|
Romania is a republic in South East Europe. Romania is situated in the
northern part of the Balkan peninsula and its territory is marked by
the Carpathian Mountains, the Danube and the Black Sea. Its neighbours
are Moldova to the east, Ukraine to the north, Hungary and
Serbia-Montenegro to the west and Bulgaria to the south. It borders on:
Bulgaria 608 km, Hungary 443 km, Moldova 450 km, Serbia and Montenegro
476 km, Ukraine (north) 362 km, and Ukraine (east) 169 km. Its has 225
km of coastline. Romania has 41 counties (judet): Alba, Arad, Arges,
Bacau, Bihor, Bistrita-Nasaud, Botosani, Braila, Brasov, 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, and Vrancea.
Bucharest has the status of city-municipality (municipiu). In the 1st
century BC, as the Roman empire was expanding and Roman provinces were
being created in Pannonia, Dalmatia, Moesia and Thracia, 1,500 km of
the Danube became the border (Limes) between the Roman Empire and the
Dacian world. Dacia was at the peak of its power under King Decebal
(87-106 AD). After the first confrontation during the reign of Domitian
(87-89), and after two wars (101-102 and 105-106) the Roman empire, at
the peak of its power under Emperor Trajan (98-117), beat Decebal and
turned most of his kingdom into the Roman province Dacia. People and
language were Romanised. Four centuries later, the Romanian territory
of today faced waves of migrating peoples - the Getae, the Tartars, the
Huns, the Gepidae, the Avars, the Slavs, the Petchenegs, and the
Cumanians all crossed the territory. The Romanians belonged to the
Orthodox religion and adopted Old Church Slavic as a church language.
The Hungarians succeeded in gaining control of Transylvania and making
it part of the Hungarian kingdom the 10-13th centuries, though it was
an autonomous voivodate until the beginning of the 16th century.
Colonisation of Szecklers and Germans (Saxons) took place in the 12th
century in border areas. The voivodes of Wallachia Mircea the Old
(1386-1418) and Vlad the Impeller (1456-1462 – known as Dracula in
legends), along with Stephen the Great and Holy (1457-1504), the
voivode of Moldavia and Iancu of Hunedoara, and the voivode of
Transylvania (1441-1456) fought heavy defence battles against the
Ottoman Turks. Wallachia, Transylvania and Moldavia were forced to
recognise the Ottoman Empire. The end of the 16th century was dominated
by the personality of Michael the Brave, voivode of Wallachia, who
joined the Christian League as part of an anti-Ottoman coalition and
succeeded, following heavy battles (Calugareni, Giurgiu), to actually
regain the independence of his country. In 1599-1600 he united for the
first time in history all the territories, proclaiming himself "prince
of Wallachia, Transylvania and the whole of Moldavia." Michael the
Brave was assassinated in 1601. The Ottoman Empire, in an attempt to
defend its old position, introduced in Moldavia (1711) and Wallachia
(1716) the "Phanariot regime," (until 1821), Austria annexed Oltenia
(1718-1793) and Northern Moldavia, which they called Bukovina
(1775-1918). The Danube principalities became a European issue at the
Paris Congress in 1856. The principalities Wallachia (Valachia) and
Moldavia were under the Ottoman Empire, but were placed under the
guarantee of the seven states that signed the Paris Peace Treaty.
According to these decisions, local assemblies were convened to decide
on the future organisation of the two principalities. In 1857 the "
assemblies" convened in Bucharest and Iasi under provisions of the
Paris Congress. These assemblies unanimously decided to unite the two
principalities into one single state. In 1859 Romanians in Moldavia and
in Valachia elected Alexandru Ioan Cuza as their prince, achieving de
facto the union of the two principalities. The state took the name of
Romania in 1862, and settled its capital in Bucharest. Cuza initiated a
reform programme, which contributed to the modernisation of Romanian
society and state structures. Romania proclaimed independence from
Turkey on 9 May 1877. The independence of Romania, as well as the union
of Dobrudja with Romania were recognised in the Russian-Turkish peace
treaty of San Stefano in 1878. Romania became an independent state with
the Treaty of Berlin in 1878. It proclaimed itself a kingdom on 26
March 1881 and Carol I of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen was crowned King of
Romania. After World War I the state acquired Bukovina, Transylvania,
Banat and Bessarabia, but in 1940 it ceded northern Transylvania to
Hungary, Bessarabia and a part of Bukovina to the USSR and part of
Dobrudja to Bulgaria. In 1941 Ion Antonescu led the country in its
support of Germany against the USSR. At the end of the war, the country
was occupied by Soviet troops. After World War II a People’s Republic
was proclaimed (on 30 December 1947). King Michael I was forced to
abdicate on the same day. A single-party dictatorship was established,
based on an omnipotent and omnipresent surveillance and repression
force. Industrial enterprises, banks and transportation were
nationalised (1948), agriculture was forcibly collectivised
(1949-1962), and the whole economy was developed according to five-year
plans, the main goal being a Stalinist-type industrialisation. Romania
became a founding member of COMECON (1949) and the Warsaw Treaty
(1955). At the death of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej (Dezh) in 1965, the
communist leader of the after-war epoch and the party was Nicolae
Ceausescu. Romania distanced herself from the USSR and the country was
the only Warsaw Treaty member-state that did not intervene in
Czechoslovakia in 1968. Nicolae Ceausescu managed to concentrate in his
hands and those of his wife Elena Ceausescu the power of the communist
party and of the state system. On 16 December 1989 anti-government
demonstrations were fired on in Timisoara, and president and communist
leader Nicolae Ceausescu declared a state of emergency. The army and
some police joined the rebellion and a “Council of National Salvation”
announced that it had overthrown the government. Ceausescu and his wife
Elena were captured and after a short trial (with famous words from
Ceausescu that he “only recognises the Grand National Assembly”,
adding: “I will only speak in front of it”) they were executed on 25
December 1989. Romania had at the end of the regime to make a
transition with a largely obsolete socialist industrial base. The
country got a new constitution on 8 December 1991, and revised it in
2003. Former communists continued to dominate Romania’s political life
until 1996, when a central government took power. In Romanian elections
at the end of 2004, former communist Ion Iliescu, who had been
president since 2000, and left-wing Prime Minister Adrian Năstase lost
their positions. Traian Basescu became the new president and Calin
Constantin Anton Popescu – Tariceanu got the prime minister’s job.
Traian Basescu, who represents the National Liberal Party (PNL) –
Democrat Party (PD) alliance, pulled in 51.3% of the vote in the second
presidential election tour. Former Prime Minister Năstase, representing
the Social-Liberal Party (PSD) and the Romanian Humanist Party (PUR),
got 48.77%. Important political parities are: the Democratic Party
(PD); the Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR); the
National Liberal Party (PNL); the Romania Mare Party (Greater Romanian
Party – PRM); and the Social Democratic Party (PSD), formerly known as
the Party of Social Democracy in Romania (PDSR). Parliament consists of
the Senate (Senat) and the Chamber of Deputies (Camera Deputatilor).
The Chamber of Deputies and the Senate are elected in constituencies by
direct expressed suffrage. The two chambers have different numbers of
members: the Chamber of Deputies is composed of 332 deputies, and the
Senate of 137 senators. This differentiation is possible owing to the
legal provision of a representation norm differing from one chamber to
the other. Thus for the election of the Chamber of Deputies the
representation norm is of one deputy to 70,000 inhabitants, and for the
election of the Senate, of one Senator to 160,000 inhabitants. UN, NATO
and OSCE member Romania is a candidate, together with Bulgaria and
Croatia, to join the European Union (EU) during the next membership
wave (in 2007 with Bulgaria, but there is a safeguard clause which
under certain conditions may postpone EU membership for both countries
by a year). The EU Commission published an October 2005 paper called
the Regular Report on Romania’s progress towards accession. According
to this report, Romania continues to fulfil the political criteria for
EU accession and has taken decisive steps to further reform the
judiciary system and make it more independent and to improve the
situation for media freedom, property restitution, minorities and child
protection. However, a number of shortcomings still exist: significant
efforts are needed to pursue the reform of public administration,
effectively implement reform of the justice system and ensure effective
enforcement of the fight against corruption, including high level
corruption. In the area of human rights and the protection of
minorities, further efforts are needed in particular to improve the
situation of disabled and mentally ill people. Regarding economic
criteria, Romania is considered a functioning market economy which has
“broadly maintained macroeconomic stability, even though policy has
widened macroeconomic imbalances”. The report considers that
“vigorously implementing its structural reform programme should enable
it to cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the
union”. The implementation of a currency reform passed in 2004 began on
1 July 2005. The currency was re-denominated at a ratio of 1:10,000
through new bank notes and coins. The old money can be legally used
until 31 December 2006. This change also brought a revision of the
country monetary code: from ROL (until 1 July 2005) it changed to RON.
|