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Kishinev: The Character and Development of a Tsarist Frontier Town*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
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At the Treaty of Bucharest in 1812, Russia annexed the eastern half of Moldavia, the territory between the Dnestr and Prut Rivers, which it called “Bessarabia.” One historian argues that this was an effort to circumvent the Tilsit agreement with Napoleon in which Russia had agreed to vacate both Romanian principalities. Since Tilsit “did not mention ‘Bessarabia’ the Russian troops could remain there.”
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References
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* I would like to thank IREX, the Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Abroad Program, Centre College, Michael Impey, Charles King, and Wim van Meurs for their help in preparing this essay.Google Scholar
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55. Ibid., p. 279. Of the 32 arrested, seven were said to be Moldavians (ibid., p. 280).Google Scholar
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64. Urussov, , Memoirs, p. 112. See also Budak, , Obshchestvenno-politicheskoe dvizhenie, p. 395.Google Scholar
65. Hitchins, , Rumania, p. 242.Google Scholar
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67. Ciobanu, , Chişinăul, p. 90.Google Scholar
68. One report written by local Jews stressed the role of the paper in inciting the pogrom, noting that its inflammatory stories had been widely circulated in the city's taverns and tearooms prior to the pogrom (PSR 464/10, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam). Bessarabets, whose windows were broken during the pogrom, initially said very little about the pogrom. It failed to publish editions at all on 7, 8, and 9 April. On 10 April, it blamed the pogrom “on drunken bur'ian [roughnecks], teenagers, and boys.” On 15 April it acknowledged that the pogrom had been “terrible.” On 29 April it published casualty figures and stated that the violence had resulted from the spreading of false rumors accusing Jews of ritual murders in Kiev, Kishinev, and elsewhere. On 30 April 1903, it criticized the national Russian press, stating that “90 percent of what is written by Kishinev correspondents is lies.”Google Scholar
69. Ciobanu, , Chişinăul, p. 61.Google Scholar
70. Cazacu, , Moldova dintre Prut şi Nistru, pp. 214, 220–225. Other papers to appear briefly were Viaţa Noua (New Life) and Lumina (Light). See pp. 226–227 for the ruckus over Bishop Vladimir. See Drug (Kishinev) 6 January 1906, for the position of the influential Rightist Pavolachi Krushevan; and Judge, Easter in Kishinev, ch. 3, for background on the city's Rightists.Google Scholar
71. One Romanian source, Arbore, , Liberarea Basarabiei, p. 189, contends that demands for autonomy had given way to demands for liberation by 1915.Google Scholar
72. Meurs, van, The Bessarabian Question, p. 56.Google Scholar
73. Ibid., pp. 66–69; Hitchins, , Rumania, p. 277.Google Scholar
74. Meurs, van, The Bessarabian Question, p. 71.Google Scholar
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77. Ibid., p. 156.Google Scholar
78. Urussov, , Memoirs, p. 1.Google Scholar
79. Livezeanu, Irina, Cultural Politics in Greater Romania (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995), pp. 96–97. See also p. 100.Google Scholar
80. Ibid., p. 116. Private schools could continue to teach in languages other than Romanian.Google Scholar
81. Ciobanu, , Chişinăul, p. 91.Google Scholar
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85. This seems to be Ciobanu's conclusion as well. See, for example, p. 76.Google Scholar
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