June 4, 2022, National History Museum of Transylvania
On the occasion of the Day of the Treaty of Trianon (June 4), an exhibition was opened at the National History Museum of Transylvania in which documents from the Paris Peace Conference that belonged to Alexandru Vaida-Voevod, as a delegate, were exhibited plenipotentiary of Romania (official identification, membership card in the Masonic Lodge, letters, postcards, maps). The public was also able to see a roulette used to draw the border between Romania and Hungary that belonged to Dumitru Melinescu, one of the many experts who fixed this route on the ground in accordance with the provisions of the Treaty of Trianon.
The Trianon Peace Treaty was signed between the Allied and Associated Powers and Hungary, one of the successor states of the former Dualist Monarchy. Complementing the Peace Treaty with Austria of September 10, 1919, the new document definitively sanctioned the de facto disintegration of the Monarchy since the end of the First World War.