Abstract
This paper examines the recruitment strategies and profiles of prefects appointed in Transylvania (including Banat, Partium, and Maramureș) during General Alexandru Averescu’s second and third governments (1920–1921; 1926–1927). Combining appointment decrees published in the Monitorul Oficial with prosopographic and biographical sources, it traces how political change, party organization, and center– periphery dynamics shaped selections, resignations, and delegations. Quantitative evidence suggests that a large majority of prefects were locally born and legally trained, while the presence of appointees from the Old Kingdom in 1920–1921 diminished markedly by 1926–1927. The analysis underscores the prefect’s pivotal electoral role and shows how Averescu’s allies—especially in 1926—balanced local legitimacy with central control. It also situates recruitment patterns within broader political realignments and debates over administrative centralization and “Romanianisation.”