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  1. t. e. The Repression of communists in the Kingdom of Romania was political repression against people who held communist views in the Kingdom of Romania between 1921 and 1944. In 1921, a number of 271 members of the Socialist-Communist Party who voted for the affiliation of the party into the Third International were arrested and the following ...

  2. The Kingdom of Romania was under Fascist rule for a total of six to eight months, comprising two separate regimes headed by two different parties. First there was the National Christian Party between December 1937 and February 1938, then the Iron Guard between September 1940 and January 1941. The sole legal party from 1938 to 1940, the National ...

  3. Romania in World War I. Romanian troops at Mărășești battlefield in 1917. The Kingdom of Romania was neutral for the first two years of World War I, entering on the side of the Allied powers from 27 August 1916 until Central Power occupation led to the Treaty of Bucharest in May 1918, before reentering the war on 10 November 1918.

  4. On 30 December 1947, Romania was proclaimed a socialist people's republic and all the ex-kingdom's symbols were outlawed, including the coat of arms and the tricolor flags that showed it. During the communist era in Romania , the state flag had the emblem of the country in the middle of the yellow stripe, and for the first time the 2:3 proportion was regulated by law.

  5. Greece. The Kingdom of the Morea or Realm of the Morea ( Italian: Regno di Morea) was the official name the Republic of Venice gave to the Peloponnese peninsula in southern Greece (which was more widely known as the Morea until the 19th century) when it was conquered from the Ottoman Empire during the Morean War in 1684–99.

  6. 7 de feb. de 2023 · Media in category "Kingdom of Romania" The following 31 files are in this category, out of 31 total. 1914REGAT.png 3,445 × 1,937; ... Wikipedia; In Wikipedia.

  7. Term of office. Note. Boško Tcholak-Antitch. (1871–1949) 1920. 1935. Longest-serving Yugoslav Ambassador to the Kingdom of Romania [2] Ninko Perić. (1871–1949)