HistoryPrior to World War I, Transylvania was a semi-independent state under Ottoman sovereignty, province of the Habsburg Monarchy, province of the Austrian Empire and part of the Kingdom of Hungary (from 1867 to 1918; within the Austro-Hungarian Empire). The dual monarchy dissolved after the war. In December, 1918, Transylvanian political organizations of ethnic Romanians and ethnic Hungarians each expressed loyalty to their respective homelands. The treaties of Saint-Germain (1919) and Trianon (1920) reflected the victory of the Romanian army, granting Transylvania to Romania. After Romania settled a claim to Soviet Union over Bessarabian territories, in June 1940, Hungary attempted to regain Transylvania, which it had lost in World War I. Germany and Italy pressured both Hungary and Romania to resolve the situation in a bilateral agreement. The two delegation met in Turnu Severin but the negotiations failed due to a demand for a 60,000 skm territory on Hungarian side and only a population exchange on Romanian side. To impede a Hungarian-Romanian war in their "hinterland" the Axis powers pressured both governments to accept their arbitration: the Second Vienna Award. Historian Keith Hitchins (Hitchins 1994) summarizes the situation created by the award:
Hungary held Northern Transylvania only from 1940 to 1944. Ethnic disturbances between Hungarians and Romanians continued during this period, with some Hungarians pursuing discrimination, harassment, or extreme violence against Romanians (see Treznea massacre, Ip massacre). Like Jews living in Hungary, most of the Jews in Northern Transylvania (about 150,000) were sent to concentration camps during World War II. Some of the Romanian population in this region fled or was expelled, and the same happened with many Hungarians in Southern Transylvania. There was a mass exodus; over 100,000 people on both sides of the ethnic and political borders relocated. Northern Transylvania reverted to Romanian rule in 1947, when the Treaty of Paris reaffirmed the borders between Romania and Hungary originally defined in Treaty of Trianon, 27 years earlier. See alsoReferences
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