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HISTORY
Romanians trace their history
back to the 300's B.C. But Romania did not become an independent, unified
country until 1861. During most of the time in-between, various foreign
peoples ruled all or part of Romania.
Early days. Historians
do not know when Romania was first settled. But a people called the
Dacians were known to be living there by the 300's B.C. The Dacians farmed,
mined gold and iron ore, and traded with neighboring peoples. Romania
was called Dacia during this period.
The Romans, under Emperor
Trajan, conquered Dacia in A.D. 106 and made it a province of the Roman
Empire. Roman soldiers occupied Dacia, and Roman colonists settled
there. The Romans intermarried with the Dacians, who adopted Roman
customs and the Latin language. Dacia became known as Romania because
of the Roman occupation and influence.
Barbarians from the east
and north began invading Romania during the A.D. 200's. They forced
the Romans to abandon the province in the late 200's. The invasions
were to continue off and on until the 1100's. The invaders included
Bulgars, Goths, Huns, Magyars, Slavs, and Tatars. These groups, especially
the Slavs, intermarried with the Romanians.
Unification movement.
The period of invasions slowed the development of Romania into a unified
nation. For hundreds of years, various groups fought for control
of the region, and no one group gained full control. The first steps
toward unification took place between 1250 and 1350. The people of
Walachia, a region in southern Romania, gradually united and formed an
independent state under a single ruler. The people of Moldavia, in
eastern Romania, did the same. A prince ruled each state, and so
they were called principalities.
Earlier, during the 1000's,
Hungary had taken over most of what is now northern Romania. This
area, called Transylvania, had many Romanian people. But it did not
become part of Romania until the 1900's.
Ottoman rule. The independence
of the principalities was short-lived. The Ottomans of Asia Minor
(now Turkey) swept into Europe in the mid-1400's. They conquered
Walachia in 1476 and Moldavia in 1504. The Ottoman Empire ruled these
lands almost continuously for over 300 years. The peasants in the
principalities--who made up most of the population--led hard lives even
before the Ottomans took over. They were poor farmers, but they had
to pay high taxes to the ruling nobles. Conditions grew worse under
the Ottomans, who let Romanian nobles rule in their name, but demanded
increased taxes from the peasants for themselves.
The Romanian nobles made
several attempts to gain freedom from the Ottoman Empire. As a result,
in the early 1700's, the empire sent wealthy Greeks to govern the principalities.
These Greeks were called Phanariots because they came from the Phanar district
of Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey). They taxed the peasants
far more than ever before and treated them harshly. Phanariot rule
lasted until 1821, when a revolt by Romanians forced the Ottomans to remove
the Greeks from power. Many scholars believe that Romania's peasants
never suffered more than they did during the Phanariot period.
Russian control. During
the late 1700's, the Ottoman Empire suffered a series of military defeats
at the hands of Russia. Little by little, the Ottomans lost parts
of their empire. Officially, Ottoman rule of the principalities lasted
until 1878. But, in effect, it ended in 1829, when Russian troops
occupied the principalities.
Russia drew up a constitution
for the principalities in the early 1830's. The constitution, called
Organic Statutes, gave governing power in each principality to an assembly
of nobles. This marked the beginning of representative government
in Romania. Russia's troops withdrew from the principalities in 1834.
The origins of modern Romania.
The idea of uniting Moldavia and Walachia existed almost from the time
the principalities were founded. The unification movement grew rapidly
during the mid-1800's. In 1859, the assemblies of the two principalities
elected Prince Alexander John Cuza as their common ruler. In 1861,
the principalities officially united to form a nation called Romania.
Many of the leaders of the
unification movement were young Romanians who had studied in Paris.
There, they learned about a revolutionary spirit that was sweeping through
Europe. Many Europeans were demanding an end to undemocratic government
and calling for improvements in living conditions for the lower classes.
The young Romanians demanded reforms after they returned home. Prince
Cuza responded. His government bought much land from wealthy Romanians
and gave it to peasants. It also increased the number of free schools
for the poor. Many of the wealthy Romanians opposed Cuza. They
forced the prince to resign in 1866.
The wealthy Romanians selected
Karl of Hohenzollern to replace Cuza. Karl was a German prince who
knew little about Romania. According to one story, he even had to
consult a map to learn where the country was. But he was to rule
Romania for nearly 50 years.
Karl took the name Prince
Carol. In 1878, the major nations of Europe officially recognized
Romania's full independence from Turkey. In 1881, Romania became
a kingdom, and Carol became King Carol I.
At the start of Carol's reign,
Romania's first political parties were established, and the people were
given the right to elect their government representatives. But a
complex election system kept the peasants from having many representatives.
Romania's economy improved under Carol. Wealthy Romanians benefited
from the economic growth, but the peasants gained little from it.
In 1907, Romania's peasants revolted. They burned the houses and
destroyed the crops of many wealthy landowners. The Romanian Army
put down the revolt, killing at least 10,000 peasants. Carol died
in 1914, and his nephew Ferdinand became king.
World War I was fought from
1914 to 1918. Romania remained neutral at first. But in 1916,
it joined France, Great Britain, and the other Allies in their fight against
the Central Powers (chiefly Austria-Hungary and Germany). Romania
wanted to gain Banat, Bukovina, and Transylvania--three provinces of Austria-Hungary
that had large Romanian populations. The Allies won the war, and
Romania received the territories it wanted as part of the peace settlement.
As a result, Romania about doubled in size and population. For the
first time, Romania's territory included almost all the land where large
numbers of Romanians lived.
Depression and fascism.
Liberal political parties headed Romania's government after World War I.
They divided the estates of many of the wealthy landowners into small farms
and sold the farms to peasants. The liberals wanted to continue helping
the peasants, but a worldwide depression that began in 1929 destroyed the
economy of Romania. Millions of Romanians lost their jobs, and poverty
became severe throughout the country.
Romania's economic problems
caused many people to seek new leadership in the early 1930's. The
Iron Guard soon became a strong authoritarian movement. Its followers
were fascists who sought to destroy Romania's government and establish
a dictatorship. This group used terror against its political opponents
and blamed Communists, Jews, and liberals for Romania's problems.
King Ferdinand died in 1927,
and his son Carol became King Carol II three years later. The popularity
and power of the Iron Guard grew during the early years of Carol's reign.
Fearing a loss of his own authority, Carol made himself dictator of Romania.
He outlawed the Iron Guard and all political parties.
World War II began in Europe
in September 1939, as a struggle between Germany and the Allies--a group
of nations led by France and Great Britain. Romania remained neutral
at first. By June of 1940, Germany had gained a great military advantage
over the Allies. Germany allowed Hungary to take northern Transylvania
from Romania. The Soviet Union took part of northeastern Romania.
Bulgaria took territory in the southeast.
The territorial losses turned
the people against King Carol, and he gave up his throne on Sept. 6, 1940.
Carol's son Michael became king, but Premier Ion Antonescu ruled.
Antonescu cooperated with Germany, and German troops occupied Romania in
October. Romania then joined the war on the side of Germany.
By August 1944, the tide
of the war had turned against Germany. King Michael then overthrew
Antonescu, and Romania joined the Allies. The war ended in 1945,
and the Allies took northern Transylvania from Hungary and returned it
to Romania. The Soviet Union and Bulgaria kept the Romanian territory
they had taken.
Communist control.
The Soviet Union had been formed as a Communist nation under Russia's leadership
in 1922, and it existed until 1991. During World War II, the Soviet
Union fought on the side of the Allies. Soviet troops occupied Romania
in 1944 and stayed there until the late 1950's.
Romania's Communist Party
had never been strong before World War II. But under the protection
of the Soviet troops, Romanian Communists took over the government after
the war. They killed or imprisoned their political opponents, and
forced King Michael to give up his throne on Dec. 30, 1947.
The Communists declared Romania
an "independent people's democracy." But Romania was a Soviet satellite
(country controlled by the Soviet Union). In 1948 and 1952, Romania
adopted constitutions that praised the Soviet Union. Romania's government,
educational system, and other institutions were modeled on those of the
Soviet Union. Soviet leaders directed Romania's economy and forced
the country to emphasize agriculture and neglect industry. They also
set foreign policy.
Opposition to the Soviet
Union. Resentment of Soviet interference in Romania's affairs grew
during the 1950's. In the early 1960's, Romania's Communists--led
by Communist Party head Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej--began to oppose this interference
openly. Gheorghiu-Dej died in 1965. Nicolae Ceausescu, who
succeeded him as party head, continued the opposition.
In 1962, Romania insisted
that each Communist country should be free to develop its own economic
system, trade freely with all nations, and make its own foreign policy.
Romania's leaders then began expanding industry and increasing trade with
Western nations. In 1964, Romania exchanged ambassadors with the
United States. Romania's leaders hosted a visit by U.S. President
Richard M. Nixon in 1969. They also declared Romania neutral in a
dispute between the Soviet Union and China. In 1965, Romania adopted
a Constitution that called for the nation's complete independence.
In 1977, Romania began strengthening its ties with the nations of the nonaligned
movement. These nations, primarily in Asia and Africa, had refused
to support either the Communist or non-Communist bloc.
Also in 1977, an earthquake
struck Bucharest and other parts of Romania. It caused about 1,500
deaths and over $1 billion in damage.
The government's industrialization
policy increased the size of Romania's urban communities. Each year,
thousands of young people moved from rural areas to cities to work in industry
and government.
In the 1980's, new jobs were
created, but Romania's living standard remained low and consumer goods
were scarce. Reasons for the struggling economy included corruption
in the Communist Party and overreliance on central government economic
planning. In addition, Romania had to borrow heavily from Western
European banks to finance its industrial build-up. Paying off this
debt took funds away from further development and slowed economic growth.
Recent developments.
Ceausescu's government maintained an extensive system of restrictions on
the lives of the people. In mid-December 1989, thousands of people
in the city of Timisoara staged demonstrations, calling for greater freedom
from the Communist government and for an improved standard of living.
Government security forces responded to the protests by firing on the people
and killing hundreds. Antigovernment protests then spread across
Romania. In Bucharest, tens of thousands gathered in the streets
and called for increased freedoms and the resignation of Ceausescu.
Security forces fired on the crowds, bringing the death toll of demonstrators
into the thousands. Army units joined the revolt, and fierce fighting
between the army and Ceausescu's security forces followed.
On December 22, Ceausescu
and his wife, Elena, fled Bucharest during a massive antigovernment demonstration.
However, they were soon captured by the army. A secret trial took
place and Ceausescu and his wife were charged with murder and embezzlement
of government funds. They were found guilty and were executed on
December 25. The National Salvation Front, a group made up chiefly
of former Communists, took control of the government. Ion Iliescu,
leader of the Front, became the acting president. The Front canceled
a number of Ceausescu's restrictions on freedom. Free multiparty
elections took place in May 1990. Iliescu won the presidency, and
the Front also won a wide majority in the legislature. Iliescu then
stepped down as leader of the Front in accordance with a law established
in early 1990. The law states that the head of state cannot be a
party leader.
Opposition parties complained
of abuse and intimidation by members of the ruling party during the election.
In mid-1990, progovernment and antigovernment demonstrators clashed on
the streets of Bucharest. Hundreds were injured. Large antigovernment
demonstrations continued in the early 1990's, often in protest of economic
conditions. In late 1991, following strikes and riots staged by miners,
the government of the National Salvation Front resigned. It was replaced
by a coalition government dominated by the Front. Iliescu remained
president. New national elections were held in late 1992. Iliescu
was reelected president. But in this election, he represented a political
party called the Democratic National Salvation Front. This party
broke away from the National Salvation Front in 1992. In 1993, it
changed its name to the Social Democratic Party of Romania.
Iliescu's government was
dominated by former Communists who favored only limited political and economic
reform. In 1996, Emil Constantinescu, who supported more rapid reform,
was elected president. His party, the Democratic Convention of Romania,
also won the most seats in the legislature. |