Strange Maps

September 23, 2008

311 – Transnistria, A Soviet Fly in Geopolitical Amber

Filed under: Uncategorized — strangemaps @ 12:39 pm

 

Now that Russia has recognised the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, the improbable phantom nation of Transnistria (1) might be gearing up for its own fifteen minutes of geopolitical fame. Like the aforementioned breakaway regions of Georgia (itself a former Soviet republic), Transnistria is a bizarre splinter off  the old Soviet block, and now a client state of Russia.

Transnistria occupies the sliver of Moldovan territory hemmed in between the river Dniester (2) in the west and the Ukrainian border in the east. It is about 400 km long, from north to south, and typically no more than 20 km wide, sharing its snake-like look on the map with a few other nations, notably Chile, Norway and the Gambia. Except that Transnistria doesn’t appear on most maps.  No other country recognises the independence of this freak accident of world politics, not even Mother Russia – at least not yet (3).

The birth of Transnistria is an indirect result of the death of the Soviet Union. When the Soviet Union broke up in the early 1990s, Moldova was one of the 15 constituent republics that gained its independence. Moldova, which shares language, culture and history with neighbouring Romania had the distinction of being the only Romance-language Soviet republic. Its ‘western’ orientation hasn’t helped it integrate into Europe, as the Baltic states have done: Moldova remains one of the poorest countries on the continent, notorious for corruption, smuggling and prostitution. 

It may be argued that Moldova’s near-failed-stateness is the cause – or the effect – of its conflict with Transnistria. That strip of Moldovan territory was heavily industrialised in Soviet times, and populated with migrants from other parts of the Soviet Union: Russians, Ukrainians and others. That typically ‘Soviet’ mix of nationalities felt no desire, post-USSR, to be integrated into a state dominated by Moldovans, and looked east for protection.

Cossacks and Russian regular troops helped Transnistria fight its brief war of independence from Moldova in 1992. Since then, the rogue republic has remained virtually unchanged, frozen in time like a Soviet fly in geopolitical amber. Lenin statues still adorn the Transnistrian town centres, and the main ideology seems to be nostalgia.  

The self-declared republic’s regime is styled as ’super-presidentialism’ under the leadership of one Oleg Smirnov (4), who managed to obtain 103.6% of the votes in a particular district during the 2001 election. Transnistria still has a large manufacturing base, and profits greatly from non-regulated exports (or ’smuggling’, if you’re into the whole brevity thing) and other activities that thrive best in the twilight of disputed sovereignty, including arms manufacturing.

Transnistria might yearn for the sunny Soviet past, but those days are not returning. These days, it’s one of Russia’s westernmost outposts, an illegal, southern mirror site to Kaliningrad, which sits uncomfortably on the Baltic coast, completely hemmed in by the EU member states Poland and Lithuania. Transnistria is similarly surrounded by Moldova and the Ukraine, which has in the past exerted pressure on the small statelet as a way of getting back at Russia.

A notable example was the gas crisis of 2006, in which Russia suddenly and dramatically raised the price of its gas exports to Ukraine – a warning to its newly-elected, pro-western president  Yushchenko not to stray too far from Moscow’s sphere of influence. Ukraine retaliated by instituting measures to stem Transnistria’s illegal exports, strangling the local economy. This mechanism of war by proxy might make Transnistria a more ‘convenient’ flashpoint in a future conflict between Russia and the Ukraine than the Crimea, the sovereignty of which is directly disputed between both countries.

This map taken from this page at moldova.org  - “Moldova’s best international gateway”.

 

———-

(1) Official full name: Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic. Also known as Transdniestria, Transdniestria and Pridnestrovie (the latter its Russian short name). Some official Moldovan sources insist on not using the region’s self-chosen name, but instead refer to it as the ‘Administrative-territorial unit of the Left Bank of the Dniestr’.The implication is that using the name chosen by a wayward territory for itself opens the door for its official recognition.. This is reminiscent of the insistence of some Arab sources to refer to Israel as the ‘Zionist Entity’. 

(2) Hence the breakaway republic’s name, literally ‘across the Dniester’. The river’s name derives from ancient Sarmatian, and can be translated as “the near river”. The Dnieper River, from the same source (linguistically, not hydrographically), means “the far river”. The old Greek name for the Dniester is Tyras, which still survives in the name of the Transnistria’s capital, Tiraspol.

(3) Tellingly, both Abkhazia and South Ossetia have recognised Transnistria’s independence.

(4) Real name.


33 Comments »

  1. [...] Transnistria? [...]

    Pingback by Stones Cry Out - If they keep silent… » Things Heard: e34v2 — September 23, 2008 @ 1:32 pm

  2. Great find! I need to add this map to my collection :)

    Comment by Hungry Donner — September 23, 2008 @ 2:07 pm

  3. Does a Moldavian nationality actually exist, or is this just another name for Romanians living in a former Soviet republic called Moldava?

    You would think that the Transnistrians would prefer to stay with Moldova instead of clamor for the old Soviet (Russian) motherland. The standard of living for most people is much higher in the EU than in Russia…….

    I don’t know…..you think that many of the former Soviet block nations would file a lawsuit with the world court and demand billions of dollars in compensation for the crimes committed against their people by the former Soviet regime.

    Comment by bourgoises pig — September 23, 2008 @ 3:58 pm

  4. There’s some controversy in Moldova on whether Moldovan is distinct from Romanian linguistically:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moldovan_language

    Unlike Moldovans, Transnistrians write it using a different alphavet when they write it at all.

    Comment by Leo Petr — September 23, 2008 @ 4:23 pm

  5. “The standard of living for most people is much higher in the EU than in Russia”

    Moldova is not in the EU and neither side has shown any desire to change that. (Romania is in the EU.)

    OTOH, Estonia and Latvia’s entry into the EU is one factor helping to ease tensions somewhat between the Soviet-era Russian immigrants there and the native Balts.

    One criticism* I had of the slasher movie “Hostel” was that it would have been much more plausible to set it in Transnistria rather than Slovakia

    (*Others were the pornographic violence and moral vacuity.)

    Comment by mollymooly — September 23, 2008 @ 4:49 pm

  6. @ Leo Petr

    Moldovan language? Huh? According to Wikipedia, the language is identical to Romanian. A better description would be a “dialect of Romanian” that is spoken in Moldova.

    Transnistrian language? A better description would be a “dialect of Romanian” that is spoken in Transnistria, but is written in cyrillic letters instead of in Latin.

    @ mollymooly

    Moldova does want to join the EU:

    http://www.moldpres.md/default.asp?Lang=en&ID=68715

    Comment by bourgoises pig — September 23, 2008 @ 5:54 pm

  7. Perhaps Transnistria will no longer be an independent republic. Very timely information:

    http://www.moldpres.md/banner/p_vopros_en.html

    Comment by bourgoises pig — September 23, 2008 @ 6:06 pm

  8. The question actually it is not straight forward and need an excurse to the history. Let’s go back to the end of 19th beginning of 20th century. Territory which considered today’s republic of Moldova was Bessarabia district of Russian Empire. Bessarabia district also includes Ismail region of Odessa district of today’s Ukraine. Transnistria or left bank of Dniester river belonged to Kherson district of Russian Empire. After Communist Revolution of 1917 Russia (USSR by then) lost Bessarabia to Rumanians, which left Russians really biter. In 1920’s they created artificial Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (territory of today’s Transnistria) in a borders of Ukraine, with a hope in a near future to reunite with Rumanian Bessarabia as a Moldavian Republic inside the Soviet borders. That moment came in 1940 than Soviet ultimatum was given to government of Rumania to withdraw it troops from Bessarabia and Bukovina or face complete occupation of Rumanian territory. Rumania agreed and Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic was created out of territory of Bessarabia and Moldavian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic. This is the first time Transnistria become part of Moldova. However southern portion of Bessarabia (Izamail region) and Bukovina ( today’s Chernovtsy District) was given to Ukraine. It was not a big issue back then, because all the borders were nominal and inside one particular country – USSR. However USSR fell apart in 1991, which made Transnistria as a part not a nominal but already real country of Moldova. I would think Izmail and Chernovtsy have more rights to be part of Moldavia then Transnistria. All of the problem this region is experiencing due to the fake geography which was wildly practiced in Soviet Union and by Stalin in particular.

    Comment by Gene K — September 23, 2008 @ 6:09 pm

  9. I was coincidentally just reading about Transnistria in a Romania/Moldova Lonely Planet guide yesterday. The guide had nothing positive to say about this region but it seemed rather fascinating.

    Comment by Jon — September 23, 2008 @ 6:23 pm

  10. More info: http://www.pridnestrovie.net/

    Comment by Michael Newton — September 23, 2008 @ 8:12 pm

  11. more about Transnistria:
    http://cool-maps.blogspot.com/2008/07/transnistria-county-that-barely-exists.html

    Comment by Björn — September 24, 2008 @ 9:46 am

  12. Thanks for posting on Transistria, that strange territorial entity is pretty much ignored, as time stopped there since 1991.

    How about a next post on an other secluded part of Moldavia, the improbable Gagauzia?

    Then we’ll talk about Syldavia and Latveria !

    Comment by Tertius — September 24, 2008 @ 12:14 pm

  13. When it was called Moldavia, it had the distinction of the only Romance language written in Cyrillic. I gather that they use Romanian orthography now.

    Comment by Anton Sherwood — September 24, 2008 @ 6:41 pm

  14. More info!

    http://www.geografiya.net/transnistria

    Comment by Stefanie Gray — September 24, 2008 @ 6:47 pm

  15. [...] Transnistria be given NATO membership? September 24, 2008 Off the Strange Maps blog is this map and background on the improbable state of Transnistria, which lies precariously between Moldova and [...]

    Pingback by Should Transnistria be given NATO membership? « Audible Smirk — September 24, 2008 @ 9:54 pm

  16. Surely the name is Transdnistria (or Transdniestria, depending on transliteration) not Transnistria. As the article says, it is “across the Dniestr/Dnistr river” not the “Nistr” river.

    On the language question, political separation sometimes leads to one language not only being recognised as two (or more) but actually over time developing into dialects distinct enough to be considered separate languages. See Spanish/Castillian/Galician/etc or Serbo-Croat/Serbian/Croatian as examples.

    Comment by Cudzoziemiec — September 25, 2008 @ 4:40 am

  17. Do you know, that ca. 100 years before the village of Cioburciu (Чобурчи) was still inhabited by ethnic Hungarians? It was called Csöbörcsök (’tʃøbørtʃøk’) in Hungarian. It was the easternmost Csango-Hungarian village.

    Comment by Szabo Pal (Budapest) — September 25, 2008 @ 10:37 am

  18. To Cudzoziemiec and anybody who interested.
    Dniester is a name of the river in Russian, Ukrainian, English and some other Germanic and Slavic languages. Nistru – is a name in Romanian, Moldavian and other Romance languages. So Transdnistria, Transdniestria and Transnistria are valid names of the country, as well as Prednistroviya and Transdnistrovia.

    Comment by Gene K — September 25, 2008 @ 3:18 pm

  19. As Mr. Spock would say, “Fascinating!”

    Comment by Iolanthe — September 25, 2008 @ 8:13 pm

  20. I just came in to say “fascinating,” but Iolanthe beat me to it

    Comment by Patrick — September 26, 2008 @ 3:02 am

  21. As someone above has mentioned, the name is also “Transdniestria” and it could well become the bane of Europe in the next few months.
    A nice little article in wiki explains all:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transnistria
    Raf Uzar
    http://uzar.wordpress.com/2008/09/10/eu-ii/

    Comment by Raf Uzar — September 26, 2008 @ 6:29 am

  22. Szabo Pal – you can always count on the Hungarians to say “We used to own that.”

    I notice that the ethnic breakdown includes no Roma (gypsies), though they are likely at least a few percent of the population. One more bit of evidence of how discounted they are.

    Comment by Assistant Village Idiot — September 26, 2008 @ 11:59 pm

  23. @ Assistant Village Idiot (post #22)

    The Hungarians could not have become so influential without the help of the Austrians within a joint empire…..

    Comment by Bourgeois Pig — September 29, 2008 @ 3:21 pm

  24. [...] as the Cuba of Europe seemed intriguing, and then it was independently brought to my attention by this Strange Maps post where the author pointed out that, with Russia’s recent action and the US media’s [...]

    Pingback by RumorsDaily » Guest Post: Transnistria — September 30, 2008 @ 5:42 am

  25. I just tread of Transnistria . In the (very readible) “Playing the moldovians at Tennis” by Tony Hawks (the british comedian, not the american skater). He actually had to travel to Transnistria…

    Comment by Peer — October 10, 2008 @ 5:09 pm

  26. [...] remember Abkhazia and South Ossetia, right? Well, feast your eyes on this freaky statelet. I’ve been following Transnistria for some time, but this is the first map worthy of the name [...]

    Pingback by The Confabulum » Blog Archive » Transnistria! — November 17, 2008 @ 7:56 pm

  27. Go visit Moldova. The people are the friendliest and most hospitable in Europe!

    I visited Moldova from Ukraine. Crossing the Transnistrian border four times is a bit scary – the “border” guards of Transdnistria extracted bribes/”fines”/”presents” on three of the four occasions.

    Transdnistria is a weird hybrid of the Soviet nostalgia and the in-your-face capitalism of the Sheriff conglomerate.

    Comment by Bob D — November 27, 2008 @ 10:55 pm

  28. About Cudzoziemiec’s remark that the territory should be refered to as Transdniestria, because the river is called Dniestr, that would be correct from a Russian viewpoint. In Rumanian (’Moldovan’ refers to people from Moldova, their language is Rumanian not Moldovan, which is comparable to the Flemish from Flanders who speak Dutch not ‘Flemish’) the river is called Nistru. Hence the region on the left bank of the Nistru river can be called Transnistria, which is also much more easy to pronounce for people with a non-slavic mother-tongue. The latter of course being a pragmatic reason for using ‘Transnistria’.

    Comment by Stadjer — December 16, 2008 @ 5:41 pm

  29. The president of Transdniestria is Igor Smirnov. Oleg Smirnov, that you name as president in the text, is his son, and also has some important function in the country administration.

    Comment by Lucian, Bucureşti — February 28, 2009 @ 11:48 pm

  30. long live the USSR!

    Comment by Стамен Съвев — March 14, 2009 @ 1:49 am

  31. thanks for this map
    good 
    luck

    ….

    Comment by Solomon — May 11, 2009 @ 9:02 am

  32. Vielen Dank

    Comment by moon — July 3, 2009 @ 5:27 am

  33. Muchas gracias

    Comment by sun — July 4, 2009 @ 7:50 am

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