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The History of Moldova

For over 500 years, Moldova was a principality of hilly river country to the east of the Carpathians, along the rivers Siret, Prut and Dniester all running south to the Danube river and the Black Sea.

Before the principality was formed, the Dacian tribes of Moldova were partly Romanised 100AD and after another few hundred years, Moldovans came under the influence of the Sântana de Mureş culture, which originated in the western Baltic, in what is now Sweden and Poland, and also the Ukraine.

Stephen the Great

Stephen the GreatRuler of Moldavia 1436–1504
Stephen the Great was the cousin of Vlad III Dracula, was the most important Prince of Moldavia. Born c. 1436 in County Bacău, died at Suceava 1504, he ruled 47 years, from 14 April 1457 until his death.
Although Stephen is mostly a historical figure and a national hero, his reign is also appreciated for the large number of churches that were built or restored. Some of the best pieces of Moldovan medieval art date from his reign.

READ MORE HERE

Once organisation of principalities began in eastern Europe around the 10th century, Moldova as a cohesive region became organised. 
The Moldovan principality in its greatest extent streched from Transylvania in the west to the Dniester River in the east, but had its nucleus in the northwestern part, the Ţara de Sus ("Upper Land"), which later became known as Bukovina under variously Austrian, Polish and now Ukrainian rule. This area contained Suceava, the capital of the principality from 1359-1565. Iaşi has served as the capital since 1565, remaining as the largest city in Romanian Moldova after the 1859 union with Wallachia. 
The political entity known as Moldova was founded in the mid-14th century by the Romanian leader Dragoş of Maramureş, who had been ordered by the Hungarian king to establish a defence line for the Kingdom of Hungary against the Tatars.

 

Moldova's First Prince, 1359

Bogdan I became the first independent prince of Moldova when he rejected Hungarian authority in 1359. Later it became a vassal of Poland.   The Turkish word for Moldova is Bogdan.

 

Stephen the Great, 1457

Arguably the greatest Moldovan prince was Stephen the Great, who ruled from 1457-1504. With his army of boyars and retainers, Stephen fought off invasions from the Ottoman Empire, the Kingdom of Poland, and the Crimean Tatars.
Stephen fought 36 major battles, but suffered only two defeats. By the end of his reign, Moldova had kept its independence, although an annual tribute was made to the Ottomans.
During his reign, he turned Moldavia into a strong state and maintained her independence against the ambitions of Hungary, Poland, and the Ottoman Empire, which all sought to subdue the land. Stephen achieved fame in Europe for his long resistance against the Ottomans.
He was a man of religion and displayed his piety when he paid the debt of Mount Athos to the Porte, ensuring the continuity of Athos as an independent state. 
 

Moldova in 1600

The advances of Stephen the Great extended to the Black Sea and Dniester River
Moldova 1600
Moldova 1750
Prior to ceding Eastern Moldova or Bessarabia to the Russian Empire
Moldova 1750
Moldova in 1857
Before Unification with Wallachia in 1859
Moldova, 1857

Ottoman Moldova, 1512

Stephen was succeeded by weak princes who let incompetent boyars rule the state; because the boyars did not pay taxes, the state became bankrupt.
Moldova succumbed to Ottoman power in 1512, becoming a vassal of the empire for the most of the next 300 years. In addition to paying tribute to the Ottoman Empire, Moldova later acceded to the selection of local rulers by Ottoman authorities. Moldova suffered repeated invasions by the Ottomans, Crimean Tatars, and Russians.
In the beginning of the 17th century, magnates of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth clashed with the Ottomans over control of Moldova in the Moldovan Magnate Wars.

Jointly Administered with Wallachia, 1712

By the early 1700s, the rule from Constantinopole was enforced by Greek transplants such as Nicolae Mavrocordat (Nicholas Mavrocordato in Greek), who was the first ruler in 1712 to jointly rule both Moldova and neighbouring principality Wallachia, followed in 1730 by his son, who ruled until 1769.   The rule of the Greek officials ended only after the uprising of 1821 of Tudor Vladimirescu

Russian Protectorate, 1774

In 1774 the territory of Bessarabia from Hotin to the Black Sea and between the rivers Prut and Dneister became a Russian protectorship while remaining formally a vassal of the Ottoman Empire, which at that time extended up to the Danube in northern Dobrogea.
 By the Treaty of Bucharest following the Russo-Turkish War (1806-1812), Moldova lost Bessarabia to Russia and Bukovina to Austria.   Bukovina extended from Vatra Dornei north to the Dniester River north of Cernauţi.

Moldova's Constitution, 1832

In 1821 a revolt overthrew the unpopular Phanariote regime and, after political and economic reforms were implemented with Russian support, a constitution, the Rčglement Organique, was adopted in 1832.
After Russia's defeat in the Crimean War (1853-1856), the Treaty of Paris stipulated that Moldova and Wallachia were to be placed under the collective guarantee of the seven powers that signed the treaty, as well as the retrocession to Moldova of Southern Bessarabia (Izmail, Bolhrad, Cahul counties).

 

 
 
Below:  Moldova, c. 1800

Moldova 1800

Below:  The typical rolling hills of Moldova, just north of Bacău

The typical rolling hills of Moldova, just north of Bacău

 

 

Alexander John Cuza

United Wallachia with Moldova, 1859
Alexander John Cuza
Cuza represented a truly unified Romania and Cuza knew how to choose progressive ministers and had an intelligent ear for advice.
Immediately he gained the sultan's assent to a single unified parliament and cabinet for his lifetime, in recognition of the complexity of the task.

READ MORE HERE

A United Romania, 1859

In 1859, Moldova voted to unite with Wallachia to form the state of Romania, under the rule of Alexandru Ioan Cuza/Alexander John Cuza.
Cuza belonged to the traditional noble class, the Romanian Orthodox upper class that had come into control of the local governments of Wallachia and Moldavia, and retained traditional control of the country's land, the only key to pre-industrial wealth. Cuza received an urbane European education.
Cuza failed in his effort to create an alliance of prosperous peasants and a strong liberal prince, ruling as a benevolent despot in the style of Napoleon III. Financial distress supervened, there was an awkward scandal that revolved around his mistress, and popular discontent culminated in revolution.
Despite fairly impressive modernisation and reforms for his beloved Moldova and the new Romania, Cuza was forced to abdicate by the so-called "Monstrous Coalition" of conservatives and liberals.

 

Romania's First King 

Prince Karl of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, was proclaimed domnitor as Carol I of Romania on March 26, 1866.  Ironically, a foreign prince with ties to an important princely house, legitimizing Romanian independence, had been one of the liberal aims in the revolution of 1848.
His family being closely related to the Bonaparte family, they enjoyed very good relations with Napoleon III of France. Romania was, at the time, under the influence of French culture and Napoleon's recommendation of the prince weighed heavy in the eyes of Romanian politicians of the time. 
While Moldova had existed for centuries as a principality, it was now part of a nation with it's own royalty, politically beholden to nobody.
Romanian Moldova in 1910
After Bulgaria's Creation in 1908
Romanian Moldova 1910
Romanian Moldova in 1920
Expanded to the Dniester River after WWI, often known as Greater Romania, the largest official borders realised.
Romanian Moldova in 1920
 
 

 

Moldova and the Kingdom, 1881 - 1947

After the proclamation of the Independence (1877), Romania became a constitutional monarchy, and Moldova a part of that new kingdom.  The royalist constitutions in Romania all stated that the King would rule as the head of state without governing. 
In 1914, King Ferdinand ascended the throne after the death of his uncle.  Despite the setbacks after the entry into the first world war, Romania fought on in 1917 and stopped the German advance into Moldavia.
The Central Powers forced Romania to conclude the Treaty of Bucharest, 1918, although Ferdinand refused to sign the treaty. When the Allies took Bulgaria out of the war, Ferdinand ordered the Romanian Army to fight on the Triple Entente side. The outcome of Romania's war effort was to greatly expand Moldova's borders adding Russian Bessarabia, the formerly Austrian Bukovina, as well as the Bugeac region over to the Nistru river.
Ferdinand became the ruler of this greatly enlarged Romanian state in 1918-1920 following the Entente's victory over the Central Powers, a war between the Kingdom of Romania and the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and the civil war in Russia, and was crowned King of Romania in a spectacular ceremony on October 15, 1922 at the historic princely seat of Alba Iulia.

Moldova in WWII

Bizarrely enough, the Second World War saw  Moldova expand to a territory nearly as large as the rest of the kingdom.
Nazi Romania began with a military coup against the government in 1940 by the pro-Nazi Iron Guard under Marshall Ion Antonescu, who installed himself in the post of "Conducator" or "Leader". 
Romanian Moldova in 1941-1944
The Nazi-Soviet pact ceded a swath of Transilvania to the Hungarians and of Soviet Odessa Oblast to Romania.
Romanian Moldova 1941 1944
(Northern Transilvania returned 1947 to Romania)
Antonescu and Hitler, 1943
Meeting the master of the Moldovan Holocaust
Antonescu and Hitler
 
Ceauşescu Looms over Iaşi, 1986
Yet more of the dictator's ludicrous propaganda in a street poster
Yet more of the dictator's ludicrous propaganda in a street poster
Moldova quickly lost Bessarabia and Bukovina, and Antonescu forced King Carol II to abdicate, placing his son Mihai on the thrown.  Moldova now had it's fourth Romanian king in the 20th century. 
The next year Moldovan borders expanded wildly as the Romanian Army pierced deep into Soviet territory with the Germans, quickly reclaiming Bukovina and Soviet Bessarabia, and pushing onwards beyond Odessa on the Black Sea coast.  
This was considered too far by Romanian politicians as well as by the Allied powers.  Romania was fighting in Stalingrad -- well beyond any historical or cultural boundary ever realised by Romania, even by Stephen the Great in the 1600s.
Moldova witnessed very dark hours in the early 1940s, from hosting concentration camps to  the hideous Massacre of Odessa, where Romanian troops slaughtered thousands of Jews under liquidation orders from Antonescu.   Read more about Romania in the Holocaust.
In late 1944 King Michael arrested Antonescu and ordered a cease fire, accepting the Allies terms of unconditional surrender in the name of the Kingdom of Romania.  This de facto coup side-stepping the Nazis probably saved at least 6 months of fighting against the Soviets, saving countless lives on both sides.  However, this also led to the the forced abdication of King Michael by the Communists in 1947, the King never to return to his nation until 1993. 

Communist Moldova, 1947 - Present

Moldovan professor Constantin Parhon, formerly of the Medics' and  Naturalists' Society in Iaşi, and director of medical institutes. led Romania as President of the Presidium of the new People's Republic after the forced abdication of King Michael.
The Deputies' Assembly repealed the Constitution of 1866 (with major amendments in 1923) was repealed. The same law provided for a Presidium composed of five members (elected by the Deputies' Assembly) to exercise the executive powers in the state.
Parhon became in a short time the President of the Presidium, thus exercising the most important function in the state.
Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej was another Moldovan leader from Bârlad, perhaps the second-most influential Communist leader after Ceausescu.  Gheorghiu-Dej ruled Romania from 1948 until his death in 1965.  
Gheorgiu-Dej became increasingly displeased with Soviet policy and status after Kruchev came to power, and the question of Soviet occupation of the majority of Moldova remained a sore point in relations with the Kremlin.   This sentiment was reinforced by the release previously secret notes by Karl Marx, which largely condemned Russia's imperial policy in Moldova which nonetheless were still part of the Soviet Union. 
Three days after the death of Gheorghiu-Dej in March 1965, Nicolae Ceauşescu became first secretary of the Romanian Workers' Party.  Moldova suddenly became part of the Socialist Republic of Romania rather than a People's Republic, after Ceauşescu decided to change the name of Romania (which today is called, perhaps not surprisingly, "Romania").  His odd dogma  of combined fascist-dictatorial-Marxism was dubbed "Ceauşism" by the people. 
Moldovan Family Field
Mother and Son work a communal plot in Ceahlau Village, County Neamţ
Mother and Son work a communal plot in Ceahlau Village, County Neamţ
The Republic of Moldova and Romanian Moldova
Showing Greatest Historic Borders
See More Maps in History Below!
The residents of Moldova's towns and cities suffered mass dislocation as demolition of houses, churches and entire neighbourhoods were destroyed under Ceauşescu's megalomaniacal scheme to systematise the region.   Dreadful new concrete blocks cropped up in Iaşi, Bacău and Galaţi in the early 1970s, the progress extending to other centres into the mid 1980s.  Even small towns from Piatra Neamţ to Tecuci now bear these ugly chancres.
Across Moldova's beautiful and expansive rolling plains, Ceauşescu's "new agrarian revolution" bit particularly hard.  To the unfortunate Moldovan farmer, this newest bad idea from Bucharest made no sense.  Each farmer was forced to deliver quotas of their crops to the state at about a third of the price they could get at markets in nearby towns.
His paranoic, cruel and fundamentally dumb mismanagement of the country fostered the major defection of his intelligence chief to the USA.  All through the 1980s, Moldovans further suffered the hardships of long lines for basic food, as Ceauşescu had ordered the export of much of the country's agricultural and industrial production in order to repay its debts.  In all towns, harsh energy rationing for heating and gas resulted in thousands of deaths, and electricity black-outs became the rule.
Ironically, these hardships and fierce export policy resulted that the national debt was fully paid in summer 1989, shortly before Ceauşescu was overthrown.  Almost comically, state television often showed Ceauşescu entering well stocked stores.
All of this led to his inevitable downfall in 1989, when he was hunted down and shot.  The Romanian people had simply had enough after decades of cruel abuse.

The Moldovan Question

Although the name Moldova still has strong historical resonance in many countries, for Romanians today, Moldova is simply a region of 6 counties (or 8 depending if you include the Suceava and Botoşani counties). 
From time to time, polls and news surface about the reunification of the Republic of Moldova with greater Romania, although issues about also regaining the few remaining Romanian speaking areas in the Ukraine, as well as the Transnistrian issue often muddy the waters.
BasarabiaRomanian speakers today constitute only 20% in the Cernăuţi oblast and around 13% in the Bugeac region (part of the Ukrainian oblast of Odessa), just north of Romanian Dobrogea. Even if a referendum would be organized for the Ukrainian portions, it is very unlikely that the over 80% non-Romanian majorities would vote for a union with Romania.
The Russians and the Romanians still can't see eye-to-eye on the question of Moldova. In 2005, Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin told Moscow radio listeners that Russia remains one of Moldova's "strategic partners".
Simple Map of the Republic of Moldova
From the CIA Factbook
Simple Map of the Republic of Moldova
"There is only one problem that is still to be settled in our bilateral relations, and that is the Transdniester region," Voronin said. "We simply cannot find points in common in that matter, and we want to unite the country." Voronin also assured Russian listeners that there are no problems with the use of Russian in Moldova.
"Russian is an official language, and is being used in governmental agencies and educational establishments throughout the republic," he noted, adding that Moldova has 630 Russian-language schools, and that their number is growing."
Several leading public organizations of Moldova (Union of Writers, Union of Journalists, Union of Cinematographers, Union of Artists, and some other) and a whole number of prominent academicians, writers, journalists have founded a new non-governmental civil movement named The Democratic Forum of the Romanians of Moldova (DFRM).

 

 
 
 
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