جمهورية گاگاؤزيا
Gagauz Republic Gagauz Respublikası (Gagauz) | |||||||||||
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1990–1994 | |||||||||||
العلم | |||||||||||
Map of the territory claimed by the Gagauz Republic. It did not hold control of all of these lands. | |||||||||||
العاصمة | Comrat 46°19′N 28°40′E / 46.317°N 28.667°E | ||||||||||
اللغات الشائعة | Gagauz, Romanian, Russian | ||||||||||
الحكومة | Republic | ||||||||||
التاريخ | |||||||||||
• تأسست | 19 August 1990 | ||||||||||
• انحلت | 23 December 1994 | ||||||||||
Currency | Soviet ruble, Moldovan cupon, Moldovan leu | ||||||||||
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Today part of | Moldova |
The Gagauz Republic (قالب:Lang-gag; رومانية: Republica Găgăuzia; روسية: Республика Гагаузия, Respublika Gagauzija) was an unrecognised state that separated from Moldova during the dissolution of the Soviet Union but later peacefully joined Moldova after being de facto independent from 1990 to 1994.[1][2]
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History
The Special Congress of Representatives of the Gagauz people was held on 12 November 1989, in which the Gagauz Republic was proclaimed in the Moldavia, but on the next day the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Moldavia abolished the Special Congress decisions, calling them unconstitutional.[3]
The Congress of People's Deputies of the Steppe South of the Moldavia declared independence from the Moldavia and the establishment of the Gagauz Republic on 19 August 1990.[4] Two days later, the Presidium of the Supreme Council of the Moldavia held an emergency meeting, and a decision was reached to declare the republic illegal and the congress unconstitutional.[5] A detachment of Moldovan volunteers and police units were sent to Gagauzia to quell the dissidence, but the arrival of SSV soldiers prevented bloodshed.
In December 1994, on the basis of agreements reached by the Gagauz Republic and the Republic of Moldova, a document on the peaceful integration of Gagauzia with autonomous rights was signed. The integration was carried out from December 1994 to June 1995, when the Gagauz Republic legally dissolved and became the Autonomous Territorial Unit of Gagauzia.
See also
- Gagauzia
- Gagauz people
- List of Chairmen of the Gagauzian People's Assembly
- Comrat Republic
- Transnistria
References
- ^ Marcin Kosienkowski (2017) The Gagauz Republic: An Autonomism-Driven De Facto State The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review, volume 44, no. 3, pp. 292–313.
- ^ Erendor, Metin (2021). Gagauz Türkleri: "Gök - Oğuzlar". Bilge Kültür Sanat.
- ^ Фёдор Ангели (20 August 1990). "ГАГАУЗСКАЯ АВТОНОМИЯ. ЛЮДИ И ФАКТЫ (1989-2005)" (PDF) (in الروسية).
- ^ "ГАГАУЗИЯ, ОБЩИЕ СВЕДЕНИЯ - Справка - БД "Лабиринт"". www.labyrinth.ru. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
- ^ "ГАГАУЗЫ ОБЪЯВИЛИ О СОЗДАНИИ СВОЕЙ РЕСПУБЛИКИ И ВЫХОДЕ ИЗ МОЛДОВЫ". 20 August 1990. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
- CS1 الروسية-language sources (ru)
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles containing Gagauz-language text
- Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas
- Articles containing رومانية-language text
- Pages using Lang-xx templates
- Articles containing روسية-language text
- History of Gagauzia
- Post-Soviet states
- Separatism in Moldova
- مناطق اوروپا with multiple official languages
- States and territories disestablished in 1994
- States and territories established in 1990
- Former republics
- بلدان سابقة غير معترف بها
- 1990 establishments in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic
- 1994 disestablishments in Moldova