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  1. By the Treaty of Bucharest of May 28, 1812 between the Ottoman Empire and the Russian Empire — concluding the Russo-Turkish War (18061812) — the latter annexed the eastern half of the Principality of Moldavia. That region was then called Bessarabia.

  2. is, it had been conquered by sword by Alexander I in 1812 and the Soviet Union was the de facto heir of the Russian Empire. This was 8 The Principality of Moldavia covered the territories from Carpathian Moun-tains in the West to Dniester River in the East, and from Black Sea and Da-nube mouths in the South to Podolia in the North.

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  4. (Russo-Turkish War (18061812)) Bessarabia is placed under Imperial Russian rule in 1812. (See also President of Moldova, for the heads of state of Moldova, a part of this territory which became independent in the 20th century.) Alexandru Hangerli: 1807: Caimacam Iordache Ruset-Roznovanu: 1807: Rosetti: Caimacam Metropolitan Veniamin Costache ...

  5. Alexander I, commonly known as Alexander the Good (Romanian: Alexandru cel Bun; c. 1375 – 1 January 1432) was Voivode of Moldavia between 1400 and 1432. He was the son of Roman I and succeeded Iuga to the throne. As ruler he initiated a series of reforms while consolidating the status of the Principality of Moldavia.

  6. In the Russo-Turkish War of 1806-1812, Imperial Russia annexed Bessarabia (formerly known as the Republic of Moldavia) from the Ottoman Empire. After noticing the weakening of the Ottoman Empire, the Russian Empire began encroaching on Bessarabia (or present-day Moldova) in 1806.

  7. With the Treaty of Bucharest in 1812, which temporarily ended t-ostilities between the Russian and Ottoman empires, Tsar Alexander I extended Russian control over the eastern half of the Principality of Moldova, the area between the Prut and Dnestr Rivers to which tsarist cartographers gave the name "Bessarabia."6 In 1859 the western half

  8. Beginning with Peter I (the Great), Russia drove toward the Danube River delta. The Russians occupied Moldavia five times between 1711 and 1812 and finally secured the Ottomans’ cession of Bessarabia—approximately half of historical Moldavia—in the Treaty of Bucharest (1812).

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