Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Romania

 
Dictionary: Ro·ma·ni·a   (rō-mā'nē-ə, -mān') pronunciation or Ru·ma·ni·a
Romania
(Click to enlarge)
Romania
(Mapping Specialists, Ltd.)
(rū-)

A country of southeast Europe with a short coastline on the Black Sea. Originally a Roman province, the area was conquered from the 3rd to the 12th century by a succession of invaders, including Goths, Huns, Magyars, and Mongols. In the 13th century two principalities, Moldavia and Walachia, emerged, becoming vassal states within the Turkish Empire and eventually Russian protectorates. They were united in 1861 and became independent in 1878. The rise of fascism in the 1930s led to the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of a dictatorship in 1940. Following Romania's surrender to the USSR during World War II, the country was declared (1947) a communist republic, which was overthrown in 1989 with army-supported countrywide revolts. Bucharest is the capital and the largest city. Population: 22,300,000.

 

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics

Country, northeastern Balkan Peninsula, southeastern Europe. Area: 92,043 sq mi (238,391 sq km). Population (2007 est.): 21,549,000. Capital: Bucharest. Most of the people are Romanian; a minority are Hungarian. Language: Romanian (official). Religion: Christianity (predominantly Eastern Orthodox; also Protestant, Roman Catholic). Currency: leu. The land is dominated by the great arc of the Carpathian Mountains, whose highest peak, Moldoveanu, reaches an elevation of 8,346 ft (2,544 m). The Danube River forms most of the southern boundary with Bulgaria. Under communist rule (1948 – 89), Romania had a centrally planned economy that was transformed from an agricultural into an industrial economy. From 1991 the postcommunist government began returning industrial and commercial enterprises to the private sector. Romania is a republic with two legislative houses; its chief of state is the president, and the head of government is the prime minister. Romania was formed in 1859 by the de facto unification of Moldavia and Walachia (for earlier history, see Dacia). During World War I it sided with the Allies and doubled its territory in 1918 with the addition of Transylvania, Bukovina, and Bessarabia. Allied with Germany in World War II, Romania was occupied by Soviet troops in 1944 and became a satellite of the U.S.S.R. in 1948. During the 1960s Romania's foreign policy was frequently independent of the Soviet Union's. The communist regime of Nicolae Ceausescu was overthrown in 1989, and free elections were held in 1990. In the 1990s Romania struggled with rampant corruption, but it entered the 21st century with a stabilizing economy. In 2004 it joined NATO, and in 2007 it became a member of the European Union.

For more information on Romania, visit Britannica.com.

Dictionary of Dance: Romania
Top

The Lyrical Company of the Bucharest National Theatre was founded in 1877, and its corps de ballet established in 1898. The company became state-supported in 1921 and under ballet master A. Romanowski presented stagings of the Ballets Russes and early Soviet repertories. After the Second World War many new state-subsidized schools and companies were established, with close links to the USSR, though some native Romanian choreographers also emerged, such as Vasily Marcu. The school in Bucharest has produced several major dancers, including Ileana Iliescu, Elena Dacian, and Alexa Mezincescu. Since 1993 the Romanian Opera of Bucharest Ballet Company has been run by Iliescu and Mihai Babuska and has toured widely in Europe. Other important activity has occurred within the Experimental Studios of Dance founded 1968, and the Classical and Contemporary Ballet Ensemble (orig. called Fantasio Theatre) which was founded in 1979 by Danovschi. Smaller modern dance groups, including the Contemp, Orion Ballet and more recently Marginalii and Studio DCM, have helped create a public eager for new and experimental work.

Holocaust: Romania
Top

Eastern European country established in 1859 with the union of the former Walachia and Moldavia principalities. These two areas together were called the Regat. During and after World War I, Romania was enlarged significantly by annexing Southern Dobruja from Bulgaria, Transylvania from Hungary, and Bessarabia from Russia. These new areas had a very high percentage of Jews, sometimes up to 30 percent of the population.

Between the two world wars, the lack of political stability in Romania led to the creation of right-wing nationalist and antisemitic political parties such as the Iron Guard, and to the growth of Antisemitism. After the Nazis came to power, they also encouraged anti-Jewish measures in Romania. In late 1937 the Nazis' Foreign Policy Office, headed by Alfred Rosenberg, helped form the short-lived Goga-Cuza government. Octavian Goga and Alexandru Cuza only ruled Romania for 40 days, but they did their best to turn their antisemitic ideals into reality. The parliamentary government established next was so weak that King Carol II instituted a dictatorship in February 1938. The Jews' situation became even worse under this regime; Romania's new constitution included several sections that allowed racial discrimination against them.

In March 1939 Romania signed a trade agreement with Germany. This was followed by several other deals giving Germany power over the Romanian economy. In addition, when Germany and the Soviet Union made their non-aggression pact during the summer of 1939, Germany agreed to take Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina from Romania and return them to the Soviet Union. Germany also forced Romania to return Northern Transylvania to Hungary, and Southern Dobruja to Bulgaria. These withdrawals caused severe problems for the Jews of those areas. In Bukovina and Northern Moldavia, villagers and withdrawing Romanian troops took out their fury on the Jews, killing hundreds. Also at that time, the Romanians wanted to please the Germans, so they instituted laws that canceled the citizenship of most Jews and forbid marriages between Jews and Romanians. With the return of lands to the Soviet Union, Hungary, and Bulgaria, the Jewish population of Romania was reduced from 760,000 to 342,000.

In September 1940 General Ion Antonescu asked King Carol II to set up a new pro-German cabinet. Carol fled Romania and his son nominally became king. Antonescu took over as a fascist dictator and destroyed any remnant of democracy. He instituted a government that consisted of Iron Guard members and army officers. Under Antonescu, there was mass plundering of Jewish property, Jews lost the right to vote, and were barred from doing business.

In January 1941 the Iron Guard tried to take over the government completely. This revolt was put down by Antonescu's army, but was also accompanied by anti-Jewish riots---127 Jews were murdered. After the rebellion was crushed, the government passed more anti-Jewish laws that aimed to eliminate Jewish involvement in Romanian life. Antonescu, aided by the office of Adolf Eichmann, set up a "National Romanianization Center" which officially organized terror acts against Jews. The police and a special intelligence unit persecuted those who opposed Antonescu's regime, including Communists and Jews.

The Germans turned on their Soviet allies in June 1941. The Romanians sided with the Germans, hoping to reannex the land they had been forced to give back to the Soviet Union. In fact, Romania did regain some of its land, but lost it again in 1944 to the Soviets. During this time, Antonescu ordered the expulsion of 40,000 Jews from their villages and towns. Some were sent to detention camps, while others were transferred to other areas.

Antonescu treated Jews of different areas in different ways. He called for the extermination of the Jews of Bessarabia and Bukovina, but not of the Jews of the Regat. When Romania joined Germany in fighting the Soviet Union, Hitler informed Antonescu of his plan to exterminate Europe's Jews; Antonescu agreed to go along with Hitler's designs. The Romanian army was commanded to imprison city Jews, while the police were ordered to kill any Jew found in rural areas. German and Romanian army units, aided by Einsatzgruppen, carried out the extermination of Romania's Jews. About 160,000 were killed in the first phase, with local Romanians and Ukrainians joining in the murders; tens of thousands of Ukrainian Jews were also killed by the police and Romanian army. In September 1941 Antonescu ordered that the 150,000 remaining Jews be banished to Transnistria. Tens of thousands died on the way.

During 1942 Antonescu began to doubt that Germany would win the war. In addition, the Jewish leadership of Romania was exerting great pressure on him to help the Jews. These elements convinced Antonescu to cancel the next phase to which he had originally agreed: the Deportation of most of the remaining 292,000 Jews to Belzec. Instead, he decided that the solution for Romania's Jews was to leave Romania. He agreed to the emigration of 70,000 Jews in exchange for a large payment. However, Eichmann blocked the plan and less than 5,000 Jews reached Palestine. Once the plans for extermination were aborted, Jewish organizations fought hard for the return of the Jews who had been deported to Transnistria. In late 1943 the first of the surviving deportees were brought home, and the rest returned in 1945 and 1946.

Antonescu's government was overthrown on August 23, 1944 by an anti-fascist group called the National Democratic Bloc. In September the new government signed an agreement with the Soviet Union that formally acknowledged that Romania was no longer allied with Germany.

In all, about 420,000 Jews who had been living in Romania in 1939 died in the Holocaust. This includes those killed by the Romanian army, those who died in or on the way to Transnistria, the victims of pogroms, and the Jews of Hungarian-occupied Northern Transylvania who were murdered at Auschwitz. This number does not count those Jews living in the Soviet territory taken over by Romania during the war who also died during the Holocaust.

 
Romania (rōmān'ēə, -yə) or Rumania (rū-), republic (2005 est. pop. 22,330,000), 91,699 sq mi (237,500 sq km), SE Europe. It borders on Hungary in the northwest, on Serbia in the southwest, on Bulgaria in the south, on the Black Sea in the southeast, on Moldova in the northeast, and on Ukraine in the north. Bucharest is the capital and largest city.

Land and People

The Danube River, which forms part of the border with Serbia and almost all of the frontier with Bulgaria, traverses Romania in the southeast; its tributary, the Prut, constitutes most of the border with Moldova and Ukraine. The Carpathian Mts., of which the Transylvanian Alps are a part, cut through Romania in a wide arc from north to southwest; the Carpathians' highest peaks in Romania are Moldoveanu (8,343 ft/2,543 m) and Negoiu (8,317 ft/2,535 m). The country's climate is continental, with hot, dry summers and cold winters; severe droughts are common during the summer. Romania includes seven historic and geographic regions: Walachia, Moldavia, Transylvania, and parts of Bukovina, Crişana-Maramureş, the Dobruja, and the Banat.

About 90% of the people are ethnically Romanian; Hungarians and Gypsies make up the largest minorities. Romanian is the official language, but Hungarian is also spoken. By far the largest religious body is the Romanian Orthodox Church. There are also Protestant and Roman Catholic minorities.

Economy

From 1948 until 1989, Romania had a Soviet-style command economy in which nearly all agricultural and industrial enterprises were state controlled. During those years, it built an economy based largely on heavy industry. Romania remains one of the poorer European countries. Agriculture employs about one third of the labor force but accounts for only 10% of the gross domestic product (GDP). The chief crops are wheat, corn, barley, sugar beets, sunflower seeds, potatoes, and grapes. Sheep and poultry are raised. About 25% of the country is forested, and large quantities of timber are cut, especially in Transylvania.

Industry contributes about a third of the country's GDP and accounts for one third of the labor force. Auto assembly, mining and metallurgy, timber, food processing, and petroleum refining are important industrys; major manufactures include textiles, footwear, light machinery, construction materials, and chemicals. The country's main industrial centers are Arad, Bucharest, Braşov, Hunedoara, Iaşi, Oradea, Reşiţa, and Timişoara. Brăila, Galaţi, and Giurgiu are the main Danubian ports; Constanţa is the chief Black Sea port. Galaţi and Constanţa are resort cities in Romania's growing tourism industry.

Textiles and clothing, metals, machinery and equipment, chemicals, and agricultural products are exported. Romania has an inadequate supply of mineral resources and must import raw materials and fuels, although historically it has been an important oil-producing center. The chief trading partners are Italy, Germany, France, and Turkey.

Government

Romania is governed under the constitution of 1991 as revised. The president, who is the head of state, is elected by popular vote for a five-year term and is eligible for a second term. The government is headed by the prime minister, who is appointed by the president with the approval of the legislature; the cabinet is appointed by the prime minister. The bicameral legislature, or Parliament, consists of the 137-seat Senate and the 332-seat Chamber of Deputies. All legislators are popularly elected by proportional representation to terms of four years. Administratively, the country is divided into 41 counties and one municipality (Bucharest).

History

History to 1881

Romania occupies, roughly, ancient Dacia, which was a Roman province in the 2d and 3d cent. A.D. The ethnic character of modern Romania seems to have been formed in the Roman period; Christianity was introduced at that time as well. After the Romans left the region, the area was overrun successively by the Goths, the Huns, the Avars, the Bulgars, and the Magyars.

After a period of Mongol rule (13th cent.), the history of the Romanian people became in essence that of the two Romanian principalities-Moldavia and Walachia-and of Transylvania, which for most of the time was a Hungarian dependency. The princes of Walachia (in 1417) and of Moldavia (mid-16th cent.) became vassals of the Ottoman Empire, but they retained considerable independence. Although the princes were despots and became involved in numerous wars, their rule was a period of prosperity as compared with the 18th and 19th cent. Many old cathedrals in the country still testify to the cultural activity of the time.

Michael the Brave of Walachia defied both the Ottoman sultan and the Holy Roman emperor and at the time of his death (1601) controlled Moldavia, Walachia, and Transylvania. However, Michael's empire soon fell apart. An ill-fated alliance (1711) of the princes of Moldavia and Walachia with Peter I of Russia led to Turkish domination of Romania. Until 1821 the Turkish sultans appointed governors, or hospodars, usually chosen from among the Phanariots (see under Phanar), Greek residents of Constantinople. The governors and their subordinates reduced the Romanian people (except for a few great landlords, the boyars) to a group of nomadic shepherds and poor, enserfed peasants.

At the end of the 18th cent. Turkish control was seriously challenged by Russia and by Austria; at the same time, a strong nationalist movement was growing among the Romanians. The treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji (1774) gave Russia considerable influence over Moldavia and Walachia. When, in 1821, Alexander Ypsilanti raised the Greek banner of revolt in Moldavia, the Romanians (who had more grievances against the Greek Phanariots than against the Turks) helped the Turks to expel the Greeks. In 1822 the Turks agreed to appoint Romanians as governors of the principalities; after the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-29, during which Russian forces occupied Moldavia and Walachia, the governors were given life tenure. Although the two principalities technically remained within the Ottoman Empire, they actually became Russian protectorates.

Under Russian pressure, new constitutions giving extensive rights to the boyars were promulgated in Walachia (1831) and Moldavia (1832). At the same time, a renewed national and cultural revival was under way, and in 1848 the Romanians rose in rebellion against both foreign control and the power of the boyars. The uprising, secretly welcomed by the Turks, was suppressed, under the leadership of Russia, by joint Russo-Turkish military intervention. Russian troops did not evacuate Romania until 1854, during the Crimean War, when they were replaced by a neutral Austrian force. The Congress of Paris (1856) established Moldavia and Walachia as principalities under Turkish suzerainty and under the guarantee of the European powers, and it awarded S Bessarabia to Moldavia.

The election (1859) of Alexander John Cuza as prince of both Moldavia and Walachia prepared the way for the official union (1861-62) of the two principalities as Romania. Cuza freed (1864) the peasants from certain servile obligations and distributed some land (confiscated from religious orders) to them. However, he was despotic and corrupt and was deposed by a coup in 1866. Carol I of the house of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen was chosen as his successor. A moderately liberal constitution was adopted in 1866. In 1877, Romania joined Russia in its war on Turkey. At the Congress of Berlin (1878), Romania gained full independence but was obliged to restore S Bessarabia to Russia and to accept N Dobruja in its place. In 1881, Romania was proclaimed a kingdom.

The Kingdom to World War I

After becoming a kingdom, Romania continued to be torn by violence and turmoil, caused mainly by the government's failure to institute adequate land reform, by the corruption of government officials, and by frequent foreign interference. There was no real attempt to curb the anti-Semitic excesses through which the peasants, encouraged by demagogues, vented their feelings against the Jewish agents of the absentee Romanian landlords, the boyars. A major peasant revolt in 1907 was directed against both the Jews and the boyars. Romania remained neutral in the first (1912) of the Balkan Wars but entered the second war (1913), against Bulgaria, and gained S Dobruja.

Although Romania had adhered (1883) to the Triple Alliance, it proclaimed its neutrality when World War I broke out in 1914. In the same year Ferdinand succeeded Carol as king. Romanian irredentism in Transylvania helped to bring Romania into the Allied camp, and in 1916 Romania declared war on the Central Powers. Most of the country was overrun by Austro-German forces, and in Feb., 1918, by the Treaty of Bucharest, Romania consented to a harsh peace. On Nov. 9, 1918, Romania again entered the war on the Allied side, and the general armistice of Nov. 11, 1918, annulled the Treaty of Bucharest. Shortly thereafter, Romania annexed Bessarabia from Russia, Bukovina from Austria, and Transylvania and the Banat from Hungary.

Romanian armed intervention (1919) in Hungary defeated the Communist regime of Béla Kun and helped to put Admiral Horthy into power. Romania's acquisition of Bukovina, Transylvania, part of the Banat (the rest going to Yugoslavia [now in Serbia]), and Crişana-Maramureş (until then a part of Hungary) was confirmed by the treaties of Saint-Germain (1919) and Trianon (1920), but the USSR did not recognize Romania's seizure of Bessarabia. A series of agrarian laws beginning in 1917 did much to break up the large estates and to redistribute the land to the peasants. The large Magyar population as well as other minority groups were a constant source of friction.

The 1920s through World War II

Internal Romanian politics were undemocratic and unfair. Electoral laws were revised (1926) to enable the party in power to keep out opponents, and assassination was not unusual as a political instrument. Political conflict became acute after the death (1927) of Ferdinand, when the royal succession was thrown into confusion. Ferdinand's son, Carol, had renounced the succession and Carol's son Michael became king, but in 1930 Carol returned, set his son aside, and was proclaimed king as Carol II. The court party, led by the king and by Mme Magda Lupescu, was extremely unpopular, but its opponents were divided.

The Liberal party, headed first by John Bratianu (see under Bratianu, family) and later by Ion Duca, was bitterly opposed by the Peasant party, led by Iuliu Maniu. A right wing of the Peasant party joined with other anti-Semitic groups in the National Christian party, which was linked with the terrorist Iron Guard. There was a frequent turnover of cabinets, and the only figure of some permanence was Nicholas Titulescu, who was foreign minister for much of the period from 1927 to 1936, when the increasingly powerful Fascist groups forced him to resign. In 1938, Carol II assumed dictatorial powers and promulgated a corporative constitution, which was approved in a rigged plebiscite. Later in 1938, after Codreanu and 13 other leaders of the Iron Guard were shot "while trying to escape" from prison, Carol proclaimed the Front of National Renascence as the sole legal political party.

In foreign affairs, Romania entered the Little Entente (1921) and the Balkan Entente (1934) largely to protect itself against Hungarian and Bulgarian revisionism. After 1936 the country drew closer to the Axis powers. The country remained neutral at the outbreak (1939) of World War II, but in 1940 it became a neutral partner of the Axis. Romania was powerless (1940) to resist Soviet demands for Bessarabia and N Bukovina or to oppose Bulgarian and Hungarian demands, backed by Germany, for the S Dobruja, the Banat, Crişana-Maramureş, and part of Transylvania. The Iron Guard rose in rebellion against Carol's surrender of these territories. Carol was deposed (1940) and exiled, and Michael returned to the throne. The army gained increased influence and Ion Antonescu became dictator.

In June, 1941, Romania joined Germany in its attack on the Soviet Union. Romanian troops recovered Bessarabia and Bukovina and helped to take Odessa, but they suffered heavily at Stalingrad (now Volgograd) in late 1942 and early 1943. In Aug., 1944, two Soviet army groups entered Romania. Michael overthrew Antonescu's Fascist regime, surrendered to the USSR, and ordered Romanian troops to fight on the Allied side. During the war half of Romania's Jewish population of 750,000 was exterminated, while most of the remainder went to Israel after its independence (1948). The peace treaty between Romania and the Allies, signed at Paris in 1947, in essence confirmed the armistice terms of 1944. Romania recovered all its territories except Bessarabia, N Bukovina, and S Dobruja.

The Rise and Fall of Romanian Communism

Politically and economically, Romania became increasingly dependent on the Soviet Union. A Communist-led coalition government, headed by the nominally non-Communist Peter Groza, was set up in 1945. In Dec., 1947, Michael was forced to abdicate, and Romania was proclaimed a people's republic. The first constitution (1945) was superseded in 1952 by a constitution patterned more directly on the Soviet model. Nationalization of industry and natural resources was completed by a law of 1948, and there was also forced collectivization of agriculture. Control over the major industries, notably petroleum, was shared with the USSR after 1945, but an agreement in 1952 dissolved the joint companies and returned them to full Romanian control. In 1949, Romania joined the Council of Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON), and in 1955 it became a charter member of the Warsaw Treaty Organization and also joined the United Nations.

For all but a year of the period from 1945 to 1965 Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej was head of the Romanian Workers' (Communist) party; he was succeeded by Nicholae Ceauşescu as leader of the party, renamed the Romanian Communist party. Gheorghiu-Dej and Ceauşescu were both dictators who followed the Stalinist model of rapid industrialization and political repression. In 1965, Romania was officially termed a socialist republic, instead of a people's republic, to denote its alleged attainment of a higher level of Communism, and a new constitution was adopted.

Beginning in 1963, Romania's foreign policy became increasingly independent of that of the USSR. In early 1967, Romania established diplomatic relations with West Germany. It maintained friendly relations with Israel after the Arab-Israeli War of June, 1967, whereas the other East European Communist nations severed diplomatic ties. In 1968, Romania did not join in the invasion of Czechoslovakia, and in 1969, Ceauşescu and President Tito of Yugoslavia affirmed the sovereignty and equality of socialist nations.

During the 1970s, the emphasis on rapid industrialization continued at the expense of other areas, especially agriculture. Political repression remained severe, particularly toward the German and Magyar minorities. In 1981, a rising national debt, caused in part by massive investment in the petrochemical industry, led Ceauşescu to institute an austerity program that resulted in severe shortages of food, electricity, and consumer goods. In Dec., 1989, antigovernment violence broke out in Timişoara and spread to other cities. When army units joined the uprising, Ceauşescu fled, but he was captured, deposed, and executed along with his wife. A 2006 presidential commission report estimated that under Communist rule (1945-89) as many as 2 million people were killed or persecuted in Romania.

A provisional government was established, with Ion Iliescu, a former Communist party official, as president. In the elections of May, 1990, Iliescu won the presidency and his party, the National Salvation Front, obtained an overwhelming majority in the legislature. Iliescu was reelected in 1992, but was defeated by Emil Constantinescu of the Democratic Convention party in 1996.

Throughout the 1990s and into the next decade the country's economy lagged, as it struggled to make the transition to a market-based economy. Price increases and food shortages led to civil unrest, and the closing of mines set off large-scale strikes and demonstrations by miners. Privatization of state-run industries proceeded cautiously, with citizens having shares in companies but little knowledge or information about their investments. Widespread corruption also was a problem. In Nov.-Dec., 2000, elections Iliescu again won the presidency, after a runoff against Corneliu V. Tudor, an ultranationalist.

In Oct., 2003, the country approved constitutional changes protecting the rights of ethnic minorities and property owners; the amendments were designed to win European Union approval for Romania's admission to that body, but continuing pervasive corruption remained a stumbling block. The country joined NATO in Mar., 2004. The Nov.-Dec., 2004, presidential election was won by the center-right opposition candidate, Traian Basescu of the Liberal Democratic party (PDL); Basescu defeated the first round leader, Prime Minister Adrian Nastase, after a runoff. In Apr., 2005, Romania finally signed an accession treaty with the European Union; Romania became a member of the EU in 2007, but corruption and judicial reform remained significant EU concerns. In Feb., 2006, Nastase, who had become parliament speaker, was charged with corruption; he accused the government of mounting a politically inspired prosecution. In 2007, after Nastase asserted the case was unconstitutional, Romania's supreme court suspended the trial and referred the matter to the constitutional court.

Disagreements between the outspoken, popular president and the center-right prime minister, Calin Popescu-Tariceanu, of the National Liberal party (PNL), became increasing acrimonious in early 2007, after the president accused the prime minister of having attempted to influence a corruption investigation of a political ally. In April the left-wing opposition and Popescu-Tariceanu's allies in parliament voted to suspend the president for unconstitutional conduct, a dubious charge given that the constitutional court had ruled previously that the president had not violated the constitution, but the court also upheld the president's suspension. The suspension forced a referendum on impeaching the president, and in the May poll 74% of the voters opposed impeachment. The prime minister's government subsequently (June) survived a no-confidence vote. In the Nov., 2008, parliamentary elections, the Social Democratic and Conservative parties (PSD-PC) won the most votes, but the PDL won the most seats. The two formed a coalition government, with PDL leader Emil Boc as prime minister.

Bibliography

See R. W. Seton-Watson, A History of the Roumainians (1963); T. W. Riker, The Making of Roumania (1931, repr. 1971); V. Georgescu, Political Ideas and the Enlightenment in the Romanian Principalities, 1750-1831 (1972); E. K. Keefe et al., Area Handbook for Romania (1972); M. Shafir, Romania: Politics, Economics, and Society (1985); D. Turnock, The Romanian Economy in the Twentieth Century (1986); T. Gilberg, Nationalism and Communism in Romania (1990).


Psychoanalysis: Romania
Top

On returning from training courses in France and Germany, Gheorghe Preda (1879-1965), a medical officer in the Romanian army, published his considerations on psychoanalysis in a Romanian journal of medical sciences in 1912. Without any personal experience of psychoanalysis, he encouraged the interest of his collaborators, who were the first to propagate Freud's work. Later, in 1923, one of Jean Martin Charcot's students, Gheorghe Marinescu, contributed to making psychoanalysis known to Romanian intellectuals by publishing two articles: an introduction to the study of psychoanalysis and a critique of Freudian theory. Several psychologists and psychiatrists then took an interest in psychoanalysis. One of them, Ion Popescu-Sibiu, entered into correspondence with Freud and became the author of a very complete book on the theory and practice of psychoanalysis: Conceptia Psihanalitica (1947). In 1932 he won a Romanian Academy prize for this book. It was in fact a revision of the thesis he presented in 1927, with an addendum of "medico-psychological vocabulary." It was first published in three thousand copies. Around this time more than ten books and theses were published dealing with the applications of psychoanalysis to psychotherapy, forensic medicine, literature, the study of dreams, spiritualism, and career guidance. In a setback, in 1932 an application of psychoanalysis to the work of the Romanian national poet Mihai Eminescu (1850-1889) was considered iconoclastic. In 1934, and again in 1935, attempts to start a journal of psychoanalysis resulted in the appearance of one issue and no follow-up.

Over the next few decades the development of psychoanalysis was limited by the economic crisis of 1929, the rise of the fascist Iron Guard party, which aligned Romania with Nazi Germany, and the communist takeover of the country. In 1946, just after the Second World War, Ion Popescu-Sibiu and Constantin Vlad (1892-1971) founded the Romanian Society for Psychopathology and Psychotherapy. They rallied around them all those who had been interested in analysis before the war. But psychoanalysis was prohibited in 1948, as it was in all communist countries. Not until 1973 and the new directions opened up by the political head of state Nicolae Ceausescu did a clinical psychological circle organize regular meetings of practitioners. This breach in the wall was short lived, however, and in 1977 it was forbidden to teach psychology. People nevertheless continued to study psychoanalytic texts. The first volume of a translation of Freud's Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis (1916-1917a [1915-1917]) was published in 1980. But the almost total absence of personal and training analysis was detrimental to any real development of psychoanalysis.

Not until after the fall of the Ceausescu regime could a group of psychotherapists, largely nonphysicians, found the Romanian Psychoanalytic Society in 1990. This society publishes an internal bulletin and a journal that appear on a regular basis. The desire of Romanian analysts to improve themselves professionally is manifest in the numbers that have gone abroad for training and by the 1995 Conference for Eastern Europeans at Constanza, organized with the help of the European Federation for Psychoanalysis.

Bibliography

Diatkine, Gilbert, Gibeault, Alain, Gibeault, Monique, and Vincent, Michel. (1993). La psychanalyse en Europe orientale. In Gilbert Diatkine, Gérard Le Goues, and Ilana Reiss-Schimmel (Eds.), La psychanalyse et l'Europe de 1993. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.

—MICHEL VINCENT

History 1450-1789: Romania
Top

The principalities of Walachia and Moldavia, formed in the fourteenth century, were the nucleus of what would become modern Romania in the nineteenth century. Their populations were ethnically the same, spoke the same language, and professed the same Orthodox faith; and their political institutions, culture, and historical development throughout the early modern period were similar. They were situated at the crossroads of East and West: their Latin heritage linked them to Rome; their religion drew them to Constantinople.

The decisive force in the international relations of the principalities from the middle of the fifteenth to the end of the eighteenth century was the Ottoman Empire. Despite the heroic efforts of princes such as Stephen the Great of Moldavia (ruled 1457–1504) to defend their independence, both countries were eventually forced to recognize Ottoman suzerainty, Walachia between 1420 and 1480 and Moldavia between 1484 and 1498. Under the terms of ahd-names (treaties) granted by the sultans, they accepted vassal status and agreed to pay an annual tribute, to participate in Ottoman military campaigns, and to sever direct political relations with foreign countries. But both principalities avoided occupation by the Ottoman army and the settlement of Muslims on their territory, and they preserved their political institutions, laws, and economic and social structures, thus escaping the incorporation into the Ottoman Empire to which the peoples south of the Danube had been subjected. Their relationship with the Ottoman Empire constantly evolved and became increasingly restrictive and burdensome. By the eighteenth century the sultans were treating the principalities as mere provinces and their princes as Ottoman functionaries. Yet the heaviest burdens they bore were economic and fiscal, as the Ottomans continually increased the amount of the tribute, the number and size of bribes, and the quantities of foodstuffs to be delivered at fixed prices.

Opposition to the Ottomans was constant, but the majority of princes were realists. Aware that their countries were too weak to challenge Ottoman supremacy directly, they looked for support to Poland, the Habsburg empire, and Russia. Theirs was the classic strategy of playing powerful neighbors off against one another, thereby securing independence. One of the high points of this delicate game was the reign of Michael the Brave of Walachia (ruled 1593–1601), who allied himself with the Habsburgs and won several significant victories over Ottoman armies, notably at Calugareni in 1595. He also brought Moldavia and the principality of Transylvania under his rule for a brief time, but his enemies prevailed, and the Ottomans regained their predominance over the principalities. Other significant attempts to throw off Ottoman rule occurred a century later. Constantin Brâncoveanu of Walachia (ruled 1688–1714) cooperated with Austria, and Dimitrie Cantemir of Moldavia (ruled 1710–1711) turned to Peter the Great of Russia to regain independence, but neither alliance was successful, and both princes lost their thrones.

The Ottomans, convinced that they could no longer trust native princes, dispensed with elections altogether and appointed princes mainly from among important Greek families of the Phanar (Lighthouse) district of Constantinople. During the so-called Phanariot regime, which lasted until 1821, Ottoman political interference in the principalities' internal affairs, economic and fiscal exploitation, and corruption reached its height. Yet it was also an era of significant reforms under forward-looking princes such as Constantin Mavrocordat (ruled six times in Walachia and four times in Moldavia between 1730 and 1769), who reorganized administrative, judicial, and fiscal institutions and abolished serfdom in Walachia in 1746 and in Moldavia in 1749, and Alexandru Ipsilanti of Walachia (ruled 1774–1782, 1796–1797) and Moldavia (ruled 1786–1788), who introduced new governmental reforms and undertook the codification of laws. In the latter decades of the eighteenth century, the striving for independence became more intense and was led by the boiers (nobles). Their efforts coincided with Russia's own policy of aggrandizement against the Ottomans and brought an easing of Ottoman rule. The Treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji (1774) required the sultan to respect the autonomy of the principalities guaranteed in the ahd-names and enabled Russia to intervene regularly on their behalf.

The economy of the principalities rested on agriculture. Production was organized around large estates controlled by the boiers and the monasteries, which were worked by peasants, many of whom were serfs (before 1746 and 1749) or were dependent in some other way. There were also free peasants who had their own holdings, but their numbers steadily declined. Artisan crafts were practiced in villages as well as towns, where they were organized into guilds; production was mainly consumed locally. Local commerce was carried on by small merchants, artisans, and peasants, while long-distance and transit trade was mainly in the hands of foreign merchants. Among the main exports of the principalities were foodstuffs, timber, and salt, the bulk of it going to the Ottoman Empire, which monopolized their foreign trade.

Society was dominated by the boiers, who formed a hereditary estate and owed their status to control of land and to posts in government. The great majority of the population (about 600,000 in Walachia and 400,000 in Moldavia in 1700) consisted of peasants, who bore the greatest share of taxation and other public burdens but had few civil or political rights. The native middle class was small, mainly because of the modest level of urbanization, the artisan industry, and commerce, and it exercised little influence in public affairs. The clergy of the Orthodox Church, to which the great majority of Walachians and Moldavians belonged, was the primary spiritual force, especially in the villages.

Cultural and intellectual life until the eighteenth century reflected the principalities' primary orientation toward the Byzantine-Orthodox world. Education was the province of the church, and monasteries were the centers for the copying and diffusion of manuscripts, which were almost all religious in nature. The majority of books, the printing of which began in 1508 with a liturgy book, were also religious. Slavonic persisted as the official language of the church and the princes' chancelleries until the seventeenth century. But influences came from the West, too. The Reformation stirred religious debate and hastened the replacement of Slavonic by Romanian. Contacts with Western scholarship helped transform chronicles into true histories, as in the works of Miron Costin (1633–1691), which revealed a new, secular consciousness of man's destiny. The Enlightenment brought the elites still closer to Europe and provided them with the analytical tools they needed to define their condition and chart their future. By the end of the eighteenth century, the transition from a medieval to a modern society was underway.

Bibliography

Duţu, Alexandru. Romanian Humanists and European Culture: A Contribution to Comparative Cultural History. Bucharest, 1977.

Hitchins, Keith. The Romanians, 1774–1866. Oxford, 1996.

Iorga, Nicolae. Histoire des Roumains et de la Romanité orientale. Vols. 4–7 (10 Vols.). Bucharest, 1937–1940.

Maxim, Mihai. Tǎrile Române si Înalta Poartǎ. Cadrul juridic al relatiilor româno-otomane în Evul Mediu. Bucharest, 1993.

Mihordea, V. Mâitres du sol et paysans dans les Principautés Roumaines au XVIIIe siècle. Bucharest, 1971.

Pippidi, Andrei. Traditia politicǎ bizantinǎîn Tǎrile Române în secolele XVI–XVIII. Bucharest, 1983.

—KEITH HITCHINS

Geography: Romania
Top

Republic in southeastern Europe on the northeast Balkan Peninsula, bordered by Hungary to the northwest, Ukraine to the northeast, Moldova and the Black Sea to the east, Bulgaria to the south, and the former Yugoslavia to the southwest. Its capital and largest city is Bucharest.


Dialing Code: Romania
Top

The international dialing code for Romania is:   40


Local Time: Romania
Top

It is 5:38 AM, November 26, in Romania.

Currency: Romania
Top
Statistics: Romania
Top
Click to enlarge flag of Romania
Introduction
Background:The principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia - for centuries under the suzerainty of the Turkish Ottoman Empire - secured their autonomy in 1856; they united in 1859 and a few years later adopted the new name of Romania. The country gained recognition of its independence in 1878. It joined the Allied Powers in World War I and acquired new territories - most notably Transylvania - following the conflict. In 1940, Romania allied with the Axis powers and participated in the 1941 German invasion of the USSR. Three years later, overrun by the Soviets, Romania signed an armistice. The post-war Soviet occupation led to the formation of a Communist "people's republic" in 1947 and the abdication of the king. The decades-long rule of dictator Nicolae CEAUSESCU, who took power in 1965, and his Securitate police state became increasingly oppressive and draconian through the 1980s. CEAUSESCU was overthrown and executed in late 1989. Former Communists dominated the government until 1996 when they were swept from power. Romania joined NATO in 2004 and the EU in 2007.
Geography
Map of Romania
Location:Southeastern Europe, bordering the Black Sea, between Bulgaria and Ukraine
Geographic coordinates:46 00 N, 25 00 E
Map references:Europe
Area:total: 237,500 sq km
land: 230,340 sq km
water: 7,160 sq km
Area - comparative:slightly smaller than Oregon
Land boundaries:total: 2,508 km
border countries: Bulgaria 608 km, Hungary 443 km, Moldova 450 km, Serbia 476 km, Ukraine (north) 362 km, Ukraine (east) 169 km
Coastline:225 km
Maritime claims:territorial sea: 12 nm
contiguous zone: 24 nm
exclusive economic zone: 200 nm
continental shelf: 200 m depth or to the depth of exploitation
Climate:temperate; cold, cloudy winters with frequent snow and fog; sunny summers with frequent showers and thunderstorms
Terrain:central Transylvanian Basin is separated from the Moldavian Plateau on the east by the Eastern Carpathian Mountains and separated from the Walachian Plain on the south by the Transylvanian Alps
Elevation extremes:lowest point: Black Sea 0 m
highest point: Moldoveanu 2,544 m
Natural resources:petroleum (reserves declining), timber, natural gas, coal, iron ore, salt, arable land, hydropower
Land use:arable land: 39.49%
permanent crops: 1.92%
other: 58.59% (2005)
Irrigated land:30,770 sq km (2003)
Total renewable water resources:42.3 cu km (2003)
Freshwater withdrawal (domestic/industrial/agricultural):total: 6.5 cu km/yr (9%/34%/57%)
per capita: 299 cu m/yr (2003)
Natural hazards:earthquakes, most severe in south and southwest; geologic structure and climate promote landslides
Environment - current issues:soil erosion and degradation; water pollution; air pollution in south from industrial effluents; contamination of Danube delta wetlands
Environment - international agreements:party to: Air Pollution, Air Pollution-Persistent Organic Pollutants, Antarctic-Environmental Protocol, Antarctic Treaty, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Desertification, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands
signed, but not ratified: none of the selected agreements
Geography - note:controls most easily traversable land route between the Balkans, Moldova, and Ukraine
People
Population:22,215,421 (July 2009 est.)
Age structure:0-14 years: 15.5% (male 1,772,583/female 1,681,539)
15-64 years: 69.7% (male 7,711,062/female 7,784,041)
65 years and over: 14.7% (male 1,332,120/female 1,934,076) (2009 est.)
Median age:total: 37.7 years
male: 36.3 years
female: 39.2 years (2009 est.)
Population growth rate:-0.147% (2009 est.)
Birth rate:10.53 births/1,000 population (2009 est.)
Death rate:11.84 deaths/1,000 population (2008 est.)
Net migration rate:-0.13 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2009 est.)
Urbanization:urban population: 54% of total population (2008)
rate of urbanization: -0.1% annual rate of change (2005-10 est.)
Sex ratio:at birth: 1.06 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 0.99 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.69 male(s)/female
total population: 0.95 male(s)/female (2009 est.)
Infant mortality rate:total: 22.9 deaths/1,000 live births
male: 25.94 deaths/1,000 live births
female: 19.66 deaths/1,000 live births (2009 est.)
Life expectancy at birth:total population: 72.45 years
male: 68.95 years
female: 76.16 years (2009 est.)
Total fertility rate:1.39 children born/woman (2009 est.)
HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate:less than 0.1% (2007 est.)
HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/AIDS:15,000 (2007 est.)
HIV/AIDS - deaths:350 (2001 est.)
Nationality:noun: Romanian(s)
adjective: Romanian
Ethnic groups:Romanian 89.5%, Hungarian 6.6%, Roma 2.5%, Ukrainian 0.3%, German 0.3%, Russian 0.2%, Turkish 0.2%, other 0.4% (2002 census)
Religions:Eastern Orthodox (including all sub-denominations) 86.8%, Protestant (various denominations including Reformate and Pentecostal) 7.5%, Roman Catholic 4.7%, other (mostly Muslim) and unspecified 0.9%, none 0.1% (2002 census)
Languages:Romanian 91% (official), Hungarian 6.7%, Romany (Gypsy) 1.1%, other 1.2%
Literacy:definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 97.3%
male: 98.4%
female: 96.3% (2002 census)
School life expectancy (primary to tertiary education):total: 14 years
male: 14 years
female: 14 years (2006)
Education expenditures:3.5% of GDP (2005)
Government
Country name:conventional long form: none
conventional short form: Romania
local long form: none
local short form: Romania
Government type:republic
Capital:name: Bucharest
geographic coordinates: 44 26 N, 26 06 E
time difference: UTC+2 (7 hours ahead of Washington, DC during Standard Time)
daylight saving time: +1hr, begins last Sunday in March; ends last Sunday in October
Administrative divisions:41 counties (judete, singular - judet) and 1 municipality* (municipiu); Alba, Arad, Arges, Bacau, Bihor, Bistrita-Nasaud, Botosani, Braila, Brasov, Bucuresti (Bucharest)*, Buzau, Calarasi, Caras-Severin, Cluj, Constanta, Covasna, Dimbovita, Dolj, Galati, Gorj, Giurgiu, Harghita, Hunedoara, Ialomita, Iasi, Ilfov, Maramures, Mehedinti, Mures, Neamt, Olt, Prahova, Salaj, Satu Mare, Sibiu, Suceava, Teleorman, Timis, Tulcea, Vaslui, Vilcea, Vrancea
Independence:9 May 1877 (independence proclaimed from the Ottoman Empire; independence recognized 13 July 1878 by the Treaty of Berlin); 26 March 1881 (kingdom proclaimed); 30 December 1947 (republic proclaimed)
National holiday:Unification Day (of Romania and Transylvania), 1 December (1918)
Constitution:8 December 1991; revised 29 October 2003
Legal system:based on civil law system; has not accepted compulsory ICJ jurisdiction
Suffrage:18 years of age; universal
Executive branch:chief of state: President Traian BASESCU (since 20 December 2004); note - President Traian BASESCU was suspended by vote of parliament on 19 April 2007, but resumed his duties on 23 May 2007 after a popular referendum confirmed that his impeachment should not stand
head of government: Prime Minister Emil BOC (since 22 December 2008)
cabinet: Council of Ministers appointed by the prime minister
elections: president elected by popular vote for a five-year term (eligible for a second term); election last held 28 November 2004 with runoff between the top two candidates held 12 December 2004 (next to be held in November-December 2009); prime minister appointed by the president with the consent of the Parliament
election results: percent of vote - Traian BASESCU 51.23%, Adrian NASTASE 48.77%
Legislative branch:bicameral Parliament or Parlament consists of the Senate or Senat (137 seats; members are elected by popular vote in a mixed electoral system to serve four-year terms) and the Chamber of Deputies or Camera Deputatilor (334 seats; members are elected by popular vote in a mixed electoral system to serve four-year terms)
elections: Senate - last held 30 November 2008 (next expected to be held in November 2012); Chamber of Deputies - last held 30 November 2008 (next expected to be held November 2012)
election results: Senate - percent of vote by alliance/party - PSD-PC 34.2%, PDL 33.6%, PNL 18.7%, UDMR 6.4%, other 7.1%; seats by alliance/party - PSD-PC 49, PDL 51, PNL 28, UDMR 9; Chamber of Deputies - percent of vote by alliance/party - PSD-PC 33.1%, PDL 32.4%, PNL 18.6%, UDMR 6.2%, ethnic minorities 3.6%, other 6.1%; seats by alliance/party - PSD-PC 114, PDL 115, PNL 65, UDMR 22, ethnic minorities 18
Judicial branch:Supreme Court of Justice (comprised of 11 judges appointed for three-year terms by the president in consultation with the Superior Council of Magistrates, which is comprised of the minister of justice, the prosecutor general, two civil society representatives appointed by the Senate, and 14 judges and prosecutors elected by their peers); a separate body, the Constitutional Court, validates elections and makes decisions regarding the constitutionality of laws, treaties, ordinances, and internal rules of the Parliament; it is comprised of nine members serving nine-year terms, with three members each appointed by the president, the Senate, and the Chamber of Deputies
Political parties and leaders:Conservative Party or PC [Daniela POPA] (formerly Humanist Party or PUR); Democratic Liberal Party or PDL [Emil BOC]; Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania or UDMR [Bela MARKO]; National Liberal Party or PNL [Calin Popescu-TARICEANU]; Social Democratic Party or PSD [Mircea Dan GEOANA] (formerly Party of Social Democracy in Romania or PDSR)
Political pressure groups and leaders:other: various human rights and professional associations
International organization participation:Australia Group, BIS, BSEC, CE, CEI, EAPC, EBRD, EIB, ESA (cooperating state), EU, FAO, G-9, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICCt, ICRM, IDA, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, IMSO, Interpol, IOC, IOM, IPU, ISO, ITSO, ITU, ITUC, LAIA (observer), MIGA, MONUC, NAM (guest), NATO, NSG, OAS (observer), OIF, OPCW, OSCE, PCA, SECI, UN, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNHCR, UNIDO, Union Latina, UNMIL, UNMIS, UNOCI, UNOMIG, UNWTO, UPU, WCL, WCO, WEU (associate partner), WFTU, WHO, WIPO, WMO, WTO, ZC
Diplomatic representation in the US:chief of mission: Ambassador Adrian Cosmin VIERITA
chancery: 1607 23rd Street NW, Washington, DC 20008
telephone: [1] (202) 332-4846, 4848, 4851, 4852
FAX: [1] (202) 232-4748
consulate(s) general: Chicago, Los Angeles, New York
Diplomatic representation from the US:chief of mission: Ambassador (vacant); Charge D'Affaires Jeri GUTHRIE-CORN
embassy: Strada Tudor Arghezi 7-9, Bucharest
mailing address: pouch: American Embassy Bucharest, US Department of State, 5260 Bucharest Place, Washington, DC 20521-5260 (pouch)
telephone: [40] (21) 200-3300
FAX: [40] (21) 200-3442
Flag description:three equal vertical bands of blue (hoist side), yellow, and red; the national coat of arms that used to be centered in the yellow band has been removed; now similar to the flag of Chad, also resembles the flags of Andorra and Moldova
Economy
Economy - overview:Romania, which joined the European Union on 1 January 2007, began the transition from Communism in 1989 with a largely obsolete industrial base and a pattern of output unsuited to the country's needs. The country emerged in 2000 from a punishing three-year recession thanks to strong demand in EU export markets. Domestic consumption and investment have fueled strong GDP growth in recent years, but have led to large current account imbalances. Romania's macroeconomic gains have only recently started to spur creation of a middle class and address Romania's widespread poverty. Corruption and red tape continue to handicap its business environment. Inflation rose in 2007-08, driven in part by strong consumer demand and high wage growth, rising energy costs, a nation-wide drought affecting food prices, and a relaxation of fiscal discipline. Romania's strong GDP growth moderated markedly in the last quarter of 2008 as the country began to feel the effects of a global downturn in financial markets and trade, and growth is expected to be much weaker in 2009. Romania hopes to adopt the euro by 2014.
GDP (purchasing power parity):$271.2 billion (2008 est.)
$252.1 billion (2007)
$237.8 billion (2006)
note: data are in 2008 US dollars
GDP (official exchange rate):$213.9 billion (2008 est.)
GDP - real growth rate:7.6% (2008 est.)
6% (2007 est.)
7.9% (2006 est.)
GDP - per capita (PPP):$12,200 (2008 est.)
$11,300 (2007 est.)
$10,700 (2006 est.)
note: data are in 2008 US dollars
GDP - composition by sector:agriculture: 8.1%
industry: 36%
services: 55.9% (2008 est.)
Labor force:9.32 million (2008 est.)
Labor force - by occupation:agriculture: 29.7%
industry: 23.2%
services: 47.1% (2006)
Unemployment rate:3.6% (2008 est.)
Population below poverty line:25% (2005 est.)
Household income or consumption by percentage share:lowest 10%: 1.2%
highest 10%: 20.8% (2006)
Distribution of family income - Gini index:32 (2008)
Investment (gross fixed):31.5% of GDP (2008 est.)
Budget:revenues: $64.44 billion
expenditures: $71.16 billion (2008 est.)
Fiscal year:calendar year
Public debt:14.1% of GDP (2008 est.)
Inflation rate (consumer prices):7.8% (2008 est.)
Central bank discount rate:NA
Commercial bank prime lending rate:13.35% (31 December 2007)
Stock of money:$25.17 billion (31 December 2007)
Stock of quasi money:$34.96 billion (31 December 2007)
Stock of domestic credit:$58.76 billion (31 December 2007)
Market value of publicly traded shares:$44.93 billion (31 December 2007)
Agriculture - products:wheat, corn, barley, sugar beets, sunflower seed, potatoes, grapes; eggs, sheep
Industries:electric machinery and equipment, textiles and footwear, light machinery and auto assembly, mining, timber, construction materials, metallurgy, chemicals, food processing, petroleum refining
Industrial production growth rate:8% (2008 est.)
Electricity - production:58.25 billion kWh (2007 est.)
Electricity - consumption:48.43 billion kWh (2006 est.)
Electricity - exports:3.362 billion kWh (2007 est.)
Electricity - imports:1.277 billion kWh (2007 est.)
Electricity - production by source:fossil fuel: 62.5%
hydro: 27.6%
nuclear: 9.9%
other: 0% (2001)
Oil - production:112,400 bbl/day (2007 est.)
Oil - consumption:238,200 bbl/day (2006 est.)
Oil - exports:125,200 bbl/day (2005)
Oil - imports:219,000 bbl/day (2005)
Oil - proved reserves:600 million bbl (1 January 2008 est.)
Natural gas - production:12.5 billion cu m (2006 est.)
Natural gas - consumption:17.09 billion cu m (2007)
Natural gas - exports:0 cu m (2007 est.)
Natural gas - imports:4.8 billion cu m (2007 est.)
Natural gas - proved reserves:63 billion cu m (1 January 2008 est.)
Current account balance:-$28.03 billion (2008 est.)
Exports:$59.75 billion f.o.b. (2008 est.)
Exports - commodities:machinery and equipment, textiles and footwear, metals and metal products, machinery and equipment, minerals and fuels, chemicals, agricultural products
Exports - partners:Italy 17.2%, Germany 16.9%, France 7.7%, Turkey 7%, Hungary 5.6%, UK 4.1% (2007)
Imports:$92.09 billion f.o.b. (2008 est.)
Imports - commodities:machinery and equipment, fuels and minerals, chemicals, textile and products, metals, agricultural products
Imports - partners:Germany 17.2%, Italy 12.8%, Hungary 6.9%, Russia 6.3%, France 6.2%, Turkey 5.4%, Austria 4.8% (2007)
Reserves of foreign exchange and gold:$44.47 billion (31 December 2008 est.)
Debt - external:$92.76 billion (31 December 2008 est.)
Stock of direct foreign investment - at home:$72.82 billion (2008 est.)
Stock of direct foreign investment - abroad:$1.015 billion (2008 est.)
Currency (code):"new" leu (RON) was introduced in 2005; "old" leu (ROL) was phased out in 2006; note - because of currency revaluation, 10,000 ROL = 1 RON
Currency code:ROL
Exchange rates:lei (RON) per US dollar - 2.5 (2008 est.), 2.43 (2007), 2.809 (2006), 3 (2005), 3 (2004)
Communications
Telephones - main lines in use:4.3 million (2007)
Telephones - mobile cellular:22.875 million (2007)
Telephone system:general assessment: the telecommunications sector is being expanded and modernized; domestic and international service improving rapidly, especially in wireless telephony
domestic: more than 90 percent of telephone network is automatic; fixed-line teledensity is roughly 20 telephones per 100 persons; mobile-cellular teledensity, expanding rapidly, now slightly exceeds 100 telephones per 100 persons
international: country code - 40; the Black Sea Fiber Optic System provides connectivity to Bulgaria and Turkey; satellite earth stations - 10; digital, international, direct-dial exchanges operate in Bucharest (2007)
Radio broadcast stations:698 (station frequency type NA) (2006)
Radios:7.2 million (1997)
Television broadcast stations:623 (plus 200 repeaters) (2006)
Televisions:5.25 million (1997)
Internet country code:.ro
Internet hosts:2.195 million (2008)
Internet Service Providers (ISPs):38 (2000)
Internet users:12 million (2007)
Transportation
Airports:53 (2008)
Airports - with paved runways:total: 25
over 3,047 m: 4
2,438 to 3,047 m: 10
1,524 to 2,437 m: 11 (2008)
Airports - with unpaved runways:total: 28
914 to 1,523 m: 7
under 914 m: 21 (2008)
Heliports:2 (2007)
Pipelines:gas 3,588 km; oil 2,424 km (2008)
Railways:total: 10,789 km
broad gauge: 57 km 1.524-m gauge
standard gauge: 10,731 km 1.435-m gauge (3,965 km electrified)
narrow gauge: 1 km 0.760-m gauge (2007)
Roadways:total: 198,817 km
paved: 60,043 km (includes 228 km of expressways)
unpaved: 138,774 km (2004)
Waterways:1,731 km
note: includes 1,075 km on Danube River, 524 km on secondary branches, and 132 km on canals (2006)
Merchant marine:total: 17
by type: cargo 11, passenger 1, passenger/cargo 2, petroleum tanker 2, roll on/roll off 1
registered in other countries: 49 (Cambodia 1, Georgia 16, North Korea 4, Liberia 2, Malta 8, Marshall Islands 1, Moldova 3, Panama 7, Saint Kitts and Nevis 1, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1, Sierra Leone 3, Syria 2) (2008)
Ports and terminals:Braila, Constanta, Galati, Tulcea
Military
Military branches:Land Forces, Naval Forces, Romanian Air Force (Fortele Aeriene Romane, FAR), Special Operations (2009)
Military service age and obligation:18-35 years of age for male and female voluntary military service; conscription officially ended October 2006; all military inductees (including women) contract for an initial 5-year term of service, with subsequent successive contracts for 3-year terms until age 36 (2009)
Manpower available for military service:males age 16-49: 5,682,299
females age 16-49: 5,557,098 (2008 est.)
Manpower fit for military service:males age 16-49: 4,542,720
females age 16-49: 4,604,484 (2009 est.)
Manpower reaching militarily significant age annually:male: 124,356
female: 118,430 (2009 est.)
Military expenditures:1.9% of GDP (2007 est.)
Transnational Issues
Disputes - international:the ICJ gave Ukraine until December 2006 to reply, and Romania until June 2007 to issue a rejoinder, in their dispute submitted in 2004 over Ukrainian-administered Zmiyinyy/Serpilor (Snake) Island and Black Sea maritime boundary delimitation; Romania also opposes Ukraine's reopening of a navigation canal from the Danube border through Ukraine to the Black Sea
Illicit drugs:major transshipment point for Southwest Asian heroin transiting the Balkan route and small amounts of Latin American cocaine bound for Western Europe; although not a significant financial center, role as a narcotics conduit leaves it vulnerable to laundering, which occurs via the banking system, currency exchange houses, and casinos


Romania ranks as one of the top ten wine-producing countries, yet few Romanian wines are seen in Western countries. With the fall of the communist regime, however, this is slowly changing. Romania grows many international as well local grape varieties and produces a wide assortment of wines. In general, the white wines are better than the reds. Some of the white grapes grown here are Banat Riesling, chardonnay Feteasca% Alba%, gewürztraminer Grasa%, muscat, riesling Rülander (pinot gris), and Tamiîoasa% Romaneasca. The red varieties used include cabernet sauvignon Babeasca Neagra, Feteasca% Negra%, merlot and pinot noir. The Tîrnave area in the northern part of the country (Transylvania) is thought to produce Romania's best wines. By most accounts, however, the sweet sauternes-style wines from Cotnari in the northeast (Moldavia) are really the only ones worth seeking. Other growing areas include Stefa%nesti, Dra­ga%sa%ni, and Segarcea, all in the southern part of the country; Odobes¸ti, Nicores¸ti, and Cotes¸ti in the eastern portion; Murfatlar near the Black Sea; the Banat Plain in the west; and Dealul Mare in the southeast where Pinot Noir and other international varieties are grown.

National Anthem: National Anthem of: Romania
Top

Desteapta-te, romane, din somnul cel de moarte,
In care te-adancira barbarii de tirani!
Acum ori niciodata croieste-ti alta soarte,
La care sa se-nchine si cruzii tai dusmani!
Acum ori niciodata sa dam dovezi in lume
Ca-n aste mani mai curge un sange de roman,
Si ca-n a noastre piepturi pastram cu fala-un nume
Triumfator in lupte, un nume de Traian!
Priviti, marete umbre, Mihai, Stefan, Corvine,
Romana natiune, ai vostri stranepoti,
Cu bratele armate, cu focul vostru-n vine,
„Viata-n libertate ori moarte!“ striga toti.
Preoti, cu crucea-n frunte! caci oastea e crestina,
Deviza-i libertate si scopul ei preasfant,
Murim mai bine-n lupta, cu glorie deplina,
Decat sa fim sclavi iarasi in vechiul nost' pamant!

 
Blogs: Related blogs on: Romania
Top
Wikipedia: Romania
Top
Romania
România
Flag Coat of arms
AnthemDeşteaptă-te, române!
Awaken, Romanian!

Location of  Romania  (green)

– on the European continent  (light green & grey)
– in the European Union  (light green)  —  [Legend]

Capital
(and largest city)
Bucharest (Bucureşti)
44°25′N 26°06′E / 44.417°N 26.1°E / 44.417; 26.1
Official languages Romanian1
Ethnic groups  89.5% Romanians, 6.6% Hungarians, 2.5% Roma, 1.4% other minority groups
Demonym Romanian
Government Unitary semi-presidential republic
 -  President Traian Băsescu
 -  Prime Minister Emil Boc
Legislature Parliament
 -  Upper House Senate
 -  Lower House Chamber of Deputies
Formation
 -  Transylvania 10th century 
 -  Wallachia 1290 
 -  Moldavia 1346 
 -  First Unification 1599 
 -  Reunification of Wallachia and Moldavia January 24, 1859 
 -  Officially recognised independence from the Ottoman Empire July 13, 1878 
 -  Unification with Transylvania December 1, 1918 
EU accession January 1, 2007
Area
 -  Total 238,391 km2 (82nd)
92,043 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) 3
Population
 -  1 January 2009 estimate &0000000021498616.00000021,498,616[1] (52nd)
 -  2002 census 21,680,974 
 -  Density 90/km2 (104th)
233/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2008 estimate
 -  Total $270.772 billion[2] (39th)
 -  Per capita $12,600[2] (65th)
GDP (nominal) 2008 estimate
 -  Total $200.074 billion[2] (43rd)
 -  Per capita $9,310[2] (61st)
Gini (2003) 312 (low) (21st)
HDI (2009) 0.837 (high) (63rd)
Currency Leu (L)2 (RON)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 -  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Drives on the right
Internet TLD .ro .eu
Calling code 40
1 Other languages, such as Hungarian, German, Turkish, Crimean Tatar, Greek, Romani, Croatian, Macedonian, Ukrainian and Serbian, are official at various local levels.
2 Romanian War of Independence.
3 Treaty of Berlin.

Romania (pronounced /roʊˈmeɪniə/ ( listen); archaic: Rumania, Roumania; Romanian: România [romɨˈni.a]  ( listen)) is a country located in Southeastern and Central Europe, North of the Balkan Peninsula, on the Lower Danube, within and outside the Carpathian arch, bordering on the Black Sea[3]. Almost all of the Danube Delta is located within its territory. Romania shares a border with Hungary and Serbia to the west, Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova to the northeast, and Bulgaria to the south.

The territory's recorded history includes periods of rule by Dacians, the Roman Empire, the Bulgarian empire, the Kingdom of Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire. As a nation-state, the country was formed by the merging of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859 and it gained recognition of its independence in 1878. Later, in 1918, they were joined by Transylvania, Bukovina and Bessarabia. At the end of World War II, parts of its territories (roughly the present day Republic of Moldova) were occupied by the USSR and Romania became a member of the Warsaw Pact.

With the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1989, Romania started a series of political and economic reforms. After a decade of post-revolution economic problems, Romania made economic reforms such as low flat tax rates in 2005 and joined the European Union on January 1, 2007. While Romania's income level remains one of the lowest in the European Union, reforms have increased the growth speed. Romania is now an upper-middle income country economy.

Romania has the 9th largest territory and the 7th largest population (with 21.5 million people)[4] among the European Union member states. Its capital and largest city is Bucharest (Romanian: Bucureşti [bukuˈreʃtʲ]  ( listen)), the 6th largest city in the EU with 1.9 million people. In 2007, Sibiu, a city in Transylvania, was chosen as a European Capital of Culture.[5] Romania also joined NATO on March 29, 2004, and is also a member of the Latin Union, of the Francophonie, of the OSCE and of the United Nations, as well as an associate member of the CPLP. Romania is a semi-presidential unitary state.

Contents

Etymology

The name of Romania (Romanian: România) comes from Romanian: român which is a derivative of the Latin: Romanus (Roman).[6] The fact that Romanians call themselves a derivative of Romanus (Romanian: Român/Rumân) is mentioned as early as the 16th century by many authors, including Italian Humanists travelling in Transylvania, Moldavia and Wallachia.[7][8][9][10] The oldest surviving document written in the Romanian language is a 1521 letter known as "Neacşu's Letter from Câmpulung".[11] This document is also notable for having the first occurrence of "Rumanian" in a Romanian written text, Wallachia being here named The Rumanian Land – Ţeara Rumânească (Ţeara from the Latin: Terra land).

In the following centuries, Romanian documents use interchangeably two spelling forms: Român and Rumân.[note 1] Socio-linguistic evolutions in the late 17th century led to a process of semantic differentiation: the form "rumân", presumably usual among lower classes, got the meaning of "bondsman", while the form român kept an ethno-linguistic meaning.[12] After the abolition of serfdom in 1746, the form "rumân" gradually disappears and the spelling definitively stabilises to the form "român", "românesc".[note 2] The name "România" as common homeland of all Romanians is documented in the early 19th century.[note 3] This name has been officially in use since December 11, 1861.[13]

English-language sources still used the terms "Rumania" or "Roumania", borrowed from the French spelling "Roumanie", as recently as World War II,[14] but since then those terms have largely been replaced with the official[15] spelling "Romania".

History

Prehistory and Antiquity

A relief of Dacian king Decebalus from Trajan's Column

The oldest modern human remains in Europe were discovered in the "Cave With Bones" in present day Romania.[16] The remains are approximately 42,000 years old and as Europe’s oldest remains of Homo sapiens, they may represent the first such people to have entered the continent.[17] But the earliest written evidence of people living in the territory of the present-day Romania comes from Herodotus in book IV of his Histories (Herodotus) written 440 BCE, where he writes about the Getae tribes.[18]

Dacians, considered a part of these Getae, were a branch of Thracians that inhabited Dacia (corresponding to modern Romania, Moldova and northern Bulgaria). The Dacian kingdom reached its maximum expansion during King Burebista, around 82 BC, and soon came under the scrutiny of the neighboring Roman Empire. After an attack by the Dacians on the Roman province of Moesia in 87 AD, the Romans led a series of wars (Dacian Wars) which eventually led to the victory of Emperor Trajan in 106 AD, and transformed the core of the kingdom into the province of Roman Dacia.[19]

Rich ore deposits were found in the province, and especially gold and silver were plentiful.[20] which led to Rome heavily colonizing the province.[21] This brought Vulgar Latin and started a period of intense romanization, that would give birth to proto-Romanian.[22][23] Nevertheless, in the 3rd century AD, with the invasions of migratory populations such as Goths, the Roman Empire was forced to pull out of Dacia around 271 AD, thus making it the first province to be abandoned.[24][25]

Several competing theories have been generated to explain the origin of modern Romanians. Linguistic and geo-historical analysis tend to indicate that Romanians have coalesced as a major ethnic group both South and North of the Danube.[26] For further discussion, see Origin of Romanians.

Middle Ages

Bran Castle was built in 1212, and became commonly known as Dracula's Castle after the myths that it was the home of Vlad III the Impaler

After the Roman army and administration left Dacia, the territory was invaded by the Goths,[27] then, in the 4th century by Huns.[28] They were followed by more nomads including Gepids,[29][30] Avars,[31] Bulgars,[29] Pechenegs,[32] and Cumans.[33]

In the Middle Ages, Romanians lived in three distinct principalities: Wallachia (Romanian: Ţara Românească—"Romanian Land"), Moldavia (Romanian: Moldova) and Transylvania. By the 11th century, Transylvania became a largely autonomous part of the Kingdom of Hungary,[34] and became independent as the Principality of Transylvania from the 16th century,[35] until 1711.[36] In the other Romanian principalities, many small local states with varying degrees of independence developed, but only in the 14th century did the larger principalities of Wallachia (1310) and Moldavia (around 1352) emerge to fight the threat of the Ottoman Empire.[37][38] Vlad III the Impaler maintained an independent policy in relation to the Ottoman Empire, and, in 1462, defeated Mehmed II's offensive during The Night Attack.[39]

By 1541, the entire Balkan peninsula and most of Hungary became Ottoman provinces. In contrast, Moldavia, Wallachia, and Transylvania, came under Ottoman suzerainty, but conserved fully internal autonomy and, until the 18th century, some external independence. During this period the Romanian lands were characterised by the slow disappearance of the feudal system; the distinguishment of some rulers like Stephen the Great, Vasile Lupu, and Dimitrie Cantemir in Moldavia, Matei Basarab, Vlad III the Impaler, and Constantin Brâncoveanu in Wallachia, Gabriel Bethlen in Transylvania; the Phanariot Epoch; and the appearance of the Russian Empire as a political and military influence.[40]

Moldavia, Wallachia and Transylvania at the end of the 16th century

In 1600, the principalities of Wallachia, Moldova and Transylvania were simultaneously headed by the Wallachian prince Michael the Brave (Mihai Viteazul), Ban of Oltenia, but the chance for a unity dissolved after Mihai was killed, only one year later, by the soldiers of Austrian army general Giorgio Basta. Mihai Viteazul, who was prince of Transylvania for less than one year, intended for the first time to unite the three principalities and to lay down foundations of a single state in a territory comparable to today's Romania.[41]

After his death, as vassal tributary states, Moldova and Wallachia had complete internal autonomy and external independence, which was finally lost in the 18th century. In 1699, Transylvania became a territory of the Habsburgs' Austrian empire, following the Austrian victory over the Turks in the Great Turkish War. The Austrians, in their turn, rapidly expanded their empire: in 1718 an important part of Wallachia, called Oltenia, was incorporated to the Austrian monarchy and was only returned in 1739. In 1775, the Austrian empire occupied the north-western part of Moldavia, later called Bukovina, while the eastern half of the principality (called Bessarabia) was occupied in 1812 by Russia.[40]

Independence and monarchy

Territories inhabited by Romanians before WWI

During the period of Austro-Hungarian rule in Transylvania, and Ottoman suzerainty over Wallachia and Moldavia, most Romanians were in the situation of being second-class citizens (or even non-citizens)[42] in a territory where they formed the majority of the population.[43][44] In some Transylvanian cities, such as Braşov (at that time the Transylvanian Saxon citadel of Kronstadt), Romanians were not even allowed to reside within the city walls.[45]

After the failed 1848 Revolution, the Great Powers did not support the Romanians' expressed desire to officially unite in a single state, which forced Romania to proceed alone against the Ottomans. The electors in both Moldavia and Wallachia chose in 1859 the same person –Alexandru Ioan Cuza– as prince (Domnitor in Romanian).[46] Thus, Romania was created as a personal union, albeit a Romania that did not include Transylvania. There, the upper class and the aristocracy remained mainly Hungarian, and Romanian nationalism inevitably ran up against Hungarian in the late 19th century. As in the previous 900 years, Austria-Hungary, especially under the Dual Monarchy of 1867, kept the Hungarians firmly in control even in the parts of Transylvania where Romanians constituted a local majority.

In a 1866 coup d'état, Cuza was exiled and replaced by Prince Karl of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, who became known as Prince Carol of Romania. During the Russo-Turkish War Romania fought on the Russian side,[47] in and in the 1878 Treaty of Berlin, Romania was recognized as an independent state by the Great Powers.[48][49] In return, Romania ceded three southern districts of Bessarabia to Russia and acquired Dobruja. In 1881, the principality was raised to a kingdom and Prince Carol became King Carol I.

The 1878–1914 period was one of stability and progress for Romania. During the Second Balkan War, Romania joined Greece, Serbia, Montenegro and Turkey against Bulgaria, and in the peace Treaty of Bucharest (1913) Romania gained Southern Dobrudja.[50]

World Wars and Greater Romania

(1916–1945)
Romanian territory during the 20th century: purple indicates the Old Kingdom before 1913, pink indicates Greater Romania areas that joined after WWI and remained so after WWII, and orange indicates areas that joined Romania after WWI or were annexed after the Second Balkan War, but were lost after WWII. The small Hertza region, also purple but delimited, was part of the Old Kingdom before 1913, but was lost after WWII.

In August 1914, when World War I broke out, Romania declared neutrality. Two years later, under pressure from the Allies (especially France, desperate to open a new front), on August 14/27 1916, Romania joined the Allies, declaring war on Austria-Hungary. For this action, under the terms of the secret military convention, Romania was promised support for its goal of national unity for all Romanian people.[51]

The Romanian military campaign ended in disaster for Romania as the Central Powers conquered two-thirds of the country and captured or killed the majority of its army within four months. Nevertheless, Moldavia remained in Romanian hands after the invading forces were stopped in 1917. By the war's end, Austria-Hungary and the Russian Empire had collapsed and disintegrated; Bessarabia, Bukovina and Transylvania proclaimed unions with the Kingdom of Romania in 1918. Total deaths from 1914 to 1918, military and civilian, within contemporary borders, were estimated at 748,000.[52] By the 1920 Treaty of Trianon, Hungary renounced in favour of Romania all the claims of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy over Transylvania.[53] The union of Romania with Bukovina was ratified in 1919 in the Treaty of Saint Germain,[54] and with Bessarabia in 1920 by the Treaty of Paris.[55]

The Romanian expression România Mare (literal translation "Great Romania", but more commonly rendered "Greater Romania") generally refers to the Romanian state in the interwar period, and by extension, to the territory Romania covered at the time (see map). Romania achieved at that time its greatest territorial extent (almost 300,000 km2/120,000 sq mi),[56] managing to unite all the historic Romanian lands.[56]

Romanian Army tanks entering Chişinău in 1941

During the Second World War, Romania tried again to remain neutral, but on June 28, 1940, it received a Soviet ultimatum with an implied threat of invasion in the event of non-compliance.[57] Under pressure from Moscow and Berlin, the Romanian administration and the army were forced to retreat from Bessarabia as well from Northern Bukovina to avoid war.[58] This, in combination with other factors, prompted the government to join the Axis. Thereafter, southern Dobruja was awarded to Bulgaria, while Hungary received Northern Transylvania as result of an Axis arbitration.[59] The authoritarian King Carol II abdicated in 1940, succeeded by the National Legionary State, in which power was shared by Ion Antonescu and the Iron Guard. Within months, Antonescu had crushed the Iron Guard, and the subsequent year Romania entered the war on the side of the Axis powers. During the war, Romania was the most important source of oil for Nazi Germany,[60] which attracted multiple bombing raids by the Allies. By means of the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union, Romania recovered Bessarabia and northern Bukovina from the Soviet Russia, under the leadership of general Ion Antonescu. The Antonescu regime played a major role in the Holocaust,[61] following to a lesser extent the Nazi policy of oppression and massacre of the Jews, and Romas, primarily in the Eastern territories Romania recovered or occupied from the Soviet Union (Transnistria) and in Moldavia.[62]

In August 1944, Antonescu was toppled and arrested by King Michael I of Romania. Romania changed sides and joined the Allies, but its role in the defeat of Nazi Germany was not recognized by the Paris Peace Conference of 1947.[63] By the end of the war, the Romanian army had suffered about 300,000 casualties.[64] Jewish Holocaust victims totaled 469,000 within the 1939 borders, including 325,000 in Bessarabia and Bukovina.[65]

Communism

(1945–1989)
The coat of arms of the Romanian Communist Party

With Red Army forces still stationed in the country and exerting de facto control, the Communist-dominated government called new elections, which were won with 80% of the vote through intimidation and likely electoral fraud.[66] They thus rapidly established themselves as the dominant political force.

In 1947, the Communists forced King Michael I to abdicate and leave the country, and proclaimed Romania a people's republic.[67][68] Romania remained under the direct military occupation and economic control of the USSR until the late 1950s. During this period, Romania's vast natural resources were continuously drained [69] by mixed Soviet-Romanian companies (SovRoms) set up for exploitative purposes.[70][71]

From the late 1940s to the early 1960s, the Communist government established a reign of terror, carried out mainly through the Securitate (the new secret police). During this time they launched several campaigns to eliminate "enemies of the state", in which numerous individuals were killed or imprisoned for arbitrary political or economic reasons.[72] Punishment included deportation, internal exile, and internment in forced labour camps and prisons; dissent was vigorously suppressed. A notorious experiment in this period took place in the Piteşti prison, where a group of political opponents were put into a program of reeducation through torture. Historical records show hundreds of thousands of abuses, deaths and incidents of torture against a wide range of people, from political opponents to ordinary citizens.[73]

In 1965, Nicolae Ceauşescu came to power and started to pursue independent policies such as being the only Warsaw Pact country to condemn the Soviet-led 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia, and to continue diplomatic relations with Israel after the Six-Day War of 1967; establishing economic (1963) and diplomatic (1967) relations with the Federal Republic of Germany.[74] Also, close ties with the Arab countries (and the PLO) allowed Romania to play a key role in the IsraelEgypt and Israel–PLO peace processes.[75] But as Romania's foreign debt sharply increased between 1977 and 1981 (from 3 to 10 billion US dollars),[76] the influence of international financial organisations such as the IMF or the World Bank grew, conflicting with Nicolae Ceauşescu's autarchic policies. He eventually initiated a project of total reimbursement of the foreign debt by imposing policies that impoverished Romanians and exhausted the Romanian economy, while also greatly extending the authority of the police state, and imposing a cult of personality. These led to a dramatic decrease in Ceauşescu's popularity and culminated in his overthrow and execution in the bloody Romanian Revolution of 1989.

In 2006, the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania estimated the number of direct victims of communist repression at two million people.[77][78] This number does not include people who died in liberty as a result of their treatment in communist prisons, nor does it include people who died because of the dire economic circumstances in which the country found itself.

Present-day democracy

After the revolution, the National Salvation Front, led by Ion Iliescu, took partial multi-party democratic and free market measures.[79][80] Several major political parties of the pre-war era, such as the Christian-Democratic National Peasants' Party, the National Liberal Party and the Romanian Social Democrat Party were resurrected. After several major political rallies, in April 1990, a sit-in protest contesting the results of the recently held parliamentary elections began in University Square, Bucharest accusing the Front of being made up of former Communists and members of the Securitate. The protesters did not recognize the results of the election, deeming them undemocratic, and asked for the exclusion from the political life of the former high-ranking Communist Party members. The protest rapidly grew to become an ongoing mass demonstration (known as the Golaniad). The peaceful demonstrations degenerated into violence, and the violent intervention of coal miners from the Jiu Valley led to what is remembered as the June 1990 Mineriad.[81]

The subsequent disintegration of the Front produced several political parties including the Romanian Democrat Social Party (later Social Democratic Party), the Democratic Party and the (Alliance for Romania). The first governed Romania from 1990 until 1996 through several coalitions and governments and with Ion Iliescu as head of state. Since then there have been three democratic changes of government: in 1996, the democratic-liberal opposition and its leader Emil Constantinescu acceded to power; in 2000 the Social Democrats returned to power, with Iliescu once again president; and in 2004 Traian Băsescu was elected president, with an electoral coalition called Justice and Truth Alliance. The government was formed by a larger coalition which also includes the Conservative Party and the ethnic Hungarian party.

Post-Cold War Romania developed closer ties with Western Europe, eventually joining NATO in 2004, and hosting in Bucharest the 2008 summit.[82] The country applied in June 1993 for membership in the European Union and became an Associated State of the EU in 1995, an Acceding Country in 2004, and a member on January 1, 2007.[83]

Following the free travel agreement and politic of the post-Cold War period, as well as hardship of the life in the post 1990s economic depression, Romania has an increasingly large diaspora, estimated at over 2 million people. The main emigration targets are Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria, UK, Canada and the USA.[84]

Geography

Topographic map of Romania

With a surface area of 238,391 square kilometres (92,043 sq mi), Romania is the largest country in southeastern Europe and the twelfth-largest in Europe.[85] A large part of Romania's border with Serbia and Bulgaria is formed by the Danube. The Danube is joined by the Prut River, which forms the border with the Republic of Moldova.[85] The Danube flows into the Black Sea within Romania's territory forming the Danube Delta, the second largest and the best preserved delta in Europe, and a biosphere reserve and a biodiversity World Heritage Site.[86] Other important rivers are the Siret, running north-south through Moldavia, the Olt, running from the oriental Carpathian Mountains to Oltenia, and the Mureş, running through Transylvania from East to West.[85]

Romania's terrain is distributed roughly equally between mountainous, hilly and lowland territories. The Carpathian Mountains dominate the center of Romania, with fourteen of its mountain ranges reaching above the altitude of 2,000 meters.[85] The highest mountain in Romania is Moldoveanu Peak (2,544 m/8,350 ft). In south-central Romania, the Carpathians sweeten into hills, towards the Bărăgan Plains. Romania's geographical diversity has led to an accompanying diversity of flora and fauna.[85]

Environment

Glacial lakes within Retezat National Park

A high percentage (47% of the land area) of the country is covered with natural and semi-natural ecosystems.[87] Since almost half of all forests in Romania (13% of the country) have been managed for watershed conservation rather than production, Romania has one of the largest areas of undisturbed forest in Europe.[87] The integrity of Romanian forest ecosystems is indicated by the presence of the full range of European forest fauna, including 60% and 40% of all European brown bears and wolves, respectively.[88] There are also almost 400 unique species of mammals (of which Carpathian chamois are best known), birds, reptiles and amphibians in Romania.[89]

There are almost 10,000 km2 (3,900 sq mi) (almost 5% of the total area) of protected areas in Romania.[90] Of these, Danube Delta Reserve Biosphere is the largest and least damaged wetland complex in Europe, covering a total area of 5,800 km2 (2,200 sq mi).[91] The significance of the biodiversity of the Danube Delta has been internationally recognised. It was declared a Biosphere Reserve in September 1990, a Ramsar site in May 1991, and over 50% of its area was placed on the World Heritage List in December 1991.[92] Within its boundaries is one of the most extensive reed bed systems in the world.[93] There are two other biosphera reserves: Retezat National Park and Rodna National Park.

Flora and fauna

In Romania there have been identified 3,700 plant species from which to date 23 have been declared natural monuments, 74 missing, 39 are endangered, 171 vulnerable and 1,253 are considered rare.[94] The three major vegetation areas in Romania are the alpine zone, the forest zone and the steppe zone. The vegetation is distributed in an storied manner in accordance with the characteristics of soil and climate, but according to altitude as: oak, flasks, linden, ash (in the steppe zone and low hills), beech, oak (between 500 and 1200 meters), spruce, fir, pine (between 1200 and 1800 m), juniper, Mountain Pine and dwarf trees (in 1800 and 2000 meters), alpine meadows consisting of small herbs (over 2000 meters).[95] Off the high valleys, due to persistent moisture, there is a specific vegetation of meadow, reed, rush, sedge, and often with patches of willows, poplars and Arini. In the Danube Delta swamp vegetation is dominant.[95]

The fauna of Romania consists of 33,792 species of animals, 33,085 invertebrate and 707 vertebrate.[94] The vertebrate species consist of 191 fish, 20 amphibian, 30 reptile, 364 bird and 102 mammal species.[94] Fauna is especially broken down by vegetation. Thus, specific floor steppe and forest steppe have the following species: rabbit, hamster, ground squirrel, pheasant, drop, quail, carp, perch, pike, catfish, the forest floor of hardwood (oak and beech): boar, wolf, fox, barbel, woodpecker, and for coniferous forest floor: trout, lynx, deer, goats and specific alpine fauna like black and bald eagles.[95] In particular the Danube Delta is the place where hundreds of species of birds exist, including pelicans, swans, wild geese and flamingos, birds that are protected by law. The delta is also a seasonal stopover for migratory birds. Some rare species of birds in the Dobrogea area are the pelican, cormorant, little deer, Red-breasted Goose, White-fronted Goose and the Mute Swan.[96]

Climate

Owing to its distance from the open sea and position on the southeastern portion of the European continent, Romania has a climate that is transitional between temperate and continental with four distinct seasons. The average annual temperature is 11 °C (52 °F) in the south and 8 °C (46 °F) in the north.[97] The extreme recorded temperatures are 44.5 °C (112.1 °F) in Ion Sion 1951 and −38.5 °C (−37 °F) in Bod 1942.[98]

Spring is pleasant with cool mornings and nights and warm days. Summers are generally very warm to hot, with summer (June to August) average maximum temperatures in Bucharest being around 28 °C (82 °F),[99] with temperatures over 35 °C (95 °F) fairly common in the lower-lying areas of the country. Minima in Bucharest and other lower-lying areas are around 16 °C (61 °F), but at higher altitudes both maxima and minima decline considerably. Autumn is dry and cool, with fields and trees producing colorful foliage. Winters can be cold, with average maxima even in lower-lying areas being no more than 2 °C (36 °F) and below −15 °C (5.0 °F) in the highest mountains, where some areas of permafrost occur on the highest peaks.[100]

Precipitation is average with over 750 mm (30 in) per year only on the highest western mountains — much of it falling as snow which allows for an extensive skiing industry. In the south-centern parts of the country (around Bucharest) the level of precipitation drops to around 600 mm (24 in),[101] while in the Danube Delta, rainfall levels are very low, and average only around 370 mm.

Demographics

Demographics of Romania between 1961-2003
Ethnic map of Romania in 2002

According to the 2002 census, Romania has a population of 21,698,181 and, similarly to other countries in the region, is expected to gently decline in the coming years as a result of sub-replacement fertility rates. Romanians make up 89.5% of the population. The largest ethnic minorities are Hungarians, who make up 6.6% of the population and Roma, or Gypsies, who make up 2.46% of the population. By the official census 535,250 Roma live in Romania.[note 4][102] Hungarians, who are a sizeable minority in Transylvania, constitute a majority in the counties of Harghita and Covasna. Ukrainians, Germans, Lipovans, Turks, Tatars, Serbs, Slovaks, Bulgarians, Croats, Greeks, Russians, Jews, Czechs, Poles, Italians, Armenians, as well as other ethnic groups, account for the remaining 1.4% of the population.[103] Of the 745,421 Germans in Romania in 1930,[104] only about 60,000 remained.[105] In 1924, there were 796,056 Jews in the Kingdom of Romania.[106] The number of Romanians and individuals with ancestors born in Romania living abroad is estimated at around 12 million.[84]

Languages

The official language of Romania is Romanian, an Eastern Romance language related to Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Catalan. Romanian is spoken as a first language by 91% of the population, with Hungarian and Rroma, being the most important minority languages, spoken by 6.7% and 1.1% of the population, respectively.[103] Until the 1990s, there was also a substantial number of German-speaking Transylvanian Saxons, even though many have since emigrated to Germany, leaving only 45,000 native German speakers in Romania. In localities where a given ethnic minority makes up more than 20% of the population, that minority's language can be used in the public administration and justice system, while native-language education and signage is also provided. English and French are the main foreign languages taught in schools. English is spoken by 5 million Romanians, French is spoken by 4–5 million, and German, Italian and Spanish are each spoken by 1–2 million people.[107] Historically, French was the predominant foreign language spoken in Romania, even though English has since superseded it. Consequently, Romanian English-speakers tend to be younger than Romanian French-speakers. Romania is, however, a full member of La Francophonie, and hosted the Francophonie Summit in 2006.[108] German has been taught predominantly in Transylvania, due to traditions tracing back to the Austro-Hungarian rule in this province.

Religion

Romania is a secular state, thus having no national religion. The dominant religious body is the Romanian Orthodox Church, an autocephalous church within the Eastern Orthodox communion; its members make up 86.7% of the population according to the 2002 census. Other important Christian denominations include Roman Catholicism (4.7%), Protestantism (3.7%), Pentecostalism (1.5%) and the Romanian Greek-Catholic Church (0.9%).[103] Romania also has a Muslim minority concentrated in Dobrogea, mostly of Turkish ethnicity and numbering 67,500 people.[109] Based on the 2002 census data, there are also 6,179 Jews, 23,105 people who are of no religion and/or atheist, and 11,734 who refused to answer. On December 27, 2006, a new Law on Religion was approved under which religious denominations can only receive official registration if they have at least 20,000 members, or about 0.1 percent of Romania's total population.[110]

Largest cities

Cluj-Napoca one of the largest Romanian cities

Bucharest is the capital and the largest city in Romania. At the census in 2002, its population was over 1.9 million.[111] The metropolitan area of Bucharest has a population of about 2.2 million. There are several plans to increase further its metropolitan area to about 20 times the area of the city proper.[112][113]

There are 5 more cities in Romania, with a population of around 300,000, that are also present in the EU's top 100 most populous cities. These are: Iaşi, Cluj-Napoca, Timişoara, Constanţa, and Craiova. The other cities with populations over 200,000 are Galaţi, Braşov, Ploieşti, Brăila and Oradea. Another 13 cities have populations over 100,000.[4]

At present, several of the largest cities have a metropolitan area: Constanţa (450,000 people), Braşov, Iaşi (both with around 400,000) and Oradea (260,000) and several others are planned: Timişoara (365,000), Cluj-Napoca (380,000), Brăila-Galaţi (600,000), Craiova (335,000), Bacău and Ploieşti.[114]

Education

Since the Romanian Revolution of 1989, the Romanian educational system has been in a continuous process of reform that has been both praised and criticized.[115] According to the Law on Education adopted in 1995, the educational system is regulated by the Ministry of Education and Research. Each level has its own form of organization and is subject to different legislation. Kindergarten is optional for children between 3 and 6 years old. Schooling starts at age 7 (sometimes 6), and is compulsory until the 10th grade (which usually corresponds to the age of 17 or 16).[116] Primary and secondary education are divided into 12 or 13 grades. Higher education is aligned with the European higher education area.

Aside from the official schooling system, and the recently-added private equivalents, there exists a semi-legal, informal, fully private tutoring system. Tutoring is mostly used during secondary as a preparation for the various examinations, which are notoriously difficult. Tutoring is widespread, and it can be considered a part of the Education System. It has subsisted and even prospered during the Communist regime.[117]

In 2004, some 4.4 million of the population were enrolled in school. Out of these, 650,000 in kindergarten, 3.11 million (14% of population) in primary and secondary level, and 650,000 (3% of population) in tertiary level (universities).[118] In the same year, the adult literacy rate was 97.3% (45th worldwide), while the combined gross enrollment ratio for primary, secondary and tertiary schools was 75% (52nd worldwide).[119] The results of the PISA assessment study in schools for the year 2000 placed Romania on the 34th rank out of 42 participant countries with a general weighted score of 432 representing 85% of the mean OECD score.[120] According to the Academic Ranking of World Universities, in 2006 no Romanian university was included in the first 500 top universities world wide.[121] Using similar methodology to these rankings, it was reported that the best placed Romanian university, Bucharest University, attained the half score of the last university in the world top 500.[122]

Romanian high school curricula have recently been censored and restructured, owing to a growing trend of religious conservatism. In 2006, the theory of evolution, which had been taught since the country's Communist era, was dropped from the compulsory curriculum nationwide. Philosophical writers critical of religion, such as Voltaire and Camus have also been removed from the philosophy curriculum. Instead, students are taught 7-day Creationism in Orthodox religion classes, which under new proposals could become compulsory.[123]

Government

Politics

The Constitution of Romania is based on the Constitution of France's Fifth Republic[124] and was approved in a national referendum on December 8, 1991.[124] A plebiscite held in October 2003 approved 79 amendments to the Constitution, bringing it into conformity with European Union legislation.[124] Romania is governed on the basis of multi-party democratic system and of the segregation of the legislative, executive and judicial powers.[124] Romania is a semi-presidential democratic republic where executive functions are shared between the president and the prime minister. The President is elected by popular vote for maximum two terms, and since the amendments in 2003, the terms are five years.[124] The President appoints the Prime Minister, who in turn appoints the Council of Ministers.[124] While the president resides at Cotroceni Palace, the Prime Minister with the Romanian Government is based at Victoria Palace.

The legislative branch of the government, collectively known as the Parliament (Parlamentul României), consists of two chambers – the Senate (Senat), which has 140 members, and the Chamber of Deputies (Camera Deputaţilor), which has 346 members.[124] The members of both chambers are elected every four years under a system of party-list proportional representation.[124]

The justice system is independent of the other branches of government, and is made up of a hierarchical system of courts culminating in the High Court of Cassation and Justice, which is the supreme court of Romania.[125] There are also courts of appeal, county courts and local courts. The Romanian judicial system is strongly influenced by the French model,[124][126] considering that it is based on civil law and is inquisitorial in nature. The Constitutional Court (Curtea Constituţională) is responsible for judging the compliance of laws and other state regulations to the Romanian Constitution, which is the fundamental law of the country. The constitution, which was introduced in 1991, can only be amended by a public referendum, the last one being in 2003. Since this amendment, the court's decisions cannot be overruled by any majority of the parliament.

The country's entry into the European Union in 2007 [127] has been a significant influence on its domestic policy. As part of the process, Romania has instituted reforms including judicial reform, increased judicial cooperation with other member states, and measures to combat corruption. Nevertheless, in 2006 Brussels report, Romania and Bulgaria were described as the two most corrupt countries in the EU.[128]

Administrative divisions

Map of the 8 development regions. The 41 local administrative units are also highlighted, but Bucharest and Ilfov county are lumped together. The two form a development region of their own, surrounded by the Sud region.

Romania is divided into forty-one counties (sing. judeţ, pl. judeţe), plus the municipality of Bucharest (Bucureşti) – which has equal rank. Each county is administered by a county council (consiliu judeţean), responsible for local affairs, as well as a prefect, who is appointed by the central government but cannot be a member of any political party, responsible for the administration of national (central) affairs at the county level. Since 2008, the president of the county council (preşedintele consiliului judeţean) is directly elected by the people, and not by the county council as before that.[129]

Each county is further subdivided into cities (sing. oraş, pl. oraşe) and communes (sing. comună, pl. comune), the former being urban, and the latter being rural localities. There are a total of 319 cities and 2686 communes in Romania.[130] Each city and commune has its own mayor (primar) and local council (consiliu local). 103 of the larger and more urbanised cities have the status of municipality, which gives them greater administrative power over local affairs. Bucharest is also reckoned as a city with municipality status, but it is unique among the other localities in that it is not part of a county. It does not have a county concil, but has a prefect. Bucharest elects a general mayor (primar general) and a general city council (Consiliul General Bucureşti). Each of Bucharest's six sectors also elects a mayor and a local council.[130]

The NUTS-3 level divisions reflect Romania's administrative-territorial structure, and correspond to the 41 counties, and the Bucharest municipality.[131] Cities and communes are NUTS-5 level divisions. The country currently does not have NUTS-4 level divisions, but there are plans to make such associating neighboring localities for better coordination of local development and assimilation of national and European funds.[131]

The 41 counties and Bucharest are grouped into eight development regions corresponding to NUTS-2 divisions in the European Union.[131] Prior to Romania's accession into the European Union, these were called statistical regions, and were used exclusively for statistical purposes. Thus, albeit they formally existed for over 40 years, the regions are publicly a news. There are proposals in the future to cancel county councils (but leave the prefects) and create regional councils instead. This would not change the nomenclature of the country's territorial subdivision, but would presumably allow better coordination of policy at the local level, more autonomy, and a smaller bureaucracy.[131]

There are also proposals to use four NUTS-1 level divisions; they would be called macroregions (Romanian:Macroregiune). NUTS-1 and -2 divisions have no administrative capacity and are instead used for co-ordinating regional development projects and statistical purposes.[131]

Foreign relations

Since December 1989, Romania has pursued a policy of strengthening relations with the West in general, more specifically with the United States and the European Union. It joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) on March 29, 2004, the European Union (EU) on January 1, 2007, and the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in 1972, and is a member of the World Trade Organization.

The current government has stated its goal of strengthening ties with and helping other Eastern European countries (in particular Moldova, Ukraine and Georgia) with the process of integration with the West.[132] Romania has also made clear since the late 1990s that it supports NATO and EU membership for the democratic former Soviet republics in Eastern Europe and the Caucasus.[132] Romania also declared its public support for Turkey, Croatia and Moldova joining the European Union.[132] With Turkey, Romania shares a privileged economic relation.[133] Because it has a large Hungarian minority, Romania has also developed strong relations with Hungary – the latter supported Romania's bid to join the EU.[134]

In December 2005, President Traian Băsescu and United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice signed an agreement that would allow a U.S. military presence at several Romanian facilities primarily in the eastern part of the country.[135] In May 2009, the American state secretary Hillary Clinton declared that "Romania is one of the most trustworthy and respectable partners of the USA" during a visit of the Romanian foreign minister.[136]

Relations with The Republic of Moldova are special,[132] considering that the two countries practically share the same language, and a fairly common historical background. A movement for unification of Romania and Moldova appeared in the early 1990s after both countries achieved emancipation from communist rule,[137] but quickly faded away with the new Moldovan government that had an agenda to preserve a Moldovan republic independent of Romania.[138] Romania remains interested in Moldovan affairs and has officially rejected the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact,[137] but the two countries have been unable even to reach agreement on a basic bilateral treaty.[139]

Armed Forces

The Romanian Armed Forces consist of Land, Air, and Naval Forces, and are led by a Commander-in-chief who is managed by the Ministry of Defense. The president is the Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces during wartime. Of the 90,000 men and women which the Armed Forces comprise, 15,000 are civilians and 75,000 are military personnel—45,800 for land, 13,250 for air, 6,800 for naval forces, and 8,800 in other fields.[140]

The total defence spending currently accounts for 2.05% of total national GDP, which represents approximately 2.9 billion dollars (ranked 39th). However, the Romanian Armed Forces will spend about 11 billion dollars between 2006 and 2011, for modernization and acquisition of new equipment.[141] The Land Forces have overhauled their equipment in the past few years, and today are an army with multiple NATO capabilities, participating in a NATO peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan. The Air Force currently operates modernized Soviet MiG-21LanceR fighters which are due to be replaced by new advanced 4.5 generation Western jet fighters, such as the F-16 Fighting Falcon, Eurofighter Typhoon or JAS 39 Gripen.[142] Also, in order to replace the bulk of the old transport force, the Air Force ordered seven new C-27J Spartan tactical airlift aircraft which are to be delivered starting with late 2008.[143] Two modernized ex-Royal Navy Type 22 frigates were acquired by the Naval Forces in 2004, and a further four modern missile corvettes will be commissioned until 2010.

Economy

ArcelorMittal steel mill in Galaţi

With a GDP of around $264 billion and a GDP per capita (PPP) of $12,285[144] estimated for 2008, Romania is an upper-middle income country economy[145] and has been part of the European Union since January 1, 2007.

After the Communist regime was overthrown in late 1989, the country experienced a decade of economic instability and decline, led in part by an obsolete industrial base and a lack of structural reform. From 2000 onwards, however, the Romanian economy was transformed into one of relative macroeconomic stability, characterised by high growth, low unemployment and declining inflation. In 2006, according to the Romanian Statistics Office, GDP growth in real terms was recorded at 7.7%, one of the highest rates in Europe.[146] Growth dampened to 6.1% in 2007,[147] but was expected to exceed 8% in 2008 because of a high production forecast in agriculture (30–50% higher than in 2007). The GDP grew by 8.9% in the first nine months of 2008, but growth fell to 2.9% in the fourth quarter and stood at 7.1% for the whole 2008 because of the financial crisis.[148]

According to Eurostat data, the Romanian PPS GDP per capita stood at 46% of the EU average in 2008.[149] Unemployment in Romania was at 3.9% in September 2007,[150] which is very low compared to other middle-sized or large European countries such as Poland, France, Germany and Spain. Foreign debt is also comparatively low, at 20.3% of GDP.[151] Exports have increased substantially in the past few years, with a 25% year-on-year rise in exports in the first quarter of 2006. Romania's main exports are clothing and textiles, industrial machinery, electrical and electronic equipment, metallurgic products, raw materials, cars, military equipment, software, pharmaceuticals, fine chemicals, and agricultural products (fruits, vegetables, and flowers). Trade is mostly centred on the member states of the European Union, with Germany and Italy being the country's single largest trading partners. The country, however, maintains a large trade deficit, which increased sharply during 2007 by 50%, to €15 billon.[152]

After a series of privatisations and reforms in the late 1990s and early 2000s, government intervention in the Romanian economy is somewhat lower than in other European economies.[153] In 2005, the government replaced Romania's progressive tax system with a flat tax of 16% for both personal income and corporate profit, resulting in the country having the lowest fiscal burden in the European Union,[154] a factor which has contributed to the growth of the private sector. The economy is predominantly based on services, which account for 55% of GDP, even though industry and agriculture also have significant contributions, making up 35% and 10% of GDP, respectively. Additionally, 32% of the Romanian population is employed in agriculture and primary production, one of the highest rates in Europe.[151]

Since 2000, Romania has attracted increasing amounts of foreign investment, becoming the single largest investment destination in Southeastern and Central Europe. Foreign direct investment was valued at €8.3 billion in 2006.[155] According to a 2006 World Bank report, Romania currently ranks 49th out of 175 economies in the ease of doing business, scoring higher than other countries in the region such as Hungary and the Czech Republic.[156] Additionally, the same study judged it to be the world's second-fastest economic reformer (after Georgia) in 2006.[157] The average gross wage per month in Romania was 1855 lei in May 2009,[158] equating to €442.48 (US$627.70) based on international exchange rates, and $1110.31 based on purchasing power parity.[159]

Transportation

Due to its location, Romania is a major crossroad for International economic exchange in Europe. However, because of insufficient investment, maintenance and repair, the transport infrastructure does not meet the current needs of a market economy and lags behind Western Europe.[160] Nevertheless, these conditions are rapidly improving and catching up with the standards of Trans-European transport networks. Several projects have been started with funding from grants from ISPA and several loans from International Financial Institutions (World Bank, IMF, etc.) guaranteed by the state, to upgrade the main road corridors. Also, the Government is actively pursuing new external financing or public-private partnerships to further upgrade the main roads, and especially the country's motorway network.[160]

The World Bank estimates that the railway network in Romania comprised 22,298 kilometres (13,855 mi) of track in 2004, which would make it the fourth largest railroad network in Europe.[161] The railway transport experienced a dramatic fall in freight and passenger volumes from the peak volumes recorded in 1989 mainly due to the decline in GDP and competition from road transport. In 2004, the railways carried 8.64 billion passenger-km in 99 million passenger journeys, and 73 million metric tonnes, or 17 billion ton-km of freight.[124] The combined total transportation by rail constituted around 45% of all passenger and freight movement in the country.[124]

Bucharest is the only city in Romania which has an underground railway system. The Bucharest Metro was only opened in 1979 and is now one of the most accessed systems of the Bucharest public transport network with an average ridership of 600,000 passengers during the workweek.[162]

Tourism

Mamaia Resort at the Black Sea shore

Tourism focuses on the country's natural landscapes and its rich history and is a significant contributor to the Romania's economy. In 2006, the domestic and international tourism generated about 4.8% of gross domestic product and 5.8% of the total jobs (about half a million jobs).[163] Following commerce, tourism is the second largest component of the services sector. Tourism is one of the most dynamic and fastest developing sectors of the economy of Romania and characterized by a huge potential for development. According to the World Travel and Tourism Council Romania is the fourth fastest growing country in the world in terms of travel and tourism total demand with a yearly potential growth of 8% from 2007-2016.[164] Number of tourists grew from 4.8 million in 2002 to 6.6 million in 2004.[124] Similarly, the revenues grew from 400 million in 2002 to 607 in 2004.[124] In 2006, Romania registered 20 million overnight stays by international tourists, an all-time record,[165] but the number for 2007 is expected to increase even more.[166] Tourism in Romania attracted €400 million in investments in 2005.[167]

A view from the Carpathian Mountains near Prahova Valley

Over the last years, Romania has emerged as a popular tourist destination for many Europeans (more than 60% of the foreign visitors were from EU countries),[166] thus attempting to compete with Bulgaria, Greece, Italy and Spain. Romania destinations such as Mangalia, Saturn, Venus, Neptun, Olimp, Constanta and Mamaia (sometimes called the Romanian Riviera) are among the most popular attraction during summer.[168] During winter, the skiing resorts along the Valea Prahovei and Poiana Braşov are popular with foreign visitors. For their medieval atmosphere and castles, Transylvanian cities such as Sibiu, Braşov, Sighişoara, Cluj-Napoca, Târgu Mureş have become important touristic attractions for foreigners. Rural tourism focused on folklore and traditions, has become an important alternative recently,[169] and is targeted to promote such sites as Bran and its Dracula's Castle, the Painted churches of Northern Moldavia, the Wooden churches of Maramureş, or the Merry Cemetery in Maramureş County.[170] Other major natural attractions in Romania such as Danube Delta,[124] Iron Gates (Danube Gorge), Scărişoara Cave and several other caves in the Apuseni Mountains have yet to receive great attention.

Culture

The Palace of Culture in Iaşi was built between 1906 and 1925 and hosts several museums

Romania has its unique culture, which is the product of its geography and of its distinct historical evolution. Like Romanians themselves, it is fundamentally defined as the meeting point of three regions: Central Europe, Eastern Europe, and the Balkans, but cannot be truly included in any of them.[171] The Romanian identity formed on a substratum of mixed Roman and quite possibly Dacian elements,[172] with many other influences. During late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, the major influences came from the Slavic peoples who migrated and settled in near Romania;[172] from medieval Greeks,[172] and the Byzantine Empire;[173] from a long domination by the Ottoman Empire;[174] from the Hungarians;[172] and from the Germans living in Transylvania. Modern Romanian culture emerged and developed over roughly the last 250 years under a strong influence from Western culture, particularly French,[173] and German culture.[173]

Arts

Romanian Athenaeum in Bucharest was opened in 1888
Brâncuşi's Endless Column in Târgu Jiu

The Romanian literature began to truly evolve with the revolutions of 1848 and the union of the two Danubian Principalities in 1859. The Origin of the Romanians began to be discussed and in Transylvania and Romanian scholars began studying in France, Italy and Germany.[173] The German philosophy and French culture were integrated into modern Romanian literature and a new elite of artists led to the appearance of some of the classics of the Romanian literature such as Mihai Eminescu, George Coşbuc, Ioan Slavici. Although they remain little known outside Romania, they are very appreciated within Romania for giving birth to a true Romanian literature by creating modern lyrics with inspiration from the old folklore tales. Of them, Eminescu is considered the most important and influential Romanian poet, and is still very much loved for his creations, and especially the poem Luceafărul.[175] Among other writers that made large contributions around the second half of 19th century are Mihail Kogălniceanu (also the first prime minister of Romania), Vasile Alecsandri, Nicolae Bălcescu, Ion Luca Caragiale, and Ion Creangă.

The first half of the 20th century is regarded by many Romanian scholars as the Golden Age of Romanian culture and it is the period when it reached its main level of international affirmation and a strong connection to the European cultural trends.[176] The most important artist who had a great influence on the world culture was the sculptor Constantin Brâncuşi, a central figure of the modern movement and a pioneer of abstraction, the innovator of world sculpture by immersion in the primordial sources of folk creation. His sculptures blend simplicity and sophistication that led the way for modernist sculptors.[177] As a testimony to his skill, one of his pieces, "Bird in Space" , was sold in an auction for $27.5 million in 2005, a record for any sculpture.[178][179] In the period between the two world wars, authors like Tudor Arghezi, Lucian Blaga, Eugen Lovinescu, Ion Barbu, Liviu Rebreanu made efforts to synchronize Romanian literature with the European literature of the time. George Enescu, probably the best known Romanian musician, also came from this period;[180] a composer, violinist, pianist, conductor, and teacher,[181] the annual George Enescu Festival is held in Bucharest in his honor.

After the world wars, communism brought heavy censorship and used the cultural world as a means to better control the population. Freedom of expression was constantly restricted in various ways, but the likes of Gellu Naum, Nichita Stănescu, Marin Sorescu or Marin Preda managed to escape censorship, broke with "socialist realism" and were the leaders of a small "Renaissance" in Romanian literature.[182] While not many of them managed to obtain international acclaim due to censorship, some, like Constantin Noica, Paul Goma and Mircea Cărtărescu, had their works published abroad even though they were jailed for various political reasons.

Some artists chose to leave the country entirely, and continued to make contributions in exile. Among them Eugen Ionescu, Mircea Eliade and Emil Cioran became renown worldwide for their works. Other literary figures who enjoy acclaim outside of the country include the poet Paul Celan and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel, both survivors of the Holocaust. Some famous Romanian artists musicians are the folk artist Tudor Gheorghe, and the virtuoso of the pan flute Gheorghe Zamfir – who is reported to have sold over 120 million albums worldwide.[183][184]

Romanian cinema has recently achieved worldwide acclaim with the appearance of such films as The Death of Mr. Lazarescu, directed by Cristi Puiu, (Cannes 2005 Prix un certain regard winner), and 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, directed by Cristian Mungiu (Cannes 2007 Palme d'Or winner).[185] The latter, according to Variety, is "further proof of Romania's new prominence in the film world."[186]

Monuments

The UNESCO List of World Heritage Sites[187] includes Romanian sites such as the Saxon villages with fortified churches in Transylvania, the Painted churches of northern Moldavia with their fine exterior and interior frescoes, the Wooden Churches of Maramures unique examples that combine Gothic style with traditional timber construction, the Monastery of Horezu, the citadel of Sighişoara, and the Dacian Fortresses of the Orăştie Mountains.[188] Romania's contribution to the World Heritage List stands out because it consists of some groups of monuments scattered around the country, rather than one or two special landmarks.[189] Also, in 2007, the city of Sibiu famous for its Brukenthal National Museum is the European Capital of Culture alongside the city of Luxembourg.

National Flag

The national flag of Romania is a tricolour with vertical stripes: beginning from the flagpole, blue, yellow and red. It has a width-length ratio of 2:3. Romania's national flag is very similar to that of Chad.[190][191][192]

Sports

Nadia Comăneci celebrating after she obtained the first-ever perfect score in an Olympic gymnastics competition

Football (soccer) is by far the most popular sport in Romania.[193] The governing body is the Romanian Football Federation, which belongs to UEFA. The top division of the Romanian Professional Football League attracted an average of 5417 spectators per game in the 2006–07 season.[194] At international level, the Romanian National Football Team has taken part 7 times in the Football World Cup, and it had the most successful period throughout the 1990s, when during the 1994 World Cup in the United States, Romania reached the quarter-finals and was ranked by FIFA on the 6th place. The core player of this "Golden Generation"[195] and perhaps the best known Romanian player internationally is Gheorghe Hagi (nicknamed the Maradona of the Carpathians).[196] Famous currently active players are Adrian Mutu and Cristian Chivu. The most famous football club is Steaua Bucureşti, who in 1986 became the first Eastern European club ever to win the prestigious European Champions Cup title, and who played the final again in 1989. Another successful Romanian team Dinamo Bucureşti played a semifinal in the European Champions Cup in 1984 and a Cup Winners Cup semifinal in the 1990. Other important Romanian football clubs are Rapid Bucureşti, CFR 1907 Cluj-Napoca and FC Universitatea Craiova.

Tennis is the second most popular sport in terms of registered sportsmen.[193] Romania reached the Davis Cup finals three times (1969, 1971, 1972). The tennis player Ilie Năstase won several Grand Slam titles and dozens of other tournaments, and was the first player to be ranked as number 1 by ATP from 1973 to 1974. The Romanian Open is held every fall in Bucharest since 1993.

Popular team sports are rugby union (national rugby team has so far competed at every Rugby World Cup), basketball and handball.[193] Some popular individual sports are: athletics, chess, sport dance, and martial arts and other fighting sports.[193]

Romanian gymnastics has had a large number of successes – for which the country became known worldwide.[197] In the 1976 Summer Olympics, the gymnast Nadia Comăneci became the first gymnast ever to score a perfect ten. She also won three gold medals, one silver and one bronze, all at the age of fifteen.[198] Her success continued in the 1980 Summer Olympics, where she was awarded two gold medals and two silver medals.

Romania participated in for the first time in the Olympic Games in 1900 and has taken part in 18 of the 24 summer games. Romania has been one of the more successful countries at the Summer Olympic Games (15th overall) with a total of 283 medals won throughout the years, 82 of which are gold medals.[199] Winter sports have received little investments and thus only a single bronze medal was won by Romanian sportsmen in the Winter Olympic Games.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "am scris aceste sfente cǎrţi de învăţături, sǎ fie popilor rumânesti... sǎ înţeleagǎ toţi oamenii cine-s rumâni creştini" "Întrebare creştineascǎ" (1559), Bibliografia româneascǎ veche, IV, 1944, p. 6.
    "...că văzum cum toate limbile au şi înfluresc întru cuvintele slǎvite a lui Dumnezeu numai noi românii pre limbă nu avem. Pentru aceia cu mare muncǎ scoasem de limba jidoveascǎ si greceascǎ si srâbeascǎ pre limba româneascǎ 5 cărţi ale lui Moisi prorocul si patru cărţi şi le dăruim voo fraţi rumâni şi le-au scris în cheltuială multǎ... şi le-au dăruit voo fraţilor români,... şi le-au scris voo fraţilor români" Palia de la Orǎştie (1581–1582), Bucureşti, 1968.
    În Ţara Ardealului nu lăcuiesc numai unguri, ce şi saşi peste seamă de mulţi şi români peste tot locul..., Grigore Ureche, Letopiseţul Ţării Moldovei, p. 133–134.
  2. ^ In his well known literary testament Ienăchiţă Văcărescu writes: "Urmaşilor mei Văcăreşti!/Las vouă moştenire:/Creşterea limbei româneşti/Ş-a patriei cinstire."
    In the "Istoria faptelor lui Mavroghene-Vodă şi a răzmeriţei din timpul lui pe la 1790" a Pitar Hristache writes: "Încep după-a mea ideie/Cu vreo câteva condeie/Povestea mavroghenească/Dela Ţara Românească.
  3. ^ The first known mention of the term "Romania" in its modern denotation dates from 1816, as the Greek scholar Dimitrie Daniel Philippide published in Leipzig his work "The History of Romania", followed by "The Geography of Romania".
    On the tombstone of Gheorghe Lazăr in Avrig (built in 1823) there is the inscription: "Precum Hristos pe Lazăr din morţi a înviat/Aşa tu România din somn ai deşteptat."
  4. ^ 2002 census data, based on Population by ethnicity, gives a total of 535,250 Roma in Romania. This figure is disputed by other sources, because at the local level, many Roma declare a different ethnicity (mostly Romanian, but also Hungarian in the West and Turkish in Dobruja) for fear of discrimination. Many are not recorded at all, since they do not have ID cards. International sources give higher figures than the official census(UNDP's Regional Bureau for Europe, World Bank, "International Association for Official Statistics" (PDF). Archived from the original on 2008-02-26. http://web.archive.org/web/20080226202154/http://www.msd.govt.nz/documents/publications/msd/journal/issue25/25-pages154-164.pdf. .

References

  1. ^ "Populaţia stabilă la 1.01.2009" (in Romanian). INSSE. May 19, 2009. http://www.insse.ro/cms/rw/resource/populatia%20stabila%20la%201%20ianuarie%202009%20si%2018.xls?download=true. Retrieved May 20, 2009. 
  2. ^ a b c d "Romania". International Monetary Fund. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2009/02/weodata/weorept.aspx?sy=2006&ey=2009&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=968&s=NGDPD%2CNGDPDPC%2CPPPGDP%2CPPPPC%2CLP&grp=0&a=&pr.x=17&pr.y=14. Retrieved 2009-10-01. 
  3. ^ North Atlantic Treaty Organization . NATO. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  4. ^ a b "Romanian Statistical Yearbook" (PDF). Romanian National Institute of Statistics. 2007. http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/pdf/en/cp2.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  5. ^ "Report on the Nominations from Luxembourg and Romania for the European Capital of Culture 2007" (pdf). The Selection Panel for the European Capital of Culture (ECOC) 2007. 2004-04-05. http://ec.europa.eu/culture/pdf/doc670_en.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  6. ^ Explanatory Dictionary of the Romanian Language, 1998; New Explanatory Dictionary of the Romanian Language, 2002
  7. ^ Andréas Verres. Acta et Epistolae. I. pp. 243. ""nunc se Romanos vocant"" 
  8. ^ Cl. Isopescu (1929). "Notizie intorno ai romeni nella letteratura geografica italiana del Cinquecento". Bulletin de la Section Historique XVI: 1–90. ""...si dimandano in lingua loro Romei...se alcuno dimanda se sano parlare in la lingua valacca, dicono a questo in questo modo: Sti Rominest ? Che vol dire: Sai tu Romano,..."". 
  9. ^ Maria Holban (1983) (in Romanian). Călători străini despre Ţările Române. II. Ed. Ştiinţifică şi Enciclopedică. pp. 158–161. "“Anzi essi si chiamano romanesci, e vogliono molti che erano mandati quì quei che erano dannati a cavar metalli...”" 
  10. ^ Paul Cernovodeanu (1960) (in Romanian). Voyage fait par moy, Pierre Lescalopier l’an 1574 de Venise a Constantinople, fol 48. IV. 444. ""Tout ce pays la Wallachie et Moldavie et la plus part de la Transivanie a esté peuplé des colonie romaines du temps de Traian l’empereur…Ceux du pays se disent vrais successeurs des Romains et nomment leur parler romanechte, c'est-à-dire romain … "" 
  11. ^ Iorga, N.. Hurmuzachi, Apud. ed. Neacsu's Letter from Campulung. Documente, XI. pp. 843. http://cimec.ro/Istorie/neacsu/rom/scrisoare.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  12. ^ Brezeanu, Stelian (1999). Romanitatea Orientalǎ în Evul Mediu. Bucharest: Editura All Educational. pp. 229–246. 
  13. ^ "Wallachia and Moldavia, 1859-61". http://www.fotw.net/flags/ro-wm.html. Retrieved 2008-01-05. 
  14. ^ "Map of Southern Europe, 1942-1945". United States Army Center of Military History via the University of Texas at Austin Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/historical/s_approaches_1942-1945.jpg. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  15. ^ "General principles" (in Romanian). cdep.ro. http://www.cdep.ro/pls/dic/site.page?den=act2_2&par1=1#t1c0s0a1. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  16. ^ Trinkaus, E. (2003). "Early Modern Human Cranial remains from the Peştera cu Oase". Journal of Human Evolution 45: 245–253. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2003.08.003. 
  17. ^ Zilhão, João (2006). "Neanderthals and Moderns Mixed and It Matters". Evolutionary Anthropology 15: 183–195. doi:10.1002/evan.20110. 
  18. ^ Herodotus (1859). The Ancient History of Herodotus By Herodotus. Derby & Jackson. pp. 213–217. http://books.google.com/books?id=sfHsgNIZum0C&pg=PA215&lpg=PA215&dq=herodotus+dacians+darius&source=web&ots=G4uX7Mnsqb&sig=kYPtXH157JEzuk7V618EreDadqY&hl=en. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  19. ^ "Assorted Imperial Battle Descriptions". De Imperatoribus Romanis, An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors. http://www.roman-emperors.org/assobd.htm#s-inx. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  20. ^ "Dacia-Province of the Roman Empire". United Nations of Roma Victor. http://www.unrv.com/provinces/dacia.php. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  21. ^ Deletant, Dennis (1995). Colloquial Romanian. New York: Routledge. pp. 1. ISBN 9780415129008. 
  22. ^ Matley, Ian (1970). Romania; a Profile. Praeger. pp. 85. 
  23. ^ Giurescu, Constantin C. (1972). The Making of the Romanian People and Language. Bucharest: Meridiane Publishing House. pp. 43, 98–101,141. 
  24. ^ Eutropius; Justin, Cornelius Nepos (1886). Eutropius, Abridgment of Roman History. London: George Bell and Sons. http://www.ccel.org/p/pearse/morefathers/eutropius_breviarium_2_text.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  25. ^ Watkins, Thayer. "The Economic History of the Western Roman Empire". http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/barbarians.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. ""The Emperor Aurelian recognized the realities of the military situation in Dacia and around 271 A.D. withdrew Roman troops from Dacia leaving it to the Goths. The Danube once again became the northern frontier of the Roman Empire in eastern Europe"" 
  26. ^ Ghyka, Matila (1841). "A Documented Chronology of Roumanian History". Oxford: B. H. Blackwell Ltd.. Archived from the original on 2007-01-25. http://web.archive.org/web/20070125091613/http://www.vlachophiles.net/ghika.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  27. ^ Jordanes (551 A.D.). Getica, sive, De Origine Actibusque Gothorum. Constantinople. http://www.harbornet.com/folks/theedrich/Goths/Goths1.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  28. ^ Iliescu, Vl.; Paschale, Chronicon (1970). Fontes Historiae Daco-Romanae. II. Bucureşti. pp. 363, 587. 
  29. ^ a b Teodor, Dan Gh. (1995). Istoria României de la începuturi până în secolul al VIII-lea. 2. Bucureşti. pp. 294–325. 
  30. ^ Bóna, István (2001). "History of Transylvania: II.3. The Kingdom of the Gepids". in Köpeczi, Béla. New York: Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mek.oszk.hu/03400/03407/html/33.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  31. ^ Bóna, István (2001). "History of Transylvania: II.4. The Period of the Avar Rule". in Köpeczi, Béla. New York: Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mek.oszk.hu/03400/03407/html/41.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  32. ^ Constantine VII, Porphyrogenitus (950). Constantine Porphyrogenitus De Administrando Imperio. Constantinople. http://faculty.washington.edu/dwaugh/rus/texts/constp.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  33. ^ Xenopol, Alexandru D. (1896). Histoire des Roumains. i. Paris. pp. 168. 
  34. ^ Makkai, László (2001). "History of Transylvania: III. Transylvania in the Medieval Hungarian Kingdom (896–1526)". in Köpeczi, Béla. New York: Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mek.oszk.hu/03400/03407/html/57.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  35. ^ Köpeczi, Béla, ed (2001). "History of Transylvania: IV. The First Period of the Principality of Transylvania (1526–1606)". New York: Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mek.oszk.hu/03400/03407/html/97.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  36. ^ Várkonyi, Ágnes R. (2001). Köpeczi, Béla. ed. History of Transylvania: VI. The Last Decades of the Independent Principality (1660–1711). 2. New York: Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. http://mek.oszk.hu/03400/03407/html/221.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  37. ^ Ştefănescu, Ştefan (1991). Istoria medie a României. I. Bucharest. pp. 114. 
  38. ^ Predescu, Lucian (1940). "Enciclopedia Cugetarea". Enciclopedia Cugetarea. 
  39. ^ Vlad III (ruler of Walachia). Britannica Online Encyclopedia.
  40. ^ a b István, Vásáry. "Cumans and Tatars". cambridge.org. http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780511110153&ss=fro. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  41. ^ Rezachevici, Constantin (2000). "Mihai Viteazul: itinerariul moldovean" (in Romanian). Magazin istoric (5). http://www.itcnet.ro/history/archive/mi2000/current5/mi5.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  42. ^ "The Magyarization Process". GenealogyRO Group. http://www.genealogy.ro/cont/13.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  43. ^ Kocsis, Karoly; Kocsis-Hodosi, Eszter (1999). Ethnic structure of the population on the present territory of Transylvania (1880-1992). http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/hmcb/Tab14.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  44. ^ Kocsis, Karoly; Kocsis-Hodosi, Eszter (2001). Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin. Simon Publications. pp. 102. ISBN 193131375X. 
  45. ^ Prodan, David (1971). Supplex Libellus Valachorum= Or, The Politicle Struggle of Romanians in Transylvania During the 18th Century. Bucharest: Academy of Social Republic of Romania. 
  46. ^ Bobango, Gerald J (1979). The emergence of the Romanian national State. New York: Boulder. ISBN 9780914710516. 
  47. ^ "San Stefano Preliminary Treaty". 1878. http://www.hist.msu.ru/ER/Etext/FOREIGN/stefano.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  48. ^ The Treaty of Berlin, 1878 - Excerpts on the Balkans. Berlin: Fordham University. July 13, 1878. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1878berlin.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  49. ^ Patterson, Michelle (August 1996). "The Road to Romanian Independence" ([dead link]Scholar search). Canadian Journal of History. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3686/is_199608/ai_n8755098. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  50. ^ Anderson, Frank Maloy; Hershey, Amos Shartle (1918). Handbook for the Diplomatic History of Europe, Asia, and Africa 1870-1914. Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office. 
  51. ^ Horne, Charles F. (Horne). "Ion Bratianu's Declaration of War Delivered to the Austrian Minister in Romania on August 28, 1916". Source Records of the Great War. http://www.firstworldwar.com/source/romaniawardeclaration.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  52. ^ Erlikman, Vadim (2004). Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik. Moscow. ISBN 5-93165-107-1. 
  53. ^ "Text of the Treaty of Trianon". World War I Document Archive. http://wwi.lib.byu.edu/index.php/Treaty_of_Trianon. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  54. ^ Bernard Anthony Cook (2001). Europe Since 1945: An Encyclopedia. Taylor&Francis. p. 162. ISBN 0815340575. 
  55. ^ Malbone W. Graham (October 1944). "The Legal Status of the Bukovina and Bessarabia". The American Journal of International Law (American Society of International Law) 38 (4). http://www.jstor.org/stable/2192802. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  56. ^ a b "Statul National Unitar (România Mare 1919 - 1940)publisher=ici.ro" (in Romanian). http://media.ici.ro/history/ist08.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  57. ^ Ioan Scurtu, Theodora Stănescu-Stanciu, Georgiana Margareta Scurtu (2002) (in Romanian). Istoria Românilor între anii 1918-1940. University of Bucharest. http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/istorie/istorie1918-1940/13-4.htm. 
  58. ^ Nagy-Talavera, Nicolas M. (1970). Green Shirts and Others: a History of Fascism in Hungary and Romania. Hoover Institution Press. p. 305. 
  59. ^ M. Broszat (1968). "Deutschland — Ungarn — Rumänien. Entwicklung und Grundfaktoren nationalsozialistischer Hegemonial- und Bündnispolitik 1938-1941" (in German). Historische Zeitschrift (206): 552–553. 
  60. ^ "The Biggest Mistakes In World War 2:Ploesti - the most important target". http://www.2worldwar2.com/mistakes.htm#ploesti. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  61. ^ Note: follow the World War II link: (2005-11-09) Romania:World War II , Washington D.C.: Library of Congress.Federal Research Division. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  62. ^ Raul Hilberg; Yad Vashem (2004). "Executive Summary: Historical Findings and Recommendations" (PDF). International Commission on the Holocaust in Romania. http://yad-vashem.org.il/about_yad/what_new/data_whats_new/pdf/english/EXECUTIVE_SUMMARY.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. "“no country, besides Germany, was involved in massacres of Jews on such a scale.”" 
  63. ^ Eugen Tomiuc (May 6, 2005). "World War II – 60 Years After: Former Romanian Monarch Remembers Decision To Switch Sides". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. http://web.archive.org/web/20070930033400/http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/5/38D4D252-BE7E-4943-A6A9-4E3C1B32A05F.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  64. ^ Michael Clodfelter (2002). Warfare and Armed Conflicts- A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures, 1500-2000 (2 ed.). Jefferson, NC: McFarland. pp. 582. ISBN 0-7864-1204-6. 
  65. ^ Martin Gilbert. Atlas of the Holocaust. 1988
  66. ^ "Romania: Country studies - Chapter 1.7.1 "Petru Groza's Premiership"". Federal research Division, Library of Congress. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/rotoc.html#ro0037. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  67. ^ "Romania". CIA - The World Factbook. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ro.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  68. ^ "Romania - Country Background and Profile". ed-u.com. http://www.ed-u.com/ro.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  69. ^ Rîjnoveanu, Carmen (2003). "Romania's Policy of Autonomy in the Context of the Sino-Soviet Conflict" (PDF). Czech Republic Military History Institute, Militärgeschichtliches Forscheungamt. pp. 1. http://www.servicehistorique.sga.defense.gouv.fr/07autredossiers/groupetravailhistoiremilitaire/pdfs/2003-gthm.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  70. ^ Roper, Stephen D. (2000). Romania: The Unfinished Revolution. London: Routledge. pp. 18. ISBN 9058230279. 
  71. ^ Cioroianu, Adrian (2005) (in Romanian). "On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism". Bucharest: Editura Curtea Veche. pp. 68–73. ISBN 9736691756. 
  72. ^ Caraza, Grigore (2004) (in Romanian). Aiud însângerat. Chapter IV. Editura Vremea XXI. ISBN 9736450503. [page needed]
  73. ^ Cicerone Ioniţoiu (2000) (in Romanian). Victimele terorii comuniste. Arestaţi, torturaţi, întemniţaţi, ucişi. Dicţionar. Bucharest: Editura Maşina de scris. ISBN 973-99994-2-5. [page needed]
  74. ^ "Romania: Soviet Union and Eastern Europe". Country Studies.us. http://countrystudies.us/romania/75.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  75. ^ "Middle East policies in Communist Romania". Country Studies.us. http://countrystudies.us/romania/80.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  76. ^ Deletant, Dennis. "New Evidence on Romania and the Warsaw Pact, 1955-1989". Cold War International History Project e-Dossier Series. http://www.wilsoncenter.org/index.cfm?topic_id=1409&fuseaction=topics.publications&doc_id=16367&group_id=13349. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  77. ^ (2004) Recensământul populaţiei concentraţionare din România în anii 1945-1989 . Sighet: Centrul Internaţional de Studii asupra Comunismului. (Report).
  78. ^ (2006-12-15) Raportul Comisiei Prezidenţiale pentru Analiza Dictaturii Comuniste din România . Comisia Prezidenţială pentru Analiza Dictaturii Comuniste din România, 215–217. (Report).
  79. ^ Carothers, Thomas. "Romania: The Political Background" (PDF). http://www.idea.int/publications/country/upload/Romania,%20The%20Political%20Background.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. ""This seven-year period can be characterized as a gradualistic, often ambiguous transition away from communist rule towards democracy."" 
  80. ^ Hellman, Joel (January 1998). "Winners Take All: The Politics of Partial Reform in Postcommunist". Transitions World Politics 50 (2): 203–234. 
  81. ^ Bohlen, Celestine. "Evolution in Europe; Romanian miners invade Bucharest". http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CE6D6113DF936A25755C0A966958260. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  82. ^ "NATO update: NATO welcomes seven new members". NATO. http://www.nato.int/docu/update/2004/04-april/e0402a.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  83. ^ "EU approves Bulgaria and Romania". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/5380024.stm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  84. ^ a b "Romania". focus-migration.de. http://www.focus-migration.de/index.php?id=2515&L=1. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  85. ^ a b c d e "Geography, Meteorology and Environment" (in Romanian). Romanian Statistical Yearbook. 2004. http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/pdf/ro/cap1.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  86. ^ "Danube Delta". UNESCO's World Heritage Center. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/588. Retrieved 2008-01-09. 
  87. ^ a b "Romania's Biodiversity". Ministry of Waters, Forests and Environmental Protection of Romania. http://enrin.grida.no/biodiv/biodiv/national/romania/robiodiv.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  88. ^ "State of the Environment in Romania 1998: Biodiversity". Romanian Ministry of Waters, Forests and Environmental Protection. http://www.envir.ee/programmid/pharecd/soes/romania/html/biodiversity/index.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  89. ^ "EarthTrends:Biodiversity and Protected Areas - Romania" (PDF). http://earthtrends.wri.org/pdf_library/country_profiles/bio_cou_642.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  90. ^ "Protected Areas in Romania". Romanian Ministry of Waters, Forests and Environmental Protection. http://www.envir.ee/programmid/pharecd/soes/romania/html/biodiversity/ariiprot/protarea.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  91. ^ "Danube Delta Reserve Biosphere". Romanian Ministry of Waters, Forests and Environmental Protection. http://www.envir.ee/programmid/pharecd/soes/romania/html/biodiversity/ariiprot/delta.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  92. ^ "Danube Delta". UNESCO's World Heritage Center. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/588. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  93. ^ "NHK World Heritage 100 Series". UNESCO's World Heritage Center. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/588/video. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  94. ^ a b c "Flora si fauna salbatica" (in Romanian). enrin.grida.no. http://enrin.grida.no/htmls/romania/soe2000/rom/cap5/ff.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  95. ^ a b c "Capitolul 12: Relieful, apele, clima, vegetatia, fauna, ariile protejate" (in Romanian). Aproape totul despre România. Radio Romania International. http://www.rri.ro/art.shtml?lang=2&sec=252&art=18152. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  96. ^ "Land » Plant and animal life". Encyclopædia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/508461/Romania. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  97. ^ "Romania: Climate". U.S. Library of Congress. http://countrystudies.us/romania/34.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  98. ^ "Romania: climate". Climate. http://www.romaniatourism.com/climate.html. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  99. ^ "The monthly average climate parameters in Bucharest". WorldTravels. http://www.wordtravels.com/Travelguide/Countries/Romania/Climate/. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  100. ^ "Permafrost Monitoring and Prediction in Southern Carpathians, Romania". CliC International Project Office (CIPO). 2004-12-22. http://clic.npolar.no/disc/disc_datasets_metadata.php?s=0&desc=1&table=Datasets&id=DISC_GCMD_GGD30&tag=All&Category=&WCRP=&Location=All&stype=phrase&limit=10&q=. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  101. ^ "The 2004 Yearbook" (in Romanian) (PDF). Romanian National Institute of Statistics. http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/pdf/ro/cap1.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  102. ^ "European effort spotlights plight of the Roma". usatoday. http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-02-01-roma-europe_x.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  103. ^ a b c Official site of the results of the 2002 Census . (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  104. ^ "German Population of Romania, 1930-1948". hungarian-history.hu. http://www.hungarian-history.hu/lib/minor/min02.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  105. ^ "German minority". auswaertiges-amt.de. http://www.auswaertiges-amt.de/diplo/en/Laenderinformationen/01-Laender/Rumaenien.html. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  106. ^ "The Virtual Jewish History Tour - Romania". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/vjw/romania.html. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  107. ^ "Outsourcing IT în România" (in Romanian). Owners Association of the Software and Service Industry. http://www.anis.ro/index.php?page=afaceri&sec=afaceri_avantaje&lang=ro. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  108. ^ "Chronology of the International Organization La Francophonie" (in French) (pfd). http://www.francophonie.org/doc/doc-historique/chronologie-oif.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  109. ^ Romanian Census Website with population by religion . Recensamant.ro. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-01-01.
  110. ^ "Romania President Approves Europe's "Worst Religion Law"". http://www.bosnewslife.com/europe/romania/2674-romania-president-approves-europes-worst/. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  111. ^ "Population of the largest cities and towns in Romania". World Gazetteer. http://www.world-gazetteer.com/wg.php?x=1186654811&men=gcis&lng=en&des=gamelan&dat=200&geo=-182&srt=pnan&col=aohdqcfbeimg&pt=c&va=&srt=1pnan. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  112. ^ "Metropolitan Zone of Bucharest will be ready in 10 years" (in Romanian). Romania Libera. http://www.romanialibera.ro/a94321/zona-metropolitana-bucuresti-va-fi-gata-peste-10-ani.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  113. ^ "Official site of Metropolitan Zone of Bucharest Project" (in Romanian). http://www.zmb.ro/main.php. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  114. ^ "Map of Romanian municipalities that can have metorpolitan areas in maroon". http://www.zmi.ro/de/zmi_context_romania.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  115. ^ The Romanian Educational Policy in Transition . UNESCO. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  116. ^ The Romanian Educational Policy in Transition . UNESCO. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  117. ^ "Limited relevants. What feminists can learn from the eastern experience" (pdf). genderomania.ro. http://www.genderomania.ro/book_gender_post/part1/Anca_Gheaus.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-25. 
  118. ^ "Romanian Institute of Statistics Yearbook - Chapter 8" (in Romanian) (PDF). http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/pdf/ro/cap8.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  119. ^ "UN Human Development Report 2006" (pdf). Archived from the original on 2007-02-02. http://web.archive.org/web/20070202212856/http://hdr.undp.org/hdr2006/pdfs/report/HDR06-complete.pdf. 
  120. ^ (2002) OECD International Program for Evaluation of Students, National Report . Bucureşti: Romanian Ministry of Education, 10—15. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  121. ^ Academic Ranking World University 2006: Top 500 World University . (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  122. ^ Răzvan Florian Romanian Universities and the Shanghai rankings , Cluj-Napoca, România: Asociaţia Ad Astra a cercetătorilor rom âni, 7–9. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  123. ^ "Romania removes theory of evolution from school curriculum". The Diplomat. http://www.thediplomat.ro/reports_1207.php. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  124. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Romania. 2 (48 ed.). London and New York: Routledge. 2007. pp. 3734–3759. ISBN 9781857434125. 
  125. ^ "Presentation". High Court of Cassation and Justice - —Romania. http://www.scj.ro/monogr_en.asp. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  126. ^ "Romanian Legal system". CIA Factbook. 2000. http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/lps35389/2000//legal_system.html. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  127. ^ Bos, Stefan (01 January 2007). "Bulgaria, Romania Join European Union". VOA News (Voice of America). http://voanews.com/english/archive/2007-01/2007-01-01-voa16.cfm. Retrieved 2 January 2009. 
  128. ^ "Romania will be EU's most corrupt new member". http://www.bbj.hu/main/news_18741_romania+will+be+eus+most+corrupt+new+member.html. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  129. ^ "Geografia Romaniei" (in Romanian). descopera.net. http://www.descopera.net/romania_geografie.html. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  130. ^ a b Administrative Organisation of Romanian Territory, on December 31, 2005 , Romanian National Institute of Statistics. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  131. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Hierarchical list of the Nomenclature of territorial units for statistics - NUTS and the Statistical regions of Europe". Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. http://web.archive.org/web/20080118234301/http://ec.europa.eu/comm/eurostat/ramon/nuts/codelist_en.cfm?list=nuts. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  132. ^ a b c d "Foreign Policy Priorities of Romania for 2008" (in Romanian). Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. http://www.mae.ro/index.php?unde=doc&id=35181&idlnk=1&cat=3. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  133. ^ "Turkey & Romania hand in hand for a better tomorrow." (PDF). The New Anatolian, February 1, 2006. http://www.thenewanatolian.com/ek6.pdf. 
  134. ^ Government of Romania (2006-03-24). "Headline: Meeting with the Hungarian Prime Minister, Ferenc Gyurcsány". Press release. http://www.guv.ro/engleza/presa/afis-doc.php?idpresa=6372&idrubricapresa=&idrubricaprimm=&idtema=&tip=&pag=&dr=. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  135. ^ "Background Note: Romania - U.S.-Romanian Relations". U.S. Department of State. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/35722.htm. 
  136. ^ http://www.bucharestherald.com/politics/34-politics/3116-hillary-clinton-romania-one-of-the-most-trustworthy-and-respectable-partners-of-the-usa-
  137. ^ a b Gabriel Andreescu, Valentin Stan, Renate Weber (1994-10-30). "Romania'S Relations With The Republic Of Moldova". International Studies (Center for International Studies). http://studint.ong.ro/moldova.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  138. ^ Stefan Ihrig. "Rediscovering History, Rediscovering Ultimate Truth" (PDF). http://www.desk.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/download/es_5_Ihrig.pdf. Retrieved 2008-09-17. 
  139. ^ "Moldova urging Romania to sign basic political treaty". Romania News Watch. 2007-12-16. 
  140. ^ Ministry of National Defense of Romania (2003-01-21). "Press conference". Press release. http://www.mapn.ro/briefing/030122/030121conf.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  141. ^ "MoND Budget as of 2007" (in Romanian). Ziarul Financiar. 2006-10-30. http://www.zf.ro/articol_99920/bugetul_mapn__2_05__din_pib__in_2007.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  142. ^ "SUA şi UE se intrec să ne doboare MiG-urile". Cotidianul. January 2007. http://www.cotidianul.ro/index.php?id=45&art=25285&nr=3&cHash=b2e1d334a5. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  143. ^ "Spartan Order". Aviation Week & Space Technology. 2006-12-11. 
  144. ^ "IMF World Economic Outlook April 2008 - Central and Eastern Europe". IMF. April 2008. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2008/01/weodata/weorept.aspx?sy=2006&ey=2013&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=968&s=NGDP_RPCH%2CNGDPD%2CNGDPDPC%2CPPPGDP%2CPPPPC%2CPCPIPCH&grp=0&a=&pr1.x=87&pr1.y=12. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  145. ^ "Country Classification Groups". World Bank. 2005. http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/DATASTATISTICS/0,,contentMDK:20421402~pagePK:64133150~piPK:64133175~theSitePK:239419,00.html#Upper_middle_income. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  146. ^ "GDP in 2006" (in Romanian) (PDF). Romanian National Institute of Statistics. http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/statistici/comunicate/pib/pibr06.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  147. ^ "World Bank: In 2008 Romania will have an economic growth of 5.9%" (in Romanian). http://www.romanialibera.ro/a115093/banca-mondiala-in-2008-romania-va-avea-o-crestere-economica-de-5-9.html. Retrieved 2008-01-13. 
  148. ^ "Creşterea economică din 2008 a frânat brusc în T 4" (in Romanian). Curierul National. http://www.curierulnational.ro/Economie/2009-03-05/Cresterea+economica+din+2008+a+franat+brusc+in+T+4. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  149. ^ "GDP per capita in PPS". Eurostat. http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_PUBLIC/2-25062009-BP/EN/2-25062009-BP-EN.PDF. Retrieved 2009-06-25. 
  150. ^ "Main Macroeconomic Indicators, September 2007" (in Romanian) (PDF). National Institute of Statistics of Romania. http://www.insse.ro/cms/files/statistici/comunicate/lunar_indicatori/a07/sic09r07.pdf. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  151. ^ a b "Romania". CIA World Factbook. 2006. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ro.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  152. ^ "Romania at A Glance - January 2008". Romania Economy Watch. January 2008. http://romaniaeconomywatch.blogspot.com/2007/11/romania-trade-balance-september-2007.html. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  153. ^ "Index of Economic Freedom: Romania". heritage.org. http://www.heritage.org/research/features/index/country.cfm?id=Romania. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  154. ^ (2007-06-26) Taxation trends in the EU , Eurostat. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  155. ^ "Romania: FDI reached over EUR 8.3 bn". http://www.portalino.it/nuke/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=20346. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  156. ^ (2007) Economy Ranking . World Bank. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  157. ^ Doing Business 2007 Report . World Bank. (Report). Retrieved on 2008-08-31.
  158. ^ Average wage in May 2009 , National Institute of Statistics, Romania. (Report). Retrieved on 2009-07-28.
  159. ^ "Implied PPP conversion rate for Romania". IMF. April 2008. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2008/01/weodata/weorept.aspx?pr.x=30&pr.y=8&sy=2006&ey=2013&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=968&s=PPPEX&grp=0&a=. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  160. ^ a b "Prezentarea generală a reţelei de drumuri" (in Romanian). cnadnr.ro. http://www.cnadnr.ro/pagina.php?idg=20. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  161. ^ "Reteaua feroviara" (in Romanian). cfr.to. http://www.cfr.ro/jf/romana/0208/retea.htm. Retrieved 2009-09-06. 
  162. ^ "Metrorex ridership" (in Romanian). Financial Week newspaper. April 23, 2007. http://www.sfin.ro/articol_8634/transferul_metrorex_la_primaria_capitalei_a_incins_spiritele.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  163. ^ "Country/Economy Profiles: Romania, Travel&Tourism" (PDF). World Economic Forum. http://www.weforum.org/pdf/tourism/Romania.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  164. ^ "WTTC spells out policy recommendations for Romania to tap travel and tourism potential". WTTC. http://www.wttc.travel/eng/News_and_Events/Press/Press_Releases_2006/WTTC_spells_out_recommendations_for_Romania/index.php. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  165. ^ "20 million overnight stays by international tourists". http://aktirom.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2&Itemid=2. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  166. ^ a b Report from Romanian National Institute of Statistics . (Report). Retrieved on 2008-01-11. “for the first 9 months of 2007 an increase from the previous year of 8.7% to 16.5 million tourists; of these 94.0% came from European countries and 61.7% from EU”
  167. ^ "Tourism attracted in 2005 investments worth €400 million" (in ro). Gandul Newspaper. http://www.gandul.info/social/turismul-atras-2005-investitii-400-milioane-euro.html?3932;255059. Retrieved 2008-01-11. 
  168. ^ "Tan and fun at the Black Sea". UnseenRomania. http://www.unseenromania.com/places-to-go-romania/tan-and-fun-at-the-black-sea.html. Retrieved 2008-01-10. 
  169. ^ "Turismul renaste la tara" (in Romanian). Romania Libera. 2008-07-05. http://www.romanialibera.ro/a128995/turismul-renaste-la-tara.html. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  170. ^ "Bine ati venit pe site-ul de promovare a pensiunilor agroturistice din Romania !!!" (in Romanian). RuralTourism.ro. http://www.ruraltourism.ro/. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  171. ^ "Romania - Culture". http://www.itcnet.ro/folk_festival/culture.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  172. ^ a b c d Lucian Boia, James Christian Brown (2001). Romania: Borderland of Europe. Reaktion Books. pp. 13, 36–40. ISBN 9781861891037. 
  173. ^ a b c d "Cultural aspects". National Institute for Research & Development in Informatics, Romania. http://www.ici.ro/romania/en/cultura/cultural_aspects.html. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  174. ^ Luis Bush. "Romania Prepares for GCOWE September 20, 1994". Mission Frontiers. http://www.missionfrontiers.org/1994/1112/nd9416.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  175. ^ "Mihai Eminescu" (in Romanian). National Institute for Research & Development in Informatics, Romania. http://www.ici.ro/romania/en/cultura/l_eminescu.html. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  176. ^ Mona Momescu. "Romanian Cultural Debate of the Summer: Romanian Intellectuals and Their Status Groups". Romanian Club @ Columbia University. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/romanian/articles/TheRomanianCulturalDebateOfTheSummer.html. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  177. ^ "Constantin Brâncuşi's bio". Brancusi.com. http://www.brancusi.com/bio.html. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  178. ^ "Brancusi's 'Bird in Space' Sets World Auction Record for Sculpture at $27,456,000". Antiques and the Arts Online. http://antiquesandthearts.com/AW-2005-05-10-12-15-39p1.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  179. ^ "November 9, The price record for a Brancusi masterpiece was set up in 2005 when “Bird in Space” was sold for USD 27.5 M". Romanian Information Center in Brussels. http://crib.mae.ro/index.php?lang=en&id=31&s=15441&arhiva=true. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  180. ^ "George Enescu, the composer". International Enescu Society. http://www.enescusociety.org/georgeenescu.php. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  181. ^ "George Enescu (1881 - 1955)". National Institute for Research & Development in Informatics, Romania. http://www.ici.ro/romania/en/cultura/m_enescu.html. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  182. ^ Ştefănescu, Alex. (1999) (in Romanian). Nichita Stănescu, The Angel With A Book In His Hands. Maşina de scris. pp. 8. ISBN 9789739929745. 
  183. ^ "Sounds Like Canada feat. Gheorghe Zamfir". CBC Radio. 2006-01-17. http://www.cbc.ca/insite/SOUNDS_LIKE_CANADA/2006/1/17.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  184. ^ "Gheorghe Zamfir, master of the pan pipe". Gheorghe Zamfir, Official Homepage. http://www.gheorghe-zamfir.com/English/diskographie-e.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-20. 
  185. ^ "Cannes 2007 Winners". Alternative Film Guide. http://www.altfg.com/blog/film-festivals/cannes-2007-winners/. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  186. ^ Jay Weissberg (2007-05-17). "4 Months, 3 Weeks & 2 Days". Variety. http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout=cannes2007&jump=review&reviewid=VE1117933650. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  187. ^ "Official list of WHS within Romania". UNESCO. http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/?search=&searchSites=&search_by_country=romania&type=&media=&region=&order=&criteria_restrication=&x=0&y=0. Retrieved 2008-01-31. 
  188. ^ "World Heritage List from Romania". UNESCO. http://www.cimec.ro/Monumente/unesco/UNESCOen/fastvers.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-31. 
  189. ^ "World Heritage Site - Romania". http://www.worldheritagesite.org/countries/romania.html. Retrieved 2008-01-31. 
  190. ^ Law no. 75 of 16 July 1994, published in Monitorul Oficial no. 237 of 26 August 1994.
  191. ^ Governmental Decision no. 1157/2001, published in Monitorul Oficial no. 776 of 5 December 2001.
  192. ^ "'Identical flag' causes flap in Romania". bbc.co.uk. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3626821.stm. Retrieved 2009-09-07. 
  193. ^ a b c d "Romania". The Europa World Year Book. 2. Routledge. 2007. 
  194. ^ "european-football-statistics.co.uk EFS Attendances". European Football Statistics. http://www.european-football-statistics.co.uk/attn.htm european-football-statistics.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  195. ^ "Hagi leaves Romania post". BBC Sport. 2001-11-26. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/world_cup_2002/1677201.stm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. "Hagi enjoyed legendary status in Romania where he spearheaded the 'Golden Generation' of players..." 
  196. ^ "Hagi snubs Maradona". BBC Sport Online. 2001-04-06. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/low/football/europe/1264097.stm. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 
  197. ^ Romanians were for example stereotyped as gymnasts, as in the South Park episode Quintuplets 2000
  198. ^ Robin Herman (1976-03-28). "Gymnast Posts Perfect Mark". New York Times. http://www.gymn-forum.net/Articles/NYT-1976_AmCup2.html. Retrieved 2008-08-13. 
  199. ^ "All-Time Medal Standings, 1896-2004". infoplease.com. http://www.infoplease.com/ipsa/A0115108.html. Retrieved 2008-08-31. 

External links

Find more about Romania on Wikipedia's sister projects:

Search Wiktionary Definitions from Wiktionary
Search Wikibooks Textbooks from Wikibooks
Search Wikiquote Quotations from Wikiquote
Search Wikisource Source texts from Wikisource
Search Commons Images and media from Commons
Search Wikinews News stories from Wikinews
Search Wikiversity Learning resources from Wikiversity
Government
General information
Economy and law links
Culture and history links
Romania around the world
Travel



Translations: Romania
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - Rumænien

Français (French)
n. - Roumanie

Deutsch (German)
n. - Rumänien

Português (Portuguese)
n. - Romênia

Español (Spanish)
n. - Rumania

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
罗马尼亚

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 羅馬尼亞

한국어 (Korean)
루마니아 (유럽 남동부의 사회주의 공화국; 수도 부쿠레슈티(Bucharest))

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮רומניה‬


Shopping: Romania
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Dictionary of Dance. The Oxford Dictionary of Dance. Copyright © 2000, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Holocaust. Encyclopedia of the Holocaust. Copyright © H.H. The Jerusalem Publishing House, Ltd. © Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes' Remembrance Authority. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Psychoanalysis. International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
History 1450-1789. Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Geography. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation Dialing Code. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Local Time. Copyright © 2009 - Chaos Software. All rights reserved.  Read more
Statistics. The World Factbook 2009 is prepared by the Central Intelligence Agency.  Read more
Wine Lover's Companion. Wine Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2003 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation National Anthem. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Answers Corporation Blogs. © 1999-2009 by Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Romania" Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more