Trajan conquered Dacia in 105-106. Dacia covered Romania and Moldova and small parts of Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria and Ukraine.
The ancestors of the Romanians were the Dacians. The kingdom of Dacia covered present day Romania, Moldova and parts of Hungary and Serbia. Dacia was conquered and annexed to the Roman Empire as the province of Dacia Traiana by emperor Trajan in 106 AD.
Yugoslavia was a united country only between 1918 and 1990s. It was split into different political entities from the Middle Ages to 1918 and the areas it covered had been under several different empires. In antiquity the area was under the Roman Empire. Later, parts of the area were under the Carolingian Empire, the Holy Roman Empire, The Bulgarian Empire, The Serbian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the Austrian Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The First Bulgarian Empire (681-1018) included Macedonia, part of Montenegro and much of Serbia. The Second Bulgarian Empire (1185-1391) included Macedonia and much of Serbia until the formation of the Serbian Empire (1346-1371) which included Serbia, Montenegro and Macedonia. Macedonia was under the Ottoman Empire from 1395 to 1912 when it joined the Kingdom of Serbia. The Ottoman Turks also conquered Serbia in 1455, Bosnia & Herzegovina in 1463 and Montenegro in 1499. Serbia broke away from Ottoman rule in 1815, becoming the Kingdom of Serbia. Bosnia & Herzegovina came under the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1878 and Montenegro became independent in the same year. The Kingdom of Montenegro joined the Kingdom of Serbia in 1818 and then the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1918 Bosnia & Herzegovina became part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1526 Croatia decided to be ruled by Ferdinand I of Habsburg in exchange of protection from Ottoman attacks. It was called the Kingdom of Croatia, an administrative unit of the territories of the Habsburg Monarchy which from 1804 to 1867 became the Austrian Empire and from 1867 to 1918 the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In 1918 it joined the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In the Early and High Middle Ages Slovenia was under the Carolingian Empire and then the Holy Roman Empire. In the 14th century it came under the rule of the Habsburg Monarchy and then the Austrian Empire and the Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918 when it became part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
It was the Province of Dacia. The Romans retained the name of the kingdom they had conquered. It included Romania, Moldova, and parts of Ukraine, Bulgaria, Serbia and Hungary
1. Romania wasn't a part of an empire in the 20th century. 2. Some provinces as Transylvania, Banat, Bucovina, CriÅŸana and MaramureÅŸ were parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. 3. Another province - Bessarabia (Basarabia in Romanian language) was a part of the Russian Empire. Note that during the antiquity some provinces of the today Romania are parts of the Roman Empire; and during the middle age Romanian provinces were included in the Ottoman Empire as vassals.
It is native to Slovenia, southern Austria, parts of Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria
At that time the German lands were still the Holy Roman Empire. However, some parts of Prussia and the Austrian Empire were to the east of the HRE.
The region historically known as Dacia corresponds to present-day Romania, Moldova, and parts of Bulgaria, Serbia, and Hungary. The modern country of Romania encompasses the majority of the territory that was once part of the ancient region of Dacia.
The countries most influenced by the Ottoman Empire include Turkey, which was the empire's heartland, as well as Greece and the Balkan states like Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, which experienced significant cultural and political impacts. Additionally, parts of North Africa, such as Egypt and Libya, were also shaped by Ottoman governance, impacting their administrative systems and cultural practices. The empire's influence can still be seen in architecture, cuisine, and various social customs in these regions.
Austria-Hungary didn't join the war, they were basically the ones who started it as well as Serbia. On June 28, 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to throne of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire and his wife are assassinated in Sarajevo, Serbia by a secret Serbian organization called the "Black Hand". 7 assassins were sent out to do the job. Austria-Hungary immediately calls war against Serbia, who has an alliance with Russia etc.
The Roman Empire covered the following modern day European countries:Western Europe: Italy, Malta, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland south of the river Rhine, southern Germany and part of central Germany, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, Austria and England and Wales.Eastern Europe: western Hungary, part of western Slovakia, Slovenia, Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia, Albania, Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova and a slither of western Ukraine.
Austria gained several territories from the Ottoman Empire primarily through the wars fought in the late 17th and early 18th centuries. Notably, the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699 resulted in Austria acquiring parts of Hungary, Transylvania, and the Banat region. Additionally, the Treaty of Passarowitz in 1718 further expanded Austrian territory, granting parts of Serbia and the Morea. These gains marked significant territorial expansion for the Habsburg Monarchy and solidified its influence in Southeast Europe.