Romania Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
Romania (formerly spelled Rumania or Roumania) is a country in southeastern Europe. Romania is bordered by Ukraine and Moldova in the northeast, Hungary and Serbia in the west and Bulgaria to the south. Romania also has a small sea coast on the Black Sea.
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| National motto: none | |||||
| Official language | Romanian | ||||
| Capital | Bucharest | ||||
| President | Ion Iliescu | ||||
| Prime Minister | Adrian Năstase; | ||||
| Area - Total - % water | Ranked 78th 238,391 km˛ 3.0% | ||||
| Population - Total (2002) - Density | Ranked 49th 21,698,181 91.3/km² | ||||
| Independence | 9 May 1877 (from the Ottoman Empire) | ||||
| Currency | Leu | ||||
| Time zone | UTC +2/+3 | ||||
| National anthem | Deşteaptă-te, Române; | ||||
| Internet TLD | .RO | ||||
| Calling Code | 40 | ||||
| Table of contents |
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2 History 3 Politics 4 Counties 5 Geography 6 Economy 7 Demographics 8 Culture 9 Miscellaneous topics 10 External links |
The name Romania comes from Rome or the (Eastern) Roman Empire and asserts the country's origins as a Roman Empire province. In Late Antiquity the Roman Empire was often called Romania in Latin. The official language is Romanian.
Some historians have argued that the medieval Byzantine Empire should more properly be called Romania, but this has not caught on.
"Romania" is also used for the set of European lands where Romance languages appeared.
The Dacians were defeated by the Roman Empire in 106 by the Emperor Trajan in two campaigns stretching from 101 to 107, which marked the beginning of a succession of invasions of Romania, although the rulers usually allowed a high degree of autonomy.
In the Middle Ages Romanians lived in three distinct principalities: Wallachia, Moldavia (also Moldova) and Transylvania.
Wallachia and Moldavia came under the suzeranity of the Ottoman Empire in 15th and 16th century respectively, with internal autonomy, and brief periods of independence, Moldova losing its eastern side Bessarabia to the Russian Empire in 1812, its northern part Bukovina to the Austrian Empire in 1775 and its south-eastern part Bugeac to the Ottoman Empire
Transylvania came under Hungary's influence by 12th century, (but enjoying a large autonomy as a principality), subsequently falling under the influence of the Ottoman Empire in 1526, following the Battle of Mohacs. During the 18th century, the Austrian Empire (since 1857 Austria-Hungary) also exerted its political influence over Transylvania.
The modern Romania was born when the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia merged in 1859, and independency was ratified by the Great Powers in 1877. Following the WW I and the disintegration of the Russian Empire and Austro-Hungary, and the rise of Bolshevism in Hungary and Russia, Transylvania and Bessarabia opted for a Union with the Romanian Kingdom in 1918.
Bessarabia, N. Bukovina and Bugeac were incorporated by the Soviet Union in 1940, mostly comprising the present-day Republic of Moldova with Bugeac and N. Bukovina assigned to Ukraine. After the Second World War, Romania became a communist state under military and economic control of USSR until 1958.
The decades-long reign of president Nicolae Ceauşescu; was ended with an uprising in late 1989, although ex-communists, now reformed as social democrats continued to be present in the democratically elected government until 1996 when a center-right coalition government took power for one term. In 2000, social democrats returned to power and elections will be held on November 28th, 2004
See also: Kings of Romania
Romania is a democratic republic. The legislative branch of the Romanian government consists of two chambers, the Senat (Senate), which has 140 members, and the Camera Deputaţilor (Chamber of Deputies), which has 345 members.
The members of both chambers are chosen in elections held every four years.
The president, the head of the executive branch, is also elected by popular vote, every five years (until 2004 - four years).
The president appoints a prime minister, who heads the government, the members of which are in turn appointed by the prime minister. The government is subject to a parliamentary vote of approval.
Romania is divided into 41 judeţe, or counties, and the municipality of Bucharest (Bucureşti) - the capital.
The counties are (in alphabetical order):
Name
History
Main article: History of RomaniaPolitics
Main article: Politics of RomaniaCounties
Main article: Counties of Romaniais green, Wallachia blue, the Moldavian region red, and Dobrogea yellow]]
Main article: Geography of Romania
A large part of Romania's borders with Yugoslavia and Bulgaria is formed by the Danube. The Danube is joined by the Prut River, which forms the border with Moldova.
The Carpathian Mountains dominate the western part of Romania, with peaks up to 2,500 m, the highest, Moldoveanu, reaching 2,544 m.
Major cities are the capital Bucharest, Braşov;, Timişoara;, Cluj-Napoca, Constanţa;, Craiova, and Iaşi; (Jassy).
See also:
After the collapse of the Soviet Bloc in 1989-91, Romania was left with an obsolete industrial base and a pattern of industrial capacity wholly unsuited to its needs.
In February 1997, Romania embarked on a comprehensive macroeconomic stabilisation and structural reform programme, but reform subsequently has been a frustrating stop-and-go process. Restructuring programs include liquidating large energy-intensive industries and major agricultural and financial sector reforms.
Romania's lagging and unstable economy has been transformed into one with macroeconomic stability, high growth and low unemployment.
Romania reached an agreement with the IMF in August for a USD $547 million loan, but release of the second tranche was postponed in October because of unresolved private sector lending requirements and differences over budgetary spending.
Bucharest avoided defaulting on mid-year lump-sum debt payments, but had to significantly draw down reserves to do so; reserves rebounded to an estimated $1.5 billion by year end 1999.
The government's priorities include: obtaining renewed IMF lending, tightening fiscal policy, accelerating privatisation, and restructuring unprofitable firms.
2002 and 2003 were successful economic years, and currently GDP growth is forecast at 4.5% per annum. The economy grew by 6.6% in the first half of 2004, marking the highest growth rate in the region. The average gross wage per month in Romania is 8,292,762 lei as of April 2004, an increase of a significant 7.8% over the previous month. This equates to US$246.90, 203.41 euro and 352.56 AUD. The average net salary per month in January 2004 was 5,969,555 lei.
GDP growth could reach 7-8% in 2005.
Unemployment in Romania is at 6.2% (2004), which is very low compared to other European countries.
Romania was invited by the European Union in December 1999 to begin accession negotiations. It is expected to join the EU in 2007 along with Bulgaria.
Despite clear improvements, Romania still faces several key problems: rampant corruption on almost all levels of society, lack of transparency regarding public spendings, lack of economic competitivity - especially in the agricultural sector, some underemployment in rural areas and low pace of reform in the public (state owned) sector of economy.
Press freedom is generally granted, but some economic and administrative pressures determine media to reflect especially the positive or neutral aspects in the society, rather than the negative ones or critics addressed to the Government.
Romania was granted in October 2004 the much desired 'functional market economy' status by EU officials, with some reserves - especially related to aspects mentioned in the paragraph above.
Ethnic groups (2002 est.):
Sizeable minorities of Hungarian and German descent, mostly in Transylvania, also speak Hungarian and German. Other ethnic groups include Roma Gypsies and natives of Romania's neighbouring countries. The true size of the Roma population is unknown because it is undercounted in national censuses (for various reasons, some Gypsies choose to declare themselves as Romanians or Hungarians; usually the criterion is the language they speak). There is also small Polish minority (numbering a few thousand people) living in Suceava County.
Most Romanians are members of the Romanian Orthodox Church, which is one of the churches of Eastern Orthodox Christianity. Catholicism (both Roman Catholic and Romanian Catholic) and Protestantism are also represented, mostly in the areas inhabited by population of Hungarian descent, mostly in the western part of the country.
In Dobrogea, the region lying on the shore of the Black Sea, there is a small Muslim minority (most of Turkish ethnicity), a remnant of the Ottoman colonization of that province in the past.
See also:
This is an Article on Romania. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Romania Geography
Economy
Main article: Economy of RomaniaDemographics
Main article: Demographics of Romania
Religions (2002 est.):
The official language is Romanian, a Romance language of the Italic subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages, which are also called Romanic, and are spoken by about 670 million people in many parts of the world, but mainly in Europe and the Western Hemisphere. Culture
Main article: Culture of RomaniaMiscellaneous topics
External links
