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Csángós

The Csángós (Hungarian: Csángók; Romanian: Ceangăi) are a Hungarian ethnographic group of Roman Catholic faith living mostly in the Romanian region of Moldavia, especially in Bacău County. The region where the Csángós live in Moldavia is known as Csángó Land. Their traditional language, Csángó, an old Hungarian dialect, is currently used by only a minority of the Csángó population group.[6]

Csángós
Csángók
Flag adopted by the Csángó Council[1]
Total population
1,536 (self-declared, 2011 census)[2]
6,471 Hungarians in Moldavia[3]
(4,208 in Bacău county, 2011 census)[4]
60,000–70,000 Csángó speakers (2001 estimate)[5]
Regions with significant populations
Romania (mostly Moldavia, especially Csángó Land), Hungary (Tolna)
Languages
Romanian (most ethnic Csángós are monolingual Romanian speakers)[6] and Csángó, an old dialect of Hungarian[7][8]
Religion
Roman Catholic (majority)
Related ethnic groups
Hungarians, Székelys, Romanians

Some Csángós also live in Transylvania (around the Ghimeș-Palanca Pass and in the so-called Seven Csángó Villages)[9] and in the village of Oituz in Northern Dobruja.[10]

Etymology

It has been suggested that the name Csángó is the present participle of a Hungarian verb csángál meaning "wander, as if going away"; purportedly a reference to sibilation, in the pronunciation of some Hungarian consonants by Csángó people.[11][12][13]

Alternative explanations include the Hungarian word elcsángált, meaning "wandered away", or the phrase csángatta a harangot "ring the bell".[citation needed]

The Finnish researcher Yrjö Wichmann believed that probably the name of ceangău (csángó) did not come from a certain Hungarian tribe, but they were called those Transylvanian Szeklers who moved away from their comrades and settled in areas inhabited by Romanians, where they were, both materially and ideologically influenced by them and even Romanized to a certain level.[14] Ion Podea in the "Monograph of Brașov County" of 1938 mentioned that the ethnonym derives from the verb csángodni or ecsángodni and means "to leave someone or something, to alienate someone or something that has left you". This was used by the Szeklers in the case of other Romanized Szeklers from the Ciuc area.[15]

In some Hungarian dialects (the one from Transylvanian Plain and the Upper Tisza) "csángó", "cángó" means "wanderer".[16] In connection with this etymological interpretation, the linguist Szilágyi N. Sándor [hu] made an analogy between the verb "to wander" with the ethnonyms "kabars" and "khazars", which means the same thing.[17]

According to the "Dictionary of the Hungarian Language", 1862; The etymological dictionary of the Hungarian language , Budapest 1967; The historical dictionary of the Hungarian lexicon from Transylvania , Bucharest, 1978; The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language , Hungarian Academy Publishing House, Budapest, 1972; The new dictionary of regionalisms , Hungarian Academy Publishing House, Budapest, 1979, the terms "csangó", "csángó" are translated in "walker", "a person who changes his place".

The historian Nicolae Iorga stated that the term comes from șalgăi (șálgó,[18] with the variants derived from the Hungarian sóvágó meaning "salt cutter"[19]), name given to the Szekler workers at Târgu Ocna mine.[18]

A theory of the historian Antal Horger relates that the ceangău comes from czammog, which refers to a shepherd who walks with the bludgeon after the herds. Another hypothesis of Bernát Munkácsi explains that the term comes from the verb csángani which in Ciuc County means to mix; csángadik.[20]

Origins

 
Migration of the Hungarian Csángós

The Hungarian and the international literature in this subject unanimously agree that the Csángós are of Hungarian origin, but there are also small assimilated elements of Romanian, German, Polish, Italian and Gypsy origin.[21]

Hungarian origins include a mixture of Turkic (Cumans, Pannonian Avars, Khazars, Pechenegs, Székelys), original Hungarian, German and Alan populations.[22][23][24]

The Csángós had historically been a rural and agricultural people, raising stock like sheep and cows and farmed crops such as corn, potatoes, and hemp. They were also often called for military service, protecting the Eastern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages.[25] Before the Communist era and the collectivization efforts, the Csángós were structured in a traditional society until the introduction of civil code. Village elders were well respected and could be pointed out by their traditionally long hair and beards. Notably, some Csángós also participated in the 1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt and fought on behalf of Romania in both world wars.[26]

Genetics

A study estimating possible Inner Asian admixture among nearly 500 Hungarians based on paternal lineages only, estimated it at 5.1% in Hungary, at 7.4% in Székelys and at 6.3% at Csángós.[27]

Population structure

Csángós from Moldavia

Csángós from Transylvania

Csángós from Ghimeș (Gyimes)

History, culture and identity

Middle Age sources

 
Map showing the Hungarian minority in the United Principalities in 1861

Perugia, 14 November 1234: Pope Gregory IX to Béla IV, king of Hungary

"In the Cuman bishopric – as we were informed – is living a people called Vallah and others, Hungarians and Germans as well, who came here from the Hungarian Kingdom."

Roman, 13 April 1562: Report of the Habsburg Agent, John Belsius, to the Emperor Ferdinand the First

"On the day of the 10th of April, Despot Vodă left Hîrlău (Horlo) to Tîrgul Frumos (Zeplak = Széplak) finally on the 12th to the fortress of Roman (Románváros)" Despot Vodă ordered me to write these: Alexandru Moldoveanul forced all the nations, with no exceptions, to be baptized again and to follow the religion of the Moldavians, taking them away from their own religion, he appointed a bishop of the Saxons and the Hungarians, to rebuild the confiscated churches and to strengthen their souls in their beliefs, and his name is Ian Lusenius, and is Polish."

After 1562: Notes of the Humanist Johann Sommer about Saxons in Moldavia, from his work about the Life of Jacob-Despot, the Ruler of Moldavia

"Despot was unyielding in punishment, especially against the ones who don't respect the sanctity of marriage, -according to the habit of those people-: this habit was copied by the Hungarians and Saxons living here, in this country (Moldavia). He started to build a school in Cotnari, which is mostly inhabited by Hungarians and Saxons."

Iași, 14 January 1587: Bartolomeo Brutti's letter to Annibal de Capua

"These Franciscans are very few and they speak neither German, nor Hungarian, so they can't take spiritual care of these catholics, 15000 in number.

Roman 1588: The First Jesuit Mission in Moldavia: Written by Stanislaw Warszewicki

"In the whole region in 15 towns and in all the neighborhood villages there are Hungarians and Saxons, but most of them don't know how to read, don't even recognize the letters."[28]

Munich Codex: Hussite translation of the New Testament to Hungarian dated in the text in 1466 in Moldavia Hungarian edition (text original Old Hungarian with modernized script, foreword, introduction in modern Hungarian, dictionary in German and Hungarian).[29]

2001 Report of the Council of Europe

 
Coat of arms of the Csángós

For centuries, the self-identity of the Csángós was based on the Roman Catholic religion and the Hungarian language spoken in the family. It is generally accepted by serious scholars (Hungarian but also Romanian) that the Csángós have a Hungarian origin, and that they arrived in Moldavia from the west. Some Romanian authors claim that the Csángós are in fact "Magyarised" Romanians from Transylvania. This theory has also to be dismissed; it is not conceivable that these "Romanians" could persist in using a "foreign" language after centuries of living in Romania surrounded by Romanians speaking Romanian. Whatever can be argued about the language of the Csángós there is no doubt that this is a form of Hungarian.– Csango minority culture in Romania, Doc. 9078 from 4 May 2001[7]

The Council of Europe has expressed its concerns about the situation of the Csángó minority culture,[8] and discussed that the Csángós speak an early form of Hungarian and are associated with ancient traditions, and a great diversity of folk art and culture, which is of exceptional value for Europe. The council also mentioned that (although not everybody agrees on this number) it is thought that between 60,000 and 70,000 people speak the Csángó Hungarian dialect. It has also expressed concerns that despite the provisions of the Romanian law on education, and repeated requests from parents there is no teaching of the Csángó language in the Csángó villages, and, as a consequence, very few Csángós are able to write in their mother tongue. The document also discussed that the Csángós make no political demands, but merely want to be recognized as a distinct culture and demand education and church services in the Csángó dialect.[7]

At the time of this report's release, the Vatican expressed hope that the Csángós would be able to celebrate Catholic masses in their liturgical language, Csángó.[30]

Comments of the government of Romania, dissenting opinion on behalf of the Romanian delegation

The situation of Csángó community may be understood by taking into consideration the results of 2002 census. 1,370 persons declared themselves Csángó.[31] Most of them live in Bacău County, Romania, and belong to the Roman Catholic Church. During the last years, some statements identified all Catholics in Bacău County (119.618 persons according to 2002 census) as Csángó. This identification is rejected by most of them, who did identify themselves as Romanians.[32]

The name Csángó appeared relatively recently, being used for the first time, in 1780 by Péter Zöld.[33] The name Csángó is used to describe two different ethnic groups:

  • those concentrated in the county of Bacǎu (the southern group) and in the area surrounding the city of Roman (the northern group). We know for certain that these people are not Szeklers. They are Romanian in appearance, and the majority of them speak a Transylvanian dialect of Romanian and live according to Romanian traditions and customs. These characteristics suggest that they are Romanians from Transylvania who have joined the Romanian Catholic population of Moldavia.
  • those of Szekler origin, most of whom settled in the valleys of the Trotuş and the Tazlǎu and, to a lesser extent, of the Siret. Their mother tongue is the same as that spoken by the Szeklers, and they live side by side with Romanians.[33]

Hungarian sources

Their music shows the characteristic features of Hungarian music and the words of their songs are mostly Hungarian, with some dialect differences.[34]

The anthem of the Csángós[clarification needed (see Talk:Csángós/Archive 2 § Anthem)] refers to Csángó Hungarians multiple times.[35][36]

The Csángós did not take part in the language reforms of the Age of Enlightenment, or the bourgeois transformation that created the modern consciousness of nationhood (cf. Halász 1992, Kósa 1998). They did not have a noble stratum or intelligentsia (cf. Kósa 1981) that could have fashioned their consciousness as Hungarians (Halász 1992: 11). They were "saved" (Kósa 1998: 339) from "assimilation" with the Romanians by virtue of their Roman Catholic religion, which distinguished them from the majority Greek Orthodox society.[37]

Romanian sources

Official Romanian censuses in Moldavia indicate the following:[38]

Year Hungarians in Moldavia
1859 37,825  
1899 24,276  
1930 23,894  
1992 3,098  

Controversy

Hungarian sources

In 2001 the Romanian authorities banned the teaching of the Hungarian language in private houses in the village of Klézse, despite the recommendation of the Council of Europe.[39][need quotation to verify] From 1990, parents in Cleja, Pustiana and Lespezi requested several times that their children have the opportunity of learning the Hungarian language at school, either as an optional language, or as their native language, in 1-4 lessons a week. At best their petition was registered, but in most cases it was ignored. Seeing the possibility of organizing Hungarian courses outside school, they gave up the humiliating process of writing requests without results. The MCSMSZ maintains its standpoint according to which the community should claim their legal rights, but the population is not so determined. Leaders of the school inspectorate in Bacău County, as well as the authorities and church, declared at a meeting that they were opposed to the official instruction of Hungarian in Csángó villages. In their opinion the Csángós are of Romanian origin, and sporadic requests for teaching Hungarian at schools reflect not a real parental demand, but Hungarian nationalist ambitions.[40][third-party source needed]

In the village of Arini (Magyarfalu in Hungarian) the village mayor and the Romanian-only teachers of the state school, filed a complaint with the local police about the "unlawful teaching activities" of Gergely Csoma. Csoma teaches[timeframe?] Hungarian as an extracurricular activity to the children of Arini. Following the complaint, the local police started what Csángó activists have described as an intimidation campaign among the mothers of those children who are studying their maternal language with the said teacher.[41]

In 2008 members of the European Parliament sent a petition to the European Commission regarding the obstruction of Hungarian language education and the alleged intimidation of Csángó-Hungarian pupils in Valea Mare (Nagypatak).[42] The leader of the High Commission on Minority Affairs responded to the petition of László Tőkés MEP in a written notice that they would warn Romania to secure education in the mother tongue for the Csángós of Moldavia.[42]

Romanian sources

According to the final report of the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania in 2006, the policy of assimilation of the communist regime had serious consequences on the situation of the Csángós in Moldavia. The report noted that the first attempts at forced assimilation of the Csángós date back to the interwar period, with the Catholic Church taking on an important role in this process. Facilitating the loss of the linguistic identity of the Csángós allowed the Catholic Church to stop their assimilation into the Orthodox Church, and as a result of these policies, the Csángós did not benefit from religious services and education in their mother tongue.[43]

Population

It is difficult to estimate the exact number of the Csángós because of the elusive nature and multiple factors (ethnicity, religion and language) of Csángó identity.[citation needed]

As far as ethnic identification is concerned, in the census of 2002, 4,317 declared themselves Hungarians and 796 declared themselves Csángó in Bacău County, reaching a total of 5,794 out of the county's total population of 706,623. The report of the Council of Europe estimates a Csángó population ranging from 20,000 to as many as 260,000, based in the total Catholic population in the area, which is a clear exaggeration as there also are Catholic ethnic Romanians.[7][dead link] One plausible explanation for this discrepancy is that many Csángó hide or disguise their true ethnicity.[citation needed]

The Council of Europe had in 2001 estimates that put the total number of Csángó-speaking people between 60,000 and 70,000.[8]

According to the most recent research executed between 2008 and 2010 by Vilmos Tánczos, famous Hungarian folklorist, there has been a sharp decline in the total number of Csángó-speaking people in Eastern Romania. Tánczos set their number to roughly 43,000 people. Moreover, he found out that the most archaic version of Csángó language, the Northern Csángó was known and regularly used by only some 4,000 people, exclusively the older generation above the age of 50. It can be said, therefore, that the Csángó Hungarian dialect is in high risk of extinction. In fact, when applying the UNESCO Framework to measure language vitality, this dialect fits the category of "Severely Endangered".[44]

See also

References

  1. ^ Székely, Blanka (25 July 2019). "New flag and coat of arms fuels Csango national identity". Transylvania Now.
  2. ^ "Populația stabilă după etnie – județe, municipii, orașe, comune". Institutul Național de Statistică.
  3. ^ "Center for Documentation and Information on Minorities in Europe – Southeast Europe (CEDIMSE-SE) : Minorities in Southeast Europe" (PDF). Edrc.ro. Retrieved 2013-12-06.
  4. ^ https://bacau.insse.ro/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/RPL_2011_Structura_demografica_etnica_confesionala.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  5. ^ . December 17, 2005. Archived from the original on 2005-12-17.
  6. ^ a b Klára Sándor (January 2000). "National feeling or responsibility: The case of the Csángó language revitalization" (PDF). Multilingua.
  7. ^ a b c d "Csango minority culture in Romania". Committee on Culture, Science and Education. Council of Europe. 2001-05-04. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
  8. ^ a b c . Parliamentary Assembly. Council of Europe. Archived from the original on 2005-12-17.
  9. ^ Antal, Aubert; János, Csapó (2006). "A Kárpát-medence magyar vonatkozású etnikai-történeti tájegységei" (PDF) (in Hungarian). Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences of the University of Pécs: 1–28. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ Iancu, Mariana (25 April 2018). "Fascinanta poveste a ceangăilor care au ridicat un sat în pustiul dobrogean stăpânit de șerpi: "Veneau coloniști și ne furau tot, până și lanțul de la fântână"". Adevărul (in Romanian).
  11. ^ Alexandru Ciorănescu, Dicţionarul etimologic român, Universidad de la Laguna, Tenerife, 1958–1966 ceangău
  12. ^ Erdmann D. Beynon, "Isolated Racial Groups of Hungary", Geographical Review, Vol. 17, No. 4 (Oct., 1927), pp. 604
  13. ^ Anna Fenyvesi (2005). Hungarian Language Contact Outside Hungary: Studies on Hungarian as a Minority Language. p. 174. ISBN 978-1-58811-630-7.
  14. ^ Ștefan Casapu; Plaiuri Săcelene, Asociația Cultural-Sportivă „Izvorul” Săcele, Anul XXVII (Serie nouă), Trimestrul III, 2014, Nr. 81, pag. 6
  15. ^ Ion Podea; Monografia județului Brașov, Vol. I, Institutul de Arte Grafice "Astra", Brașov, 1938, p. 50
  16. ^ Új Magyar Tájszótár – Noul Dicționar de Regionalisme – articolul „csángó”
  17. ^ Sándor N. Szilágyi; Amit még nem mondtak el a csángó névről in A Hét. X, 1979. No. 24, June 15, pag. 10
  18. ^ a b Nicolae Iorga; Privilegiile șangăilor de la Târgu Ocna, Librăriile Socec & Comp. și C. Sfetea București, 1915, pag. 3/247
  19. ^ Vilmos Tánczos, „Vreau să fiu român!” Identitatea lingvistică și religioasă a ceangăilor din Moldova, Editura Institutului pentru Studierea Problemelor Minorităților Naționale, 2018, ISBN 978 606 8377 55 1, p. 138
  20. ^ Iosf Petru M Pal; Originea catolicilor din Moldova și Franciscanii păstorii lor de veacuri, Tipografia Serafica Săbăoani, Roman, 1941, pag. 96
  21. ^ Vilmos Tánczos, Csángós in Moldavia, published in Magyar nemzeti kisebbségek Kelet-Közép-Európában ("Hungarian National Minorities in East-Central Europe"), Magyar Kisebbség, No. 1-2, 1997. (III), p. 1
  22. ^ Robin Baker; On the Origin of the Moldavian Csángós, The Slavonic and East European Review, vol. 75, no. 4, 1997, UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, pp. 658-680
  23. ^ Guglielmino, C. R.; Silvestri, A. De; Beres, J. (2000). "Probable ancestors of Hungarian ethnic groups: an admixture analysis". Annals of Human Genetics. 64 (2): 145–159. doi:10.1046/j.1469-1809.2000.6420145.x. ISSN 1469-1809. PMID 11246468. S2CID 23742103.
  24. ^ Vilmos Tánczos, Csángós in Moldavia, published in Magyar nemzeti kisebbségek Kelet-Közép-Európában ("Hungarian National Minorities in East-Central Europe"), Magyar Kisebbség, No. 1-2, 1997 (III)
  25. ^ "The Csángós: A Unique Hungarian Community Living in Romania". Hungarianconservative.com/.
  26. ^ Davis, R. Chris (2019). Hungarian Religion Romanian Blood (1st ed.). Wisconsin, USA: The University of Wisconsin Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-299-31640-2.
  27. ^ András Bíró; Tibor Fehér; Gusztáv Bárány; Horolma Pamjav (15 November 2014). "Testing Central and Inner Asian admixture among contemporary Hungarians". Forensic Science International: Genetics. 15: 121–126. doi:10.1016/j.fsigen.2014.11.007. PMID 25468443.
  28. ^ [1] October 30, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Király, László; Szabó T., Ádám (1985). A Müncheni Kódex négy evangéliuma (1466): A négy evangélium szövege és szótára. ISBN 9789630735346 – via Antikvarium.hu.
  30. ^ "Csángó anyanyelvű oktatás". Népszabadság (in Hungarian). 2001-11-14. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  31. ^ [2] March 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  32. ^ (PDF). Government of Romania. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 5, 2009. Retrieved 2008-10-11.
  33. ^ a b "Appendix 2 — Dissenting opinion presented by Mr Prisǎcaru on behalf of the Romanian delegation". Delegation from Romania. Council of Europe. 2001-05-04. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
  34. ^ Palma Szirmai (1967). "A Csángó-Hungarian lament". Ethnomusicology. University of Illinois Press. 11 (3): 310–325. doi:10.2307/850268. JSTOR 850268.
  35. ^ "Csángó Himnusz" (PDF). Székely Útkereső (cultural and literary magazine). 1998. p. 6.
  36. ^ Horváth, Dezső (1999). "Eleven csángó". Mivé lettél, csángómagyar?. Hungarian Electronic Library. ISBN 963-9144-32-0.
  37. ^ Balázs Soross. . Archived from the original on 2008-02-06. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
  38. ^ Tánczos Vilmos. "A moldvai csángók lélekszámáról". Kia.hu. Retrieved 2013-12-06.
  39. ^ "Betiltották a csángók magyaróráit" (in Hungarian). 20 November 2001.
  40. ^ . Homepage of the Hungarian Csángós. Archived from the original on 2008-02-06. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
  41. ^ . Homepage of the Hungarian Csángós. Archived from the original on July 6, 2007.
  42. ^ a b "The issue of Hungarian Education in Moldavia, Romania in front of European Parliament". The Association of the Csango Hungarians of Moldavia. 2008-03-06. Archived from the original on 2008-06-09. Retrieved 2008-09-29.
  43. ^ Vladimir Tismăneanu, "Raport final", Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania, p. 537
  44. ^ "Situation of the Csángó Dialect of Moldavia in Romania". www.academia.edu.

External links

  • Situation of the Csángó dialect in Romania
  • "Dumitru Mărtinaș" Roman-Catholic Association
  • Association of Csángó-Hungarians in Moldavia
  • (in Romanian)
  • (in Romanian)

csángós, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, factual, accuracy, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, help, ensure, that. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s factual accuracy is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help to ensure that disputed statements are reliably sourced October 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted April 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Csangos Hungarian Csangok Romanian Ceangăi are a Hungarian ethnographic group of Roman Catholic faith living mostly in the Romanian region of Moldavia especially in Bacău County The region where the Csangos live in Moldavia is known as Csango Land Their traditional language Csango an old Hungarian dialect is currently used by only a minority of the Csango population group 6 CsangosCsangokFlag adopted by the Csango Council 1 Total population1 536 self declared 2011 census 2 6 471 Hungarians in Moldavia 3 4 208 in Bacău county 2011 census 4 60 000 70 000 Csango speakers 2001 estimate 5 Regions with significant populationsRomania mostly Moldavia especially Csango Land Hungary Tolna LanguagesRomanian most ethnic Csangos are monolingual Romanian speakers 6 and Csango an old dialect of Hungarian 7 8 ReligionRoman Catholic majority Related ethnic groupsHungarians Szekelys RomaniansSome Csangos also live in Transylvania around the Ghimeș Palanca Pass and in the so called Seven Csango Villages 9 and in the village of Oituz in Northern Dobruja 10 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 2 1 Genetics 2 2 Population structure 2 2 1 Csangos from Moldavia 2 2 2 Csangos from Transylvania 2 2 2 1 Csangos from Ghimeș Gyimes 3 History culture and identity 3 1 Middle Age sources 3 2 2001 Report of the Council of Europe 3 2 1 Comments of the government of Romania dissenting opinion on behalf of the Romanian delegation 3 3 Hungarian sources 3 4 Romanian sources 4 Controversy 4 1 Hungarian sources 4 2 Romanian sources 5 Population 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology EditIt has been suggested that the name Csango is the present participle of a Hungarian verb csangal meaning wander as if going away purportedly a reference to sibilation in the pronunciation of some Hungarian consonants by Csango people 11 12 13 Alternative explanations include the Hungarian word elcsangalt meaning wandered away or the phrase csangatta a harangot ring the bell citation needed The Finnish researcher Yrjo Wichmann believed that probably the name of ceangău csango did not come from a certain Hungarian tribe but they were called those Transylvanian Szeklers who moved away from their comrades and settled in areas inhabited by Romanians where they were both materially and ideologically influenced by them and even Romanized to a certain level 14 Ion Podea in the Monograph of Brașov County of 1938 mentioned that the ethnonym derives from the verb csangodni or ecsangodni and means to leave someone or something to alienate someone or something that has left you This was used by the Szeklers in the case of other Romanized Szeklers from the Ciuc area 15 In some Hungarian dialects the one from Transylvanian Plain and the Upper Tisza csango cango means wanderer 16 In connection with this etymological interpretation the linguist Szilagyi N Sandor hu made an analogy between the verb to wander with the ethnonyms kabars and khazars which means the same thing 17 According to the Dictionary of the Hungarian Language 1862 The etymological dictionary of the Hungarian language Budapest 1967 The historical dictionary of the Hungarian lexicon from Transylvania Bucharest 1978 The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language Hungarian Academy Publishing House Budapest 1972 The new dictionary of regionalisms Hungarian Academy Publishing House Budapest 1979 the terms csango csango are translated in walker a person who changes his place The historian Nicolae Iorga stated that the term comes from șalgăi șalgo 18 with the variants derived from the Hungarian sovago meaning salt cutter 19 name given to the Szekler workers at Targu Ocna mine 18 A theory of the historian Antal Horger relates that the ceangău comes from czammog which refers to a shepherd who walks with the bludgeon after the herds Another hypothesis of Bernat Munkacsi explains that the term comes from the verb csangani which in Ciuc County means to mix csangadik 20 Origins Edit Migration of the Hungarian Csangos The Hungarian and the international literature in this subject unanimously agree that the Csangos are of Hungarian origin but there are also small assimilated elements of Romanian German Polish Italian and Gypsy origin 21 Hungarian origins include a mixture of Turkic Cumans Pannonian Avars Khazars Pechenegs Szekelys original Hungarian German and Alan populations 22 23 24 The Csangos had historically been a rural and agricultural people raising stock like sheep and cows and farmed crops such as corn potatoes and hemp They were also often called for military service protecting the Eastern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary in the Middle Ages 25 Before the Communist era and the collectivization efforts the Csangos were structured in a traditional society until the introduction of civil code Village elders were well respected and could be pointed out by their traditionally long hair and beards Notably some Csangos also participated in the 1907 Romanian Peasants Revolt and fought on behalf of Romania in both world wars 26 Genetics Edit A study estimating possible Inner Asian admixture among nearly 500 Hungarians based on paternal lineages only estimated it at 5 1 in Hungary at 7 4 in Szekelys and at 6 3 at Csangos 27 Population structure Edit Csangos from Moldavia Edit Family from Săbăoani Galbeni Bacău Targu Trotuș Somușca SăbăoaniCsangos from Transylvania Edit Csangos from Săcele Burzenland Csango group from Săcele Csango family from Săcele Csangos from SăceleCsangos from Ghimeș Gyimes Edit History culture and identity EditMiddle Age sources Edit Map showing the Hungarian minority in the United Principalities in 1861 Perugia 14 November 1234 Pope Gregory IX to Bela IV king of Hungary In the Cuman bishopric as we were informed is living a people called Vallah and others Hungarians and Germans as well who came here from the Hungarian Kingdom Roman 13 April 1562 Report of the Habsburg Agent John Belsius to the Emperor Ferdinand the First On the day of the 10th of April Despot Vodă left Hirlău Horlo to Tirgul Frumos Zeplak Szeplak finally on the 12th to the fortress of Roman Romanvaros Despot Vodă ordered me to write these Alexandru Moldoveanul forced all the nations with no exceptions to be baptized again and to follow the religion of the Moldavians taking them away from their own religion he appointed a bishop of the Saxons and the Hungarians to rebuild the confiscated churches and to strengthen their souls in their beliefs and his name is Ian Lusenius and is Polish After 1562 Notes of the Humanist Johann Sommer about Saxons in Moldavia from his work about the Life of Jacob Despot the Ruler of Moldavia Despot was unyielding in punishment especially against the ones who don t respect the sanctity of marriage according to the habit of those people this habit was copied by the Hungarians and Saxons living here in this country Moldavia He started to build a school in Cotnari which is mostly inhabited by Hungarians and Saxons Iași 14 January 1587 Bartolomeo Brutti s letter to Annibal de Capua These Franciscans are very few and they speak neither German nor Hungarian so they can t take spiritual care of these catholics 15000 in number Roman 1588 The First Jesuit Mission in Moldavia Written by Stanislaw Warszewicki In the whole region in 15 towns and in all the neighborhood villages there are Hungarians and Saxons but most of them don t know how to read don t even recognize the letters 28 Munich Codex Hussite translation of the New Testament to Hungarian dated in the text in 1466 in Moldavia Hungarian edition text original Old Hungarian with modernized script foreword introduction in modern Hungarian dictionary in German and Hungarian 29 2001 Report of the Council of Europe Edit Coat of arms of the Csangos For centuries the self identity of the Csangos was based on the Roman Catholic religion and the Hungarian language spoken in the family It is generally accepted by serious scholars Hungarian but also Romanian that the Csangos have a Hungarian origin and that they arrived in Moldavia from the west Some Romanian authors claim that the Csangos are in fact Magyarised Romanians from Transylvania This theory has also to be dismissed it is not conceivable that these Romanians could persist in using a foreign language after centuries of living in Romania surrounded by Romanians speaking Romanian Whatever can be argued about the language of the Csangos there is no doubt that this is a form of Hungarian Csango minority culture in Romania Doc 9078 from 4 May 2001 7 The Council of Europe has expressed its concerns about the situation of the Csango minority culture 8 and discussed that the Csangos speak an early form of Hungarian and are associated with ancient traditions and a great diversity of folk art and culture which is of exceptional value for Europe The council also mentioned that although not everybody agrees on this number it is thought that between 60 000 and 70 000 people speak the Csango Hungarian dialect It has also expressed concerns that despite the provisions of the Romanian law on education and repeated requests from parents there is no teaching of the Csango language in the Csango villages and as a consequence very few Csangos are able to write in their mother tongue The document also discussed that the Csangos make no political demands but merely want to be recognized as a distinct culture and demand education and church services in the Csango dialect 7 At the time of this report s release the Vatican expressed hope that the Csangos would be able to celebrate Catholic masses in their liturgical language Csango 30 Comments of the government of Romania dissenting opinion on behalf of the Romanian delegation Edit The situation of Csango community may be understood by taking into consideration the results of 2002 census 1 370 persons declared themselves Csango 31 Most of them live in Bacău County Romania and belong to the Roman Catholic Church During the last years some statements identified all Catholics in Bacău County 119 618 persons according to 2002 census as Csango This identification is rejected by most of them who did identify themselves as Romanians 32 The name Csango appeared relatively recently being used for the first time in 1780 by Peter Zold 33 The name Csango is used to describe two different ethnic groups those concentrated in the county of Bacǎu the southern group and in the area surrounding the city of Roman the northern group We know for certain that these people are not Szeklers They are Romanian in appearance and the majority of them speak a Transylvanian dialect of Romanian and live according to Romanian traditions and customs These characteristics suggest that they are Romanians from Transylvania who have joined the Romanian Catholic population of Moldavia those of Szekler origin most of whom settled in the valleys of the Trotus and the Tazlǎu and to a lesser extent of the Siret Their mother tongue is the same as that spoken by the Szeklers and they live side by side with Romanians 33 Hungarian sources Edit Their music shows the characteristic features of Hungarian music and the words of their songs are mostly Hungarian with some dialect differences 34 The anthem of the Csangos clarification needed see Talk Csangos Archive 2 Anthem refers to Csango Hungarians multiple times 35 36 The Csangos did not take part in the language reforms of the Age of Enlightenment or the bourgeois transformation that created the modern consciousness of nationhood cf Halasz 1992 Kosa 1998 They did not have a noble stratum or intelligentsia cf Kosa 1981 that could have fashioned their consciousness as Hungarians Halasz 1992 11 They were saved Kosa 1998 339 from assimilation with the Romanians by virtue of their Roman Catholic religion which distinguished them from the majority Greek Orthodox society 37 Romanian sources Edit Official Romanian censuses in Moldavia indicate the following 38 Year Hungarians in Moldavia1859 37 825 1899 24 276 1930 23 894 1992 3 098 Controversy EditThis article s Criticism or Controversy section may compromise the article s neutrality by separating out potentially negative information Please integrate the section s contents into the article as a whole or rewrite the material April 2014 Hungarian sources Edit In 2001 the Romanian authorities banned the teaching of the Hungarian language in private houses in the village of Klezse despite the recommendation of the Council of Europe 39 need quotation to verify From 1990 parents in Cleja Pustiana and Lespezi requested several times that their children have the opportunity of learning the Hungarian language at school either as an optional language or as their native language in 1 4 lessons a week At best their petition was registered but in most cases it was ignored Seeing the possibility of organizing Hungarian courses outside school they gave up the humiliating process of writing requests without results The MCSMSZ maintains its standpoint according to which the community should claim their legal rights but the population is not so determined Leaders of the school inspectorate in Bacău County as well as the authorities and church declared at a meeting that they were opposed to the official instruction of Hungarian in Csango villages In their opinion the Csangos are of Romanian origin and sporadic requests for teaching Hungarian at schools reflect not a real parental demand but Hungarian nationalist ambitions 40 third party source needed In the village of Arini Magyarfalu in Hungarian the village mayor and the Romanian only teachers of the state school filed a complaint with the local police about the unlawful teaching activities of Gergely Csoma Csoma teaches timeframe Hungarian as an extracurricular activity to the children of Arini Following the complaint the local police started what Csango activists have described as an intimidation campaign among the mothers of those children who are studying their maternal language with the said teacher 41 In 2008 members of the European Parliament sent a petition to the European Commission regarding the obstruction of Hungarian language education and the alleged intimidation of Csango Hungarian pupils in Valea Mare Nagypatak 42 The leader of the High Commission on Minority Affairs responded to the petition of Laszlo Tokes MEP in a written notice that they would warn Romania to secure education in the mother tongue for the Csangos of Moldavia 42 Romanian sources Edit According to the final report of the Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania in 2006 the policy of assimilation of the communist regime had serious consequences on the situation of the Csangos in Moldavia The report noted that the first attempts at forced assimilation of the Csangos date back to the interwar period with the Catholic Church taking on an important role in this process Facilitating the loss of the linguistic identity of the Csangos allowed the Catholic Church to stop their assimilation into the Orthodox Church and as a result of these policies the Csangos did not benefit from religious services and education in their mother tongue 43 Population EditIt is difficult to estimate the exact number of the Csangos because of the elusive nature and multiple factors ethnicity religion and language of Csango identity citation needed As far as ethnic identification is concerned in the census of 2002 4 317 declared themselves Hungarians and 796 declared themselves Csango in Bacău County reaching a total of 5 794 out of the county s total population of 706 623 The report of the Council of Europe estimates a Csango population ranging from 20 000 to as many as 260 000 based in the total Catholic population in the area which is a clear exaggeration as there also are Catholic ethnic Romanians 7 dead link One plausible explanation for this discrepancy is that many Csango hide or disguise their true ethnicity citation needed The Council of Europe had in 2001 estimates that put the total number of Csango speaking people between 60 000 and 70 000 8 According to the most recent research executed between 2008 and 2010 by Vilmos Tanczos famous Hungarian folklorist there has been a sharp decline in the total number of Csango speaking people in Eastern Romania Tanczos set their number to roughly 43 000 people Moreover he found out that the most archaic version of Csango language the Northern Csango was known and regularly used by only some 4 000 people exclusively the older generation above the age of 50 It can be said therefore that the Csango Hungarian dialect is in high risk of extinction In fact when applying the UNESCO Framework to measure language vitality this dialect fits the category of Severely Endangered 44 See also EditCsango Land SzekelysReferences Edit Szekely Blanka 25 July 2019 New flag and coat of arms fuels Csango national identity Transylvania Now Populația stabilă după etnie județe municipii orașe comune Institutul Național de Statistică Center for Documentation and Information on Minorities in Europe Southeast Europe CEDIMSE SE Minorities in Southeast Europe PDF Edrc ro Retrieved 2013 12 06 https bacau insse ro wp content uploads 2018 07 RPL 2011 Structura demografica etnica confesionala pdf bare URL PDF Csango minority culture in Romania December 17 2005 Archived from the original on 2005 12 17 a b Klara Sandor January 2000 National feeling or responsibility The case of the Csango language revitalization PDF Multilingua a b c d Csango minority culture in Romania Committee on Culture Science and Education Council of Europe 2001 05 04 Retrieved 2008 09 29 a b c Recommendation 1521 2001 Csango minority culture in Romania Parliamentary Assembly Council of Europe Archived from the original on 2005 12 17 Antal Aubert Janos Csapo 2006 A Karpat medence magyar vonatkozasu etnikai torteneti tajegysegei PDF in Hungarian Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences of the University of Pecs 1 28 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Iancu Mariana 25 April 2018 Fascinanta poveste a ceangăilor care au ridicat un sat in pustiul dobrogean stăpanit de șerpi Veneau coloniști și ne furau tot pană și lanțul de la fantană Adevărul in Romanian Alexandru Ciorănescu Dicţionarul etimologic roman Universidad de la Laguna Tenerife 1958 1966 ceangău Erdmann D Beynon Isolated Racial Groups of Hungary Geographical Review Vol 17 No 4 Oct 1927 pp 604 Anna Fenyvesi 2005 Hungarian Language Contact Outside Hungary Studies on Hungarian as a Minority Language p 174 ISBN 978 1 58811 630 7 Ștefan Casapu Plaiuri Săcelene Asociația Cultural Sportivă Izvorul Săcele Anul XXVII Serie nouă Trimestrul III 2014 Nr 81 pag 6 Ion Podea Monografia județului Brașov Vol I Institutul de Arte Grafice Astra Brașov 1938 p 50 Uj Magyar Tajszotar Noul Dicționar de Regionalisme articolul csango Sandor N Szilagyi Amit meg nem mondtak el a csango nevrol in A Het X 1979 No 24 June 15 pag 10 a b Nicolae Iorga Privilegiile șangăilor de la Targu Ocna Librăriile Socec amp Comp și C Sfetea București 1915 pag 3 247 Vilmos Tanczos Vreau să fiu roman Identitatea lingvistică și religioasă a ceangăilor din Moldova Editura Institutului pentru Studierea Problemelor Minorităților Naționale 2018 ISBN 978 606 8377 55 1 p 138 Iosf Petru M Pal Originea catolicilor din Moldova și Franciscanii păstorii lor de veacuri Tipografia Serafica Săbăoani Roman 1941 pag 96 Vilmos Tanczos Csangos in Moldavia published in Magyar nemzeti kisebbsegek Kelet Kozep Europaban Hungarian National Minorities in East Central Europe Magyar Kisebbseg No 1 2 1997 III p 1 Robin Baker On the Origin of the Moldavian Csangos The Slavonic and East European Review vol 75 no 4 1997 UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies University College London pp 658 680 Guglielmino C R Silvestri A De Beres J 2000 Probable ancestors of Hungarian ethnic groups an admixture analysis Annals of Human Genetics 64 2 145 159 doi 10 1046 j 1469 1809 2000 6420145 x ISSN 1469 1809 PMID 11246468 S2CID 23742103 Vilmos Tanczos Csangos in Moldavia published in Magyar nemzeti kisebbsegek Kelet Kozep Europaban Hungarian National Minorities in East Central Europe Magyar Kisebbseg No 1 2 1997 III The Csangos A Unique Hungarian Community Living in Romania Hungarianconservative com Davis R Chris 2019 Hungarian Religion Romanian Blood 1st ed Wisconsin USA The University of Wisconsin Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 299 31640 2 Andras Biro Tibor Feher Gusztav Barany Horolma Pamjav 15 November 2014 Testing Central and Inner Asian admixture among contemporary Hungarians Forensic Science International Genetics 15 121 126 doi 10 1016 j fsigen 2014 11 007 PMID 25468443 1 Archived October 30 2010 at the Wayback Machine Kiraly Laszlo Szabo T Adam 1985 A Muncheni Kodex negy evangeliuma 1466 A negy evangelium szovege es szotara ISBN 9789630735346 via Antikvarium hu Csango anyanyelvu oktatas Nepszabadsag in Hungarian 2001 11 14 Retrieved 2008 10 08 2 Archived March 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine Comments of the government of Romania on the second opinion of the Advisory Committee on the implementation of the framework convention for the protection of national minorities in Romania PDF Government of Romania Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2009 Retrieved 2008 10 11 a b Appendix 2 Dissenting opinion presented by Mr Prisǎcaru on behalf of the Romanian delegation Delegation from Romania Council of Europe 2001 05 04 Retrieved 2008 09 29 Palma Szirmai 1967 A Csango Hungarian lament Ethnomusicology University of Illinois Press 11 3 310 325 doi 10 2307 850268 JSTOR 850268 Csango Himnusz PDF Szekely Utkereso cultural and literary magazine 1998 p 6 Horvath Dezso 1999 Eleven csango Mive lettel csangomagyar Hungarian Electronic Library ISBN 963 9144 32 0 Balazs Soross Once it shall be but not yet Contributions to the complex reality of the identity of the Csangos of Moldavia reflected by a cultural anthropological case study Archived from the original on 2008 02 06 Retrieved 2008 10 06 Tanczos Vilmos A moldvai csangok lelekszamarol Kia hu Retrieved 2013 12 06 Betiltottak a csangok magyarorait in Hungarian 20 November 2001 The Moldavian Csangos want to learn Hungarian Homepage of the Hungarian Csangos Archived from the original on 2008 02 06 Retrieved 2008 10 06 Rumanian Atrocities Against the Csango Minority Homepage of the Hungarian Csangos Archived from the original on July 6 2007 a b The issue of Hungarian Education in Moldavia Romania in front of European Parliament The Association of the Csango Hungarians of Moldavia 2008 03 06 Archived from the original on 2008 06 09 Retrieved 2008 09 29 Vladimir Tismăneanu Raport final Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania p 537 Situation of the Csango Dialect of Moldavia in Romania www academia edu External links EditSituation of the Csango dialect in Romania Homepage of the Hungarian Csangos Dumitru Mărtinaș Roman Catholic Association Association of Csango Hungarians in Moldavia Ceangaii the Roman Catholic from Moldavia Council of Europe Recommendation 1521 2001 on the Csango minority culture in Romania Song of the Csangos National Geographic Magazine in Romanian Fundaţia culturală Siret in Romanian Comunitatile catolice din Moldova Romanians Roman Catholics Museum csango museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Csangos amp oldid 1161378651, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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