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Historical Wallachia

==INTRODUCTION===================================

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 Wallachia is the "original" home region of Romania.

Stretching from the jagged peaks of the Carpathian mountains across the wide alluvial plains down to the Danube River, Wallachia is Romanian "home territory" since it's incept in the late 1200s.  

 

 

Alexandru Ioan Cuza

United Wallachia with Moldova, 1859

 

Wallachia:  The "Real" Romania!

The historical and notional region known as Wallachia is given the nostalgic term "Ţara Românească" (Romanian Country, more like "Heartland" in this sense) and includes Muntenia, Dobrogea, most of Oltenia , and parts of Moldova.  The terms "Vlahia" or "Valahia" are also used by Romanian historians.
  Wallachia since the middle ages has been inhabited by the people who became today's modern Romanians, termed "Vlachs" by their Slavic and Saxon neighbours. 
About 80% of this traditional Romanian region which at least those living there consider to be the "real" Romanian territory, is still within Romania's national borders.  Wallachia today is represented by an eagle in Romania's coat of arms. 
The Wallachian people generally were bounded by the Carpathian mountains in the north and inhabited mainly the great sweep of alluvial plains going from the mountains down to the Danube.

What's in a Name? 

The name Wallachia is derived from Valachs a german word for Romanians who was taken by the Slavs and used as Vlach. For long periods before the 14th century, Wallachia was referred to as 'Vlashko' by Bulgarian sources (and 'Vlashka' by Serbian sources).
The traditional Hungarian name for Wallachia is Havasalföld, or literally 'Snowy Lowlands'. The name Ungrovlahia, "Hungarian Wallachia", denotes the neighbourhood position towards the Hungarian Kingdom, meaning Wallachia near Hungarian Kingdom. In Turkish, Eflak, a word derived from "Vlach" is used. As noted above, Vlahia or Valahia are also used by Romanian historians.
 
Below:  The Olt River cut through the southern Carpathian Mountains, allowing early access from Wallachia to form outposts in Transilvania at Răşinari and then Sibiu.

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The History and Culture -- What Happened and Why?
==HISTORY===================================  
This website is a general tourist guide, designed to help English-speaking tourists understand Romania, and as such, provides historical information for the interest of our traveller readers.  History can be a contentious issue, and we welcome input where readers think clarification or correction is advisable.  Please e-mail us here if you have questions or comments about anything in this history section.

 

Wallachia from the

1300s to the 1800s

 

 

The Land of the Vlachs become Wallachia

The incept of Romanian princes in the mid 1200s is marked by Litovoi, who in 1272 ruled over land in the southern Carpathians, including land as far north as the Olt River Valley on the northern side of the mountain chain. 
With the Hungarian crown greatly weakened by repeated invasions by the Huns in the late 1200s, the new Wallachian principality was given some breathing room.

 

Early Wallachia 1310 - 1396

The event which is considered the real start of the Romanian state happened when Basarab I (1310-1352) united the various Vlach princes on either side of the Olt River running from the north in Transilvania down to the Danube.
With their capitol in the high foothills at Câmpulung, the new Wallachian state quickly combined with those of the Banat of Severin, Făgăraş, southern Moldavia, the Danube Delta, and the lands between the Prut and Dniester which were to be later known as Basarabia (counties of Cahul, Ismail and Cetatae Albă).
For the next half century the Hungarian king repeatedly tried to regain control of the Romanian lands and force suzerainty (control over) the new Romanian princes.

 

Wallachia Under Siege

In the second half of the 14th century, a new threat appeared - the Ottoman Empire. After having first gained a foothold in Europe in 1354, the Ottoman Turks defeated the weakened Bulgarian states of Tarnovo, Vidin and the principality of Dobrogea, and in 1396 reached the south bank of the Danube.
The whole Balkan Peninsula south of the Danube would soon become integral Turkish territory, a process which was concluded with the fall of Constantinople to Sultan Mehmed II in 1453.
For approximately 150 years, Wallachia withstood numerous Turkish attacks. Alone or allied with the neighboring Christian countries, successful voivodes like Mircea the Elder (1386-1418) and Vlad Tepes (1456-1462) fought many defensive battles against the Ottomans, preventing them from expanding into Central Europe.
Below:  Wallachia (shown as "Valaquie") on this French Map from the 1700s

See the Full Map Here
 

Ottoman Wallachia 1535 - 1821

From the late 1300s to the early 1600s, Wallachia was dominated by the expanding Turkish empire.
Wallachia had to accept the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire for more than three centuries, though there were a few attempts to regain independence: in particular Michael the Brave who in 1600 managed to unite for a short period of time the three principalities of Wallachia, Moldavia and Transylvania.
The Wallachian Golden Eagle of the Romanian Coat of Arms

Click on Coat of Arms for Full-Sized Version
 
During the Ottoman rule, members of the ruling classes in Wallachia were appointed to rule in an always uneasy power balance.  The conflicts of the boyars and powerful families of Wallachia with their kings led to the eventual surrender to the Turks. 

United with Moldova 1712

By the early 1700s, the rule from Constantinopole was enforced by Greek transplants such as Nicolae Mavrocordat (Nicholas Mavrocordato in Greek), who was the first ruler in 1712 to jointly rule both Wallachia and Moldova, followed in 1730 by his son, who ruled until 1769. 
In 1718, the Treaty of Passarowitz gave the Banat and Oltenia to the Habsburg Empire which lasted until the Russian-Austrian-Turkish war which returned Oltenia to Wallachia in 1739.
The rule of the Greek officials ended only after the uprising of 1821 of Tudor Vladimirescu

A Nearly Free Wallachia, 1821 - 1859

For almost 40 years from 1821 to 1859, Wallachia operated mostly autonomously, albeit with a Russian Occupation period from 1828 to 1934 under Pavel Kiseleff under an agreement after the Turko-Russian war of 1828.

Grigore IV Ghica

r. 1822 - 1828

Grigore IV Ghica ruled from 1822 through the arrival of the Russians, when in 1831 an act resembling a constitution was adopted.
Succession after the end of the Russian Occupation was again in the Ghica family, this time under Grigore's younger brother, Alexandru II Ghica, who ruled 8 years from 1834 through to 1842. 

Unification with Moldova, 1859

In 1859, Wallachia voted to unite with Moldova to form the state of Romania, under the rule of Alexandru Ioan Cuza/Alexander John Cuza.
Although the name Wallachia as a principality was important between the early 1300s and the late 1800s, it's use as an administrative region waned as Romania became a nation.
Today, the two main parts of old Wallachia, Muntenia and Oltenia have more currency in common parlance. 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

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Below:  "Modern Wallachia" using traditional boundries

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Geography of Wallachia

Wallachia was situated north of the Danube and south of the Carpathian Mountains.  It's modern borders are generally identical to modern Oltenia and Muntenia.
Its neighbours were Bulgaria, after that the Ottoman Empire to the south, Transylvania to the north-west and Moldavia to the north-east.  The capital city changed over time, from Curtea de Argeş to Târgovişte and finally Bucharest.
 

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==LINKS=================================== Read More about this Great Area with some of these Interesting and Informatative Links!

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallachia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etymology_of_Vlach

 

 

==INTRODUCTION===================================

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