Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Romania_in_World_War_II> ?p ?o }
- Romania_in_World_War_II abstract "Following the outbreak of World War II on 1 September 1939, the Kingdom of Romania under King Carol II officially adopted a position of neutrality. However, the rapidly changing situation in Europe during 1940, as well as domestic political upheaval, undermined this stance. Fascist political forces such as the Iron Guard rose in popularity and power, urging an alliance with Nazi Germany and its allies. As the military fortunes of Romania's two main guarantors of territorial integrity — France and Britain — crumbled in the Fall of France, the government of Romania turned to Germany in hopes of a similar guarantee, unaware that the then dominant European power had already granted its consent to Soviet territorial claims in a secret protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, signed back in 1939.In summer 1940, a series of territorial disputes were resolved unfavorably to Romania, resulting in the loss of most of the territory gained in the wake of World War I. This caused the popularity of Romania's government to plummet, further reinforcing the fascist and military factions, who eventually staged a coup that turned the country into a fascist dictatorship under Mareșal Ion Antonescu. The new regime firmly set the country on a course towards the Axis camp, officially joining the Axis powers on 23 November 1940. \"When it's a question of action against the Slavs, you can always count on Romania,\" Antonescu stated ten days before the start of Operation Barbarossa.As a member of the Axis, Romania joined the invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, providing equipment and oil to Nazi Germany as well as committing more troops to the Eastern Front than all the other allies of Germany combined. Romanian forces played a large role during the fighting in Ukraine, Bessarabia, Stalingrad, and elsewhere. Romanian troops were responsible for the persecution and massacre of up to 260,000 Jews on Romanian-controlled territories, though most Jews living within Romania survived the harsh conditions.After the tide of war turned against the Axis, Romania was bombed by the Allies from 1943 onwards and invaded by advancing Soviet armies in 1944. With popular support for Romania's participation in the war faltering and German-Romanian fronts collapsing under Soviet onslaught, King Michael of Romania led a coup d'état, which deposed the Antonescu regime and put Romania on the side of the Allies for the remainder of the war. Despite the Red Army's presence in Romania, Stalin not only left the king on his throne, but awarded him Russia's highest military order for his part in the coup. Further showing his intent following Yalta, to abet the restoration of the powers of the ancien regimes probellum, Stalin and local Communist leaders officially honored the clerical-nationalist official churches. {Deutscher, Stalin (1967), p. 519}Despite this late association with the winning side, Greater Romania was largely dismantled, losing territory to Bulgaria and the Soviet Union, but regaining Northern Transylvania from Hungary. Approximately 370,000 Romanian soldiers died during the war, most of them while in Soviet captivity.".
- Romania_in_World_War_II thumbnail Romania_1930_ethnic_map_EN.png?width=300.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 221.gif.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink romaniareport.html.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 11_razboi.pdf.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink Rou.htm.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 22.htm.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 12954.pdf.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink Holocaust_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 7844797.stm.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink index.php?id=39.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink 7.stefan-gheorghe.pdf.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink phas-045-weinbaum.htm.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink ?language=en.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink romania.asp?WT.mc_id=wiki.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageExternalLink ?g2_page=52.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageID "297155".
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageLength "38024".
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageOutDegree "231".
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageRevisionID "707658495".
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink 1941_Odessa_massacre.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink 6th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink 8th_Army_(Wehrmacht).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Allied_Commission.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Allies_of_World_War_II.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Antisemitism.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Arad,_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Arad_County.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Armand_Călinescu.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Austria.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Austria-Hungary.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Axis_powers.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_France.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Păuliș.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Stalingrad.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Turda.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bessarabia.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bogdanovka.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bombing_of_Bucharest_in_World_War_II.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bombing_of_Romania_in_World_War_II.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Brașov.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bucharest.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bucharest_North_railway_station.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Budjak.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bukovina.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Bulgaria.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Carol_II_of_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Category:Eastern_European_theatre_of_World_War_II.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Category:Romania_in_World_War_II.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Category:The_Holocaust_in_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Caucasus.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Chișinău.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Cluj-Napoca.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Constitutional_monarchy.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Corneliu_Zelea_Codreanu.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Corporatism.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Country_neutrality_(international_relations).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Czechoslovakia.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Dniester.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Dorohoi.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Europe.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Front_(World_War_II).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Einsatzkommando.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink End_of_World_War_II_in_Europe.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Fascism.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink First_Army_(Romania).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink First_Battle_of_Târgu_Frumos.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink First_Jassy–Kishinev_Offensive.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Fourth_Army_(Romania).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink French_Third_Republic.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink General_Secretary_of_the_Communist_Party_of_the_Soviet_Union.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Ghetto.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Great_Britain.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Great_Depression.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Greater_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Greece.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink History_of_the_Jews_in_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink History_of_the_Soviet_Union_(1982–91).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Horia_Sima.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Hotin_County.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Hungarian–Romanian_War.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Iași.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Iași_pogrom.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Inflation.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Ioan_Mihail_Racoviță.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Ion_Antonescu.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Ion_Gigurtu.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Iron_Guard.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Jassy–Kishinev_Offensive.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Jilava.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Jilava_Massacre.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Stalin.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink King_Michaels_Coup.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Hungary_(1920–46).
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Italy.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Kingdom_of_Romania.
- Romania_in_World_War_II wikiPageWikiLink Legionnaires_rebellion_and_Bucharest_pogrom.