We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
SOME ASPECTS REGARDING ROMANIAN-BULGARIAN AND ROMANIAN-RUSSIAN RELATIONS IN WORLD WAR I.
- Authors
GORUN, Hadrian
- Abstract
AFTER 1913, WHEN ROMANIA OBTAINED SOUTH DOBRUDJA (CADRILATER) FROM BULGARIA, THE RELATIONS BETWEEN THE TWO COUNTRIES WORSENED. THE GOVERNEMENT LEADED BY VASIL RADOSLAVOV WANTED TO REVISE THE TREATY SIGNED IN 1913 AT BUCHAREST. IF THE RELATIONS BETWEEN BUCHAREST AND PETROGRAD BECAME BETTER AT THE BEGINNING OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR, ROMANIA'S RELATIONS WITH ITS SOUTHERN NEIGHBOUR REMAINED STRAINED. IN THE AUTUMN OF THE YEAR 1915, BULGARIA JOINED CENTRAL POWERS. ROMANIA, STILL IN NEUTRALITY, FEARED AND REJECTED THE POSSIBILITY TO FIGHT ON TWO FRONTS. THE PROBABILITY OF A BULGARIAN OFFENSIVE AGAINST THE SOUTHERN BORDER OF THE COUNTRY DELAYED THE DECISION OF INTERVENTION OF THE ROMANIAN GOVERNMENT. IN ORDER TO ENTER THE WAR, THE AUTHORITIES FROM BUCHAREST ASKED FOR RUSSIAN TROOPS IN DOBRUJA. AS THE MILITARY AGREEMENT OF AUGUST 1916 STIPULATED, THE ALLIED ARMY OF SALONIKA HAD TO BEGIN AN OFFENSIVE IN ORDER TO PREVENT A BULGARIAN ATTACK AGAINST ROMANIA. ROMANIA'S ENTRY INTO THE WORLD WAR I HAD TO BEGIN EIGHT DAYS AFTER THE OFFENSIVE FROM SALONIKA. THIS ARMY HAD ALSO TO COUNTERACT THE MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THE BULGARIAN TROOPS. SOME OF ROMANIA'S APPREHENSIONS REGARDING RUSSIA PERSISTED AS WELL.
- Subjects
BULGARIA; ROMANIA; ROMANIA-Soviet Union relations; TWENTIETH century; DIPLOMATIC history; INTERNATIONAL relations
- Publication
Annals of the Constantin Brancusi University of Targu Jiu-Letters & Social Sciences Series, 2015, p33
- ISSN
1844-6051
- Publication type
Article