MOLDAVIA

mŏldāˈvēə, historic Romanian province (c.14,700 sq mi/38,100 sq km), extending from the Carpathians in Romania east to the Dnieper River in Moldova.

Land and Economy

Moldavia borders on Ukraine in the northeast and on Walachia in the south. In Romania it comprises roughly the modern administrative divisions of Bacău, Galaţi, and Iaşi. Suceava and Iaşi, its historic capitals, and Galaţi, its port on the Danube, are the chief cities. Moldavia, a fertile plain drained by the Siretul, is the granary of Romania. Besides farming there is livestock raising, and orchards and vineyards dot the countryside. Lumbering and petroleum extraction are the main industries.

History

The region was part of the Roman province of Dacia and has retained its Latin speech despite the centuries of invasion and foreign rule. Greek, Slavic, Turkish, Jewish, and other elements have influenced its culture. Moldavia was part of the Kievan state from the 9th to the 11th cent. In the 13th cent. the Cumans, who then held Moldavia, were expelled by the Mongols. When the Mongols withdrew, Moldavia became (early 14th cent.) a principality under native rulers. It then included Bukovina and Bessarabia. Like its sister principality, Walachia, it was torn by strife among the boyars—the great landowners and officeholders—and among rival claimants to the throne. The rural population was reduced to misery and virtual slavery (which lasted well into the 19th cent.) by the princes, who ruled with absolutism and cruelty.

Moldavia reached its height under Stephen the Great (1457–1504), who in 1475 routed the Turks, but in 1504 it became tributary to the sultans. Although it was frequently occupied by foreign powers in the continuous wars among the Ottoman Empire, Austria, Transylvania, Poland, and Russia, Moldavia remained under the Ottoman Empire. S Bessarabia early passed under the rule of the khans of Crimea. Early in the 18th cent. the Turks ended the rule by native princes—who had sided with the enemy as often as with Turkey—and appointed governors (hospodars), mostly Greek Phanariots (see under Phanar). The Greeks surpassed their predecessors in avarice, while the nobility fell into total decay and corruption.

Greek rule was ended (1822) after the Greek insurrection instigated by Alexander Ypsilanti, and native hospodars were appointed. Meanwhile, Bukovina was taken (1775) by Austria and Bessarabia by Russia (1812). After the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–29, Moldavia and Walachia were made virtual protectorates of Russia (see Adrianople, Treaty of), although they continued to pay tribute to the sultan. A Romanian national uprising (1848–49) was suppressed by Russian intervention. In the Crimean War, Moldavia was again occupied by Russia, but in 1856 the two Danubian principalities, Walachia and Moldavia, were guaranteed independence under the nominal suzerainty of Turkey (see Paris, Congress of).

With the accession (1859) of Alexander John Cuza as prince of both Moldavia and Walachia the history of modern Romania began. In 1878, S Bessarabia was ceded to Russia following the Russo-Turkish War. Following World War I, Bessarabia, along with Bukovina, was reincorporated into Romania. In 1924 the USSR created the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic adjacent to true Moldavia. In 1947, the modern borders of Romania were established with the cession of Bessarabia and N Bukovina to the USSR. These two areas were joined with the Moldavian SSR and form what is now the Republic of Moldova. About 60% of Moldova's residents speak Romanian, and many Moldovans favor reunion with Romania.

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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: Moldavia
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books on: Moldavia  - 1542 results

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...in Russia. Since all his estates in Moldavia had been confiscated by the Turks, Empress...minority of his children, his property in Moldavia was put in trust under the closest relatives...owned estates in the Carpathians in Upper Moldavia and in Bukovina. The trustees managed...
...Russian government showed a lively interest in Moldavia." As proof of this the History of Moldavia mentions details of the instructions of the...military plans and to advise the tsar on Moldavia's defense plans and "financial problems...
...provinces from the Orthodox population of Moldavia and Walachia. The prince of Walachia...his death in 1601 controlled Walachia, Moldavia, and Transylvania, but his empire soon...Transylvania, gained considerable influence in Moldavia and Walachia. In 1821, when the Greeks...
...Greek aristocrats to rule Wallachia and Moldavia. These Greek rulers, the Phanariots...heavily taxed the boyars and peasants in Moldavia and Wallachia. Many boyars lost their...of Wallachia and the eastern part of Moldavia. Russia took over the west- ern part...
...Roman, 149, 250 Patrascu the Good, ruler of Moldavia, 66 Patrascanu. Lucrepu, 217, 224, 256...Bulgarian kingdom, 114 Petru Aron, ruler of Moldavia, 192, 275 Petru Rare , ruler of Moldavia, 139, 190, 192,275 Petru Schiopul, ruler...
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journal articles on: Moldavia  - 116 results

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...time since the 1940 annexation, they began to speak freely of the possibility of reunification with Romania. The Russians of Moldavia began to show the first signs of concern and opposition towards a possible reunification of Moldova with Romania in the late...
...found in the Ottoman frontier province of Moldavia, compares to that of western Europe...fifteenth century. Stephen the Great of Moldavia Descriptions of how the Ottoman Empire...Stephen the Great (1451-1504, ruler of Moldavia 1457-1504), who "built a sizable...
...Russia, the Ukraine and the Republic of Moldavia) between 2001 and 2003,2 gave us the opportunity...the territory of what is now the Republic of Moldavia (part of the Principality of Moldavia at the time) and the Budzhak district (today...
...Weller Introduction The halite deposits in Moldavia are the largest in Europe and are distributed...coming from salt water springs. Not only Moldavia, but Romania as a whole is wellknown...project called Salt water springs in Moldavia: ethnoarchaeology of a natural polyvalent...
...subordinate the Principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia."(8) Therefore, according to Laurent...Romanian Principalities - Wallachia and Moldavia - in the name of their freedom, rose...the King of Hungary in 1359.(13) In Moldavia the uprising was defeated, but to the...
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magazine articles on: Moldavia  - 57 results

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...a large proportion of the arendasi in Moldavia, Fischer was a well-off Jewish immigrant...leasing the land to peasants. In northern Moldavia, where the uprising broke out, the...the mostly Jewish arendasi of northern Moldavia failed to respond to the peasants demands...
...by the union of the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859, but it did not...protest in Timisoara. Our family founded Moldavia in 1212." During World War II he saved...abolished in Wallachia in 1746, and in Moldavia in 1749.(*)) Although there had...
...occupation of the Danubian principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia. The principalities were...territories vital for British markets, such as Moldavia and Wallachia. If the Russians should...territory of Turkey, through Wallachia and Moldavia, to strike a death-blow at the heart...
...other minorities in Romanian-dorninated Moldavia fear repression and absorption into Romania...Russian republics, such as the Ukraine, Moldavia, Kazakhstan and elsewhere, many of...mistreated in the Ukraine, the Baltics or Moldavia? The only thing likely to restrain some...
...Malta 7 11 <br/ Barishev, Roman, Moldavia 6 10 <br/ Bartolo, Valter, Portugal...Argentina 7 10 <br/ Miniuc, Nicolai, Moldavia 6 10 <br/ Montini, Giulio, Italy...Austria 5 13 <br/ Volontir, Valerie, Moldavia 8 13 <br/ Vong, Kun Kio, Macau 10...
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newspaper articles on: Moldavia  - 45 results

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...American soap Dynasty as the Prince of Moldavia, marrying into soaps most dysfunctional...producers. He was cast as the Prince of Moldavia, whose wedding to a character played...Michael says that, as the mere Prince of Moldavia, he was not consulted on their choices...
...received foreign freebies as far afield as Sierra Leone, Israel, Moldavia and Brazil. And the biggest trip by any MP in the north west...namesake. Wirral South MP Ben Chapman spent three days in Moldavia as guest of its parliament. Riversides Louise Ellman went...
...WITH RICHARD VAUGHAN-DAVIES LAST night I dreamed I was in Moldavia again. It was still under the communist jackboot. The scene...Thank God I was still home in Britain. Mold will never be Moldavia -- will it? How could you even imagine such a thing. Richard...
...plot lines took us away from Denver and in the direction of Moldavia, a mythical kingdom. Amanda - one of Blakes umpteen daughters...sleeping with - was courted by wimpy playboy Prince Michael of Moldavia and devious King Galen (an old flame of Alexis). As the...
...Carpathian Mountains Maramures has a thriving peasant culture and wooden churches in a region deemed a UNESCO World Heritage site Moldavia has its mystical folklore and medieval monasteries and the Danube Delta includes Europes largest white pelican colonies and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Moldavia  - 39 results

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MOLDAVIA molda ve , historic Romanian province...Dnieper River in Moldova . Land and Economy Moldavia borders on Ukraine in the northeast and...on the Danube, are the chief cities. Moldavia, a fertile plain drained by the Siretul...
...historic and geographic regions: Walachia , Moldavia , Transylvania , and parts of Bukovina...that of the two Romanian principalities Moldavia and Walachia and of Transylvania, which...princes of Walachia (in 1417) and of Moldavia (mid-16th cent.) became vassals...
...the east; in the northeast it adjoins Moldavia. Bucharest , the Romanian capital...ethnic mixture. The sister principality, Moldavia , came into existence about the same...princes under Turkish suzerainty. Like Moldavia, it was torn by strife among the great...
...Walachia (1774 82, 1796 97) and of Moldavia (1786 88). Captured (1790) by the...Ypsilanti, 1760 1816, was hospodar of Moldavia (1799 1801) and became hospodar of...at Jassy (now Iasi), the capital of Moldavia, proclaiming the independence of Greece...
...It is historically part of a greater Moldavia, the main part of which was an independent...target in Russo-Turkish wars. East Moldavia passed to Russia in 1791. Russia acquired...Bessarabia (the name for the area of Moldavia between the Prut and Dniester rivers...
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