DOI: 10.56679/balkar.1910678 ISSN: 2667-470X

Early Independence Fears and the Romanian Commercial Treaties Crisis: Great Power Diplomacy in the Balkans, 1874–1875

Serdar Bay
This article examines the diplomatic crisis of 1874–1875 surrounding Romania’s attempt to conclude commercial treaties independently of the Ottoman Empire. Although initially framed as a trade issue, the dispute raised broader questions about Ottoman suzerainty, Great Power oversight, and the premature recognition of Romanian independence. Drawing on British diplomatic correspondence alongside Ottoman and European archival sources, the article analyses how Romania expanded its external autonomy by presenting commercial agreements as administrative rather than political acts and by exploiting rivalries among the Great Powers. It argues that the controversy reflected wider European anxieties about altering Romania’s status before a collective settlement had been achieved. Austria-Hungary supported the treaties to secure its economic interests in the Danube region, Germany adopted a cautious stance, Russia remained restrained, while Britain and France defended the post-1856 Paris settlement. The Austro-Romanian commercial convention of June 1875 marked a significant step in Romania’s growing international agency.

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