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・ Danube–Black Sea Canal
・ Danube–Bucharest Canal
・ Danube–Criș–Mureș–Tisa Euroregion
・ Danube–Drava–Sava Euroregion
・ Danube–Oder Canal
・ Danube–Tisa–Danube Canal
・ Danube–Tisza Interfluve
・ Danubian corridor
・ Danubian culture
・ Danubian endemic familial nephropathy
・ Danubian Flat
・ Danubian Hills
・ Danubian Lowland
・ Danubian Plain
・ Danubian Plain (Bulgaria)
Danubian Principalities
・ Danubian provinces
・ Danubian Sich
・ Danubio F.C.
・ Danubit
・ Danubitaceae
・ Danubius Hotel Astoria
・ Danubius Hotels Group
・ Danubius Quartet
・ Danubyu
・ Danubyu Township
・ Danuel Pipoly
・ Danukan
・ Danuki
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Danubian Principalities : ウィキペディア英語版
Danubian Principalities

Danubian Principalities ((ルーマニア語、モルドバ語():Principatele Dunărene), (セルビア語:Dunavske kneževine)) was a conventional name given to the Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia, which emerged in the early 14th century. The term was coined in the Habsburg Monarchy after the Treaty of Küçük Kaynarca (1774) in order to designate an area on the lower Danube with a common geopolitical situation.〔Heppner Harald, ''Österreich und die Donaufürstentümer 1774–1812. Ein Beitrag zur habsburgischen Südosteuropapolitik'', Habilitationsschrift, Graz, 1984, p.8-9〕 The term was largely used then by foreign political circles and public opinion until the union of the two Principalities (1859). Alongside Transylvania, the United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia became the basis for the Kingdom of Romania, and by extension the modern Romanian nation-state.
In a wider context, the concept may also apply to the Principality of Serbia as one of ''The Principalities of the Danube''〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=http://www.harpers.org/archive/1876/03/0044983 )〕〔Wikisource:The Principalities of the Danube〕 which came under the suzerainty (alongside Wallachia and Moldova) of the Porte from 1817.
==History==


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