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The suffering of the local Jews increased during the period of Iron Guard rule over Romania (National Legionary State).In November 1940, all Jewish men were captured for forced labor; shortly thereafter, the academics among them were released as a result of protests by Romanian academics, who threatened that they too would come to work with their Jewish colleagues. [2]
Bârlad (Romanian pronunciation: ⓘ) is a city in Vaslui County, Romania.It lies on the banks of the river Bârlad, which waters the high plains of Western Moldavia.. At Bârlad the railway from Iași diverges, one branch skirting the river Siret, the other skirting the Prut; both reunite at Galați.
The Tutova is a right tributary of the river Bârlad in Romania. [1] [2] It discharges into the Bârlad near the village Tutova. [3]It flows along the villages of Plopana, Străminoasa, Dragomirești, Mărășești, Puiești, Iana, Pogana, Ciocani, Ivești and Pogonești.
The Bârlad is a river in eastern Romania, a left tributary of the river Siret. [1] [2] Its total length is 207 km (129 mi), and its drainage basin area is 7,220 km 2 (2,790 sq mi).
Bârlad Region within the administrative divisions of Romania, 1950–1952 Bârlad Region within the administrative divisions of Romania, 1952–1956. Regiunea Bârlad (Bârlad Region) was one of the newly established (in 1950) administrative divisions of the People's Republic of Romania, copied after the Soviet style of territorial organisation.
Bârlad Plateau (Romanian: Podișului Bârladului) is a geographic area in eastern Romania.It is the south central part of the Moldavian Plateau.Although occasionally has heights over 500 m (1,600 ft), it is generally sloped from north at 400 m (1,300 ft) to the south at 200 m (660 ft).
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Bârlădeanu was born into a family of teachers in Comrat in the Imperial Russian province of Bessarabia. [1] [2] [3] According to an interview he gave late in life, he was neither Gagauz nor Jewish, as sometimes claimed, but an ethnic Romanian.