The
Hungarian minority of Romania is the largest ethnic minority in Romania, consisting of 1,431,807 people and making up 6.6% of the total population, according to the
2002 census.
For historic reasons, most
ethnic Hungarians of
Romania live in what is today known as
Transylvania, where they make up about 19% of the population.
[1] This area that includes the historic regions of
Banat, Crişana and Maramureş. Hungarians form a large majority of the population in the counties of
Harghita and
Covasna, and a large percentage in Mureş (39.3%),
Satu Mare (35.22%),
Bihor (25.91%), Sălaj (23.07%),
Cluj (17.4%) and
Arad (10.70%) counties.
History
Historical background
The first Magyar presence on the present-day territory of Romania and
Moldova was recorded in what became
Moldavia, were settlements were established in the 8th-9th centuries, when the
nomadic tribes of briefly settled in that area (
see Etelköz). The last remains of early Magyar presence in that area vanished during the
Mongol invasion of Europe. Political dominance over the region, regained during the first decades of the 14th century, was reflected in an
toponyms of likely
Hungarian origin - Bacău -
Bákó,
Suceava -
Szűcsvár, the Moldovan
Orhei -
Örhely, etc.). A
Roman Catholic Hungarian community was settled in Moldavia during and after the period, on the
Siret and Trotuş valleys (
see also Cotnari); a possible consequence of this presence was the emergence of the
Csángó community.
After the Magyar tribes invaded the
Pannonian basin (in
896), they also conquered
Transylvania in the 11th century; the latter which became an autonomous province under the rule of either a prince from the ruling,
Ãrpád dynasty or a member of the
nobility of the Hungarian Kingdom until the
Ottoman victory over Hungary in the
Battle of Mohács (1526).
After the conflict, Hungary became divided into three parts:
Royal Hungary came to be ruled by the
Habsburg Monarchy, conquered Hungary became part of the Ottoman Empire, while Transylvania became an autonomous
principality under Ottoman influence, ruled mostly by Hungarian
Princes.
By the 18th century, the Habsburg Monarchy had conquered most of the former Hungarian part of the Ottoman Empire. After the independence war of
Francis II Rákóczi failed to emancipate in Hungary in
1711, Habsburg control over Transylvania could be consolidated, and the princes of Transylvania were replaced with Austrian governors. During the
Hungarian revolution of 1848 the union of Transylvania with Hungary was proclaimed by the Transylvanian Diet; this claim was, however, not supported by Romanians and
Saxons of Transylvania, whose political representatives became involved in an armed conflict with the
Honvédség. After the revolution's defeat 1849, Transylvania was again subject to direct control from
Vienna. With the
Ausgleich of 1867 Transylvania became part of the
refounded Hungarian Kingdom within the
Astro-Hungarian Empire.
Although mostly controlled by Hungarians during the last millennium, Transylvania had been a multi-ethnic region with Hungarian, Romanian and Saxon inhabitants since medieval times. In spite of
Magyarization policies of the Hungarian government by the end of the 19th century, ethnic Romanians were in the majority.
After 1918
The interwar period
- See also:
On
December 1,
1918, a large assembly of Romanians of Transylvania met at
Alba Iulia and called for a union with Romania, promising minority rights for all ethnic groups. The Romanians, who formed a majority of the population, were also joined by Saxons. In response, the Hungarian General Assembly of Cluj reaffirmed the loyalty of Transylvanian Hungarians to Hungary on
December 22,
1918.
Following WWI, with a disintegrated Austrian-Hungarian army and revolutions taking place in Budapest, Hungary could not resist the Romanian armed forces acting on behalf of the winning
Entente powers, and gradually lost territories, including Transylvania, during 1918-1919.
In 1919, the intervention of the Romanian army put an end to the intentions of the Communist government of
Béla Kun to re-capture Transylvania.
The Romanian intention of unifying Transylvania with the
Kingdom of Romania was supported by the Entente powers. In 1920, the unification was ratified, and border lines were finalised by the
Treaty of Trianon. As a result, the more than 1.5 million-strong Hungarian minority of Transylvania found itself becoming a minority group within Romania. The same event was seen by ethnic Romanians in Transylvania as a liberation from their former minority status within the
Kingdom of Hungary.
About 197,000 Transylvanian Hungarians fled to Hungary between 1918 and 1922,
[2] and a further 169,000 emigrated over the remainder of the interwar period.
[3] In 1921, the Popular Hungarian Party and National Hungarian Party were formed, which later will fuse to form the Hungarian Party of Romania.
The new regime's objective became to effectively Romanianize Transylvania in a social-political fashion, after centuries of Hungarian rule. The regime's goal was to create a Romanian middle and upper class that would assume power in all fields. The Hungarian language was expunged from official life, and all place-names were Romanianized.
[3] In the land reform undertaken in 1921, Transylvanian nobles (most of them ethnic Hungarians) were dispossessed of large domains, and the land was given to the peasants that worked it (the majority of whom were ethnic Romanians). The move changed the ethnic distribution of land ownership.
The Magyar population complained about the insufficiency of schools in their language and the pressure to send their children to Romanian language schools. In the private economy the commanding position of Hungarian, Jewish and Saxon was somewhat eroded, as the government tried to improve the relative position of the Romanian enterprise with preferential measures. Higher education was completely Romanianized, except for a chair of Hungarian Literature at the University of Cluj. On the other hand, the minority's cultural activities met with little official hindrance.
[3]
World War II
In 1940, the joint German/Italian
Second Vienna Award gave back
Northern Transylvania to Hungary, which held it until 1944. The award was intended to partly compensate Hungary for the territories lost with the
Trianon Treaty, and ensure its continued loyalty towards Germany and Italy. However, it was again simply a re-drawing of national borders in a multi-ethnic region, without providing a real solution. Historian Keith Hitchins
[4] summarizes the situation created by the award:
- Far from settling matters, the Vienna Award had exacerbated relations between Romania and Hungary. It did not solve the nationality problem by separating all Magyars from all Romanians. Some 1,150,000 to 1,300,000 Romanians, or 48 per cent to over 50 per cent of the population of the ceded territory, depending upon whose statistics are used, remained north of the new frontier, while about 500,000 Magyars (other Hungarian estimates go as high as 800,000, Romanian as low as 363,000) continued to reside in the south.
During this period, some members of the Hungarian minority participated in discriminating policies and harassment against the Romanian population. There were also atrocities by Romanians in 1944,
[5][6] leading to a chaotic situation until the
Petru Groza government took control of it in 1945.
When
World War II ended, another ca. 150,000 Hungarians sought refuge in Hungary.
After World War II
After the war, in 1952, a
Hungarian Autonomous Province was created in Romania by the communist authorities. The region was dissolved in 1968, when a new administrative organization (the one still in place) was applied.
The early communist party of Romania heavily relied on non-Romanian elements, among which were many Hungarians (many of whom were of Jewish origin). Under the first decades of Communist power, the situation of the Hungarian minority improved: a few Hungarian newspapers and theaters were created, etc.
Merging of Hungarian schools with Romanian ones began in 1959 and was completed in the mid-1980s. Teaching staff were progressively Romanianized in the wake of this consolidation, so that the proportion of Magyar children educated in their mother tongue steadily declined. In 1959, the Magyar University of Cluj was merged with the Romanian one to become an almost exclusively Romanian language institution; the event was marked by the suicide of several Magyar professors. Ethnic Hungarians were progressively excluded from the administrative apparatus of the regime, the officer corps, and economic management. In the 1980s even Magyar educational and cultural studies became headed by ethnic Romanians.
[3]
Once Ceauşescu came to power, emphasis was put on nationalism, and the situation of the Hungarian minority worsened. Education in history became focused on the Romanian history of Transylvania and omitted the role played by Hungarians. Bennett Kovrig summarizes the situation in his study
Partitioned Nation: Hungarian Minorities in Central Europe:
- The official nationalist ideology revived and accentuated the nation-building myths of the prewar period. Thus the ethnic Romanian nation and its state were represented as an organic unity; the Magyars were depicted as historical interlopers in the process of Daco-Romanian continuity, as the fundamentally alien oppressors of Romanian Transylvania in the past, and as unassailable, crypto-revisionist threat to the integrity and cohesion of contemporary Romania. The Magyars’ claim to cultural autonomy implied that a distinction could be drawn between cultural and civic allegiance, but Romania’s rulers emphatically rejected the civic form of nationalism in favor of the essentially xenophobic dogma of organic Romanian nationhood. By the early 1980’s, the regime’s favoured authors were publishing virulent diatribes against the Magyars.
- Thus ethnic Romanians were encouraged to believe that all their troubles, past and present, were due to the presence of Magyars. The latter, on the other hand, were too conscious of their history and too rooted to a community to accept the status of unwanted, second-class citizens. To be sure, cordiality was not wholly absent in daily contact between Transylvania’s Magyars and ethnic Romanians; and the autocratic Romanians were generally less hostile than those transplanted from Moldavia and Walachia. But the fact is that the nationalistic propaganda struck a responsive chord among the mass of Romanians. The few active Magyar dissidents soon lost hope of conciliating the latter or the rulers; their efforts were aimed more to raise minority spirits and alert public opinions.[3]
The regime discriminated ethnic minorities. Few members of these minorities were co-opted in party structures and administration, and many were stripped of their functions. However, mere expulsion was not the main objective of the regime. For instance,
West Germany and
Israel were obliged to pay a per capita ransom for the Ceauşescu regime to accept the emigration of Germans and Jews (however, the Jewish and German communities were rapidly depleted by emigration).
Hungary didn't have the money nor the political will to follow suit.
[3]
The minority situation after 1990


Map of Romanian counties with Hungarian presence.


Ethnic map of Harghita, Covasna, and Mureş based on the 2002 data, showing areas with Hungarian majority
In the aftermath of the
Romanian Revolution of 1989, the inter-ethnic relations of Transylvania worsened. Ethnic-based political parties were constituted by both the Hungarians, which formed the
Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania, and by the Romanian Transylvanians, who formed the
Romanian National Unity Party. Ethnic conflicts, however, never occurred on a significant scale, even though some violent clashes, such as the Târgu Mureş events of 1990, did take place shortly after the
fall of Ceauşescu regime.
In 1995, a basic treaty on the relations between Hungary and Romania was signed. In the treaty, Hungary renounced all territorial claims to Transylvania and Romania reiterated its respect for the rights of its minorities. Relations between the two countries were transformed as Romania moved to join Hungary as a full EU member. A number of Hungarian-speaking border towns which for decades were cut off from Hungary now have virtually free movement via new border-crossings.
Since November 1996 the situation of the Hungarian minority has improved following an election which brought about a government coalition that included the
Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) as a partner. Since 1996, the UDMR has been a member or supporter of every governmental coalition, including the present
Justice and Truth Alliance. Political agreements have brought the gradual implementation of major advances in the official status of the Hungarian language in all localities where it is spoken by more than 20% of the population.
While Hungarian newspapers, books, other publications and even broadcasting hours on public television have existed in Romania even during the Ceauşescu regime, their number and diversity has steadily and significantly increased after the 1989 revolution. The same is true for the number of elementary schools, high-schools, colleges and universities teaching in Hungarian, as well as for cultural institutions such as Hungarian theaters and opera houses funded by the Romanian state.
Still, the ethnic rights of the minority have so far not reached the level desired by this community. There is a movement by Hungarians both for an increase in autonomy and distinct cultural development. Initiatives proposed by various Hungarian political organisations include the creation of an autonomous region in the
Székelyföld, roughly corresponding to the territory of the former
Hungarian Autonomous Province, and the re-establishment of an independent state-funded Hungarian-language university.
Politics
The
Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR) is the major representative of Hungarians in Romania, and is a member of the
Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization. The aim of the UDMR is to achieve local government, cultural and territorial autonomy and the right to self‐determination for Hungarians. UDMR is a member of the European Democrat Union (EDU) and an associated member of the European People's Party (EPP).
In the
2004 legislative elections, UDMR gained 10 seats in the
Romanian Senate, or 6.23% of the total vote, and 22 seats in the
Chamber of Deputies (6.17% of the total vote). In 1996, UDMR became part of the National Democratic Convention coalition government, holding two ministerial portfolios in the cabinet. The party is also part of the current coalition government (2004-2008), where it holds four ministerial portfolios. Romania's vice-premier,
Béla Markó, is also a member of the party.
(to be written about autonomy of the Székely Land movement)
- See also:
Subgroups
Székely
The Székely people are Hungarians who mainly live in an area known as
Székelyföld (
Ţinutul Secuiesc in
Romanian), and who maintain a different set of
traditions and different identity from that of other Hungarians in Romania. Based on the latest Romanian statistics, there are approximately 670,000 Székely.
Csángó
The Csángó (
Romanian: Ceangău, pl. Ceangăi) are people of
Roman Catholic faith, some speaking a
Hungarian dialect and some
Romanian. They live in the Bacău County,
Moldavia region. The Hungarian speaking Csángó settled there between the 13th and 15th centuries and are the only Hungarians living to the east of the
Carpathians. They are in fact one of the oldest groups of Hungarian settlers in the whole of
Romania.
The ethnic background of Csángó/Ceangăi is nevertheless disputed, since, due to its active connections to the neighboring
Polish kingdom and to the
Papal States,
Roman Catholic faith persisted in
Moldavia throughout medieval times, long after
Vlachs living in other Romanian provinces, closer to the
Bulgarian Empire, had been completely converted to
Orthodox Christianity. Along with marked cultural and ethnolinguistic differences between Hungarian-speaking and Romanian-speaking Csángó/Ceangăi, this historical background explains why some Csángó/Ceangăi claim having Hungarian while others Romanian ancestry. Csángó's have been subject to many violations of basic minority rights: Hungarian-language schools have been closed down over time, their political rights have been suppressed and they have even been subject to slow, forced nationalisation by various Romanian governments over the years.
Culture
Owing to its multicultural roots, Transylvania has a very diverse culture, in which Hungarians left probably the most distinctive mark. There is a vast network of Hungarian theaters, more than 200 years old and still functioning, and some of them, like those from
Cluj-Napoca, Târgu-Mureş and Timişoara have international reputation. The number of Hungarian social and cultural organizations in Romania has greatly increased after the fall of communism, with more than 300 being documented a few years ago. There are also several puppet theatres. Professional Hungarian dancing in Romania is represented by the Maros Folk Ensemble (formerly State Szekler Ensemble) in Târgu-Mureş (
Marosvásárhely in
Hungarian), the Hargita Ensemble, and the Pipacsok Dance Ensemble. Other amateur popular theaters are also very important in preserving the cultural traditions.
While in the past the import of books was hindered, now there are many bookstores selling books written in Hungarian. The two public wide-coverage TV stations broadcast several Hungarian programs with good audiences also from Romanians. This relative scarcity is partially compensated by private Hungarian-language television and radio stations, like
DUNA-TV which is targeted for the Hungarian minorities outside Hungary, particularly Transylvania. A new TV station entitled "Transylvania" is scheduled to start soon, the project is funded mostly by Hungary but also by Romania and EU and other private associations. There are currently around 60 Hungarian-language press publications receiving state support from the Romanian Government. While their numbers dropped as a consequence of economic liberalisation and competition, there are many others private funded by different Hungarian organizations. The
Székely Region has many touristic facilities that attract Hungarian and other foreign tourists.
Education
According to Romania's minority rights law, Hungarians have the right to education in their native language, including as a
medium of instruction, in localities where they make up more than 20% of the population.
According to the official data of the 1992 Romanian census, 98% of the total ethnic Hungarian population over the age of 12 has had some schooling (primary, secondary or tertiary), ranking them fourth among ethnic groups in Romania and higher than the national average of 95.3%. On the other hand, the ratio of Hungarians graduating from higher education is lower than the national average. The reasons are diverse, including a lack of enough native-language lecturers, particularly in areas without a significant proportion of Hungarians.
At Babeş-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca, the largest state-funded tertiary education institution in Transylvania, more than 30% of courses are held in the
Hungarian language. There is currently a proposal by local Hungarians, supported by the
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania, to separate the Hungarian-language department from the institution, and form a new, Hungarian-only Bolyai University. The former Bolyai University was disbanded in 1956 by
Romanian Communist authorities and united with the Romanian Babeş University to form the multilingual Babeş-Bolyai University that continues to exist today.
Identity
Ethnic Hungarians in Transylvania have mixed opinions about their identity. Many of them tend to define themselves as being Hungarian, Transylvanian and Romanian at the same time, and there is even a sense of pride about this fact. Many Hungarians living in Transylvania were disconcerted when referendum held in Hungary in 2004 on the issue of giving dual-citizenship to ethnic Hungarians living abroad failed to receive enough electoral attendance and the vote was uncertain. Some of them complain that when they are in Hungary, they are perceived as half-Romanians, and are considered as having differences in language and behaviour. However, a large proportion of Transylvanian Hungarians currently work or study in Hungary, usually on a temporary basis. After 1996, Hungarian-Romanian economic relations boomed, and Hungary is now one of the major investors in Romania, with many cross-border firms employing both Romanians and Hungarians.
Historically, the
Székely people considered themselves an ethnic group distinct from Hungarians in Transylvania, even though they now identify mainly as Hungarians.
Population
Nationwide
- 1992 - 1,624,959 persons, 7.1% of the population of Romania
- 2002 - 1,431,807 persons, 6.6% of the population of Romania
Transylvania only
- 1786 - 29.4% of the population[7]
- 1910 - 1,662,000 persons, 32% of the population of Transylvania (1910 census)
- 1992 - 1,603,923 persons, 20.8% of the population of Transylvania
- 2002 - 1,415,718 persons, 19.6% of the population of Transylvania
By county
| County |
Magyars |
Population
|
| Harghita | 276,038 | 84.61% |
| Covasna | 164,158 | 73.81% |
| Mureş | 228,275 | 39.26% |
| Satu Mare | 129,258 | 35.22% |
| Bihor | 155,829 | 25.92% |
| Sălaj | 57,167 | 23.07% |
| Cluj | 122,301 | 17.37% |
| Arad | 49,291 | 10.70% |
| Maramureş | 46,300 | 9.06% |
| Braşov | 50,956 | 8.75% |
| Timiş | 50,556 | 7.59% |
| Bistriţa-Năsăud | 18,349 | 5.89% |
| Alba | 20,684 | 5.40% |
| Hunedoara | 25,388 | 5.20% |
| Sibiu | 15,344 | 3.67% |
| Bucharest | 5,834 | 0.31% |
| Caraş-Severin | 5,824 | 1.76% |
| Bacău | 4,528 | 0.64% |
Another 16,089 ethnic Hungarians live in the other counties of Romania, (primarily in Bucharest) where they make up less than 0.1% of the total population.
Notes
1.
^ Minorities in Europe - Hungarians in Romania
2.
^ Raffay Ernő: A vajdaságoktól a birodalomig-Az újkori Románia története = From voivodates to the empire-History of modern Romania, JATE Kiadó, Szeged, 1989, pages 155-156)
3.
^ Kovrig, Bennett (2000) ‘Partitioned nation: Hungarian minorities in Central Europe’, in: Michael Mandelbaum (ed.),
The new European Diasporas: national minorities and conflict in Eastern Europe, New York:
Council on Foreign Relations Press, pp. 19-80.
4.
^ Hitchins, Keith (1994) Rumania: 1866-1947 (Oxford History of Modern Europe). Oxford University Press.
5.
^ [1] Atrocities against Hungarians in the Autumn of 1944 (in Transylvania, Romania)
6.
^ [2] The Hungarians in Transylvania: Victims of Romanian Nationalism
7.
^ Hungarian Government Office for Minorities Abroad
References
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AnthemDeşteaptă-te, române!..... Click the link for more information. Transylvania (Romanian: Ardeal or Transilvania; Hungarian: Erdély; German:
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Banat is a geographical and historical region of Central Europe currently divided between three countries: the eastern part lies in Romania (the counties of Timiş, Caraş-Severin, Arad, and Mehedinţi), the western part in Serbia (the Serbian Banat, mostly included in
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Harghita (IPA: [har.'gi.ta]; Hungarian: Hargita) is a county (judeţ) in the center of Romania, in eastern Transylvania, with the county seat at Miercurea-Ciuc.
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Covasna (IPA: [ko.'vas.na], Hungarian: Kovászna) is a county (judeţ) of Romania, in Transylvania, with the capital city at Sfântu Gheorghe.
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Satu Mare County (IPA: ['sa.tu 'ma.re], Romanian: Judeţul Satu Mare, Hungarian: Szatmár megye) is a county (judeţ) of Romania.
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Bihor (IPA: [bi.'hor]), in Hungarian: Bihar (IPA: [bi.'har]), is a county (judeţ) of Romania, in Crişana, with capital city at Oradea.
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Cluj may refer to
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This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
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Arad (IPA:
[a.'rad]; Hungarian:
Arad, Serbian:
Arad/Арад..... Click the link for more information. 4-7: 15–25, < [1]
7. ^ Bóna, István (2001), "II. From Dacia to Erdoelve: Transylvania in the Period of the Great Migrations (271-896)" , in Köpeczi, Béla,
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Moldavia (Romanian: Moldova) is a geographical and historical region in South-Eastern Europe, roughly corresponding to the territory of the historic principality of the same name.
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NOMAD was founded in 2002 as an independent formation and registered as association in 2006. It targets to produce and experiment new patterns in the digital art sphere by using various lenses of other disciplines.
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Etelköz was an area settled by the Magyars from c. 830 to circa 895 CE, when they occupied the Carpathian Basin, maybe driven west by the Pecheneg mercenaries of Simeon I of Bulgaria.
The exact location of Etelköz is disputed.
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The Mongol invasions of Europe were centered in their destruction of the Ruthenian states, especially Kiev, under the leadership of Subutai. The Mongols then invaded the Kingdom of Hungary and the fragmented Poland (see History of Poland (966–1385)), the former invasion
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Toponymy refers to the scientific study of place-names (toponyms), their origins, meanings, use and typology. The first part of the word is derived from the Greek topos (τόπος), place; followed by ōnoma
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Hungarian (magyar nyelv listen (help info ) ) is a Finno-Ugric language (more specifically an Ugric language) unrelated to most other languages in Europe.
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Suceava
County Suceava County
Status County capital
Mayor Ion Lungu, National Liberal Party, since 2004
Area 52 km
Population (2002) 105,865 (2002 census) 107,513 (as of July 1, 2004)[1]
Density 2,032 inh/km
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Orhei
County Raionul Orhei
Status County capital
Mayor Ion Şarban, since 200?
Population (2004) 25,680
Density ? inh/km
Location 47°23′ N 28°49′ E
Web site ?
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Roman-Catholic Church (Romanian: Biserica Romano-Catolică din România) in Romania is a Latin Rite Christian church, part of the worldwide Roman Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of the Pope and Curia in Rome.
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Cotnari is a village and the center of the eponymous commune in Iaşi County, Romania, in the informal region of Moldova; the commune also includes the village of Cârjoaia.
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Csángó (Romanian: Ceangău, plural Ceangăi) are an ethnic group of Roman Catholic faith, some speaking a Romanian and some Hungarian dialect. They live mostly in the Bacău County in Romania, with many across the national frontier in Moldova.
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Pannonia is an ancient province of the Roman Empire bounded north and east by the Danube, coterminous westward with Noricum and upper Italy, and southward with Dalmatia and upper Moesia.
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860s 870s 880s - 890s - 900s 910s 920s
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Transylvania (Romanian: Ardeal or Transilvania; Hungarian: Erdély; German:
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The Ãrpáds or Arpads (Hungarian: Ãrpádok, Croatian: Arpadovići, Slovak: Arpádovci) was a dynasty ruling in historic Hungary from the late 9th century to 1301.
They were chieftains (dukes and princes) till c. 970. Géza (c.
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