WALACHIA

or Wallachiaboth: wälāˈkēə, wə–, historic region (29,568 sq mi/76,581 sq km), S Romania. The Transylvanian Alps separate it in the NW from Transylvania and the Banat; the Danube separates it from Serbia in the west, Bulgaria in the south, and N Dobruja in the east; in the northeast it adjoins Moldavia. Bucharest, the Romanian capital, is its chief city. The Oltul River, a tributary of the Danube, divides Walachia into Muntenia or Greater Walachia (20,265 sq mi/52,486 sq km) in the east and Oltenia or Lesser Walachia (9,303 sq mi/24,095 sq km) in the west.

With the rich Ploieşti oil fields and the industrialized area near Bucharest, Walachia is economically the most developed region of Romania. Its industries (notably chemicals, heavy machinery, and shipbuilding) provide employment for about half of the country's labor force. Walachia is also a rich agricultural area and the "breadbasket" of Romania. The overwhelming majority of the population is Romanian, but there are also Bulgarians and Serbs. The pre–World War II Jewish population of about 600,000 was reduced to about 18,000 by 1990, with the numbers still declining.

History

The region was part of the Roman province of Dacia and has retained its latinate speech despite centuries of invasion and foreign rule. Although theoretically part of the Byzantine Empire, Walachia was successively occupied (6th–11th cent.) by the Lombards, the Avars, and the Bulgarians. By the 12th cent. it had passed under the Cumans, who in turn succumbed (1240) to the Mongols.

When the Mongol wave receded, the native inhabitants descended from their mountain refuges, and the principality of Walachia was founded (c.1290) by their leader Radu Negru, or Rudolf the Black. The name Vlachs (or Walachs or Wallachs) was given them by their Slavic neighbors. Although some claim that the Vlachs are direct descendants of the Dacians (mainly on the ground that they preserved their Latin speech), it is more than likely that they represent a composite ethnic mixture. The sister principality, Moldavia, came into existence about the same time as Walachia. Cîmpulung, the earliest capital of Walachia, was later replaced by Curtea de Arges.

Mircea the Great of Walachia (reigned 1386–1418) shared in the defeats of Kosovo (1389) and Nikopol (1396) at the hands of the Turks and was obliged to pay tribute to the sultan. Walachia continued to be governed by its own princes under Turkish suzerainty. Like Moldavia, it was torn by strife among the great landowners (or boyars) and among rival claimants to the throne; lawlessness prevailed. Prince Vlad the Impaler (reigned 1456–62) restored some order by putting 20,000 persons to death within six years. He refused tribute to the sultan, defeated the Turks, and impaled the Turkish prisoners. His rivalry with Stephen the Great of Moldavia cost him his throne. A last attempt to free all Romanians from foreign domination was made (1593–1601) by Michael the Brave, who massacred the Turks in Walachia and conquered Transylvania and Moldavia. His death delivered Walachia back into the hands of the Turks.

The alliance (1711) of Prince Constantine Brancovan with Peter I of Russia and his subsequent downfall resulted in a tightening of Turkish control. Instead of native princes, governors (hospodars), mostly Greek Phanariots (see under Phanar), were appointed. In the Russo-Turkish Wars of the 18th cent. Walachia was repeatedly occupied by Russian and Austrian troops. The oppressive rule of the Phanariots lasted until 1822, when the Romanians rebelled against the Greeks, who at the same time began their war of independence against Turkey.

Native governors were again appointed, and the Treaty of Adrianople (see Adrianople, Treaty of) in 1829 made Walachia an almost autonomous state, tributary to Turkey but under Russian protection. A Romanian national uprising (1848–49) in Walachia was suppressed by Russian intervention. Russian troops occupied (1853) Walachia and Moldavia early in the Crimean War; however, to purchase Austrian neutrality, they evacuated the lands in 1854, and the two Danubian Principalities (as Walachia and Moldavia were called) passed under Austrian occupation. The Congress of Paris (1856), which ended the Crimean War, guaranteed the principalities virtual independence under the nominal suzerainty of Turkey. With the accession (1859) of Alexander John Cuza as prince of both Moldavia and Walachia, the history of modern Romania began.

____________________

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: Walachia
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books on: Walachia  - 99 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Sardinia, had promised the Grand Duchy of Lorraine to the French King, and had been forced to cede much of Serbia and most of Walachia to the Turkish Sultan. Yet, on his deathbed, Emperor Charles VI had feared that his passing would be a signal for the rulers...
...terms offered to Turkey, Moldavia and Walachia were allowed to remain under Turkish...be found for Austria, such as Little Walachia, taken from Turkey, or the strip of...be rewarded by the cession of Little Walachia, Belgrade, and Widin. The work entrusted...
...Moldavia managed to effect a union with Walachia, forming what came to be called the...the part of Moldavia that united with Walachia in 1859 to form the Romanian Kingdom...organized themselves into two states, Walachia and Moldavia. They also made up the...
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journal articles on: Walachia  - 4 results

 
 
...Company, Inc., 1958. Stoicescu, Nicolae. "The Greater Army of Walachia and Moldavia (14th-16th Centuries)," Pages From the History...Republicii Socialiste Romania, 1975. --. Vlad Tepes, Prince of Walachia. Bucuresti: Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste Romana...
...combination of elements is quite rare ( Cox 1893 : no. 298 from Walachia; Wheeler 1943 :103-104, no. 50). While its European examples...Portugal, Spain, Italy, France (four are Breton), Poland, and Walachia (Romania). The spying motif may well be more popular even...
...years of the 20th century grasshoppers were still being eaten in France, locusts in Russia and beetles in Italy, Moldavia and Walachia. Reticence against the consumption of insects was well entrenched by the 19th century in the English-speaking world. A challenge...
...cultural production. For example, an excerpt from Valerian de Vavren of 1445 illustrates the mass migration of Bulgarians into Walachia. (24) Although all early European sources reveal Christian perspectives and fears, many travelers being participants in the...


 

magazine articles on: Walachia  - 4 results

 
 
...Banat have suffered under Ceausescus Communist regime, so have Walachia and Moldavia, the core of Rumania itself. The Hungarians in...only the Hungarians of Transylvania, but also the Rumanians of Walachia and Moldavia have appealed to UNESCO for help. After all...
...Europe, Moldova displays many similarities to Yugoslavia. Historically, Moldova was Romanias third province (Transylvania and Walachia were the other two), but, during the Ottoman Empire, it was the subject of territorial haggling between Russia and the Turks...
...cultural boundary which in ex-Yugoslavia has already produced furious strife. The mainly Orthodox provinces of Moldavia and Walachia, which formed the original Romanian state between 1866 and 1918, are typically thought to belong to the Balkans, while on the...
...Salammbo and Romola. From the Mughal and Medici lands, it detours to take in the Ottoman and Persian empires and the blood-soaked Walachia of Vlad the Impaler. A six-page bibliography at the conclusion directs the interested reader to the work of Ariosto, of Sir...


 

newspaper articles on: Walachia  - 6 results

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...Transylvania to achieve this unity and freedom. On December 1, 1918, the Romanian provinces including historical ones like Walachia, Modavia, and Transylvania, were reunited. After the Revolution of December, 1989, which overthrew the Ceausescu regime, December...
...Bokovina, and Transylvania to achieve their freedom. On December 1, 1918, Romanian provinces, including historical ones like Walachia, Modavia, and Transylvania, were reunited. After the Revolution of December, 1989, which overthrew the Ceausescu regime, December...
...Bokovina, and Transylvania achieving their freedom. On December 1, 1918, Romanian provinces, including historical ones like Walachia, Modavia, and Transylvania were reunited. After the Revolution of December, 1989, which overthrew the Ceausescu regime, December...
...Stokers Dracula and the story of the man who inspired his character, Vlad the Impaler. The 15th century Prince Vlad Dracul of Walachia repelled an invading Turkish army with a demonstration of his cruelty which involved filling a field in their path with bodies...
...Stokers Dracula and the story of the man who inspired his character, Vlad the Impaler. The 15th century Prince Vlad Dracul of Walachia repelled an invading Turkish army with a demonstration of his cruelty which involved filling a field in their path with bodies...
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encyclopedia articles on: Walachia  - 47 results

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WALACHIA or Wallachia both: wala ke , w , historic region (29,568 sq mi/76,581 sq km), S Romania. The Transylvanian...Bucharest , the Romanian capital, is its chief city. The Oltul River, a tributary of the Danube, divides Walachia into Muntenia or Greater Walachia (20,265 sq mi/52,486 sq km) in the east and Oltenia or Lesser Walachia (9,303 sq mi/24,095 sq km) in...
...MICHAEL THE BRAVE d. 1601, prince of Walachia (1593 1601), of Transylvania (1599 1600...emperor for his appointment as prince of Walachia, he did away with his Ottoman creditors...massacred. This act was imitated throughout Walachia and became known as the Walachian Vespers...
...borders on Ukraine in the northeast and on Walachia in the south. In Romania it comprises...Bessarabia . Like its sister principality, Walachia, it was torn by strife among the boyars...Turkish War of 1828 29, Moldavia and Walachia were made virtual protectorates of Russia...
...Ottoman emperor and hospodar (governor) of Walachia (1774 82, 1796 97) and of Moldavia (1786...Moldavia (1799 1801) and became hospodar of Walachia in 1802. He was deposed in 1806 for his...restored (1807) to the government of Walachia by the Russians, who had occupied that...
...George Bibescu, 1804 73, prince of Walachia (1842 48). The first to be elected to...subsequently was appointed hospodar governor of Walachia for a seven-year term (1849 56). In Feb...he decreed the abolition of slavery in Walachia. ____________________ Copyright 2009...
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