On 1 December 1918, the city of Alba Iulia, in what is now central Romania, was the gathering place for the National Assembly of Romanians in Transylvania, who decided that the future of Romanians in Austria-Hungary was with Romania
French geographer Emmanuel de Martonne was one of the greatest fans of Romania in the first half of the 20th Century, even the greatest, according to some. He published studies and maps which had a great influence in the drawing of borders after WWI
Alternative history, also called 'uchronia', has been imagined by many authors so far, generating a rich corpus of literature.
Initiated by amateurs and supported by the state, Romanian radiophony was in perfect tune with the times, being a witness of the countrys major...
Relations between the Church and Jews have been mostly cold throughout history
The fall of Greater Romania started in the summer of 1940, under two ultimatums addressed by the Soviet Government to the Romanian one
The aftermath of WWII marked the dawn of a new era, defined by a new ethnic configuration
Staging gigantic events in order to legitimize the communist partys inflexible policy became common practice in Romania, too, shortly after March 6, 1945 in a bid to imitate the Soviet model
WWI was far from being ended, early into 1918. Neither of the two sides intended to back off, so under the circumstances, US President Thomas Woodrow Wilson made an attempt to make peace
Mathematics is very often described as one of the most abstract domains of human thought. With no strong background in mathematics, a thoroughgoing career in the field of science and technology is impossible
In the first decades of the 20th century, Romanias ethnic science representatives were looking for the ideal Romanian, but that scientific trend was actually a European one
Few names in Romanian journalism between 1945 and 1989 hold more prestige than the name Noel Bernard.
It is said by experts that Central and Eastern Europe past 1918 was a creation of France, and to a large extent that is true
In October 1941, the Romanian army rounded up and executed the Jewish population in Odessa