, state comprising the bulk of Bessarabia which had become independent after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, confronted with their eastern neighbor, ]. Bucharest and ] announced territorial claims on Ukrainian lands (on parts of ] and ] regions).<ref>Bohdan Nahaylo, , C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 1999, pp. 408-409</ref> ] surmised that the concept of Greater Romania stood behind Romanian foreign policy toward Moldova therefore expressed concerns about possible developments on ].<ref name="Arbatov"/>

In 1992, the issue on unification of ] and Romania was negotiated between the Romanian and Moldovan governments and they wanted to achieve it by the end of the year.<ref name="Moldova - Narrative"/> However, the "unionists" lost their dominance in Moldova in the middle of the year.<ref name="Moldova - Narrative">{{cite web|url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/ir/cews/database/Moldova/moldova.pdf|title=Ideas And Ideology In Interwar Romania|publisher=University of Southern California|access-date=2014-05-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304071905/http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/ir/cews/database/Moldova/moldova.pdf|archive-date=2016-03-04|url-status=dead}}</ref> ] admitted the existence of the two Romanian states (Romania and Moldova) and defined priorities in reference to this matter: ''"the creation of a common cultural space; the creation of an economically integrated zone; and gradual political integration"''.<ref name="Arbatov">Alekseĭ Georgievich Arbatov, , MIT Press, 1997, pp. 202-204</ref> The Moldovan ] government became more pragmatic and realized that the nationalist propaganda from Bucharest did not help their aims especially on ].<ref name="Arbatov"/> The Romanian organizations ignored the result of the ] because the referendum did not ask Romanians in Romania.<ref name="Arbatov"/> Romanian politicians blamed ] and the Moldovan regime that unification became unreal.<ref name="Arbatov"/> According to Edward Ozhiganov (Head of the Division for Ethnopolitical Research at the Analytical Center of the Federation Council in Russia), the armed conflict in Moldova was due to the Romanian ethnic nationalism, in other words, ''"the attempt to create a unitary, ethnic state with power concentrated in the hands of ethnic nationalists in what was actually a multiethnic society."''<ref name="Arbatov"/> Furthermore, Bucharest's behavior toward Ukraine did not change until 1997 when Romanian politicians realized that resolving border disputes was a precondition for ] membership.<ref>Marta Dyczok, , Routledge, 2013, p. 108</ref>

Present-day Romanian irredentists (such as members of ]) aim to take possession of territories of northern ] and ].<ref name="Miroslav Mares"/><ref name="Radu Cinpoes">{{cite web|url=http://library.fes.de/pdf-files/id-moe/09408.pdf |title=THE EXTREME RIGHT IN CONTEMPORARY ROMANIA|publisher=Bibliothek der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung |year=2012 |access-date=2014-05-11}}</ref> These regions currently belong to Ukraine and Moldova.<ref name="Miroslav Mares">{{cite web |url=http://www.cepsr.com/clanek.php?ID=367 |title=The Extreme Right in Eastern Europe and Territorial Issues |publisher=www.cepsr.com |year=2009 |access-date=2014-05-11 |archive-date=2021-02-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210214223940/http://www.cepsr.com/clanek.php?ID=367 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Russian presence and the tense political situation in Moldova also inflame their demands.<ref name="Miroslav Mares"/> Nevertheless, radicals make territorial demands on Hungary too.<ref name="Miroslav Mares"/> The ] (Partidul România Mare – PRM) is an emblematic representative of the aforesaid concept, though the conception is fostered also by other right-wing groups (e.g. the organisation of the New Right –]).<ref name="Miroslav Mares"/><ref>Uwe Backes, Patrick Moreau, , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011, p. 276</ref> Today, the phrase "]" ({{lang|ro|Basarabia, pământ românesc}}, with several variations) is commonly used in Romania, and it poses territorial claims over the region of Bessarabia.<ref>{{cite journal|title=The ideological work of the daily visual representations of nations|first=Delia|last=Dumitrica|journal=]|volume=25|issue=3|pages=910–934|year=2019|doi=10.1111/nana.12520|s2cid=150661172|doi-access=free|hdl=1765/117796|hdl-access=free}}</ref> It is also used in Moldova.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://infoprut.ro/48761-eleva-din-rep-moldova-a-scolii-de-politie-din-campina-basarabia-e-pamant-romanesc.html|title=Elevă din Rep. Moldova a Școlii de Poliție din Câmpina: "Basarabia e pământ românesc"|first=Liviu G.|last=Stan|newspaper=InfoPrut|date=27 November 2017|language=ro}}</ref>

As of 2024 ] (AUR) supports the ]. While ] leader ] proposed a law in 2023 for a project on the Romanian Parliament for the annexation by Romania of ], the ], ], ] and ] from Ukraine, as they were "historical territories" that belong to Romania as stated in the law project.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Șoșoacă vrea ca România să invadeze Ucraina. A depus un proiect de lege pentru anexarea mai multor teritorii |trans-title=Șoșoacă wants Romania to invade Ukraine. She submitted a bill for the annexation of several territories |url=https://www.digi24.ro/stiri/actualitate/sosoaca-vrea-ca-romania-sa-invadeze-ucraina-a-depus-un-proiect-de-lege-pentru-anexarea-mai-multor-teritorii-2289605 |access-date=2023-03-21 |website=www.digi24.ro |date=21 March 2023 |language=ro}}</ref> In retaliation, Ukraine announced it would impose sanctions against Iovanovici Șoșoacă, labeling her as a threat to Ukrainian national security.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ucraina anunță sancțiuni împotriva Dianei Șoșoacă. Reacția senatoarei: "Cum își permite?" |url=https://www.digi24.ro/stiri/actualitate/politica/ucraina-anunta-sanctiuni-impotriva-dianei-sosoaca-reactia-senatoarei-cum-isi-permite-2293511 |access-date=2023-03-30 |work=] |date=24 March 2023 |language=ro}}</ref>

==See also==
{{Portal|Romania|Moldova}}
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==References==
{{reflist}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
*Bucur, Maria. ''Eugenics and Modernization in Interwar Romania'', Pittsburg: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010
*{{cite journal
* Hoisington Jr, William A. "The Struggle for Economic Influence in Southeastern Europe: The French Failure in Romania, 1940." ''Journal of Modern History'' 43.3 (1971): 468–482.
* Luetkens, Gerhart. "Roumania To-Day," ''International Affairs'' (Sep. – Oct., 1938), 17#5 pp.&nbsp;682–695
* {{cite journal
|last = Leustean |last = Leustean
|first = Lucian N. |first = Lucian N.
|year = 2007 |date=September 2007
|title = "For the Glory of Romanians": Orthodoxy and Nationalism in Greater Romania, 1918–1945
|month = September
|title = "For the Glory of Romanians": Orthodoxy and Nationalism in Greater Romania, 1918-1945
|journal = ] |journal = ]
|volume = 35 |volume = 35
Line 44: Line 125:
|pages = 717–742 |pages = 717–742
|doi = 10.1080/00905990701475111 |doi = 10.1080/00905990701475111
|s2cid = 161907079
}} }}
* Suveica, Svetlana, Bessarabia in the First Interwar Decade (1918–1928): Modernization by Means of Reforms, Chișinau: Pontos, 2010, 360 p. (Romanian){{ISBN|978-9975-51-070-7}}.
* Thomas, Martin. "To arm an ally: French arms sales to Romania, 1926–1940." ''Journal of Strategic Studies'' 19.2 (1996): 231–259.


{{Irredentism}}
==References and Notes==
{{Romanian nationalism}}
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
*

{{Romanian topics}} {{Romanian topics}}
{{Moldova topics}} {{Moldova topics}}
{{Pan-nationalist concepts}}
{{Great Union}}


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Latest revision as of 21:30, 19 November 2024

Nation-state for all Romanian speakers For other uses, see România Mare.
Administrative map of Romania in 1930

The term Greater Romania (Romanian: România Mare) usually refers to the borders of the Kingdom of Romania in the interwar period, achieved after the Great Union. It also refers to a pan-nationalist idea.

As a concept, its main goal is the creation of a nation-state which would incorporate all Romanian speakers. In 1920, after the incorporation of Transylvania, Bukovina, Bessarabia and parts of Banat, Crișana, and Maramureș, the Romanian state reached its largest peacetime geographical extent ever (295,049 km). Today, the concept serves as a guiding principle for the unification of Moldova and Romania.

The idea is comparable to other similar conceptions such as the Greater Bulgaria, Megali Idea, Greater Yugoslavia, Greater Hungary and Greater Italy.

Ideology

The theme of national identity had been always a key concern for Romanian culture and politics. The Romanian national ideology in the first decades of the twentieth century was a typical example of ethnocentric nationalism. The concept of "Greater Romania" shows similarities to the idea of national state. The Romanian territorial claims were based on "primordial racial modalities", the essential goal of them was to unify the biologically defined Romanians. The nation-building based on the French model of a unitary nation-state became an all time priority especially in the interwar and the Communist periods.

Evolution

Main article: Territorial evolution of Romania

Before World War I

Hypothetical map of Romania by Cezar Bolliac (1855)
"Long Live Greater Romania", reconstruction of the "Darnița Banner", designed in 1917; it was first flown by ethnic Romanian turncoats from the Austro-Hungarian Army, who formed a Volunteer Corps of the Romanian Army
See also: National awakening of Romania and Unification of Moldavia and Wallachia

The union of Michael the Brave, who ruled over the three principalities with Romanian population (Wallachia, Transylvania and Moldavia) for a short period of time, was viewed in later periods as the precursor of a modern Romania, a thesis which was argued by Nicolae Bălcescu. This theory became a point of reference for nationalists, as well as a catalyst for various Romanian forces to achieve a single Romanian state.

The Romanian revolution in 1848 already carried the seeds of the national dream of a unified and united Romania, though the "idea of unification" had been known from earlier works of Naum Ramniceanu (1802) and Ion Budai-Deleanu (1804). The concept owes its life to Dimitrie Brătianu, who introduced the term "Greater Romania" in 1852. The first step in unifying Romanians was to establish the United Principalities by uniting Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859, which became known as Romania since the 1866 Constitution and turned into a Kingdom in 1881, after gaining independence from the Ottoman Empire. However, before the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the elite of the Transylvanian Romanians did not support the concept of "Greater Romania", instead they wanted only equality with the other nations in Transylvania. The concept became a political reality when, in 1881, the Romanian National Party of Transylvania gathered Romanians on a common political platform to fight together for Transylvania's autonomy. According to Livezeanu the creation of Greater Romania with "a unifying concept of nationhood" started to evolve in the late 1910s. World War I played a crucial part in the development of Romanian national consciousness.

World War I

The Treaty of Bucharest (1916) was signed between Romania and the Entente Powers on 4 (Old Style)/17 (New Style) August 1916 in Bucharest. The treaty stipulated the conditions under which Romania agreed to join the war on the side of the Entente, particularly territorial promises in Austria-Hungary. The signatories bound themselves to keep secret the contents of the treaty until a general peace was concluded.

Romanians!

The war which for the last two years has been encircling our frontiers more and more closely has shaken the ancient foundations of Europe to their depths.

It has brought the day which has been awaited for centuries by the national conscience, by the founders of the Romanian State, by those who united the principalities in the war of independence, by those responsible for the national renaissance.

It is the day of the union of all branches of our nation. Today we are able to complete the task of our forefathers and to establish forever that which Michael the Great was only able to establish for a moment, namely, a Romanian union on both slopes of the Carpathians.

For us the mountains and plains of Bukowina, where Stephen the Great has slept for centuries. In our moral energy and our valour lie the means of giving him back his birthright of a great and free Rumania from the Tisza to the Black Sea, and to prosper in peace in accordance with our customs and our hopes and dreams. (...)

Part of the proclamation by King Ferdinand, 28 August 1916

Lucian Boia summarised the territorial extent of the nationalist dream as following:

The phrase "De la Nistru pana la Tisa" (From Dniester to Tisza) is well known to Romanians, it defines the limits of an ideal Romania, though we should note that the Romanian population extends in the east beyond the Dniester, while both banks of the Tisza are completely Hungarian for most of the river's length. To the south, the Danube completes the symbolic geography of Romania: an enclosed space between 3 rivers, with an area of 300.000 sq km, comparable to that of Italy or the British Isles. Rivers then are perceived as natural borders, separating Romanians from Others.

Interwar Romania

See also: Little Entente and Polish–Romanian alliance
Regions of the Kingdom of Romania (1918–1940)
Physical map of Greater Romania (1933)

The concept of "Greater Romania" materialized as a geopolitical reality after the First World War. Romania gained control over Bessarabia, Bukovina and Transylvania. The borders established by the treaties concluding the war did not change until 1940. The resulting state, often referred to as "România Mare" or, alternatively, as Romanian: România Întregită (roughly translated in English as "Romania Made Whole," or "Entire Romania"), was seen as the 'true', whole Romanian state, or, as Tom Gallagher states, the "Holy Grail of Romanian nationalism". Its constitution, proclaimed in 1923, "largely ignored the new ethnic and cultural realities".

The Romanian ideology changed due to the demographic, cultural and social alterations, however the nationalist desire for a homogeneous Romanian state conflicted with the multiethnic, multicultural truth of Greater Romania. The ideological rewriting of the role of "spiritual victimization", turning it into "spiritual police", was a radical and challenging task for the Romanian intellectuals because they had to entirely revise the national identity and the destiny of the Romanian nation. In accordance with this view, Livezeanu states that the Great Union created a "deeply fragmented" interwar Romania where the determination of national identity met with great difficulties mainly because of the effects of the hundred years of political separation. Due to the inability of the government to solve the problems of the Transylvanian Romanians' integration and the effects of the worldwide and national economic depression, "the population gradually lost its faith in the democratic conception of Greater Romania".

The Great Depression in Romania, which started in 1929, destabilised the country. The early 1930s were marked by social unrest, high unemployment, and strikes. In several instances, the Romanian government violently repressed strikes and riots, notably the 1929 miners' strike in Valea Jiului and the strike in the Grivița railroad workshops. In the mid-1930s, the Romanian economy recovered and the industry grew significantly, although about 80% of Romanians were still employed in agriculture. French economic and political influence was predominant in the early 1920s but then Germany became more dominant, especially in the 1930s.

Territorial changes

Extension of Romanian Kingdom after the First World War
Bessarabia
Main articles: Treaty of Paris (1920) and Union of Bessarabia with Romania See also: Tatarbunary Uprising

Bessarabia declared its sovereignty as the Moldavian Democratic Republic in 1917 by the newly formed "Council of the Country" ("Sfatul Țării"). The state was faced with the disorderly retreat through its territory of Russian troops from disbanded units. In January 1918, the "Sfatul Țării" called on Romanian troops to protect the province from the Bolsheviks who were spreading the Russian Revolution. After declaring independence from Russia on 24 January 1918, the "Sfatul Țării" voted for union with Romania on 9 April 1918. Of the 138 deputies in the council, 86 voted for union, 3 against, 36 abstained (mostly the deputies representing minorities, 52% of the population at the time) and 13 were not present. The United Kingdom, France, Italy and Japan recognized the incorporation of Bessarabia through the Treaty of Paris. The United States and the Soviet Union however refused to do so, the latter maintaining a claim to the territory for the whole interwar period. Furthermore, Japan failed to ratify the treaty, which therefore never entered into force.

Bukovina
Main articles: Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye (1919) and Union of Bukovina with Romania

In Bukovina, after being occupied by the Romanian Army, a National Council voted for union with Romania. While the Romanian, German, and Polish deputies unanimously voted for union, the Ukrainian deputies (representing 38% of the population according to the 1910 Austrian census) and Jewish deputies did not attend the council. The unification was ratified in the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye.

Transylvania
Main articles: Treaty of Trianon and Union of Transylvania with RomaniaSee also: Hungarian-Romanian War of 1919

On 1 December 1918, the Great National Assembly of Alba Iulia proclaimed the union of Transylvania and other territories with Romania in Alba Iulia, adopted by the Deputies of the Romanians of Transylvania, and supported one month later by the vote of the Deputies of the Saxons of Transylvania. The Hungarians of Transylvania, about 32% at the time (including the Hungarian-speaking Jewish community), and the Germans of Banat did not elect deputies upon the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, since they were considered represented by the Budapest government of Hungary, nevertheless on 22 December 1918 the Hungarian General Assembly in Cluj (Kolozsvár) reaffirmed the loyalty of Hungarians from Transylvania to Hungary. In the 1920 Treaty of Trianon, Hungary was forced to give up all claims over Transylvania and the treaty set the new borders between the two countries.

World War II losses

Ethnic map of interwar Romania (1930 Romanian census)
Main articles: Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, Second Vienna Award, Treaty of Craiova, and Romania during World War II

In 1940, the Romanian state agreed to cede Bessarabia to the Soviet Union, as provided for by the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact between the Soviet Union and Germany. It also lost Northern Bukovina and the Hertsa region, which were not mentioned in the pact, to the Soviet Union. It lost Northern Transylvania to Hungary, through the Second Vienna Award, and the Southern Dobruja to Bulgaria by the Treaty of Craiova. In the course of World War II, Romania, which was allied with the Axis Powers, not only re-annexed Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina, but also took under administrative control lands to the east of Dniester (parts of recently formed Moldavian SSR, and of Odessa and Vinnytsia oblasts of Ukrainian SSR), creating Transnistria Governorate.

Population structure in Romania (Transnistria Governorate included) according to the 1941 Romanian census.

Despite clear Ukrainian majority in the governorate's ethnic composition, demonstrated by a census conducted in December 1941, Romanian government hoped to annex it eventually as a "compensation" for Northern Transylvania lost to Hungary.

These territories were lost again when the tide of the war turned. After the war, Romania regained the Transylvanian territories lost to Hungary, but not territory lost to Bulgaria or the Soviet Union. In 1948 a treaty between the Soviet Union and Soviet-occupied Communist Romania also provided for the transfer of four uninhabited islands to the Soviet Union, three in the Danube Delta and Snake Island in the Black Sea.

After World War II

See also: National Communism in Romania

After the war, the concept was interpreted as "obsolete" because of the Romanian defeat. However, even the Communist politicians between 1944 and 1947 plainly supported the re-establishment of Greater Romania. Gheorghe Apostol's reminiscence strengthens the view for the nationalist argument of the Communists at the negotiations with Stalin about the future of Northern Transylvania. In contrast with this view, Romsics quotes Valter Roman, one of the heads of the Romanian Communist Party, as writing in his memo of April 1944: "the two parts of Transylvania should be reunited as an independent state."

The Romanian Communist politicians' behavior were depicted as nationalist, and this circumstance brought about the concept of National Communism, which amalgamated elements of Stalinism and Fascism. According to Trond Gilberg the regime needed the strongly nationalist attitude because of the social, economic and political challenges. After the retreat of the Soviet troops from Romania in 1958, the national ideology was reborn, however it raises questions about its reconcilability with internationalist communism. Nicolae Ceaușescu fancied the idea that the creation of Greater Romania was the fruit of the end of the nation-formation process.

The setting up of the (Romanian) unitary national state six and a half decades ago was a brilliant historic victory of the long heroic struggle of the masses for creating the Romanian nation and the coming true of the age old dream of all Romanians to live in unity within the borders of the same country, in one free and independent state.

— Ceaușescu, 1983

Recent developments

See also: Unification of Moldova and Romania and Bessarabia, Romanian land
Graffiti with shapes of Greater Romania near Briceni, Moldova

The fall of the communist regimes in Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union and the economic downturn accompanying it led to a resurgence of nationalism in the region. Romania and Moldova, state comprising the bulk of Bessarabia which had become independent after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, confronted with their eastern neighbor, Ukraine. Bucharest and Chișinău announced territorial claims on Ukrainian lands (on parts of Chernivtsi and Odessa regions). Bulgaria surmised that the concept of Greater Romania stood behind Romanian foreign policy toward Moldova therefore expressed concerns about possible developments on Dobruja.

In 1992, the issue on unification of Moldova and Romania was negotiated between the Romanian and Moldovan governments and they wanted to achieve it by the end of the year. However, the "unionists" lost their dominance in Moldova in the middle of the year. Bucharest admitted the existence of the two Romanian states (Romania and Moldova) and defined priorities in reference to this matter: "the creation of a common cultural space; the creation of an economically integrated zone; and gradual political integration". The Moldovan Snegur government became more pragmatic and realized that the nationalist propaganda from Bucharest did not help their aims especially on the problem of "Soviet annexed Bessarabia". The Romanian organizations ignored the result of the Moldovan referendum on independence because the referendum did not ask Romanians in Romania. Romanian politicians blamed Russia and the Moldovan regime that unification became unreal. According to Edward Ozhiganov (Head of the Division for Ethnopolitical Research at the Analytical Center of the Federation Council in Russia), the armed conflict in Moldova was due to the Romanian ethnic nationalism, in other words, "the attempt to create a unitary, ethnic state with power concentrated in the hands of ethnic nationalists in what was actually a multiethnic society." Furthermore, Bucharest's behavior toward Ukraine did not change until 1997 when Romanian politicians realized that resolving border disputes was a precondition for NATO membership.

Present-day Romanian irredentists (such as members of PRM) aim to take possession of territories of northern Bukovina and Bessarabia. These regions currently belong to Ukraine and Moldova. The Russian presence and the tense political situation in Moldova also inflame their demands. Nevertheless, radicals make territorial demands on Hungary too. The Greater Romania Party (Partidul România Mare – PRM) is an emblematic representative of the aforesaid concept, though the conception is fostered also by other right-wing groups (e.g. the organisation of the New Right –Noua Dreaptă). Today, the phrase "Bessarabia, Romanian land" (Basarabia, pământ românesc, with several variations) is commonly used in Romania, and it poses territorial claims over the region of Bessarabia. It is also used in Moldova.

As of 2024 Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR) supports the unification of Moldova and Romania. While S.O.S. Romania leader Diana Iovanovici Șoșoacă proposed a law in 2023 for a project on the Romanian Parliament for the annexation by Romania of Northern Bukovina, the Hertsa region, Budjak, Northern Maramureș and Snake Island from Ukraine, as they were "historical territories" that belong to Romania as stated in the law project. In retaliation, Ukraine announced it would impose sanctions against Iovanovici Șoșoacă, labeling her as a threat to Ukrainian national security.

See also

References

  1. Cas Mudde. Racist Extremism in Central and Eastern Europe
  2. Peter Truscott, Russia First: Breaking with the West, I.B.Tauris, 1997, p. 72
  3. "Moldova's Political self and the energy Conundrum in the Context of the European neighbourhood Policy" (PDF). ISN ETH Zurich. 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-05-23.
  4. "The Romanian Holocaust in Memory and Commemoration, The Jewish fate during World War II in postwar commemoration". University of Amsterdam. 2012. Retrieved 2014-05-21.
  5. ^ Irina Livezeanu, Cultural Politics in Greater Romania: Regionalism, Nation Building & Ethnic Struggle, 1918-1930, Cornell University Press, 2000, p. 4 and p. 302
  6. ^ Iván T. Berend, History Derailed: Central and Eastern Europe in the Long Nineteenth Century, University of California Press, 2013, p. 112 and p. 252
  7. Lavinia Stan, Lucian Turcescu, Religion and Politics in Post-Communist Romania, Oxford University Press, 2007 p. 53
  8. ^ Alekseĭ Georgievich Arbatov, Managing Conflict in the Former Soviet Union: Russian and American Perspectives, MIT Press, 1997, pp. 202-204
  9. Giuseppe Motta, Less than Nations: Central-Eastern European Minorities after WWI, Volume 1 Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013, p. 11
  10. Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, Region, Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe, Part 1, LIT Verlag Münster, 2008, p. 52
  11. Michael D. Kennedy, Envisioning Eastern Europe: Postcommunist Cultural Studies, University of Michigan Press, 1994, p. 121
  12. ^ "Ideas And Ideology In Interwar Romania". www.icr.ro. 2007. Retrieved 2014-05-11.
  13. ^ Petre Berteanu, Romanian nationalism and political communication: Greater Romania Party (Partidul Romania Mare), a case-study, In: Jaroslav Hroch, David Hollan, George F. McLean, National, Cultural, and Ethnic Identities: Harmony Beyond Conflict, CRVP, 1998, pp. 161-176
  14. Aristotle Kallis, Genocide and Fascism: The Eliminationist Drive in Fascist Europe, Routledge, 2008, p. 75
  15. ^ Tristan James Mabry, John McGarry, Margaret Moore, Brendan O'Leary, Divided Nations and European Integration, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013, p. 113 and p. 117
  16. ^ Juliana Geran Pilon, The Bloody Flag: Post-Communist Nationalism in Eastern Europe : Spotlight on Romania, Transaction Publishers, 1982, p. 56
  17. Giurescu, Constantin C. (2007) . Istoria Românilor. Bucharest: Editura All., p. 211–13.
  18. Pablo Cardona, Michael J. Morley, Manager-Subordinate Trust in Different Cultures, Routledge, 2013, p. 119
  19. Constantin Kirițescu, "Istoria războiului pentru întregirea României: 1916-1919", 1922, p. 179
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  21. Lucian Boia, "Romania: Borderlands of Europe", Reaktion Books Publishing, 2001, p. 59
  22. Gallagher, Tom (2005). Modern Romania: the end of communism, the failure of democratic reform, and the theft of a nation. New York: New York University Press. p. 28. ISBN 0-8147-3172-4.
  23. Keith Hitchins, A Concise History of Romania, Cambridge University Press, 2014, p. 183, ISBN 9781107782709
  24. ^ Konrad Hugo Jarausch, Thomas Lindenberger, Annelie Ramsbrock, Conflicted Memories: Europeanizing Contemporary Histories, Berghahn Books, 2007, pp. 39-42
  25. "Siebenbürgen ohne Siebenbürger?". University of Vienna. 2013. Retrieved 2014-05-11.
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  27. Ion Nistor, Istoria Basarabiei, Cernăuți, 1923, reprinted Chișinău, Cartea Moldovenească, 1991 and Humanitas, Bucharest, 1991. ISBN 973-28-0283-9
  28. Charles Upson Clark, Bessarabia: Russia and Roumania on the Black Sea Archived 2009-01-12 at the Wayback Machine
  29. Pantelimon Halippa, Anatolie Moraru, Testament pentru urmași, Munich, 1967, reprinted Chișinău, Hyperion, 1991, p. 143
  30. Results of the 1897 Russian Census at demoscope.ru: Молдавский и румынский: 469,852; 451067; total population--"Moldavian and Romanian: 920,919 people", Archived 2016-05-30 at the Wayback Machine
  31. Volodymyr Kubijovyč, Arkadii Zhukovsky, Bukovyna, in "Encyclopedia of Ukraine", Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies, 2001
  32. Sherman David Spector, "Rumania at the Paris Peace Conference: A Study of the Diplomacy of Ioan I. C. Brătianu", Bookman Associates, 1962, p. 70
  33. ^ Irina Livezeanu (2000). Cultural Politics in Greater Romania: Regionalism, Nation Building, and Ethnic Struggle, 1918–1930. Cornell University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-8014-8688-3.
  34. Donald Peckham, Christina Bratt Paulston, "Linguistic Minorities in Central and Eastern Europe", Multilingual Matters, 1998, p. 190
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  38. ^ Paul Roe, Ethnic Violence and the Societal Security Dilemma, Routledge, 2004, p. 128
  39. Ignác Romsics, The Paris Peace Treaty of 1947, In: Storia & Diplomazia Rassegna dell’Archivio Storico del Ministero degli Affari Esteri, 2013, p. 18
  40. Costica Bradatan, Serguei Oushakine, In Marx's Shadow: Knowledge, Power, and Intellectuals in Eastern Europe and Russia, Lexington Books, 2010, p. 225
  41. Bohdan Nahaylo, The Ukrainian Resurgence, C. Hurst & Co. Publishers, 1999, pp. 408-409
  42. ^ "Ideas And Ideology In Interwar Romania" (PDF). University of Southern California. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  43. Marta Dyczok, Ukraine: Movement Without Change, Change Without Movement, Routledge, 2013, p. 108
  44. ^ "The Extreme Right in Eastern Europe and Territorial Issues". www.cepsr.com. 2009. Archived from the original on 2021-02-14. Retrieved 2014-05-11.
  45. "THE EXTREME RIGHT IN CONTEMPORARY ROMANIA" (PDF). Bibliothek der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. 2012. Retrieved 2014-05-11.
  46. Uwe Backes, Patrick Moreau, The Extreme Right in Europe: Current Trends and Perspectives, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2011, p. 276
  47. Dumitrica, Delia (2019). "The ideological work of the daily visual representations of nations". Nations and Nationalism. 25 (3): 910–934. doi:10.1111/nana.12520. hdl:1765/117796. S2CID 150661172.
  48. Stan, Liviu G. (27 November 2017). "Elevă din Rep. Moldova a Școlii de Poliție din Câmpina: "Basarabia e pământ românesc"". InfoPrut (in Romanian).
  49. "Șoșoacă vrea ca România să invadeze Ucraina. A depus un proiect de lege pentru anexarea mai multor teritorii" [Șoșoacă wants Romania to invade Ukraine. She submitted a bill for the annexation of several territories]. www.digi24.ro (in Romanian). 21 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-21.
  50. "Ucraina anunță sancțiuni împotriva Dianei Șoșoacă. Reacția senatoarei: "Cum își permite?"". Digi24 (in Romanian). 24 March 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-30.

Further reading

  • Bucur, Maria. Eugenics and Modernization in Interwar Romania, Pittsburg: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010
  • Hoisington Jr, William A. "The Struggle for Economic Influence in Southeastern Europe: The French Failure in Romania, 1940." Journal of Modern History 43.3 (1971): 468–482. online
  • Luetkens, Gerhart. "Roumania To-Day," International Affairs (Sep. – Oct., 1938), 17#5 pp. 682–695 in JSTOR
  • Leustean, Lucian N. (September 2007). ""For the Glory of Romanians": Orthodoxy and Nationalism in Greater Romania, 1918–1945". Nationalities Papers. 35 (4): 717–742. doi:10.1080/00905990701475111. S2CID 161907079.
  • Suveica, Svetlana, Bessarabia in the First Interwar Decade (1918–1928): Modernization by Means of Reforms, Chișinau: Pontos, 2010, 360 p. (Romanian)ISBN 978-9975-51-070-7.
  • Thomas, Martin. "To arm an ally: French arms sales to Romania, 1926–1940." Journal of Strategic Studies 19.2 (1996): 231–259.
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