The Dacia Kingdom time.
Greetings to the new president and all the new administration of Romania democratically elected by the Romanian people.
The question is immediate:
What historical era is the new administration that is about to govern Romania for the next decades inspired by, we hope, because now more than ever there is a need for stability, consistency and coherence.
The question is not at all of little importance since the country has a great history but which has certainly passed through different phases of the history of different European peoples.
There was once the kingdom of Dacia which geographically and territorially included the territory of today's Romania, a part of the territory of today's Moldavia, part of the territory of eastern Serbia, part of northern Bulgaria, and eastern Hungary.
The great kingdom has known in history:
the invasion of the Roman Empire ended with the surrender and retreat of the occupying Roman Empire ended in 271-275 AD due to the continuous barbarian invasions but also and above all by the difficulties in maintaining control of the province due to the indigenous population and continuous rebellions. In 271-275 AD, Aurelian "occupying emperor" ordered the withdrawal of the Roman legions and the Romanized inhabitants from Dacia. The province and the territory were handed over to the legitimate local population. The kingdom of Dacia loses important parts of the territory due to the Roman occupation that marks the borders;
the invasion of the Ottoman Empire ended with the retreat of the Ottomans as a consequence of the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878, which marks the victory of the qualified Russian forces, supported by Bulgarian, Serbian, and Romanian volunteers, managed to defeat the Ottoman army in several key battles.
The ancient kingdom of Dacia renamed Romania after the union of the territory populated by the great majority of Dacian citizens (Indo-European) and the principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia in 1859 by Alexandru Ioan Cuza prince of both Wallachia and Moldavia, uniting the two principalities under a single administration.
In 1862, the united principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia officially adopted the name "Romania". This name reflected the Romanian identity and continuity with the Roman heritage of the region. The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878 and the subsequent the international recognition of Romania was "unilateral" for having fought alongside Russia in the war for the liberation of the European peoples, it gained independence at the Congress of Berlin in 1878. Romania obtained international recognition of its independence and became a kingdom (as Dacia was), consolidating its position as a sovereign state.
“What did we fight for” is historically a question that the new administration will certainly have to ask itself before officially taking office.
Certainly, from careful reflection, the right answer will come that can only pass through a political program dedicated to strengthening the ranks of the native population of the Dacians or Romanians and their interests in the first instance.
Strengthening the ranks of Dacia that cannot fail to take into account the numerous ethnical communities that constitute the people of the Dacians or Romanians and that certainly requires attention precisely by virtue of the consolidation of the interests of the nation and the strengthening of the “ranks” of the generations to come.
This certainly implies a discontinuity with the "communist parenthesis" which ethnic different populatio never looked favourably upon.
Good work and good planning to the new administration and the new president.
Greetings from the Kingdom of Bavaria(my new home) I'll watch over you from here.