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If Moldova decided to unite with Romania, the status of Gagauzia, a "national-territorial autonomous unit" of Moldova with three official languages (Romanian, Gagauz, and Russian), would be unclear. While the autonomy of Gagauzia is guaranteed by the Moldovan constitution and regulated by the 1994 Gagauz Autonomy Act, the laws of Romania do not ...
The Journal of Early Modern Studies (JEMS) is a biannual double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal of intellectual history, specializing in the interactions between philosophy, science and religion in Early Modern Europe, published by Zeta Books.
This mission was discontinued in 1992 and missionaries were then assigned to the Hungary Budapest Mission until July 1, 1993, when the Romania Bucharest Mission was organized with John R. Morrey as president. This mission also administered church work in Moldova, and was eventually renamed the Romania/Moldova Mission. [5]
The Moldova–Romania border is a fluvial boundary, following the course of the Prut and Danube. This is also part of the eastern border of the European Union, running from Criva in the North to Giurgiulești in the South. Moldova has access to the Danube for less than 500 metres, and Giurgiulești is the Moldovan port on the Danube river.
Administrative divisions of the Romanian United Principalities in 1864, five years after the unification of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859.. The unification of Moldavia and Wallachia (Romanian: Unirea Moldovei și Țării Românești), [1] also known as the unification of the Romanian Principalities (Romanian: Unirea Principatelor Române) [2] or as the Little Union (Romanian: Mica Unire), [3 ...
Western Moldavia (Romanian: Moldova Occidentală, Moldova de Apus, or Moldova de Vest), also known as Romanian Moldavia, is the core historic and geographical part of the former Principality of Moldavia situated in eastern and north-eastern Romania.
Ismail County was a county of Romania between 1925 and 1938 and between 1941 and 1944, in Bessarabia, with the capital city at Ismail.It was also a county of Moldavia between 1856 and 1859, and of the Principality of Romania between 1859 and 1878, in Southern Bessarabia.
As of 2018, Băsescu was one of the main figures campaigning for unification between Moldova and Romania. The unification declarations in Moldova provoked similar responses in Romania, where counties, [112] cities [112] and communes, [106] but also schools, [219] parishes [225] and members of the Romanian diaspora, among others, took similar ...