| Greater Romania. From Democracy to Dictatorship | |
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In 1918, Romania's political
unity, based on the principles of peoples' right to
self-determination, was completed. On March 27, 1918, the
Council of the Country (Sfatul Tarii) convened in
Kishinew, and decided on the "unification of
Bessarabia with Romania for now and all times". On
November 28, 1918, the General Congress of Bukovina cast
a unanimous vote for the "unconditioned and
everlasting unification of Bukovina within its old
borders up to Ceremus, Colacin and the Dnestr, with the
kingdom of Romania". On the 1st of December, 1918,
the great national assembly in Alba Iulia proclaimed the
"unification of all Romanians from Transylvania, the
Banat, Crisana and Maramures with Romania for all ages to
come". Romanian forces in Transylvania drove into
Hungary in 1919, after the communist forces there gained
ground under Bela Kun, who, starting from early 1919, had
launched an attack across the Tisza River against the
Romanians. In 1919, the Romanians seized Budapest and
occupied it for several months. The unification of all
the lands inhabited by Romanians was mentioned in the
Versailles peace treaties (1919-1920) after the First
World War, and sanctioned by the crowning of King
Ferdinand I and Queen Maria at Alba Iulia in the year
1922. After 1918, Romania made important steps forward toward strengthening national state life, by enacting major reforms: the universal ballot (1918), the land reform (1921) and the Constitution of 1923. Benefitting from large natural resources and boasting a constitutional regime based on a democratic system, the country recorded a strong upsurge of development. The depression of 1929-1933 caused social unrest and instability within the country and paved the way for Carol, King Ferdiand's son, who was in exile with Elena Lupescu, his mistress. He ascended the throne in 1930, as Carol II, and brought Elena along. A fascist movement was founded in 1927 by Corneliu Codreanu, who later renamed his followers the Iron Guard. The Iron Guard grew in strength during the 1930s, and King Carol had thousands of them imprisoned, and Codreanu shot.
In 1938, King Carol II abolished the
constitution and proclaimed a royal government. As far as
foreign policy - as represented by the great Romanian
diplomat Nicolae Titulescu - was concerned, it militated
for European security, with Romania playing a major role
within the Society of Nations at Geneva; it also
masterminded regional alliances like the Little Entente
(1921), comprising Romania, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia,
and the Balkan Entente (1934), including Romania,
Yugoslavia, Greece and Turkey. |
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