DOBRUJA

dōˈbroojə, dôˈ–, Rom. Dobrogea, Bulg. Dobrudza, historic region, c.9,000 sq mi (23,300 sq km), SE Europe, in SE Romania and NE Bulgaria, between the lower Danube River and the Black Sea. The chief cities are Constanţa, in Romania, and Dobrich and Silistra, in Bulgaria. Dobruja comprises a low coastal strip and a hilly and forested inland. Largely agricultural, the region grows cereal crops, has vineyards, and breeds Merino sheep. The largest industrial concentration is in and around Constanţa. Tourism is also economically important, particularly in the Romanian part of Dobruja. The population includes Romanians, Bulgarians, Turks, and Tatars. Dobruja's original inhabitants were conquered in the 6th cent. b.c. by the Greeks, who founded colonies along the Black Sea coast. The region passed to the Scythians in the 5th cent. b.c. and to the Romans (who made it part of Moesia) in the 1st cent. b.c. As part of the Roman Empire and later of the Byzantine, it suffered frequent invasions from the Goths, Huns, Avars, and other tribes. Part of the first Bulgarian empire (681–1018), it was reconquered by the Byzantines. In 1186 it was included in the second Bulgarian empire. Tatar raids were common in the 13th cent. In the 14th cent. the region became an autonomous state under Walachian prince Dobrotich, from whom the name Dobruja derives. Turks conquered the region in 1411, and for the next five centuries it remained a sparsely populated and barely cultivated territory of the Ottoman Empire. In 1878 the Congress of Berlin awarded N Dobruja to Romania and a strip of land later known as S Dobruja to Bulgaria. As a result of the second Balkan War Bulgaria ceded (1913) S Dobruja to Romania. The Treaty of Neuilly, signed in 1919 between Bulgaria and the Allies of World War I, gave all of Dobruja to Romania. In 1940, however, the German-imposed Treaty of Craiova forced Romania to transfer S Dobruja to Bulgaria.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Dobruja
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books on: Dobruja  - 141 results

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...evacuation of German minority groups from Southern Bukovina and Northern Dobruja, which had remained part of the Romanian state. The southern part of Dobruja had been ceded to Bulgaria. Finally, a treaty between the Reich and the Soviet...
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journal articles on: Dobruja  - 5 results

 
 
...Sereth routes northwards into Hungary, Russia, and Poland, and the natural avenue southwards into the Balkans afforded by the Dobruja. Already in the thirteenth century, under the favoring influences of Tatar rule, she showed promise of commercial development...
...Russia gained some Russia was allowed to territory. keep her gains. Dobruja Gained by Romania. Kept by Romania. Bessarabia Regained by Russia. Kept by Russia...
...Romanias large armies were overwhelmed; its forces in the Dobruja simultaneously fell before the Bulgarians and Turks; and within...Russians of Bukovina and Bessarabia and tens of thousands of Dobrujan Bulgarians. Indeed, Greater Romania inherited with the expanded...
...you sly devil! Why didnt they send him, that academic monk, where I myself went so willingly, to Africa or the marshes of Dobruja! But I have teeth and nails, and I use them on occasion against whomever, great or small. . . .85 Silvestre further revealed...
...nearly two centuries Budapest was under Ottoman rule. But Bucharest, the capital of Romania, lies far to the southeast, in the Dobruja region - in geographical terms, the only part of the country that securely belongs to the Balkans. The Romanian historian Neagu...


 

magazine articles on: Dobruja  - 1 result

 
 
...all Christians remaining under Turkish rule; and it gave Bessarabia to Russia in exchange for the corner of Bulgaria known as Dobruja. The other European powers were horrified, and Austria-Hungary proposed a complete revision of San Stefano at a full European...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Dobruja  - 14 results

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DOBRUJA do brooj , do , Rom. Dobrogea, Bulg. Dobrudza...in Romania, and Dobrich and Silistra , in Bulgaria. Dobruja comprises a low coastal strip and a hilly and forested...economically important, particularly in the Romanian part of Dobruja. The population includes Romanians, Bulgarians, Turks...
DOBROGEA see Dobruja . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
DOBRICH dobrech , city (1993 pop. 104,668), NE Bulgaria, a commercial and cultural center of the Dobruja region. Foodstuffs and cotton textiles are produced. The city was called (1913 40) Bazargic under Romanian rule and was renamed...
CONSTANTA konstan tsa, city (1990 pop. 355,402), SE Romania, on the Black Sea. It is the administrative center of Dobruja and a major railroad junction and industrial city, but its chief importance derives from its role as Romanias main seaport...
...Bukovina , Crisana-Maramures , the Dobruja , and the Banat . About 90% of the...S Bessarabia to Russia and to accept N Dobruja in its place. In 1881, Romania was proclaimed...1913), against Bulgaria, and gained S Dobruja. Although Romania had adhered (1883...
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