Revision as of 05:46, 27 June 2008 editKevlar67 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers26,496 editsm fix cat← Previous edit | Revision as of 12:52, 5 July 2008 edit undoJL-Bot (talk | contribs)Bots560,614 editsm removing stale in-use template(s) as last edited 8 days agoNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{underconstruction}} | |||
{{bilateral|Moldo-Belarussian|Moldova|Belarus}} | {{bilateral|Moldo-Belarussian|Moldova|Belarus}} | ||
Moldavian-Belarussian relations are foreign relations between ] and ]. There is no border between Moldova and Belarus. The number of Belarussians in Moldova and of Moldavians in Belarus is insignificant. | Moldavian-Belarussian relations are foreign relations between ] and ]. There is no border between Moldova and Belarus. The number of Belarussians in Moldova and of Moldavians in Belarus is insignificant. |
Revision as of 12:52, 5 July 2008
Bilateral relationsMoldova |
Belarus |
---|---|
Moldavian-Belarussian relations are foreign relations between Belarus and Moldova. There is no border between Moldova and Belarus. The number of Belarussians in Moldova and of Moldavians in Belarus is insignificant.
History of Moldavian and Belarussian relations
The first Moldo-Belarussian relatiosn are attested at the stage of formation of the respective ethnicities, when Slavs started settling the terriotries between Dniestr and Southern Bug. Chronicler Nestor, in the Primary Chronicle written in the XII century, spoke of Dregovichis, Krivichis and Radimichis who settled along Pripyat, Western Dvina and Sozha, as well as of Ulichis and Tiverians, living in the Dniestr neighborhood - as of one Slavic ethnicity. he also asserted that these tribes participated in the campaigns of Kievan Princes against Byzance in 944. In X-XI centuries, part of Moldavian territories was in Kievan Rus' and Galician-Volhynian Principality. During XII-XIII there was no strong connection between what is today modern Moldavia and Belarus, due to the Wallachian and Carpathian migration to Moldavia from one side, and due to the weakening of the Kievan Rus' from the other side, as well as repetitive invasions of Nomads.
In the second half of the XIV century, the relations became active again. Modern Belarussian lands were part of the Great Lithuanian Principality, whereas an independent Moldovan Principality was forming on the territory of the modern Moldavia. In the chronicles of the Lithuanian principality of that time, the Moldavian Principality appeared as "Voloshchina", "Voloshskoe Voevodstvo", with which Lithuanian Principality was in "cordial warm and preaceful relations".
In 1387 Moldavian boyars invited the Prince Yuriy Koriatovich to rule the Moldavian Principality. In 1387, Moldavian gospodar Petru I Musat sworn to his vassal Yagaylo.
Middle Ages
2005-2008
Travel
When visiting the respective country, no mutual visa obligation exists for both nationals for any border crossing, except for transfer passengers.
Economic cooperation
See also
External links
- Embassy of the Republic of Moldova in Belarus
- Belarussian Embassy in Chisinau Template:Fr icon
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Moldova
- Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus
Foreign relations of Moldova | |
---|---|
Americas | |
Asia | |
Europe | |
Multilateral | |
Disputes | |
Diplomatic missions |
Foreign relations of Belarus | ||
---|---|---|
Africa | ||
Americas | ||
Asia | ||
Europe | ||
Multilateral relations | ||
Diplomatic missions |