Overview
Country, northeastern Balkan Peninsula, southeastern Europe.
It is bordered by Ukraine and Romania. Area: 13,067 sq mi
(33,843 sq km). Population (2007 est.): 3,794,000. Capital:
Chișinău. Nearly half the population is Moldovan; there also are
large numbers of Russians and Ukrainians, especially in
Transdniestria (Transnistria; Pridnestrovie), the
self-proclaimed republic located on the east bank of the
Dniester River. Languages: Moldovan (official), Russian,
Ukrainian. Religions: Christianity (mostly Eastern Orthodox,
also other Christians), Islam. Currency: Moldovan leu. Most of
Moldova is a fertile region lying between the Dniester and Prut
rivers; the northern and central regions of the country are
forested. The economy is based on agriculture; the major farm
products are grapes, winter wheat, corn, and dairy products.
Industry is centred on food processing. Moldova is a unitary
parliamentary republic with one legislative body; its head of
state is the president, and the head of government is the prime
minister. The area of present-day Moldova consists of that part
of the historic principality of Moldavia lying east of the Prut
River (part of Romania before 1940) and, adjoining it on the
south, the region of Bessarabia along the Black Sea coast. (See
Moldavia for history prior to 1940.) The two regions were
incorporated as the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1940.
In 1991 Moldavia declared independence from the Soviet Union. It
adopted the Moldovan spelling of Moldova, having earlier
legitimized use of the Latin rather than the Cyrillic alphabet.
Moldova was admitted to the UN in 1992. In 2000 it abandoned its
semipresidential form of government to become a parliamentary
republic.
Profile
Official name Republica Moldova (Republic of Moldova)
Form of government unitary parliamentary republic with a single
legislative body (Parliament [101])
Head of state President
Head of government Prime Minister
Capital Chișinău
Official language 1
Official religion none
Monetary unit Moldovan leu (plural lei)2
Population estimate (2008) 3,760,000
Total area (sq mi) 13,067
Total area (sq km) 33,843
1Moldovan, a form of Romanian, is the state (official) language
per article 13 of the constitution.
2The Transdniestrian ruble is the official currency of
Transdniestria.
Main
country lying in the northeastern corner of the Balkan region
of Europe. Formerly known as Bessarabia, this region was an
integral part of the Romanian principality of Moldavia until
1812, when it was ceded to Russia by its suzerain, the sultan of
the Ottoman Empire. Bessarabia remained a province of the
Russian Empire until after World War I, when it became a part of
Greater Romania, and it reverted to Russian control in 1940–41
and again after World War II, when it was joined to a strip of
formerly Ukrainian territory, the Moldavian Autonomous Soviet
Socialist Republic, on the left bank of the Dniester River
(Moldovan: Nistru) to form the Moldavian Soviet Socialist
Republic. Upon the collapse of the Soviet Union in August 1991,
this republic declared its independence and took the name
Moldova. It became a member of the United Nations in 1992. The
capital city is Chișinău.
Since its independence in 1991, Moldova has been beset with
an array of challenges stemming from four problematic
situations. First, the country has sought to establish a viable
state where no tradition of self-government and sovereignty had
existed before. Second, without a local political tradition, it
was difficult for Moldova to agree on a constitution and to find
political leaders untainted by association with the highly
centralized, authoritarian Soviet Union. Third, the transition
from a controlled economy to a free market economy has been
rocky. A largely agricultural economy based on state and
collective farms had been developed under Soviet rule. When many
of these farms were broken up and turned over to individuals
after independence, considerable dislocation, loss of
productivity, and allegations of corruption resulted. Finally,
the economic transition was further impeded by the fact that
much of Moldovan industry was located in the separatist region
of Transdniestria, which had proclaimed independence from
Moldova in 1990, resulting in a brief civil war. Although a
cease-fire was declared in 1992, relations remained tense
between Moldova and Transdniestria, and Russian troops are still
present in the security zone. Transdniestria is also the source
of much of Moldova’s electricity, which has been cut off at
various times. Thus, Moldova’s road to nationhood has remained
bumpy—from the first efforts at nation-building to the country’s
pursuit of peace and prosperity in the 21st century.
Land
Moldova is bounded by Ukraine to the north, east, and
south and by Romania to the west. The bulk of the republic lies
between the great meandering Prut and Dniester rivers.
Relief
Moldova lies to the east of the great arc of the Carpathian
Mountains. It is underlain mostly by deep sedimentary rocks
covering the southwestern portion of the ancient structural
block known as the Russian, or East European, Plain. Harder
crystalline rocks outcrop only in the north. Its surface is a
hilly plain, with an average elevation of 482 feet (147 metres),
cut by a deep network of river valleys, ravines, and gullies.
The uplands of the centre of the republic, the Codri Hills,
lie at an average elevation of about 1,150 to 1,300 feet (350 to
400 metres), and the highest point, Mount Bălănești, in the
west, reaches 1,407 feet (429 metres). These uplands are
interlaced by deep, flat valleys, ravines, and landslide-scoured
depressions separated by sharp ridges. Steep forested slopes
account for much of the terrain. The Dniester uplands, their
eastern slopes forming the high right bank of the Dniester
River, border the central uplands on the east and northeast.
The northern landscape of Moldova is characterized by the
level plain of the Bălți steppe (500 to 650 feet [150 to 200
metres] in elevation) and also by uplands averaging twice this
elevation, culminating in Vysokaya Hill (1,053 feet [321
metres]). The northern uplands include the strikingly eroded
Medobory-Toltry limestone ridges, which border the Prut River.
In the south, the extensive Bugeac Plain is broken by
numerous ravines and gullies, while, in the east, left-bank
Moldova includes spurs of the Volyn-Podolsk Upland cut into by
tributaries of the Dniester.
Drainage
Moldova has a well-developed network of rivers and streams,
all draining south to the Black Sea, but only about one-tenth of
these exceed 6 miles (10 km) in length, and even fewer exceed 60
miles (100 km). In fact, many of these are small, shallow
streams that dry up during the summer. The Dniester, the rapidly
flowing main artery, is navigable almost throughout the
republic; the river becomes swollen by spring snowmelt from the
Carpathians and by heavy summer rains. It does not freeze over
during warmer winters. The other, smaller, main artery, the
Prut, is a tributary of the Danube River, which it joins at the
extreme southern tip of the country. The Ialpug, Cogâlnic, and
other small southern rivers drain largely into the Danubian
estuary in nearby Ukraine. Underground water, extensively used
for the republic’s water supply, includes more than 2,000
natural springs. The terrain favours construction of reservoirs.
Soils
The soils of Moldova are varied and highly fertile, with
chernozem—rich black soils—covering three-fourths of the
republic. The best-developed chernozem, fostering the growth of
grain, tobacco, and sugar beets, is found in the north and in
the low-lying parts of the central and Dniester uplands, as well
as in the left-bank regions. Soil quality diminishes southward,
but grapes and sunflowers still can be grown. Brown and gray
forest soils characterize the uplands: two-fifths are covered by
forests, the rest by orchards, vineyards, and fields of grain.
Alluvial soils characterize the floodplains, while the lower
reaches of the Prut and southern river valleys have saline and
marshland soils. In general, the excessive use of chemical
fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides during the Soviet period
has resulted in significant contamination of the soil and
groundwater.
Climate
Moldova’s climate—warm and moderately continental—is
characterized by a lengthy frost-free period, a comparatively
mild winter, considerable temperature fluctuations, and, in the
south, extended droughts. The average annual temperature is in
the mid-40s F (about 8 °C) in the north and the low 50s F (about
10 °C) in the south, but the July averages rise to the upper 60s
and low 70s F (about 19 and 23 °C), respectively, and the
mercury seldom drops below the low 20s F (about −3 °C) in
January. Extreme lows near −30 °F (about −36 °C) in the north
and excessive highs near 100 °F (about 41 °C) in the south have
been recorded. Moldova receives highly variable amounts of
precipitation—usually averaging about 20 inches (500 mm)
annually, with totals a little lower in the south—but these
figures conceal variations that may double the quantity in some
years and result in prolonged dry spells in others. Most
precipitation occurs as rain in the warmer months, and heavy
summer showers, coupled with the irregular terrain, cause
erosion problems and river silting. Winter snow cover is thin.
Winds tend to come from either the northwest or the southeast.
Plant and animal life
Northern and central Moldova is a forest zone, while a
steppe belt crosses the south. There are more than 1,500 species
of plants in the republic, with scenic expanses of forest,
covering about 1,150 square miles (3,000 square km), of
particular importance, especially in the central Codri Hills
region. The most common trees are hornbeam and oak, followed by
a rich variety including linden, maple, wild pear, and wild
cherry. Beech forests are found at the sources of the Ikel and
Bâc rivers. At the beginning of the 19th century, forests
covered about one-third of the country; however, a large
increase in population severely reduced the forested areas. The
extensive deforestation in the 19th century has also resulted in
soil erosion, wind damage, a drop in the water table, flooding,
and loss of fauna. Well aware of the raft of problems caused by
the loss of so much of Moldova’s woodlands, authorities and
scientists have lobbied for increased afforestation plans, and
large-scale reforestation projects have been carried out in the
republic since the early 1990s. The state’s plans have met
resistance from peasants who are fearful that their agricultural
and grazing lands will be converted into less profitable
forests, however.
Moldova’s steppes originally were grass-covered, but most of
them are now cultivated. Lush meadows and reed growths occur in
the floodplains of the Dniester and portions of the Prut, while
salt-marsh grasslands flourish in the saline valleys of the
Cogâlnic, Ialpug, Botna, and lower Prut.
The animal life of Moldova is rich, despite the republic’s
small size. Mammals include wild boar, wolves, badgers,
wildcats, ermines, martins, and polecats. Roe deer, hare, foxes,
and muskrat are of commercial importance. Siberian stags, fallow
deer, and spotted deer also were successively introduced and are
now prevalent.
There are many species of birds, both resident and migratory.
The marshy lower reaches of Moldova’s rivers provide sanctuary
for wild geese, migratory ducks, and herons, while white-tailed
sea eagles are found in the floodplain forests. The wood lark,
jay, song thrush, blackbird, hawk, and long-eared owl frequent
the republic’s forests. Plentiful fish supplies include carp
(raised in artificial reservoirs), perch, bream, ruff, and pike.
People
Ethnic groups
About three-fourths of Moldova’s population consists of
ethnic Moldovans. There are smaller populations of Ukrainians,
Russians, Gagauz, Roma (Gypsies), and Bulgarians. The Ukrainian
population of Moldova, the largest minority group, is divided
between those who are native to the country (their ancestors
having farmed for centuries in what is now Moldova) and those
who migrated to Moldova during the periods of Russian and Soviet
control. The former group makes up the majority of Ukrainians in
Moldova.
Moldova’s Russian population arrived during the periods of
Russian imperial and Soviet rule, usually as civil servants and
labourers. The Gagauz, a mainly rural people, have lived on the
Bugeac Plain since the late 18th century. The country’s ethnic
Bulgarians also are mainly rural and inhabit the southern
districts, where they settled at the end of the 18th century.
Only a small percentage of Moldovan citizens identify themselves
as Roma.
Languages
Moldovan is designated as the country’s official language in
the constitution. During the Russian imperial and Soviet
periods, the Moldavian language (as it was then called) was
written in the Cyrillic alphabet. Soviet scholars, mainly for
political reasons, insisted that this language was an
independent Romance language that was distinct from
Daco-Romanian (see Romanian). In fact, Daco-Romanian and
Moldovan are virtually identical, and differences between the
two are confined to phonetics and vocabulary. In 1989 the script
of the Moldovan language was changed to the Latin alphabet;
thereupon began a heated debate over whether the language should
be called Romanian or Moldovan. By the middle of the first
decade of the 21st century, there was general agreement from
both sides that Moldovan and Romanian were in fact the same
language. Nevertheless, Moldovan pride in the Moldovan language
is reflected in the country’s national anthem, Limba Noastra
(“Our Language”), and the national motto, Limba Noastra-i o
Comoara (“Our Language is a Treasure”).
Some of Moldova’s ethnic communities have preserved their
respective languages, but not without accommodations brought
about by urbanization. Those who have been drawn to the cities,
especially ethnic Moldovans, often have accepted Russian as a
second language. Few, however, have abandoned their native
language, and bilingualism has become the norm. The Moldovan
state acknowledges and protects the right to preserve, develop,
and use Romanian, Russian, Ukrainian, and any other languages
spoken within the country’s borders. Gagauz is the official
language in the autonomous area of Gagauz, but Moldovan,
Romanian, and Russian are spoken there as well. Although the
Gagauz language is Turkic in origin, it was traditionally
written with the Cyrillic alphabet; however, since 1989 the
Gagauz have developed a Latin script.
Religion
During the period of Soviet rule, the influence of churches
in Moldovan public life was limited by the religious policy
imposed by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU):
separation of church and state, exclusion of the churches from
education, and subjection of the faithful to atheistic
propaganda. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, however, all
churches have undergone a revival and have striven to regain
their former prominence. The overwhelming majority of ethnic
Moldovans, Russians, Gagauz, and Ukrainians are Eastern Orthodox
Christians. There are also other Christians and smaller Muslim
and Jewish communities. The Jewish community is overwhelmingly
urban and began to enter present-day Moldova in substantial
numbers after 1800, but its numbers have been greatly reduced by
wars, the Holocaust, and emigration (since the creation of the
Moldovan republic, there has been considerable emigration of
Jews to Russia, Ukraine, and Israel). About one-fifth of
Moldova’s residents consider themselves nonreligious.
Settlement patterns
Economic policies imposed during the Soviet era brought
significant changes to both the countryside and cities. The pace
of urbanization was dramatic, in part because Moldova was the
least urban of all the Soviet republics. Industrialization
spurred the growth of large and small cities in every part of
the republic, but nowhere more so than in the capital, Chișinău,
the economic, administrative, and cultural centre of the
republic. The collectivization of agriculture during the Soviet
period concentrated population in large villages, most of which
have between 1,000 and 5,000 inhabitants. As villages assumed
new economic and administrative functions, they became more
modern in level of comfort and in the public services they could
provide.
After independence the population of Moldova became even more
urban as the movement from the countryside to the cities became
continuous. At that time ethnic Moldovans were relative
newcomers to the cities, and in the early 21st century they
accounted for only about one-third of all urban inhabitants. The
majority of the remainder of ethnic Moldovans reside in the
rural areas in the centre and north of the republic. A majority
of the Ukrainian population lives in urban centres, with
approximately one-fourth of them living in the eastern section
of the breakaway region of Moldova known as Transdniestria
(Transnistria; Pridnestrovie), which is located on the east bank
of the Dniester River. Russians constitute about one-fourth of
Moldova’s urban population, but thousands of them have resettled
in Transdniestria.
Demographic trends
During the 1960s the population of the republic grew
rapidly; however, starting in 1970 it increased at a steady but
slower rate. Since independence, though, Moldova’s population
has decreased, largely owing to the emigration of Moldovans
seeking economic opportunities elsewhere and to the virtual end
of immigration from Russia and Ukraine, which had contributed to
earlier population growth. Moreover, a sharp decline in the
standard of living and in the quality and availability of public
health and medical facilities in the early 1990s lowered life
expectancy. Infant mortality and insufficient health care,
especially in rural areas, were serious problems. The number of
stillbirths and infant deaths, which had fallen significantly
from the early 1970s to the early 1980s, rose in the late 1980s
and remained high throughout the early 2000s. Although Moldova’s
birth rate remains low compared with the world average, it is
higher than that of nearby Romania, Ukraine, and Russia.
Economy
During the communist era a diversified industry was
established in Moldova, agriculture was modernized, and
transport and the building industry were overhauled. Following
independence, the government began the gradual transformation
from a command (centrally planned) to a market economy,
establishing a program to privatize many state enterprises
primarily through distribution of ownership vouchers to the
public. The transition has been slow and uneven because of
corruption, lack of foreign investment, and other economic
pressures. In the early 21st century Moldova was among the
poorest countries in Europe.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
More than half of the country’s land is arable, and most of
that land is used to grow temporary crops (those that are sown
and harvested during the same agricultural year). About
one-tenth of the land is used to cultivate permanent crops
(those that are planted once but will not be replanted after
each annual harvest). Agriculture has been highly mechanized,
and almost all agricultural jobs are performed by machines.
Virtually all landowners have access to electricity, and
chemical pesticides and mineral fertilizers are widely used.
Most Moldovan farmers dedicate large shares of land for export
crops.
There was no large-scale private farming during the Soviet
period, but collective farmers did have small plots for their
own use. Private land ownership, consisting primarily of small
holdings, was initiated in 1990. The amount of privately owned
land grew slowly at first but proliferated after the advent of a
government program of large-scale privatization in 1995.
Conversely, collective farms (engaged mainly in cultivation of
grain crops and mixed farming) and state farms (usually
specializing in the cultivation and processing of a particular
crop) began to diminish in importance. By the early 21st
century, those who tended to privately owned farms outnumbered
those who worked on collective and state farms 10 to 1.
Since 1940 the area used for vegetables, orchards, berries,
and vineyards has undergone significant expansion. Viticulture,
fruit and vegetable growing, and other specialized farming
activities are particularly important, constituting about
one-fourth of the commodity output of arable farming. Grapes are
Moldova’s most important industrial crop, with the largest
vineyards found in the southern and central regions. Most
orchards are situated in northern and southeastern Moldova.
Sunflower seeds, another significant crop, are grown throughout
the republic, though the southeastern regions have the largest
plantations. Sugar beets, a relatively new crop in Moldova, are
cultivated in the north. Moldova also is a major tobacco grower.
Vegetables are grown mainly in the southeast. The chief grain
crops are winter wheat and corn (maize). Wheat is used for the
republic’s own needs, and corn is exported as a seed crop. Most
of the grain is grown in the north. Sheep and cattle breeding
also are important, as is pig farming.
High rates of deforestation have greatly affected Moldova’s
forestry sector. About two-thirds of the country’s forests are
designated for wood supply, while the rest is protected in
national nature reserves. Still, there is a shortage of forest
resources, and Moldova has to import some wood from Russia. Wood
in Moldova is mainly used for energy—more than one-half of the
timber felled from the country’s forests is used for fuel. The
remainder of the wood supply is used for construction, the
production of furniture and other consumer goods, and packaging.
All forests are owned by the state.
The main types of fish found in Moldova’s lakes and rivers
are bream, carp, roach, catfish, pike, and perch. The country’s
fish production decreased in the mid-1990s; thereafter, most
fish-processing companies were privatized, and the amount of
fish imported greatly exceeded the local catch. Dozens of
foreign-owned companies are active in the importing, processing,
and canning of fish. After 1991 aquaculture was largely
privatized, with pond ownership being transferred to local
municipal authorities, who began leasing the ponds for private
fish farming.
Resources and power
Moldova’s greatest resources are its fertile soil and its
climate, both of which contribute to the agricultural potential
of the country. Other natural resources include limited
quantities of lignite, found in the southern part of the
country, and phosphorite and gypsum, which are found throughout
Moldova. Deposits of natural gas also have been discovered in
the southern part of the country.
Thermoelectric power plants are located in Chișinău, Băīți,
and Tiraspol, and there are hydroelectric stations in Dubăsari
and Camenca (Kamenka), on the Dniester River. The republic
provides electricity to the southern regions of Ukraine and also
to Bulgaria through a transmission line.
Manufacturing
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Moldova lost a
large part of its manufacturing sector. This was due in part to
the economic shock of the transition to a market economy and
Moldova’s separation from the integrated economy of the Soviet
Union and Soviet bloc. Moreover, the bulk of the country’s
industry is located in the breakaway region of Transdniestria,
though, owing to Transdniestria’s isolation from the rest of the
country, manufacturing in the region has failed to live up to
its potential.
The industrial sector of Moldova’s economy is concentrated
mainly on food processing, with the machine-building,
power-engineering, consumer-goods, and building-materials
industries still undergoing development.
The food industry has numerous branches; sugar refining, wine
making, canning, and oil pressing, as well as the production of
essential oils, are especially significant. Moldova is an
important exporter of wine, champagne, and brandy. For local
needs the republic has flour and other mills and well-developed
meat, dairy, and confectionery industries.
Machine building, established in the mid-1950s and centred on
Chișinău, Bălți, Tiraspol, and Tighina, has remained important.
Tractors made in Moldova are specially equipped for use in
orchards and vineyards. Light industry includes the production
of furs at Bălți, garments and knitwear at Chișinău and
Tiraspol, footwear at Chișinău, and silk fabrics at Tighina.
Building materials produced in Moldova include brick, limestone,
tile, cement, slate, and concrete blocks. Râbnița is the leading
centre of this industry.
Finance
The National Bank of Moldova began issuing its own currency,
the Moldovan leu, in 1993. By the mid-1990s Moldova had
stabilized the leu, brought inflation under control, and
balanced the national budget. Transdniestria has its own
currency, the ruble, and its own central bank.
Services
The services sector accounts for about one-third of Moldova’s
gross domestic product. Most of the retail sector is located in
the capital. Tourism (especially rural tourism) has grown since
the 1990s. Local culture in Moldovan villages, traditional
festivals, and the country’s many monasteries are of particular
interest to international visitors; however, owing to its lack
of hotels and its poor transportation infrastructure, the
country is not always able to adequately accommodate visitors.
Labour and taxation
The pressures of inflation and the economic downturn that
followed independence resulted in widespread unemployment and
underemployment. As a result, average Moldovans have had to
struggle to provide for their families. In many parts of the
country, especially in the rural areas, the necessities of life
are procured by barter rather than by purchase. Individual
farmers tend to deliver their own goods to food stores.
A taxation system was created in Moldova in 1992 to
facilitate the transition from a planned economy to a market
economy. It was reformed in 1996 to improve the collection
process. There are two levels of tax collection in
Moldova—national and local. National taxes include an income
tax, a value-added tax (VAT), excise taxes, property taxes, and
customs and road duties. Local taxes are collected on land,
property, and use of natural resources.
Trade
Prior to 1991 Moldova traded almost exclusively within the
Soviet Union. Today the states of the former Soviet Union remain
important markets for Moldova, whose main trading partners are
Russia, Ukraine, Romania, and Belarus, as well as Germany and
Italy. Foodstuffs, beverages (notably wine), and tobacco
products make up the bulk of Moldova’s exports, followed by
apparel and agricultural goods. Moldova’s main imports are
mineral products (notably petroleum products), machinery,
chemical products, and textiles for reexport.
Transportation and telecommunications
Railway and motor transport are the basis of the republic’s
transport system. The railway network includes two main
lines—one linking Tiraspol, Chișinău, and Ungheni and the other
linking Tiraspol and Reni. Incoming freight includes coal,
petroleum products, iron and nonferrous metals, timber, mineral
fertilizers, and machines and equipment. Motor transport
generally carries freight inside Moldova, over a road network
that is nearly all paved but generally needing repair. River
transport is of local importance, and air transportation links
Moldova with other countries. The republic’s main airport is in
Chișinău.
Telecommunications are regulated by the Ministry of Transport
and Communications. The industry was privatized in 1997;
nevertheless, Moldova has one of the lowest numbers of cellular
phone and Internet users of all the former countries of the
Soviet Union.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
A new constitution, which replaced the 1978 document that
had provided for a Soviet-style government structure, was
approved by the Moldovan parliament in July 1994 and promulgated
on August 27 of that year. Describing the republic as a
“sovereign, independent” state in which “justice and political
pluralism” are guaranteed, this constitution formally
established a unicameral parliament whose members are directly
elected to four-year terms. By secret ballot they elect the
president, who serves as the head of state, to a four-year
term.The president shares executive power with the Council of
Ministers (cabinet), which is led by the prime minister, who is
designated by the president (after consultation with the
parliamentary majority) and approved by the parliament. The
council is responsible for implementing the domestic and foreign
policy of the state.
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Gagauz in the
south and Russians east of the Dniester River declared their own
independent republics. The Moldovan government addressed the
desires of the Gagauz in January 1995 by establishing an
autonomous administrative region known as Găgăuzia. Its capital
is in Comrat, where a governor (bașkan), an executive committee,
and a legislature sit (foreign policy, defense, and monetary
issues in Găgăuzia are still under the control of the Moldovan
government). Neither the Moldovan government nor the
international community has recognized the independent republic
of Transdniestria (Pridnestrovie; Transnistria), whose name is
derived from its location beyond (on the eastern side of) the
Dniester River. Under Transdniestria’s constitution its
president also serves as prime minister, and there is a
unicameral legislature. The self-proclaimed republic also has
its own flag and anthem. In response to the region’s
aspirations, the 1994 Moldovan constitution had authorized
“special status” for the semiautonomous territory of
Transdniestria, as it had for Găgăuzia. This offer was rejected
by Transdniestria’s government, and an overwhelming majority of
Transdniestrian residents voted for independence in a 2006
referendum (though the subsequent declaration of independence
was not recognized elsewhere).
Local government
Following Soviet rule, Moldova was reorganized into județ
(counties), the municipality of Chișinău, and the autonomous
region of Găgăuzia. In 2003 the country was restructured again,
with previous divisions replaced by raione (districts),
municipii (municipalities; including Chișinău), and Găgăuzia. At
a more local level, Moldova is administered by elected town and
village councils and mayors; their activities are coordinated by
district councils, which also are elected.
Justice
The judicial system comprises the Supreme Court of Justice
(with members appointed by the parliament), a Court of Appeal,
and lower courts (whose members are appointed by the president).
The Higher Magistrates’ Council nominates judges and oversees
their transfer and promotion.
Political process
The Communist Party of Moldavia—until 1990 the only legal
party—was dissolved in 1991 but was legalized as the Party of
Communists of the Republic of Moldova (Partidul Comuniștilor din
Republica Moldova; PCRM) in 1994. Following independence a
variety of political parties emerged, many of them later to
divide or to merge with other parties or coalitions. Some of
these parties are based on ethnicity (including the Gagauz
People’s Party) and advocacy of independence or unification with
either Romania or Russia. A national referendum on Moldova’s
status as an independent country was held on March 6, 1994, with
a large turnout of eligible voters. More than 95 percent voted
in favour of continued independence. Moldovans aged 18 or older
are eligible to vote in elections. In elections in the 1990s and
early 2000s, about three-fifths of eligible voters cast ballots.
Health and welfare
Since the mid-1990s the quality and availability of health
care in Moldova have improved. In 1991 the Moldovan government
established social service programs to supplement the monthly
income of the average citizen during the transition from a
command to a market economy. These programs were designed to
preserve and strengthen the social safety net put in place
during the Soviet period. The Social Assistance Fund supplies
the needy with medical payments and housing and food subsidies.
The Social Security Fund provides pensions for workers,
invalids, and soldiers, assists workers during illness or
temporary disability, and aids the unemployed.
Education
Significant changes occurred in Moldovan society during the
Soviet era. Illiteracy was eradicated, and, as in other Soviet
republics, emphasis was placed on technical education in order
to satisfy the steadily growing needs of agriculture and
industry for specialists and a highly skilled workforce. Before
1940 the republic had only a few institutions of higher
education and teacher-training colleges, as well as a
theological seminary and an agricultural institute. Since then
several institutions of higher education and numerous
specialized middle schools have been established. Notable
universities include the Moldovan State Agrarian University
(founded in 1933 as an offshoot of the agriculture department of
the University of Iași), the Moldova State University (1946),
and the Technical University of Moldova (1964). They all provide
instruction in Romanian and Russian, and since the early 1990s
the Moldovan language has increasingly been introduced into the
educational system. A vigorous program of Moldovan instruction
in primary and secondary schools was implemented in 2000.
The Moldova Academy of Sciences, established in Chișinău in
1946, coordinates the activities of scientific institutions. In
addition, dozens of research centres in the fields of
viticulture, horticulture, beet growing, grain cultivation, and
wine making have been set up, and Moldovan scientists have won
international acclaim in these fields.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
The historical ties between Bessarabia and Romania and the
ethnic kinship of Moldovans and Romanians are still reflected in
the culture of Moldova. The development of Moldovan culture
after World War II, however, followed the prevailing pattern of
the Soviet Union as a whole. The state assumed responsibility
for the content and direction of all cultural and intellectual
life. The theatre, motion pictures, television, and printed
matter were subject to censorship and close ideological
scrutiny. Until the waning days of Soviet influence, private
initiative in cultural endeavours was rare.
Daily life and social customs
As a mainly Eastern Orthodox country, Moldova celebrates
Christian holidays. Its various ethnic groups tend to follow the
customs and eat the foods of their own nationality. Moldova’s
Independence Day, August 27, commemorates the country’s
breakaway from the Soviet Union (an event that is not celebrated
in Transdniestria, which has retained many Soviet holidays and
symbols of Soviet life). Moldovans observe a calendar of
planting and harvest fairs that feature traditional dancing,
singing, and folk arts. The village of Ivancho, near Chișinău,
is a centre for these traditional cultural activities, as is the
Orheiul Vechi, a restored monastery near the capital. Chișinău
remains a musical centre, boasting dozens of nightclubs,
discotheques, and concert halls.
The arts
Notable Moldovan artists include painters Mihail Petrik,
Valentin Coreachin, and Vitaly Tiseev and sculptors Iury
Kanashin and Vladimir Moraru. Moldova was known in the Soviet
era for the quality of its musical instruction, with many
Russian composers and conductors serving on the faculty of
Chișinău’s Academy of Music. One of the academy’s graduates is
the internationally known composer Arkady Luxemburg.
Moldovan literature experienced the vicissitudes of Soviet
literature generally during the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Building socialism and creating the new Soviet citizen were the
dominant themes, and socialist goals prevailed over aesthetic
considerations. Characteristic of these trends were the early
prose and poetry of Emilian Bucov and Andrei Lupan, who followed
the principles of Socialist Realism; later they and younger
writers diversified their techniques and subject matter. Perhaps
the most outstanding modern writer is the dramatist and novelist
Ion Druța. His novel Balade de câmpie (1963; “Ballads of the
Steppes”), an investigation of the psychology of the village,
marked a significant turning point in the evolution of Moldovan
fiction, and his play Casa Mare (1962; “The Parlour”) turned
away from the concept of collectivity to probe the individual
conscience. The work of contemporary essayist and novelist
Vitalie Ciobanu is well known in Moldova.
Cultural institutions
Most of the country’s theatres, museums, music halls, and
libraries are in Chișinău. The most significant museums are the
National Museum of Fine Arts of Moldova and the National History
Museum of Moldova. During the period of Soviet rule, the state
gave particular attention to the expansion of cultural
opportunities. Numerous amateur theatres and musical and art
groups were supported. The state also attempted to preserve the
rich heritage of Moldovan folk art and music through such
ensembles as the Doina choir and Zhok popular ballet and through
local and national museums. Economic changes and urbanization,
however, undermined traditional society and curtailed artistic
creativity. Moreover, the economic deprivations and hardships
since independence have left the average Moldovan little time
for cultural interests, and the national budget deficits have
left few governmental resources with which to subsidize cultural
activities.
Sports and recreation
Moldovans are avid football (soccer) fans. Games are played
throughout the country by organized local teams that compete
each year for the national Moldovan Cup. Wrestling has become
significant, made popular by Moldovan world champion Lukman
Jabrailov. Judo, archery, and athletics (track and field) are
also popular. Other favourite sports are rugby, tennis, martial
arts, cycling, boxing, volleyball, and canoeing. Chess is a
common pastime. In past years ethnic Moldovans have competed on
the Olympic teams of both the Soviet Union and Romania. At the
1992 Games in Barcelona, the country participated as part of the
Unified Team. Moldova competed for the first time as an
independent country at the 1994 Games in Lillehammer, Nor.
Because Moldova lacks both mountains and a seashore, many
recreational opportunities are limited.
Media and publishing
The 1994 Moldovan constitution protects freedom of
expression in the press; nevertheless, Moldovan media have
received widespread criticism for being overly influenced by the
government, and there have been occasional incidents of
politically motivated prosecution of journalists. There has been
concern that Chișinău-based publications that question Moldova’s
independence or promote Transdniestria’s separatist policies
will be subject to censorship.
The initial outpouring of publications at the time of
independence has been considerably reduced in the years since,
largely as a result of economic pressures. Most publications
that started as dailies have cut back production schedules.
Notable existing dailies, all published in Chișinău, are the
government organ Moldova Suverenă (“Sovereign Moldova”),
Nezavisimaya Moldova (“Independent Moldova”), and the Christian
Democratic People’s Party (Partidul Popular Creștin și Democrat;
PPCD) organ Țara (“Homeland”). The national news agency, known
by its acronym Moldpres, is the country’s official news service.
All broadcasting activities have been consolidated under the
State Radio and Television Company of Moldova, which was founded
in 1994.
Fyodor Nikolayevich Sukhopara
Ernest Latham, Jr.
History
Bessarabia—the name often given to the region of
historical Moldavia between the Dniester and Prut rivers—has a
long and stormy history. Part of Scythia in the 1st millennium
bce, Bessarabia later came marginally under the control of the
Roman Empire as part of Dacia. Lying on one of the principal
land routes into Europe, it was invaded by successive waves of
barbarians, and the area had many masters. Gradually, under
varying influences, the Vlach (or Romanian) nationality
developed. Part of the area came under the rule of Kievan Rus
between the 10th and 12th centuries ce and later passed to the
Galician princes. From 1241 to the 14th century Moldavia was
vassal to the Tatars.
Old Moldavia
The Genoese, founding fortified commercial outposts on the
Dniester in the 14th century, paved the way for contact with
Western culture, but Bessarabia’s development depended on the
rise of the principalities of Moldavia and Walachia, which soon
expanded to include the territory. The southern area, which
originally fell into the Walachian sphere, probably took its
name from the Basarab dynasty. The whole province became part of
Moldavia in the 15th century but was soon exposed to the Turkish
onslaught; the key points of Cetatea Albă and Chilia (modern
Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyy and Kiliya, Ukraine, respectively) were
captured in 1484, and this conquest was ratified by treaty (in
1503 and 1513). The southern part of Bessarabia was again
detached and organized by the Turks into two sanjaks (districts)
of the Ottoman Empire.
Beginning with Peter I (the Great), Russia drove toward the
Danube delta. The Russians occupied Moldavia five times between
1711 and 1812 and finally secured Turkey’s cession of
Bessarabia—approximately half of historic Moldavia—in the Treaty
of Bucharest (1812).
The Russian administration (1812–1917)
In 1829, in the Treaty of Adrianople, Russia pushed the frontier
south to include the Danube delta. After the Crimean War, the
Treaty of Paris in 1856 restored southern Bessarabia (at that
time divided into three districts: Izmail, Kagul [or Cahul], and
Bolgrad) to Moldavia; but in 1878, despite Romania’s having
fought on the Russian side against Turkey, the Treaty of Berlin
assigned these three districts once more to Russia, giving the
Dobruja to Romania as compensation.
The Russian administration had at first been liberal.
Autonomy had been granted in 1818 and had remained in force
until 1828; a Moldavian boyar had been made governor and a
Moldavian archbishop installed. Nevertheless, many Moldavian
peasants, fearing the introduction of serfdom, fled across the
Prut. The introduction of the zemstvo system in 1869 provided a
measure of local autonomy, but a policy of Russification in both
civil and ecclesiastical administration was thereafter pursued,
with little effect on the largely illiterate peasantry. The
founding of the kingdom of Romania (1881) formed a centre of
attraction for Moldavian nationalism, but no lively movement
developed in Bessarabia until after the Russian Revolution of
1905. The movement’s strength was drawn not from the boyars
(largely Russified) but from schoolteachers and parish priests.
Bessarabia achieved some prosperity under Russian rule. The
empire formed a good market for Bessarabia’s agricultural
produce, which was dispatched by river or by the railway system
built to link the region with the north-south main line to
Odessa. Chişinău was a relatively flourishing town, though its
large Jewish population suffered severely in a pogrom in 1903.
World War I and the Russian Revolution
During World War I the Central Powers tempted Romania to
side with them by offering to restore Bessarabia. The scales
were tipped in favour of the Allies, however, by counteroffers
of Transylvania and Bukovina, as well as by the Francophile
sentiment of the Romanian people, so that by 1916 Romania was
fighting as Russia’s ally. The revolutionary and nationalist
ferment in the Russian Empire spread quickly to Bessarabia,
which proclaimed support for the moderate Socialist
Revolutionary Aleksandr Kerensky in March 1917. In April the
National Moldavian Committee demanded autonomy, land reform, and
the use of the Romanian language; similar rights were claimed
for the Moldavians, about 400,000 in number, settled east of the
Dniester. A move toward complete independence was encouraged by
events in Ukraine, and in November 1917 a council known as the
Sfatul Ţării (Sfat) was set up on the model of the Kiev Rada. On
Dec. 15, 1917, the Sfat proclaimed Bessarabia an autonomous
constituent republic of the Federation of Russian Republics.
Disorders caused by the revolutionary Russian soldiery led the
Sfat to appeal to the Allies’ representatives and to the
Romanian government at Iaşi for military help, whereupon the
Bolsheviks occupied Chişinău in January 1918. They were driven
out by Romanian forces within two weeks; and on February 6 the
Sfat, again following Kiev, proclaimed Bessarabia an independent
Moldavian republic, renouncing all ties with Russia. Recognizing
the economic impossibility of isolation and alarmed by the
pretensions of the German-sponsored Ukrainian government, the
Sfat voted for conditional union with Romania in April 1918.
Reservations about the union were abandoned with the defeat of
the Central Powers and the creation of Greater Romania, and
unconditional union was voted at the final session of the Sfat
in December 1918. The union of Bessarabia with Romania was
recognized by a treaty (part of the Paris Peace Conference)
signed on Oct. 28, 1920, by Romania, Great Britain, France,
Italy, and Japan; the treaty eventually was ratified by all
signatories but Japan. The Soviet Union never recognized
Romania’s right to the province, and in 1924 it established the
tiny Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic on Ukrainian
territory across the Dniester. The frontier along the Dniester
was closed, but railway connections were reestablished in 1936,
two years after the resumption of diplomatic relations.
The Romanian administration (1918–40)
The Romanian government immediately put through a drastic
land reform, initiated by Sfatul Ţării, whereby the maximum
holding allowed was 247 acres (100 hectares). Notwithstanding
this, the province languished economically. The uncertainty
caused by the continued pretensions of the Soviet Union hindered
development; Romania had little need of Bessarabia’s fruit,
grain, and wine; roads were inadequate; the railway system was
geared to that of Russia; and the closing of the Dniester and
the loss of the natural outlet, Odessa, had a disastrous effect.
The province was put under a centralized regime, at times
military in character; in 1938 King Carol II attempted to break
up its historical unity by dividing it among newly created
regions. Some tardy concessions to the minorities were made in
1939.
World War II
After the German-Soviet pact of August 1939, the Soviet
Union revived claims to Bessarabia, and the collapse of the
western European front to the Germans in 1940 precipitated
action. In late June a Soviet ultimatum to Romania demanded the
cession of Bessarabia and of northern Bukovina. The Romanian
government was forced to submit, and Soviet troops marched in
(June 28). On July 11 the districts of central Bessarabia
inhabited predominantly by Moldavians were joined to part of the
autonomous Moldavian republic across the Dniester to form, in
August, a Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic (S.S.R.), with
Chişinău as its capital. The Hotin district in the north was
incorporated into the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, as
were the southern districts of Cetatea Albă and Izmail. Further
land was expropriated and collectivization launched. Many
Moldavians left, some Jews entered, and the whole German
population was removed to western Poland under an agreement
between Germany and the Soviet Union. In July 1941 Romania,
having entered the war as Germany’s ally against the Soviet
Union, reoccupied Bessarabia. By December 1942 it was fully
governed as Romanian territory, though a formal decree of
annexation was postponed until the end of hostilities. Some
Moldavian peasants from Transdniestria (Transnistria;
Pridnestrovie), the newly organized Romanian province between
the Dniester and the Southern Buh, were settled on the farms of
departed Germans, and many Jews were killed or deported.
The Moldavian S.S.R.
Following the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia in 1944, the
province was reintegrated into the Soviet Union as the Moldavian
S.S.R. Thereafter, policies formulated in Moscow became the
norms for political and economic development until the Soviet
system began to weaken in the late 1980s. The Communist Party
coordinated all public activities, justifying its monopoly of
power as necessary to create the material foundations for the
building of communism. The party vigorously promoted
industrialization and the collectivization of agriculture,
abolishing private ownership of land and of the means of
production and distribution. So predominant was the party that
civil society ceased to exist. The history of Moldavia during
the Soviet period was, in effect, the history of the Communist
Party.
Independent Moldova
The weakening and eventual collapse of the Communist Party
in the Soviet Union made possible the revival of civil society
and open public debate in Moldavia, and a number of new
political parties were formed. The Moldovan majority took the
lead in severing ties with Moscow: sovereignty was declared in
June 1990, and the independent Republic of Moldova was
proclaimed on Aug. 27, 1991. The Gagauz in the south and the
Russians east of the Dniester responded by declaring independent
republics of their own, mainly as a defense against Moldovan
nationalism. The Moldovan majority found itself divided over the
question of union with Romania, and the Moldovan-dominated
government found it impossible militarily to subdue Russian
separatists. Such political stalemates complicated efforts to
reshape Moldova’s socialist economy through investment and trade
from abroad.
Barbara Buckmaster
The parliamentary elections of February 1994 brought about a
political realignment. Shortly before falling into decline, the
Agrarian Democratic Party won an electoral majority, defeating
parties that favoured either unification with Romania or a close
alliance with Russia. In March of that year, Moldovans voted
overwhelmingly to maintain independence, and in April the
parliament approved limited membership in the Commonwealth of
Independent States. At the same time “Moldovanism,” an ideology
of self-determination emphasizing the country’s distinctiveness
from Romania, became a significant force in political and
cultural life. A new constitution, ratified by the parliament on
July 28, 1994, granted substantial autonomy to Transdniestria
and Gagauzia, though the former remained problematic because of
the ongoing Russian military presence there. Relations between
Moldova and Transdniestria remained strained over the latter’s
attempt to secure independence, a goal the majority of voters
there supported again in a referendum in 2006.
A constitutional amendment in 2000 refashioned Moldova into a
unitary parliamentary republic, as direct presidential elections
were dropped. The Communist Party was victorious in the 2001 and
2005 elections, making Moldova the first former Soviet republic
to return unreformed communists to power; though by the time of
its 2005 electoral victory, the party had signaled a shift away
from Russia and toward the European Union (EU). This move
relaxed tensions with Romania, which in 2005 offered support for
Moldova’s entry into the EU. But Moldova’s concern with security
and independence led to further disputes with Romania,
especially when that country gained entry into the EU in 2007
and started granting citizenship to Moldovans who applied for
it. Moreover, conflicts with Russia over Transdniestria and
trade issues had caused Russia to interrupt gas shipments to
Moldova and to prohibit the importation of Moldovan wines in
2006. As Moldova moved cautiously toward a market economy,
struggling to complete its post-Soviet transformation, it
continued to suffer economically as one of the poorest countries
in Europe.
Keith Arnold Hitchins
In 2008 the country’s first female prime minister, Zinaida
Greceanii, of the Communist Party, took office. In parliamentary
elections in April 2009 the Communist Party demonstrated its
continued strength by winning 50 percent of the vote; however,
upon hearing of the Communist victory, crowds of protestors—many
of them young people desiring a break with the country’s
Communist past—stormed the parliament building. In May the
Communists tapped Prime Minister Greceanii to succeed outgoing
president Vladimir Voronin, but the parliamentary vote required
to elect the new president failed on two occasions. The body’s
opposition parties, questioning the validity of the April
election results, had refused to participate in either vote,
thereby depriving the Communists of the three-fifths majority
needed for Greceanii’s election. Following the second failed
vote, the government called new parliamentary elections, which
took place in July and in which the Communists failed to win a
majority and the four pro-Western opposition parties together
gained enough seats to form a coalition government. Despite
their victory, however, the four parties fell short of the
three-fifths majority required to choose a president.
Ed