Category
page 1Romania in World War II
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact
1939 neutrality pact between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union
Second Vienna Award
1940 border agreement
Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina
1940 Soviet annexation of territory in eastern Romania; Moldavian SSR established
Romania in World War II
involvement of Romania in World War II
King Michael's Coup
1944 coup d'état led by Romanian King Michael I
Treaty of Craiova
1940 territorial settlement between the kingdoms of Romania and Bulgaria

conducător
Conducător (, meaning 'Leader') was the title used officially by Romanian dictator Ion Antonescu during World War II, also occasionally used in official discourse to refer to Carol II and Nicolae Ceaușescu.
Northern Transylvania
Territory of the Kingdom of Hungary (1940–1945)
National Legionary State
Fascist regime in Romania
Soviet deportations from Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina
ethnic cleansing of Romanians under Soviet Union’s illegal occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina of Romania
Soviet occupation of Romania
period of Romania under the Russian occupation during and after World War II
National Peasants' Party
Romanian political party, 1926-1947
Manfred Freiherr von Killinger
German politician (1886-1944)
The Holocaust in Romania
The Holocaust as it developed in Romania

Gustav Richter
SS officer (1912-1997)
Mefkure
Turkish ship
Croatian-Romanian-Slovak friendship proclamation
1942 document
Allied Commission
control authorities by the Allies to control the defeated Axis countries
Struma disaster
maritime disaster
Inochentism
thumb|210px|Orthodox Church in Balta, Ukraine|Balta, center of the Inochentist movement (1941 photograph)
Inochentism (occasionally translated as Innocentism or the Inochentist church; ; Russian: Иннокентьевцы, Innokentevtsy) is a millennialist and Charismatic Christian sect, split from mainstream Eastern Orthodoxy in the early 20th century. The church was first set up in the Russian Empire, and was later active in both the Soviet Union and Romania. Its founder was Bessarabian monk Ioan Levizor, known by his monastic name, Inochenție.

Otto von Bolschwing
Officer in SS Sicherheitsdienst; CIA operative
Târgu Jiu concentration camp
Bessarabia Governorate
Romanian autonomous province existent during World War II
German–Romanian Treaty for the Development of Economic Relations between the Two Countries
1939 treaty between Germany and Romania
Bukovina Governorate
Romanian autonomous province existent during World War II
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact negotiations
outline of negotiations of Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact
10. Flak-Division
major combat unit of the German Luftwaffe in World War II