INDEX
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Abortion and Romania
Abu Nidal terrorist group
Adoption and Romanian children
Adrianople (Turkey)
Aegean Islands
Agca, Mehmet Ali
Albania
and Austria-Hungary
Communism and
and Greece
Greek Albanians
history of
and Ottoman Turkey
and World War II
xenophobia of
See also Durres; Kossovo; Prishtina
Albanian language
Albanians: Europe’s Forgotten Survivors, The (Logoreci)
Albright, Madeleine
Alcoholism and the Balkans
Aleksandar Nevski Memorial Church (Sofia)
Alexander (the Great)
Alexander I Karageorgevitch (of Yugoslavia), assassination of
Alexander II (of Russia)
Alexander, Stella
Alexandria Quartet, The (Durrell)
Ambler, Eric
American College of Sofia
Andronicus II Paleologus (of Byzantium)
Andropov, Yuri
Angelov, Guillermo
Angelov, Margarita
Anti-Semitism
Artukovic and
Bishop Strossmayer and
desecration of Romanian cemeteries
origins of
as a political technique
Stepinac and
See also Croatia; Greece; Macedonia; Romania
Anti-Serb racism
Antonescu, Ion “Red Dog”
Antonov, Sergei Ivanov
Apostle of Freedom, The (MacDermott)
Armenians, Turkish mass murder of
Artukovic, Andrija
Asparuh, Khan
Assen II (of Bulgaria)
Astir Palace Hotel (Athens)
Ataturk, Mustapha Kemal
Athenee Palace Bucharest (Waldeck)
Athenee Palace Hotel (Bucharest)
Athens
Astir Palace Hotel
National Archaeological Museum
Parthenon
Polytechnic University
Atrocities, acts of
Albanian oppression of ethnic Greeks
Bucharest slaughterhouse
Bulgarian oppression of Macedonian Jews
Bulgarian Muslims’ murder of Orthodox Christians
Catholic priests, collaboration of
Croatian massacre of Orthodox Serbs
death camps
extermination of Salonikan Jews
Romanian murder of Jews
Serbian murder of Islamic converts
Serbian oppression of Muslim Albanians
Transdnieastran extermination camps
Turkish atrocities in Bulgaria
Turkish murder of Armenians
Turkish rape of Macedonian women
Austria-Hungary
and Albania
and Bosnia-Hercegovia
and Bucovina
and Croatia
and Dalmatia
dual monarchy of
and the Habsburgs
and Ottoman Turkey
and Serbia
See also Vienna
“Awake Romania” (Muresamu)
Ayvazov, Todor
Baker, James
Balfour, Arthur James
Balkan Trilogy, The (Manning)
Balkan War, First (1912)
Balkan War, Second (1913)
Balkans
elections in
music of
Banat (Romania), See also Timisoara
Banitsa (Bulgaria)
Bartholomew, Patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Church
Bartok, Bela
Bashibazouks (Turkish terrorists)
Basil II (of Byzantium)
Batak (Bulgaria)
Church of St. Nedelya
Bauer, Antun (Archbishop of Zagreb)
Bayezit (Sultan of Turkey)
Bejan, Petru
Belgrade (Serbia)
Kalimegdan fortress
Moskva Hotel
Srbski Kralj Hotel
Benedicta, Mother Tatulici Georgeta
Berlin, Congress of
Berlin, Treaty of
Berlin Wall, fall of
Bessarab, Neagoe
Bessarabia (Romania)
Between the Woods and the Water (Fermor)
Beyezit, Sultan
Bildt, Karl
“Bird on a Wire” (Cohen)
Bismarck-Schonhausen, Prince Otto von
Bizau, Father Ion
Black Lamb and Grey Falcon (West)
Blajer, Zlotko
Boban, Ljubo
Bobu, Emil
Bolyai, Janos
Boris I (of Bulgaria)
Boris III (of Bulgaria)
Bosnia-Hercegovia
and Austria-Hungary
and Croatia
ethnic makeup
forced conversions in
massacre of Orthodox Serbs
and Ottoman Turkey
and Serbia
and World War II
Bouloukos, Aristides
Bourchier, James David
Brandt, Willy
British Council lecturers as spies
Brodsky, Joseph
Browning, Robert
Brucan, Sylviu
Brukenthal Museum (Sibiu)
Brunner, Alois
Bucharest (Romania)
Athenee Palace Hotel
Church of Ilie Gorgani
Civic Center
Ghensea cemetery
Intercontinental Hotel
Jewish cemetery of
municipal slaughterhouse
Royal Palace
and World War II
Bucovina (Moldavia)
and Communism
geography of
Jewish community of
painted monasteries of
See also Suceava
Budapest, wealth of
Bulgaria
and Albania
and Communism
and ethnic Turks
falsifying documents
as a fashionable cause
history of
Jewish community of
and Macedonia
and modern Turkey
and Ottoman Turkey
religious revival in
and Russia
and Serbia
territorial claims
and World Wars I and II
See also Banitsa; Batak; Darzhavna Sigurnost; Kurdzhali; Ruse; Sofia
Bulgarian language
Bulgarian Telegraphic Agency (BTA)
Burchett, Anna
Burchett, Vessa
Burchett, Wilfred
Byron, Lord
Byzantine Empire
Cacoyannis, Michael
Camus, Albert
Canetti, Elias
Caratzas, Aristide D.
Carol I (of Romania)
Carol II (of Romania)
Carpathian Mountains
Carter, Jimmy, and Ceausescu
Castro, Fidel
Catholic Church
anti-Communism of
and anti-Semitism
and Croatia
and Orthodoxy
and Yugoslavia
Cavafy, C. P.
Ceausescu, Elena
Ceausescu, Martin
Ceausescu, Nicolae
grave of
personality cult of
and the U.S.A.
Celenk, Bekir
Celts, and Belgrade
Cernovoda, power and transport complex of
Chakov, Mihail
Charles II (of Austria)
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor
Chetniks (Serbian partisans)
Christians and Muslims
Chronographia (Psellus)
Churchill, Winston
Clinton, William Jefferson
Cluj (Transylvania)
Continental Hotel
Liberty Square
Napoca Hotel
Cluj, University of
Cluj-Napoca. See Cluj
Codreanu, Zelea
Coffee, political implications of
Cohen, Leonard
Cojocariu, Mother Superior Adriana
Coliva (colored sugar bread)
Colossus of Maroussi, The (Miller)
Communism
collapse of
as fascism
and the Reichstag fire trial
See also Albania; Bucovina; Bulgaria; Catholic Church; Jews; Macedonia; Orthodox Church; Romania; Serbia; Transylvania; Yugoslavia
Confession stalls, microphones in
Conrad, Joseph
Constanta, port of (Romania)
Constantine, King (of Greece)
Constantine IX (of Byzantium)
Constantinescu, Emil
Constantinople
Church of Hagia Sophia
Greek community in
Phanar district
Turkish sacking of
Continental Hotel (Cluj)
Conversations with Stalin (Djilas)
Cornea, Doina
Crete
Greece and Ottoman Turkey
union with Greece
Croatia
and Austria-Hungary
history of
Jewish community of
Nazi occupation of
and Ottoman Turkey
and Serbians
See also Jesenovac concentration camp; Zagreb
Croatian Ustashe
Croatians and denial
“Crow, the” (legendary prostitute)
Crowd symbols (Canetti)
Curtea de Arges, monastery of
Cuza, A. L.
Cuza, Alexandru Ion
Cuza University (Jassy)
Cyprus, Greek/Turkish dispute
Cyril (apostle)
Cyrillic alphabet
Czech Republic
Dacia (Roman colony)
Daily News (of London)
Dalmatia and Austria-Hungary
Dan, Popa. See Ceausescu, Nicolae
Danas (Croatian magazine)
Danciu, Sandra
Danube River
delta of
Danube–Black Sea Canal
Darzhavna Sigurnost (Bulgarian State Security Police)
Dassin, Jules
Dayton Peace Accords
December revolution (Romania)
Ceausescu, execution of
Cluj and
and the Communist Romanian flag
Jassy and
miners of Jiu Valley
as a religious symbol
repression of ethnic Hungarians and
Timisoara and
Delchev, Gotse
Destruction of the European Jews, The (Hilberg)
Dimitras, Panayote
Dimitrov, Georgi
Disraeli, Benjamin
Djilas, Milovan
Dniester River
Don Giovanni (Mozart)
Dracula (Stoker)
Dracula. See Vlad the Impaler
Draculic, Slavenka
Drugs
and Arab students
Bulgarian smuggling of
Dumitriu, Petru
Durrell, Lawrence
Durres, port city of (Albania)
East Germany, refugees
East versus West. See West and East
Eastern Europe, collapse of
Eichmann, Adolf
Eleni (Gage)
Elgin Marbles (British Museum)
Elijah (Iliya), Saint
Elizabeth, Princess of Wied
Eminescu, Mihai
Environmental problems and Romania
Esplanade Hotel (Zagreb)
Existentialism and religion
Farewell to Salonica: Portrait of an Era (Sciaky)
Fascism. See Mussolini, Benito
Ferdinand (of Bulgaria)
Ferdinand (of Romania)
Fermor, Patrick Leigh
Field of Black Birds
Forbes, Nevill
Foreign Correspondent (St. John)
Franz Ferdinand, Archduke, assassination of
Franz Joseph (of Austria)
Frederick I Barbarossa
Freedom or Death: The Life of Goise Delchev (MacDermott)
Freedom Party (Carinthia)
Friday, Saint, relics of
Funderburk, David B.
Fussell, Paul
Gage, Nicholas
Gallipoli, bridgehead at
George, Lloyd
Germans
and Romanian emigration
in Transylvania
See also Nazis
Geza II (Magyar king)
Ghensea cemetery (Bucharest)
Gheorghe (entrepreneur in Cluj)
Gheorghiu-Dej, Gheorghe
Gibbon, Edward
Gipsy Camp and Royal Palace, In (Hoppe)
Giurgiu (Romania)
Glati, steelworks of
Glendinning, Victoria
Goldstajn, Slavko
Gorbachev, Mikhail
Gotzev, Luben
Grachanitsa, monastery of (Serbia)
Grand Hotel Bulgaria (Sofia)
Grand Hotel Prishtina
Grapes of Wrath, The (Steinbeck)
Gray Wolves (Turkish neo-Nazi group)
Greater Bulgaria, idea of
Greater Germany, idea of
Greece
and Albania
and anti-Semitism
as a Balkan country
and the Byzantine Empire
classical heritage of
and Communism
dictatorship of the colonels
ethnic makeup
and modern Turkey
and Muslim Turkish community
Nazi invasion of
and the Olympics
Orientalism of
and Ottoman Turkey
politics of
and the press
territorial claims of
and terrorism
and the Third World
and the U.S.A.
See Crete; Cyprus. See also Aegean Islands; Athens; Constantinople; Green Guards; Hellene versus Romios; Macedonia (Slavic); New Democracy Party; PASOK; Piraeus; Komotini; Tourism; Salonika; Suli.
Greek Civil War (1946–49)
Greek language
Greek music
Greek Phanariots
Greek-Turkish War
Greek War of Independence
Green Guards
Grogan, Lady
Gudmundsson, Thorir and Atta
Gypsies
and alcoholism
massacre of
poverty of
prejudice against
in Romania
Gypsy music
Habsburgs. See under Austria-Hungary
Hadjidakis, Manos
Hagia Sophia, Church of (Constantinople)
Hales, A. G.
Hamelin, Pied Piper of
Hamid II, Sultan Abdul
Hegel, Georg W.
Heimatdienst organization (Carinthia)
Helen, Princess of Greece
Hellas: A Portrait of Greece (Gage)
Hellene versus Romios
Helms, Jesse
Hemingway, Ernest
Hermannstadter Zeitung newspaper (Sibiu)
Herring, Elizabeth
Herzl, Theodor
Hilberg, Raul
Hitler, Adolf
Holbrooke, Richard
Holocaust. See Atrocities, acts of
Hoppe, E. O.
Horowitz, Goldie. See Waldeck, R. G.
“House Near the Sea, The” (Seferis)
Hoxha, Enver
Humor, monastery of (Bucovina)
Hungarian minority in Romania, repression of
Hungary
and East Germany refugees
and German settlement of Transylvania
and World War II
See also Austria-Hungary; Budapest; Transylvania
Hunyadi, Janos
Husain, Iman
Hydra (Aegean Islands)
Icons
Ignatiev, Count
Ilie Gorgani, Church, of
Iliescu, Ion
Iliya (Elijah), Saint
Imperatul Romanilor (Sibiu)
IMO (Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization)
“In Church” (Cavafy)
Intercontinental Hotel (Bucharest)
Iorga, Nicholae
Iron Guard. See Legion of Archangel Michael
Ismail (Muslim Albanian)
Istanbul. See Constantinople
Ivan Assen II (of Bulgaria)
Ivanovski, Orde
Jalloud, Maj. Abdel Salam
Jassy (Moldavia)
Cuza University
Jewish community of
Metropolitan Cathedral of
National Theater
Russian invasion of
Traian Hotel
Unirea Hotel
Jesenovac concentration camp
Jewish Encyclopedia, Universal
Jews
and Communism
converts to Christianity
and the Diaspora
helping the Russian troops
Warsaw Ghetto monument
See Anti-Semitism; Atrocities, acts of. See also Bucovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Jassy; Macedonia; Romania; Salonika; Zagreb
Jiu Valley (Romania), miners of
John Paul II
assassination attempt
and Croatia
Johnson, Lyndon B., and Greece
Journalists and the Balkans
Judgement on Deltchev (Ambler)
Justinian (of Byzantium)
Kalimegdan fortress (Belgrade)
Kaloyan (of Bulgaria)
Kamarovsky, Victor (Doctor Zhivago)
Kaplan, David, killing of
Kapsis, Ioannis
Karadzic, Radovan
Karamanlis, Constantine
Karie (Greece)
Katolicki List (Croatian newspaper)
Kazantzakis, Nikos
KGB, the, and Bulgaria
King John (Shakespeare)
Kinglake, Alexander
Kinross, Lord
Kissinger, Henry
Klagenfurt (Carinthia)
Kliment, Sveti
Kofos, Evangelos
Koksa, Msgr. Duro
Kolozsvar. See Cluj
Komotini (Greece)
Koneski, Blazhe
Koskotas, George
Kossovo (Old Serbia). See also Prishtina
Kossovo Polje. See Field of Black Birds
Kostopoulos. Sotiris
Kostov, Traicho
Kostunica, Vojislav
Koutsogiorgas, Agamemnon
Kresmir (of Croatia)
Krushovo (Macedonia)
Kuharic, Franjo (cardinal of Zagreb)
Kukush (Kilkis)
Kunz-Cizelj, Karla
Kurdzhali (Bulgaria)
Ladislas I (of Hungary)
Lambrino, Jeanne “Zizi”
Last Romantic, The (Pakula)
Lazar, Knez (Serbian prince)
Lazov, Petur
Leaves of Grass (Whitman)
Legion of Archangel Michael
Lepoglava prison (Croatia)
Levsky, Vasil
Liani, Dimitra
Libya
Life of J.D. Bourchier, The (Grogan)
Lilov, Aleksandar
Liszt, Franz
Logoreci, Anton
London, Jack
Long Row of Candles, A (Sulzberger)
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth
Loock, Lorenz and Catherine
Leuger, Dr. Karl, and anti-Semitism
Lugosi, Bela
Lukacs, John
Lupescu, Elena (Magda)
MacDermott, Mercia
Macedonia (Greek)
and Bulgaria
ethnic makeup
as part of the Serbian empire
See also Salonika
Macedonia (Slavic)
and Bulgaria
and Communism
earthquakes in
ethnic makeup
and Greece
history of
Jewish community of
nationalist movement
and Ottoman Turkey
and Serbia
and terrorism
and World Wars I and II
See also IMRO; Krushovo; Salonika; Skopje
Macedonia: Documents and Material
Macedonian women, Turkish rape of
MacGahan, J. A.
Machiavelli, Niccolò
Makarios, Archbishop (of Cyprus)
Manning, Olivia
Marie (of Romania)
Maria Theresa (of Austria)
Markov, Georgi
Maroudas, Dimitris
Mask of Dimitrios, The (Ambler)
Matthias Corvinus (king of Hungary)
Mercouri, Melina
Mestrovic, Ivan
Metaxas, John
Methodius (apostle)
Metternich, Prince Clemens
Michael (of Romania)
Michael the Brave (of Wallachia and Moldavia)
Mihal (translator in Bucovina)
Mikhail, Metropolitan
Miller, Henry
Milosevic, Slobodan
Milutin (of Serbia)
Mircea (doctor in Sfintu Gheorghe)
Mircea the Old (of Wallachia)
Mitsotakis, Constantine
Mladic, Ratko
Moldavia (Romania)
See also Bessarabia; Bucovina; Jassy
Moldova River
Moldovitsa, monastery of (Bucovina)
Molho, Rena
Molho, Saul
Montenegro
Moskva Hotel (Belgrade)
Mountain Wreath, The (Njegos)
Movila, Iremia and Simeon
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
Mungiu, Alina
Mungiu, Cristian
Murad, Sultan
Muresamu, Andrei
Muslims
and alcoholism
and Christians
in Bosnia-Hercegovia
fertility rites
fundamentalist counterrevolution
Mussolini, Benito
Mustapha Pasha, Mosque of
Mykonos (Aegean Islands)
Nadia (guide at Rila Monastery)
Naipaul, V. S.
Napoca Hotel (Chuj)
Natanail, Bishop of Ochrid
National Salvation Front (Romania)
Naum, Sveti
Nazis
birthplace of Nazism
war crimes of
See also Atrocities, acts of; Croatia; Greece; Gray Wolves; Hitler, Adolf; Romania; Salonika; Saxons; Zagreb
Nemanja, Stefan
Neue Banater Zeitung (Banat newspaper)
Never on Sunday (Dassin)
New Class, The (Djilas)
New Democracy Party (Greece)
New York Times, The
Nicholas, Saint
Nicholas II, Czar of Russia
Nietzsche, Friedrich
Nixon, Richard, and Ceausescu
Njegos, Petar Petrovic
Nordeen, William
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
November
Obilich, Milosh
Ochrid (Macedonia)
Old Serbia. See Kossovo
Olympos Palace Hotel (Salonika)
Opinia Studeneasca (Romanian newspaper)
Orlic, Ivan
Orthodox Church (Eastern)
of Bulgaria
Codreanu, canonization of
and Communism
of Macedonia
and Ottoman Turkey
of Romania
of Serbia
Slavs, conversion of the
survival of
of Transylvania
versus Catholicism
Orthodox Church (Greek)
and the colonels
Patriarch of
Ottoman Empire
and the Balkans
bridgehead at Gallipoli
fundamentalist Muslims
and Montenegro
and the Orthodox church
Young Turk Revolution
See Turkey. See also Albania; Austria-Hungary; Bosnia-Hercegovina; Bulgaria; Constantinople; Crete; Croatia; Greece; Macedonia; Romania; Salonika; Serbia; Transylvania
Ozal, Turgui
Pacepa, Ion Mihai
Pakula, Hannah
Panagoulis, Stathis
Papadopoulos, George
Papandreo, George
Papandreou, Andreas
Papandreou, Margaret
Papapoulitis, Sotiris
Pascu, Ion
PASOK (Pan-Hellenic Socialist Movement)
Pastior, Dorothea
Pauker, Anna
Paul, Saint (of Tarsus)
Pavelic, Ante
Pec, monastery of (Serbia)
Penn, William, and Transylvania
Peter the Great (of Russia)
Pfaff, William
Philip of Macedonia
Piraeus (Greece)
“Plot to Kill the Pope, The” (Sterling)
Plum brandy
as a political symbol
Poland
Pollution and Romania
Popovski, Ante
Poruciuc, Adrian
Princip, Gavrilo
Prishtina (Kossovo)
Grand Hotel Prishtina
soccer riots
Prishtina University
Procopius
Prodigals, The (Dumitriu)
Prospero’s Cell (Durrell)
Prostitution and Bucharest
Protocol of 1913
Prut River
Psellus, Michael
Puhovski, Zarko
Putna, monastery of (Bucovina)
tomb of Stefan Cel Mare
Pyrrhus (of Epirus)
Qaddafi, Muammar
Rabotnichesko Delo (Bulgarian newspaper)
Radetzky March, The (Roth)
Radio Free Europe
Rafail (Bulgarian monk)
Rafail crucifix (Rila monastery)
Raggle-Tuggle (Starkie)
Rares, Petru
Rasia, Christina
Reagan, Ronald
and Bulgaria
and Greece
and Romania
Rebecca West: A Life (Glendinning)
Reed, John
Reichstag fire trial
Report to Greco (Kazantzakis)
Rila, monastery of (Bulgaria)
Riverboat travel, Danube delta
Roman, Petru
Roman antiquities
Romania
and Communism
ethnic makeup
expectations of
geography and history of
Jewish community of
morality of
and Nazism
and Ottoman Turkey
and the U.S.A.
and World War I
See also Bessarabia; Bucharest; Bucovina; December revolution; Giurgiu; Legion of Archangel Michael; Moldavia; National Salvation Front; Securitatae; Transylvania; Vatra Romaneasca; Wallachia
Romanian language
Romanus III (of Byzantium)
Roosevelt, Franklin D., and Romania
Roth, Joseph
Rotis, Vassilis
Rough Guide to Eastern Europe, The
Roumanian Journey (Sitwell)
Rudolf of Habsburg
Ruse (Bulgaria)
Russia
annexation of Bessarabia
invasion of Romania
occupation of Sofia
Russo-Turkish War (1877)
See also Soviet Union
Russian Lipovans
St. Dimitrios, Church of (Skopje)
St. John, Robert
St. Nedelya, Church of (Batak)
Salonika (Greek Macedonia)
Greek reclaiming of
history of
Jewish community of
Nazi looting of
Olympos Palace Hotel
and Ottoman Turkey
Slavic Macedonian claim on
Villa Mozdah
White Tower
Samuel (of Bulgaria)
San Stefano, Treaty of
Sao Vicente de Fora, church of (Lisbon)
grave of Carol II
Sarajevo (Bosnia-Hercegovia)
Sava, Saint (patron of Serbia)
Sava River
Sawyer, Diane
Saxons (in Transylvania)
and the Nazis
prejudice against Gypsies
Scanderbeg, George
Schonerer, Georg von
Sciaky, Leon
Sclerena (mistress of Constantine)
Secret History, The (Procopius)
Securitatae (Romanian secret police)
Seferis, George
Selim, Sultan
Selimiye Cami, Mosque of (Adrianople)
Serande (Albania)
Serbia
and Albania
and Bosnia
architecture of
Allied war against
and Austria-Hungary
Catholic Church of
and Communism
and Croatia
empire of Stefan Dushan
history of
monasteries of
and Ottoman Turkey
See also Belgrade; Field of Black Birds; Kosovo; Lazar; Knez; Stefan Dushan
Serbian language
Sevastianos, Metropolitan Archbishop
Sfintu Gheorghe (Romania)
Sheraton Hotel (Sofia)
Sherrard, Philip
Shtip (Macedonia)
Sibiu (Transylvania)
Brukenthal Museum
Imperatul Romanilor
Siebenburgen (Seven Fortified Cities)
Sigurnost, Darzhavna
Simeon (of Bulgaria)
Simitis, Costas
Sinan (Turkish architect)
Sitwell, Sacheverell
Skatsintsi (Macedonia)
Skopje (Macedonia)
Mustapha Pasha, Mosque of
St. Dimitrios, Church of
tomb of Delchev
Slave labor and Danube–Black Sea Canal
Slovenia
Smith, R. D.
Soccer riots, Albania
Sofia (Bulgaria)
Aleksandar Nevski Memorial Church
American College of
Grand Hotel Bulgaria
journalists’ club
Macedonian refugees
mausoleum of Dimitrov
Royal Palace
Russian occupation of
Sheraton Hotel
Vitosha Otani (hotel)
Solidarity
Soviet Union
disintegration of
German invasion of
See also Russia
Spartacus
Spetsai (Aegean Islands)
Srbski Kralj Hotel (Belgrade)
Stalin, Joseph
Stalingrad, siege of
Stara Planina (Old Mountain)
Starkie, Walter
Stefan Cel Mare (of Moldavia)
Stefan Dushan (of Serbia)
Stefan Uros (of Serbia)
Steinbeck, John
Stephen (of Byzantium)
Stephen the Great (of Moldavia)
Stepinac, Alojzije (cardinal of Zagreb)
Sterling, Claire
Stirbey, Barbo
Stirbu, Stefan
Stoker, Bram
Stone, Ellen
Strossmayer. Josip (bishop of Zagreb)
Suceava (Bucovina)
Sucevitsa, monastery of (Bucovina)
Suli (Greece)
Sulzberger, C. L.
Sveti Spas, Church of (Skopje)
Sylva, Carmen. See Elizabeth, Princess of Wied
Tatiana, Mother (Serbian nun)
Temkov, Boris
Ten Days That Shook the World (Reed)
Theodorakis, Mikis
Thrace (Greek)
Times (of London)
Timisoara (Banat)
and the December revolution
Timpul (Romanian newspaper)
Tirgu Mures (Transylvania)
Tirgu Mures, Orthodox Cathedral of
Tito, Josip Broz
Todorov, Nikolai
Todorov-Garudya, Ivan
Todorovski, Gane
Tokes, Rev. Laszlo
Tomislav (of Croatia), statue of
Tourism
and Greece
and Romania
Townson, Nigel
Traian Hotel (Jassy)
Traikov, Boyan
Train travel in Romania
Trajan (Roman Emperor)
Transdniestran Republic
Transylvania (Romania)
Catholic Church of
and Communism
and Dracula
German community of
history of
Hungarian community of
and Hungary
and Ottoman Turkey
population relocations
Western Enlightenment and
See also Cluj; Tirgu Mures
Trianon, treaty of
Triple Myth: A Life of Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac, The (Alexander)
Tritsis, Andonis
Truth That Killed, The (Markov)
Tsatsos, George
Tudjman, Franjo
Tulcea (Romania)
Turkey
Armenians, mass murder of
and Bulgaria
and drug running
and Greece
Janissaries (solders)
See also Adrianople; Cyprus; Ottoman Empire
Turkish People’s Liberation Army
Ukraine, Romanian invasion of
Under Western Eyes (Conrad)
Ungar, Beatrice
Union of Democratic Forces (Bulgarian political party)
Unirea Hotel (Jassy)
United Nations
United States
Urdareanu, Ernesto
Uros (of Serbia)
Vardar River (Macedonia)
Vatra Romaneasca (Romanian organization)
Veblen, Thorstein
Vecher newspaper (Skopje)
Venice, as ally of Byzantine
Venizelos, Eleftherios
Vienna (Austria)
and anti-Semitism
wealth of
Vienna, Congress of
Vitosha Otani (hotel in Sofia)
Vivaldi, Antonio
Vlad the Impaler (Dracula)
Vlado the Chauffeur
Vlasi, Azen
Voronets, monastery of (Bucovina)
Waldeck, R. G.
Walesa, Lech
Wallachia (Romania)
and Dracula
War in Eastern Europe, The (Reed)
Washington Post, The
Welch, Richard
West, Dame Rebecca
West and East
crossroads of
religious and cultural differences
Western Alliance
Western Enlightenment in Transylvania
Whitty, Kenneth
Wiesenthal, Simon
Wilson, Woodrow
World War I
and Albania
assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
and Belgrade
and Bulgaria
and Epirus
and Romania
World War II
and Albania
and Belgrade
and Bucharest
and Bulgaria
and Epirus
and Hungary
resistance to
and Romania
Yalta Conference and the Balkans
Young Turk Revolution
Yugoslavia
break with Soviet Communism
civil war of the 1990s
Communism and
and Djilas
and Kossovo
and Macedonia
and Serbia
systematized poverty of
See also Belgrade; Bosnia-Hercegovina; Croatia; Montenegro; Serbia; Tito
Zagreb (Croatia)
Esplanade Hotel
geography of
Jewish community of
Nazi occupation of
statue of Strossmayer
tomb of Stepinac
Zagreb, Cathedral of
Zagreb, University of
Zhivkov, Todor
Zoe (of Byzantium)
Zomar, Ozama Al
Zorba the Greek (Kazantzakis/Cacoyannis)