De la Imperiul Otoman (1918) la Republica Turcia (29 octombrie 1923). Relațiile diplomatice româno-turce în 1923-1924
As a subject of international law in the contemporary era, the anniversary and celebration of the proclamation of an independent and sovereign state are natural rights and obligations with double meaning, internal and external, of every state entity that has gone through this experience – genesis wh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Studii și articole de istorie 2024 (91), p.323-345 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | rum |
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Zusammenfassung: | As a subject of international law in the contemporary era, the anniversary and celebration of the proclamation of an independent and sovereign state are natural rights and obligations with double meaning, internal and external, of every state entity that has gone through this experience – genesis which is unique in its dimensions. Also, the tribute to such an event is a gesture of healthy international morals, protocol, respect and diplomatic common sense for the states that develop friendly and collaborative relations with the celebrated entity, and based on a common past, a neighborhood of tens or hundreds of years, of major common regional and / or international state interests. This is the case of Romania and the Republic of Turkey (Türkiye Cümhüriyeti) which celebrated on 29th October 2023 a century of statehood in new republican frameworks, between the two political entities developing diplomatic relations on subjects of international law in the last hundred years (1923-2023).The period 1919-1923 was the one in which Romanian – Ottoman relations evolved from war to peace. During that period, both states went through deep complex internal structural changes and reconsiderations of their place and role in Central-Southern Europe – The Black Sea – Bosphorus – Dardanelles – Eastern Mediterranean – Anatolia – Levant. Great Romania consolidated and developed external national interests for securing and consolidating access to the world's seas and oceans. The Turkish nationalist movement, led by Mustafa Kemal Gazi, secured Turkish national identity, independence and statehood in Anatolia and Eastern Thrace, on the ruins of the former Ottoman Empire. But Great Romania and „New Turkey" also had strong common interests in the aforementioned strategic area, which facilitated the resumption and development of complex bilateral relations. The Peace Treaty of Lausanne (Switzerland) with the related documents signed on 24th July 1923 ended the Greco-Turkish war and normalized the complex political-diplomatic relations between the signatory states, being also an official international recognition of the „New Turkey" and her borders.The Turkish nationalist movement, victorious in the War of Independence against the Greek invaders (1919-1922), was legitimized and internationally recognized by the Treaty of Lausanne and the specific Annexes, through its representatives, the Great National Assembly in Angora (Ankara) led by Mustafa Kemal Gazi. The Republic of Turkey was |
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ISSN: | 0585-749X |