Dual authority and wars In 1787 Russia marched into the principalities with the aim to install
Grigory Potemkin as "Prince of
Dacia", but the war ended in 1792,
reaffirming existing Ottoman-Russian treaties. In 1802 the Porte agreed to fix the Phanariot tenure to seven years and their dethroning was made impossible without Russian approval. In 1806 the two principalities were reoccupied by Russia, put under the governorship of general
Kutuzov, until 1812 when the
Treaty of Bucharest (1812) saw their return under Ottoman suzerainty, a deal made to secure the southern Russian flank during
Napoleon's invasion. Russia still annexed Bessarabia and retained the right to interfere in the internal affairs of the two principalities. In 1812 Napoleon had objected to Russian control of Moldavia and Wallachia as they were seen as a threat to French influence in the Near East.
Uprising and national awakening Moldavia and Wallachia became involved in the cause of
Greek independence. Backed by Phanariotes, the
Filiki Eteria maneuvered in Moldavia during the anti-Phanariote and pro-Eterian
1821 Wallachian uprising. Wallachian initiative was toppled by an Eterian administration which itself retreated in the face of Ottoman invasion. Although these events brought about the disestablishment of Phanariote rules by the Porte itself, this was of little consequence in itself, as a new
Russo-Turkish War brought a period of Russian occupation under formal Ottoman supervision, extended between 1829 and the
Crimean War (
Treaty of Adrianople). A parallel Russian military administration was put in place, while the two principalities were given the first common governing document (the
Organic Statute): although never fully implemented, it confirmed a
modernizing government, created a new legal framework that reformed public administration, and deeply influenced political life in the following decades. The Russian pressures for changes in the text were perceived by Wallachians and Moldavians as a drive to remove the territories from Ottoman rule and annex them to a much more
centralised and
absolutist empire. This coincided with the period of national awakening and the
Revolutions of 1848 - the rejection of Russian tutelage during the
Moldavian attempt and the
Wallachian revolutionary period were viewed with a degree of sympathy by the Porte, but calls by Russia ultimately led to a common occupation in the years following the rebellion's crushing.
Unification 's painting
The Union of the Principalities The aftermath of Russian defeat in 1856 (the
Treaty of Paris) brought forth a period of common tutelage of the Ottomans and a Congress of
Great Powers (the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the
French Empire, the
Austrian Empire, the
Kingdom of Prussia, the
Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia, and, albeit never again fully, the
Russian Empire). While the Moldavia-Wallachia
unionist cause, which had come to dominate political demands, was viewed with sympathy by the French, Russians, Prussians, and Sardinians, it was rejected by the Austrian Empire, and viewed with suspicion by Great Britain and the Ottomans. The leading unionist figures were alumni of Western universities and the Transylvanian school. Negotiations amounted to an agreement over a minimal and formal union - however, elections for the
ad hoc divans of 1859 profited from an ambiguity in the text of the final agreement (specifying two thrones, but not preventing the same person from occupying both) and made possible the rule of
Alexander Ioan Cuza as
Domnitor of the "United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia". ==Aftermath and legacy==