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Principality of Transylvania (1570–1711)

The Principality of Transylvania (Hungarian: Erdélyi Fejedelemség; Latin: Principatus Transsilvaniae; German: Fürstentum Siebenbürgen; Romanian: Principatul Transilvaniei / Principatul Ardealului; Turkish: Erdel Voyvodalığı / Transilvanya Prensliği) was a semi-independent state ruled primarily by Hungarian princes.[7][8][9][10][11][12] Its territory, in addition to the traditional Transylvanian lands, also included the other major component called Partium, which was in some periods comparable in size with Transylvania proper. The establishment of the principality was connected to the Treaty of Speyer.[13][14] However, Stephen Báthory's status as king of Poland also helped to phase in the name Principality of Transylvania.[15] It was usually under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire, although the principality often had dual vassalage (Ottoman Turkish sultans and Habsburg Hungarian kings) in the 16th and 17th centuries.[16][17]

Principality of Transylvania
Principatus Transsilvaniae
1570–1711
Administrative map of the Principality of Transylvania, 1606–60
StatusVassal state of the Ottoman Empire;
Hungarian crown land;
Polish fiefdom
CapitalAlba Iulia (Gyulafehérvár) 1570–1692
Cibinium (Nagyszeben/Hermannstadt/Sibiu) 1692–1711
Common languagesLatin (in administration, science and politics)
Hungarian (vernacular, language of Diet and legislation[1][2][3][4])
German (vernacular, business, some official functions and instruction)
Romanian, Ruthenian (vernacular).
Religion
Roman Catholicism, Calvinism, Lutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy,
Greek Catholicism, Unitarianism, Judaism
Demonym(s)Transylvanian
GovernmentElective principality
Rulers 
• 1570–1571 (first)
John II Sigismund Zápolya
• 1704–1711 (last)
Francis II Rákóczi
LegislatureTransylvanian Diet
History 
1003
16 August 1570
28 September 1604–23 June 1606
23 June 1606
31 December 1621
16 October 1690
26 January 1699
15 June 1703 – 1 May 1711
29 April 1711
Today part ofRomania
Hungary
Slovakia
Ukraine

The principality continued to be a part of the Lands of the Hungarian Crown[18] and was a symbol of the survival of Hungarian statehood.[19] It represented Hungarian interests against Habsburg encroachments in the Habsburg-ruled Kingdom of Hungary.[20] Traditional Hungarian law had to be followed scrupulously in the principality;[16] furthermore, the state was predominantly Protestant.[21] After the unsettled period of Rákóczi's War of Independence, it was subordinated to the Habsburg monarchy.

Background edit

Eastern Hungarian Kingdom and Zápolya family edit

On 29 August 1526, the army of Sultan Suleiman of the Ottoman Empire inflicted a decisive defeat on the Hungarian forces at Mohács. John Zápolya was en route to the battlefield with his sizable army but did not participate in the battle for unknown reasons. The youthful King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia fell in battle, as did many of his soldiers. When Zápolya was proclaimed king of Hungary, Ferdinand from the House of Habsburg also claimed the throne. In the ensuing struggle John Zápolya received the support of Suleiman, who after Zápolya's death in 1540, occupied Buda and central Hungary in 1541 under the pretext of protecting Zápolya's son, John II Sigismund. Hungary was now divided into three sections: Royal Hungary in the west and north, Ottoman Hungary, and the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom under Ottoman suzerainty, which later became the Principality of Transylvania, where Austrian and Turkish influences vied for supremacy for nearly two centuries. The Hungarian magnates of Transylvania resorted to a policy of duplicity in order to preserve independence.

Transylvania was administrated by Isabella, John Sigismund's mother, from 1541 to 1551, when it fell for five years under Habsburg rule (1551–1556). The House of Zapolya regained the control of Transylvania in 1556,[22] when the Diet of Szászsebes elected Sigismund as prince of Transylvania.

Transylvania was now beyond the reach of Catholic religious authority, allowing Lutheran and Calvinist preaching to flourish. In 1563, Giorgio Blandrata was appointed as court physician, and his radical religious ideas increasingly influenced both the young king John II and the Calvinist bishop Francis David,[23] eventually converting both to the Anti-Trinitarian (Unitarian) creed. In a formal public disputation, Francis David prevailed over the Calvinist Peter Melius; resulting in 1568 in the formal adoption of individual freedom of religious expression under the Edict of Torda. This was the first such legal guarantee of religious freedom in Christian Europe, but only for Lutherans, Calvinists, Unitarians and of course Catholics, the Orthodox Christian confession being "tolerated" with no legal guarantees granted.

Principality of Transylvania edit

 
Principality of Transylvania at the end of 16th century.

The Principality of Transylvania was established in 1570 when John II renounced his claim as King of Hungary in the Treaty of Speyer (ratified in 1571),[14][24] and became a Transylvanian prince.[25] The treaty also recognized that the Principality of Transylvania belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary in the sense of public law.[26] Upon the death of John II in 1571 the Royal House of Báthory came to power and ruled Transylvania as princes under the Ottomans, and briefly under Habsburg suzerainty, until 1602. Their rise to power marked the beginning of the Principality of Transylvania as a semi-independent state.

Prince Stephen Báthory was the first powerful prince of independent Transylvania,[23] a Hungarian Catholic who later became king under the name Stephen Báthory of Poland.[23] He undertook to maintain the religious liberty granted by the Edict of Torda, but interpreted this obligation in an increasingly restricted sense. The latter period of Báthory rule saw Transylvania under Sigismund Báthory – prince of the Holy Roman Empire[23] – enter the Long War, which started as a Christian alliance against the Turks and became a four-sided conflict involving Transylvania, the Habsburgs, the Ottomans, and the voivode of Wallachia, Michael the Brave. After 1601 the principality was for a short time under the rule of Rudolf II, who initiated the Germanization of the population, and in order to reclaim the Principality for Catholicism he initiated the Counter Reformation. From 1604 to 1606, the Hungarian nobleman Stephen Bocskay led a successful rebellion against Austrian rule. Bocskay was elected Prince of Transylvania on 5 April 1603 and prince of Hungary two months later. He achieved the Peace of Vienna in 1606.[23] which afforded religious liberty and political autonomy, the restoration of all confiscated estates, the repeal of all "unrighteous" judgments, and a complete retroactive amnesty for all Hungarians in Royal Hungary, as well as his own recognition as the independent sovereign prince of an enlarged Principality of Transylvania. The Treaty of Vienna (1606) guaranteed the right of Transylvanians to elect their own independent princes, but Georg Keglević, who was the Commander-in-chief, General, Vice-Ban of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia, was since 1602 Baron in Transylvania. It was a very difficult and complicated peace treaty after a long war.

Under Bocskay's successors Transylvania had its golden age,[27] especially under the reigns of Gábor Bethlen and George I Rákóczi. Gábor Bethlen, who reigned from 1613 to 1629, perpetually thwarted all efforts of the emperor to oppress or circumvent his subjects, and won reputation abroad by championing the Protestant cause. Three times he waged war on the emperor, twice he was proclaimed King of Hungary, and by the Peace of Nikolsburg (31 December 1621), he obtained for the Protestants a confirmation of the Treaty of Vienna, and for himself seven additional counties in northern Hungary. Bethlen's successor, George I Rákóczi, was equally successful. His principal achievement was the Peace of Linz (16 September 1645), the last political triumph of Hungarian Protestantism, in which the emperor was forced to confirm again the articles of the Peace of Vienna. Gabriel Bethlen and George I Rákóczi also did much for education and culture, and their era has justly been called the golden era of Transylvania. They lavished money on the embellishment of their capital, Alba Iulia, which became the main bulwark of Protestantism in Eastern Europe. During their reign, Transylvania was also one of the few European countries where Roman Catholics, Calvinists, Lutherans, and Unitarians lived in mutual tolerance, all of them belonging to the officially accepted religions – religiones receptae, while the Orthodox church, however, were only tolerated.[citation needed]

The fall of Nagyvárad to the expansionist Ottomans on 27 August 1660 marked the decline of the Principality. To counter the Ottoman threat, the Habsburgs determined to gain influence in and perhaps control of this territory. Under Prince Kemeny, the diet of Transylvania proclaimed the secession of a sovereign Transylvania from the Ottomans (April 1661) and appealed for help to Vienna, but a secret Habsburg-Ottoman agreement resulted in the further increase of Habsburg influence. After the defeat of the Ottomans at the Battle of Vienna in 1683, the Habsburgs gradually began to impose their rule on the formerly autonomous Transylvania. Following the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz, Transylvania was formally attached to Habsburg-controlled Hungary,[5][28] and subjected to the direct rule of the emperor's governors. From 1711 onward, Habsburg control over Transylvania was consolidated, and the princes of Transylvania were replaced with governors.

Demographics edit

Ruling system edit

Until 1691 Transylvania was ruled by Unio Trium Nationum, the three state-constituting socio-ethnical entities termed "nations", consisting of the Hungarian nobility, the Saxon urban settlers, and the Székely peasant-soldiers, while a significant part of the general population, consisted of Orthodox Romanians, remained deprived of any civil and political rights.[29][30]

The Composition of the Parliament edit

The Unio Trium Nationum (Latin for "Union of the Three Nations") was a pact of mutual aid codified in 1438 by three Estates of Transylvania: the (largely Hungarian) nobility, the Saxon (German) patrician class,[31] and the free military Székelys.[32] The union was directed against the whole of the peasantry, regardless of ethnicity, in response to the Transylvanian peasant revolt.[32] In this feudal estate parliament, the peasants (whether Hungarian, Saxon, Székely or Romanian in origin) were not represented, and they did not benefit from its acts,[33] as the commoners were not considered to be members of these feudal "nations".[34]

The coalition of the "Three Nations" retained its legal representative monopoly under the prince as before the split of the medieval Hungarian Kingdom occasioned by the Ottoman invasions. According to Dennis P. Hupchick, though there were occasional clashes between the Hungarian plainsmen and the Székely mountaineers, they were united under the patronymic "Magyars" and, with Saxon support, formed a common front against the predominantly Romanian peasantry.[16]

Demographic evolution edit

There is an ongoing scholarly debate between Hungarian and Romanian historians regarding the medieval population of Transylvania. While some Romanian historians claim continuous Romanian majority, Hungarian historians claim the continuous settlement of Romanians into the Kingdom of Hungary. Official censuses with information on Transylvania's population have been conducted since the 18th century, but the ethnic composition was the subject of different modern estimations.

Nicolaus Olahus, Primate of Hungary stated in the book Hungaria et Athila in 1536 that in Transylvania "Four nations of different origins live in it: Hungarians, Székelys, Saxons, and Vlachs" [35][36][37]

Based on a work by Antun Vrančić (1504–1573), Expeditionis Solymani in Moldaviam et Transsylvaniam libri duo. De situ Transsylvaniae, Moldaviae et Transalpinae liber tertius, more estimations exist as the original text is translated/interpreted in a different way, especially by Romanian and Hungarian scholars. According to Hungarian interpretations, Vrančić wrote about the inhabitants of Transylvania and about the Romanians: "The country is inhabited by three nations, Székelys, Hungarians, and Saxons; I should also add the Romanians who – even though they easily equal any of the others in number – [38] have no freedom, no aristocracy, no right of their own, besides a small number living in the Haţeg district, where the capital of Decebalus is believed to have stood, and who, during the time of John Hunyadi, a native of those places, were granted aristocratic status because they had always taken part in the struggle against the Turks. The rest of them are all commoners, serfs of the Hungarians, having no places of their own, spread all over the territory, in the whole country, sparsely inhabited in open regions, mountains and forests, they mostly live out their miserable lives hiding together with their flocks."[39][40] In Romanian interpretations, it is noted that the proper translation of the first part of the sentence would be: "...I would nevertheless add the Romanians, who – even though they easily equal the others in number – ..."[41]

Romanian historians Ioan Bolovan and Sorina-Paula Bolovan argue that the Romanians were the majority during the life of Antun Vrančić. Based on their works, in 1690 there was an absolute Romanian majority, and no significant demographic change happened between the Middle Ages and 1750, when the Austrian administration tracked newcomers, which also explained concerns about Transylvanian Romanians leaving for Wallachia and Moldavia, including Emperor Joseph II.[42]

Károly Kocsis and Eszter Kocsisné Hodosi argue that the Hungarians were the most numerous ethnic group before the second half of the 17th century, when they were exceeded by Romanians. They assert the following structure of the population: in 1595, out of a total population of 670,000, 52% were Hungarians, 28% Romanians, 19% Germans.[43] Around 1650, in a letter written to the Sultan, Moldavian prince Vasile Lupu affirms that the number of Romanians was one-third of the population.[44][45] By 1660, according to Miklós Molnár, 955,000 people lived in the principality (Partium included) and the population consisted of 500,000 Hungarians (including 250,000 Székelys), 280,000 Romanians, 90,000 Germans and 85,000 Serbians, Ukrainians and others and had reached its end-of-century level.[46]

On the other hand, according to Dennis P. Hupchick, Romanians were the majority population in the region during the rule of Stephen Báthory (16th century).[47] In 1600, according to George W. White, Romanians, who were primarily peasants, constituted more than 60 percent of the population.[48] This theory is supported by Ion Ardeleanu, who states that the Romanian population represented "the overwhelming majority" in the age of Michael the Brave.[49] According to Louis Roman, various works from the XVII century claim that Romanians were the most numerous ethnic group in Transylvania during that time, including those of Johannes Tröster, Grigore Ureche, and Miron Costin.[50]

The period 1567–1661 had a deep demographic impact on the country. Transylvania was repeatedly ravaged by war between 1657 and 1661. Evliya Çelebi, accompanying Ali Pasha's army into Transylvania in 1661, reported vast areas, comparable in size to counties, being reduced to ashes, entire villages being put to the sword, and groups of 3,000–8,000 captives. The Transylvanian populations suffered huge losses, the Partium and the counties of Belső-Szolnok, Doboka, Kolozs, Közép-Szolnok, and Kraszna were laid waste. According to the Nagysink diet in 1664: "Over an area of five or six miles around a village, one would not find a single hut left standing, nor a single man alive, for they had been abducted, slain, or felled by the plague... while most of the poorest folk died from starvation".[51]

According to official estimates made by the Austrian administrative authority (Verwaltungsgericht) dating from 1712 to 1713, the ethnic distribution of the population in Transylvania is as follows: 47% Hungarians, 34% Romanians, 19%, Saxons.[52] In Benedek Jancsó's estimation, there were 250,000 Romanians, 150,000 Hungarians and 100,000 Saxons in Transylvania at the beginning of the 18th century.[53] In 1720, according to Károly Kocsis and Eszter Kocsisné Hodosi, out of a total population of 806,221, 50% were Romanians, 37% Hungarians, 12% Germans.[43]

Immigration and emigration of Romanians edit

The change of ethnic composition of the Principality of Transylvania and the influence of migrations is also subject to debate among historians. The Hungarian historiography claims that a large immigration of ethnic Romanians took place into the Principality of Transylvania, while the Romanian historiography asserts that there was more emigration towards Moldavia and Wallachia than vice versa.[54]

Transylvania survived as a state, and this peace facilitated its reconstruction and a gradual economic recovery, which themselves attracted new settlers from the surrounding countries into Transylvania. In addition, the population density of Transylvania was lower than it was in royal Hungary. These circumstances favoured immigration: over these decades, people moved in significant numbers to the principality, mainly from Moldavia, but from Wallachia as well.[51] As a result of two decades of peaceful rule and economic policy of Prince Michael I Apafi, the population in Transylvania increased. The labor shortage that developed as a result of the good economic conditions also favored immigration. The prince's patient and understanding religious policy offered shelter to all groups persecuted because of their religion. All the Transylvanian princes of this era strove to win the Transylvanian Romanian population to the cause of development and progress with the help of religious reform, to make the Romanian ethnic element just as useful for Transylvania as the other three nations were: Hungarian, Székely and Saxon. The efforts of these Hungarian princes were so successful that the Transylvanian Romanians became the creators, founders, and then the transmitters of Romanian culture to their brothers living beyond the Carpathians. Enjoying the full help of the princely power, the Transylvanian Romanians were able to grow numerically, according to Árpád Kosztin.[55]

Evliya Çelebi (1611–1682) was an Ottoman explorer who traveled through the territory of the Ottoman Empire and neighboring lands over a period of forty years, recording his commentary in a travelogue called the Seyahatnâme "Book of Travel". His trip to Hungary took place between 1660 and 1666. The Transylvanian's state of development in the 17th century was so good that it was an attraction to strangers longing for its territory. Evliya Çelebi wrote in his book that the Romanian serfs moved en masse to Transylvania because of the extreme ruthlessness of the rulers of Romanian lands, and the justice, legal order, and low taxes in Transylvania.[44]

In Wallachia the beys were very tyrannical over them, therefore these rayahs saying: "Let justice be justice", all moved to Transylvania and pay one gold tribute to the king and they have no other duties.

With the various Turkish, Tatar, and Cossack raids, and especially those due to the constant harassment and extortion of the Greeks, who were the tenants of the incomes of the two neighboring Romanian voivodeships, the entire population of some villages fled to Transylvania. In a diploma of Prince Gabriel Bethlen: "The Saxon priests belonging to the Kézdi chapter inform us that before that a village called Kövesd was inhabited by all Saxons, but now due to the many wars, it has been so destroyed that there are more Vlachs living in it like a Saxon." In 1648, Prince George I. Rákóczi wrote in a letter: "Our Saxon bishop called us together with his seniors under his bishopric, reporting that since the number of Saxons in Réten had greatly decreased and the Vlachs, vice versa, had multiplied greatly".[58] In 1663, the Wallachian voivode Ghica wrote to Michael I Apafi, Prince of Transylvania regarding the runaway Romanian serfs of the Filipescu boyar.[58] In 1668, the population of several Romanian villages migrated to Transylvania and the Romanian voivodes harassed Prince Michael I Apafi with demands that the "runaway villeins" be repatriated, and voivode Ghica was talking about entire Romanian groups.[51] In 1668, the voivode of Wallachia wrote to Michael I Apafi regarding a large number of escaped Romanian villages: "From our realm, a couple of villages have escaped into the realm of your greatness, some to Fogaras (Făgăraș) county, some to Brassó (Brașov), some to Szeben (Sibiu), and they did not flee because of their rascality but only for the heaviness of the tax." And in 1676, the Moldavian voivode Rosetti wrote twice to the Transylvanian prince because of his runaway serfs.[58] The Romanian peasantry, which flooded into Transylvania in this way, could take the place of the Hungarian, Székely and Saxon population decimated by the vicissitudes of the war, and their remaining real estate and property, without any difficulties.[58]

As a result of heavy taxes and hard services demanded, many serfs of the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia migrated into Transylvania where the laws were more favorable. According to Hungarian estimations 350,000–500,000 Romanians migrated to Transylvania in the 18th century.[52]

After the death of Prince Michael I Apafi, between 1690 and 1703, many people emigrated from Transylvania due to the tax burdens of the government that did not take into account the local circumstances. Furthermore, between 1703 and 1711 the armies of the Habsburg emperors and Francis II Rákóczi fought each other during the Rákóczi's War of Independence. Escapes accompanying the war, famines and epidemics – mainly the plague – also greatly decimated the population. The ordeals of the Counter-Reformation carried out by military force also contributed to the decline of the population. Many Protestant families and groups – Hungarians, Székelys and Saxons – were forced to flee.

Many Romanians also migrated from Transylvania towards Moldavia and Wallachia. This phenomenon, also existing in the Middle Ages during the foundation of Moldova and Wallachia,[59][60] was amplified after György Dózsa's rebellion of 1514, the religious persecutions and the worsening standard of living of Romanian Transylvanians.[59] The fiscal policy of the Principality of Moldavia, indulgent towards newcomers, has allowed many of them to move there, creating new settlements, such as those that are named Ungureni.[59] The juridicial discrimination of Romanian Transylvanians increased from the time of the Diet of 1502, and their economic position worsened. From the Diet of 1552, for example, in comparison to Hungarians and Saxons, it was easier for ethnic Romanians to be accused before the law.[60] Such discriminations were also noticed by foreign visitors in Transylvania.[60]

In 1552, the Hungarians nobles in the area of Deva complained about a "massive fleeing" towards Wallachia, due to the looting practiced by Castaldo's army. The Cluj Diet of 1593 constated that "our haughty serfs, gathered in large groups and raised, immediately can go to the Romanian countries, even if they commit any illegality, they go there freely". In 1602 Giorgio Basta ordered the dwellers of Bistrița to guard the roads, the passes and the paths towards Moldavia, to prevent the Transylvanian serfs getting the Principality. In 1607 the Transylvanian Diet urged the Prince of Transylvania to demand from the Moldovan Voivode the restitution of the runaway serfs to their original lords. In 1609 the Transylvanian Diet requested that "there should be taken measures to stop their (Transylvanian serfs') crossing towards the Principates".[54] In 1635, the delegates of Vasile Lupu solicited the movement of serfs near Cluj to Moldavia. Similarly, in 1662 Michael I Apafi urged the dwellers of Bistrița to stop the movement of the impoverished people towards Moldavia.[60][61]

From the 16th century some ethnic Romanians started moving from Transylvania towards Poland, Silesia and Moravia, where they formed the ethnoregion of Moravian Wallachia.[59]

According to Árpád Kosztind, the Romanians were not affected by the Counter-Reformation, and no Romanians was forced to flee for religious reasons.[55] On other hand, according to Bolovan Ioan and Ștefan Meteș, the fact that Romanians belonged to the Orthodox Church and not to any Western Christian denomination was the cause of their remaining of political, economic and cultural inferiority to Hungarians, Szekelys and Saxons, making them more willing to emigrate towards Moldova and Wallachia.[42][59] Not by chance, a good part of the Romanian elite, but sometimes also simple people, emigrated, passing south and east of the Carpathians to the Romanian states of Moldavia and Wallachia, where they were able to assert themselves unfettered on all levels. It is also true that a small part of the Romanian nobility, as much as survived after the attempts of the Hungarian royalty to Catholicize in the previous centuries, in some places embraced one of the new reformed confessions.[42]

Food shortages, the famine of 1684–1686, caused by an increase in the price of grains, lead some of inhabitants to leave Transylvania, and many of the villages in the Fundus Regius remained abandoned. The Diet of Vásárhely of December 1694 claims that one third of the population of Făgăraș Country emigrated to Wallachia. On 7 May 1699, the Austrian Emperor Leopold I blamed the Transylvanian ruling class for the fleeing of the population towards the Danubian Principalities and other Ottoman-controlled areas.[50] By the 18th century, the emigration of Romanians towards Moldavia and Wallachia further increased.[50][59][42]

Gallery edit

References edit

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  47. ^ Dennis P. Hupchick. Conflict and Chaos in Eastern Europe p. 64
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External links edit

  • at bcucluj.ro
  • History of Transylvania, Volume I–III (2001–2002)

principality, transylvania, 1570, 1711, principality, transylvania, hungarian, erdélyi, fejedelemség, latin, principatus, transsilvaniae, german, fürstentum, siebenbürgen, romanian, principatul, transilvaniei, principatul, ardealului, turkish, erdel, voyvodalı. The Principality of Transylvania Hungarian Erdelyi Fejedelemseg Latin Principatus Transsilvaniae German Furstentum Siebenburgen Romanian Principatul Transilvaniei Principatul Ardealului Turkish Erdel Voyvodaligi Transilvanya Prensligi was a semi independent state ruled primarily by Hungarian princes 7 8 9 10 11 12 Its territory in addition to the traditional Transylvanian lands also included the other major component called Partium which was in some periods comparable in size with Transylvania proper The establishment of the principality was connected to the Treaty of Speyer 13 14 However Stephen Bathory s status as king of Poland also helped to phase in the name Principality of Transylvania 15 It was usually under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire although the principality often had dual vassalage Ottoman Turkish sultans and Habsburg Hungarian kings in the 16th and 17th centuries 16 17 Principality of TransylvaniaPrincipatus Transsilvaniae1570 1711Top Bathory bannerBottom Bethlen banner Coat of armsAdministrative map of the Principality of Transylvania 1606 60StatusVassal state of the Ottoman Empire Hungarian crown land Polish fiefdomCapitalAlba Iulia Gyulafehervar 1570 1692 Cibinium Nagyszeben Hermannstadt Sibiu 1692 1711Common languagesLatin in administration science and politics Hungarian vernacular language of Diet and legislation 1 2 3 4 German vernacular business some official functions and instruction Romanian Ruthenian vernacular ReligionRoman Catholicism Calvinism Lutheranism Eastern Orthodoxy Greek Catholicism Unitarianism JudaismDemonym s TransylvanianGovernmentElective principalityRulers 1570 1571 first John II Sigismund Zapolya 1704 1711 last Francis II RakocziLegislatureTransylvanian DietHistory King Stephen I defeated Prince Gyula 5 6 1003 Treaty of Speyer16 August 1570 Bocskai uprising28 September 1604 23 June 1606 Treaty of Vienna23 June 1606 Peace of Nikolsburg31 December 1621 Diploma Leopoldinum16 October 1690 Treaty of Karlowitz26 January 1699 Rakoczi s War of Independence15 June 1703 1 May 1711 Peace of Szatmar29 April 1711Preceded by Succeeded byEastern Hungarian Kingdom Principality of Transylvania 1711 1867 Today part ofRomaniaHungarySlovakiaUkraineThe principality continued to be a part of the Lands of the Hungarian Crown 18 and was a symbol of the survival of Hungarian statehood 19 It represented Hungarian interests against Habsburg encroachments in the Habsburg ruled Kingdom of Hungary 20 Traditional Hungarian law had to be followed scrupulously in the principality 16 furthermore the state was predominantly Protestant 21 After the unsettled period of Rakoczi s War of Independence it was subordinated to the Habsburg monarchy Contents 1 Background 1 1 Eastern Hungarian Kingdom and Zapolya family 2 Principality of Transylvania 3 Demographics 3 1 Ruling system 3 2 The Composition of the Parliament 3 3 Demographic evolution 3 4 Immigration and emigration of Romanians 4 Gallery 5 References 6 External linksBackground editEastern Hungarian Kingdom and Zapolya family edit Main article Eastern Hungarian Kingdom On 29 August 1526 the army of Sultan Suleiman of the Ottoman Empire inflicted a decisive defeat on the Hungarian forces at Mohacs John Zapolya was en route to the battlefield with his sizable army but did not participate in the battle for unknown reasons The youthful King Louis II of Hungary and Bohemia fell in battle as did many of his soldiers When Zapolya was proclaimed king of Hungary Ferdinand from the House of Habsburg also claimed the throne In the ensuing struggle John Zapolya received the support of Suleiman who after Zapolya s death in 1540 occupied Buda and central Hungary in 1541 under the pretext of protecting Zapolya s son John II Sigismund Hungary was now divided into three sections Royal Hungary in the west and north Ottoman Hungary and the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom under Ottoman suzerainty which later became the Principality of Transylvania where Austrian and Turkish influences vied for supremacy for nearly two centuries The Hungarian magnates of Transylvania resorted to a policy of duplicity in order to preserve independence Transylvania was administrated by Isabella John Sigismund s mother from 1541 to 1551 when it fell for five years under Habsburg rule 1551 1556 The House of Zapolya regained the control of Transylvania in 1556 22 when the Diet of Szaszsebes elected Sigismund as prince of Transylvania Transylvania was now beyond the reach of Catholic religious authority allowing Lutheran and Calvinist preaching to flourish In 1563 Giorgio Blandrata was appointed as court physician and his radical religious ideas increasingly influenced both the young king John II and the Calvinist bishop Francis David 23 eventually converting both to the Anti Trinitarian Unitarian creed In a formal public disputation Francis David prevailed over the Calvinist Peter Melius resulting in 1568 in the formal adoption of individual freedom of religious expression under the Edict of Torda This was the first such legal guarantee of religious freedom in Christian Europe but only for Lutherans Calvinists Unitarians and of course Catholics the Orthodox Christian confession being tolerated with no legal guarantees granted Principality of Transylvania editMain article List of princes of Transylvania nbsp Principality of Transylvania at the end of 16th century The Principality of Transylvania was established in 1570 when John II renounced his claim as King of Hungary in the Treaty of Speyer ratified in 1571 14 24 and became a Transylvanian prince 25 The treaty also recognized that the Principality of Transylvania belonged to the Kingdom of Hungary in the sense of public law 26 Upon the death of John II in 1571 the Royal House of Bathory came to power and ruled Transylvania as princes under the Ottomans and briefly under Habsburg suzerainty until 1602 Their rise to power marked the beginning of the Principality of Transylvania as a semi independent state Prince Stephen Bathory was the first powerful prince of independent Transylvania 23 a Hungarian Catholic who later became king under the name Stephen Bathory of Poland 23 He undertook to maintain the religious liberty granted by the Edict of Torda but interpreted this obligation in an increasingly restricted sense The latter period of Bathory rule saw Transylvania under Sigismund Bathory prince of the Holy Roman Empire 23 enter the Long War which started as a Christian alliance against the Turks and became a four sided conflict involving Transylvania the Habsburgs the Ottomans and the voivode of Wallachia Michael the Brave After 1601 the principality was for a short time under the rule of Rudolf II who initiated the Germanization of the population and in order to reclaim the Principality for Catholicism he initiated the Counter Reformation From 1604 to 1606 the Hungarian nobleman Stephen Bocskay led a successful rebellion against Austrian rule Bocskay was elected Prince of Transylvania on 5 April 1603 and prince of Hungary two months later He achieved the Peace of Vienna in 1606 23 which afforded religious liberty and political autonomy the restoration of all confiscated estates the repeal of all unrighteous judgments and a complete retroactive amnesty for all Hungarians in Royal Hungary as well as his own recognition as the independent sovereign prince of an enlarged Principality of Transylvania The Treaty of Vienna 1606 guaranteed the right of Transylvanians to elect their own independent princes but Georg Keglevic who was the Commander in chief General Vice Ban of Croatia Slavonia and Dalmatia was since 1602 Baron in Transylvania It was a very difficult and complicated peace treaty after a long war Under Bocskay s successors Transylvania had its golden age 27 especially under the reigns of Gabor Bethlen and George I Rakoczi Gabor Bethlen who reigned from 1613 to 1629 perpetually thwarted all efforts of the emperor to oppress or circumvent his subjects and won reputation abroad by championing the Protestant cause Three times he waged war on the emperor twice he was proclaimed King of Hungary and by the Peace of Nikolsburg 31 December 1621 he obtained for the Protestants a confirmation of the Treaty of Vienna and for himself seven additional counties in northern Hungary Bethlen s successor George I Rakoczi was equally successful His principal achievement was the Peace of Linz 16 September 1645 the last political triumph of Hungarian Protestantism in which the emperor was forced to confirm again the articles of the Peace of Vienna Gabriel Bethlen and George I Rakoczi also did much for education and culture and their era has justly been called the golden era of Transylvania They lavished money on the embellishment of their capital Alba Iulia which became the main bulwark of Protestantism in Eastern Europe During their reign Transylvania was also one of the few European countries where Roman Catholics Calvinists Lutherans and Unitarians lived in mutual tolerance all of them belonging to the officially accepted religions religiones receptae while the Orthodox church however were only tolerated citation needed The fall of Nagyvarad to the expansionist Ottomans on 27 August 1660 marked the decline of the Principality To counter the Ottoman threat the Habsburgs determined to gain influence in and perhaps control of this territory Under Prince Kemeny the diet of Transylvania proclaimed the secession of a sovereign Transylvania from the Ottomans April 1661 and appealed for help to Vienna but a secret Habsburg Ottoman agreement resulted in the further increase of Habsburg influence After the defeat of the Ottomans at the Battle of Vienna in 1683 the Habsburgs gradually began to impose their rule on the formerly autonomous Transylvania Following the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz Transylvania was formally attached to Habsburg controlled Hungary 5 28 and subjected to the direct rule of the emperor s governors From 1711 onward Habsburg control over Transylvania was consolidated and the princes of Transylvania were replaced with governors Demographics editSee also History of Transylvania Historical population Ruling system edit Until 1691 Transylvania was ruled by Unio Trium Nationum the three state constituting socio ethnical entities termed nations consisting of the Hungarian nobility the Saxon urban settlers and the Szekely peasant soldiers while a significant part of the general population consisted of Orthodox Romanians remained deprived of any civil and political rights 29 30 The Composition of the Parliament edit The Unio Trium Nationum Latin for Union of the Three Nations was a pact of mutual aid codified in 1438 by three Estates of Transylvania the largely Hungarian nobility the Saxon German patrician class 31 and the free military Szekelys 32 The union was directed against the whole of the peasantry regardless of ethnicity in response to the Transylvanian peasant revolt 32 In this feudal estate parliament the peasants whether Hungarian Saxon Szekely or Romanian in origin were not represented and they did not benefit from its acts 33 as the commoners were not considered to be members of these feudal nations 34 The coalition of the Three Nations retained its legal representative monopoly under the prince as before the split of the medieval Hungarian Kingdom occasioned by the Ottoman invasions According to Dennis P Hupchick though there were occasional clashes between the Hungarian plainsmen and the Szekely mountaineers they were united under the patronymic Magyars and with Saxon support formed a common front against the predominantly Romanian peasantry 16 Demographic evolution edit There is an ongoing scholarly debate between Hungarian and Romanian historians regarding the medieval population of Transylvania While some Romanian historians claim continuous Romanian majority Hungarian historians claim the continuous settlement of Romanians into the Kingdom of Hungary Official censuses with information on Transylvania s population have been conducted since the 18th century but the ethnic composition was the subject of different modern estimations Nicolaus Olahus Primate of Hungary stated in the book Hungaria et Athila in 1536 that in Transylvania Four nations of different origins live in it Hungarians Szekelys Saxons and Vlachs 35 36 37 Based on a work by Antun Vrancic 1504 1573 Expeditionis Solymani in Moldaviam et Transsylvaniam libri duo De situ Transsylvaniae Moldaviae et Transalpinae liber tertius more estimations exist as the original text is translated interpreted in a different way especially by Romanian and Hungarian scholars According to Hungarian interpretations Vrancic wrote about the inhabitants of Transylvania and about the Romanians The country is inhabited by three nations Szekelys Hungarians and Saxons I should also add the Romanians who even though they easily equal any of the others in number 38 have no freedom no aristocracy no right of their own besides a small number living in the Haţeg district where the capital of Decebalus is believed to have stood and who during the time of John Hunyadi a native of those places were granted aristocratic status because they had always taken part in the struggle against the Turks The rest of them are all commoners serfs of the Hungarians having no places of their own spread all over the territory in the whole country sparsely inhabited in open regions mountains and forests they mostly live out their miserable lives hiding together with their flocks 39 40 In Romanian interpretations it is noted that the proper translation of the first part of the sentence would be I would nevertheless add the Romanians who even though they easily equal the others in number 41 Romanian historians Ioan Bolovan and Sorina Paula Bolovan argue that the Romanians were the majority during the life of Antun Vrancic Based on their works in 1690 there was an absolute Romanian majority and no significant demographic change happened between the Middle Ages and 1750 when the Austrian administration tracked newcomers which also explained concerns about Transylvanian Romanians leaving for Wallachia and Moldavia including Emperor Joseph II 42 Karoly Kocsis and Eszter Kocsisne Hodosi argue that the Hungarians were the most numerous ethnic group before the second half of the 17th century when they were exceeded by Romanians They assert the following structure of the population in 1595 out of a total population of 670 000 52 were Hungarians 28 Romanians 19 Germans 43 Around 1650 in a letter written to the Sultan Moldavian prince Vasile Lupu affirms that the number of Romanians was one third of the population 44 45 By 1660 according to Miklos Molnar 955 000 people lived in the principality Partium included and the population consisted of 500 000 Hungarians including 250 000 Szekelys 280 000 Romanians 90 000 Germans and 85 000 Serbians Ukrainians and others and had reached its end of century level 46 On the other hand according to Dennis P Hupchick Romanians were the majority population in the region during the rule of Stephen Bathory 16th century 47 In 1600 according to George W White Romanians who were primarily peasants constituted more than 60 percent of the population 48 This theory is supported by Ion Ardeleanu who states that the Romanian population represented the overwhelming majority in the age of Michael the Brave 49 According to Louis Roman various works from the XVII century claim that Romanians were the most numerous ethnic group in Transylvania during that time including those of Johannes Troster Grigore Ureche and Miron Costin 50 The period 1567 1661 had a deep demographic impact on the country Transylvania was repeatedly ravaged by war between 1657 and 1661 Evliya Celebi accompanying Ali Pasha s army into Transylvania in 1661 reported vast areas comparable in size to counties being reduced to ashes entire villages being put to the sword and groups of 3 000 8 000 captives The Transylvanian populations suffered huge losses the Partium and the counties of Belso Szolnok Doboka Kolozs Kozep Szolnok and Kraszna were laid waste According to the Nagysink diet in 1664 Over an area of five or six miles around a village one would not find a single hut left standing nor a single man alive for they had been abducted slain or felled by the plague while most of the poorest folk died from starvation 51 According to official estimates made by the Austrian administrative authority Verwaltungsgericht dating from 1712 to 1713 the ethnic distribution of the population in Transylvania is as follows 47 Hungarians 34 Romanians 19 Saxons 52 In Benedek Jancso s estimation there were 250 000 Romanians 150 000 Hungarians and 100 000 Saxons in Transylvania at the beginning of the 18th century 53 In 1720 according to Karoly Kocsis and Eszter Kocsisne Hodosi out of a total population of 806 221 50 were Romanians 37 Hungarians 12 Germans 43 Immigration and emigration of Romanians edit The change of ethnic composition of the Principality of Transylvania and the influence of migrations is also subject to debate among historians The Hungarian historiography claims that a large immigration of ethnic Romanians took place into the Principality of Transylvania while the Romanian historiography asserts that there was more emigration towards Moldavia and Wallachia than vice versa 54 Transylvania survived as a state and this peace facilitated its reconstruction and a gradual economic recovery which themselves attracted new settlers from the surrounding countries into Transylvania In addition the population density of Transylvania was lower than it was in royal Hungary These circumstances favoured immigration over these decades people moved in significant numbers to the principality mainly from Moldavia but from Wallachia as well 51 As a result of two decades of peaceful rule and economic policy of Prince Michael I Apafi the population in Transylvania increased The labor shortage that developed as a result of the good economic conditions also favored immigration The prince s patient and understanding religious policy offered shelter to all groups persecuted because of their religion All the Transylvanian princes of this era strove to win the Transylvanian Romanian population to the cause of development and progress with the help of religious reform to make the Romanian ethnic element just as useful for Transylvania as the other three nations were Hungarian Szekely and Saxon The efforts of these Hungarian princes were so successful that the Transylvanian Romanians became the creators founders and then the transmitters of Romanian culture to their brothers living beyond the Carpathians Enjoying the full help of the princely power the Transylvanian Romanians were able to grow numerically according to Arpad Kosztin 55 Evliya Celebi 1611 1682 was an Ottoman explorer who traveled through the territory of the Ottoman Empire and neighboring lands over a period of forty years recording his commentary in a travelogue called the Seyahatname Book of Travel His trip to Hungary took place between 1660 and 1666 The Transylvanian s state of development in the 17th century was so good that it was an attraction to strangers longing for its territory Evliya Celebi wrote in his book that the Romanian serfs moved en masse to Transylvania because of the extreme ruthlessness of the rulers of Romanian lands and the justice legal order and low taxes in Transylvania 44 In Wallachia the beys were very tyrannical over them therefore these rayahs saying Let justice be justice all moved to Transylvania and pay one gold tribute to the king and they have no other duties Evliya Celebi Seyahatname 56 57 With the various Turkish Tatar and Cossack raids and especially those due to the constant harassment and extortion of the Greeks who were the tenants of the incomes of the two neighboring Romanian voivodeships the entire population of some villages fled to Transylvania In a diploma of Prince Gabriel Bethlen The Saxon priests belonging to the Kezdi chapter inform us that before that a village called Kovesd was inhabited by all Saxons but now due to the many wars it has been so destroyed that there are more Vlachs living in it like a Saxon In 1648 Prince George I Rakoczi wrote in a letter Our Saxon bishop called us together with his seniors under his bishopric reporting that since the number of Saxons in Reten had greatly decreased and the Vlachs vice versa had multiplied greatly 58 In 1663 the Wallachian voivode Ghica wrote to Michael I Apafi Prince of Transylvania regarding the runaway Romanian serfs of the Filipescu boyar 58 In 1668 the population of several Romanian villages migrated to Transylvania and the Romanian voivodes harassed Prince Michael I Apafi with demands that the runaway villeins be repatriated and voivode Ghica was talking about entire Romanian groups 51 In 1668 the voivode of Wallachia wrote to Michael I Apafi regarding a large number of escaped Romanian villages From our realm a couple of villages have escaped into the realm of your greatness some to Fogaras Făgăraș county some to Brasso Brașov some to Szeben Sibiu and they did not flee because of their rascality but only for the heaviness of the tax And in 1676 the Moldavian voivode Rosetti wrote twice to the Transylvanian prince because of his runaway serfs 58 The Romanian peasantry which flooded into Transylvania in this way could take the place of the Hungarian Szekely and Saxon population decimated by the vicissitudes of the war and their remaining real estate and property without any difficulties 58 As a result of heavy taxes and hard services demanded many serfs of the principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia migrated into Transylvania where the laws were more favorable According to Hungarian estimations 350 000 500 000 Romanians migrated to Transylvania in the 18th century 52 After the death of Prince Michael I Apafi between 1690 and 1703 many people emigrated from Transylvania due to the tax burdens of the government that did not take into account the local circumstances Furthermore between 1703 and 1711 the armies of the Habsburg emperors and Francis II Rakoczi fought each other during the Rakoczi s War of Independence Escapes accompanying the war famines and epidemics mainly the plague also greatly decimated the population The ordeals of the Counter Reformation carried out by military force also contributed to the decline of the population Many Protestant families and groups Hungarians Szekelys and Saxons were forced to flee Many Romanians also migrated from Transylvania towards Moldavia and Wallachia This phenomenon also existing in the Middle Ages during the foundation of Moldova and Wallachia 59 60 was amplified after Gyorgy Dozsa s rebellion of 1514 the religious persecutions and the worsening standard of living of Romanian Transylvanians 59 The fiscal policy of the Principality of Moldavia indulgent towards newcomers has allowed many of them to move there creating new settlements such as those that are named Ungureni 59 The juridicial discrimination of Romanian Transylvanians increased from the time of the Diet of 1502 and their economic position worsened From the Diet of 1552 for example in comparison to Hungarians and Saxons it was easier for ethnic Romanians to be accused before the law 60 Such discriminations were also noticed by foreign visitors in Transylvania 60 In 1552 the Hungarians nobles in the area of Deva complained about a massive fleeing towards Wallachia due to the looting practiced by Castaldo s army The Cluj Diet of 1593 constated that our haughty serfs gathered in large groups and raised immediately can go to the Romanian countries even if they commit any illegality they go there freely In 1602 Giorgio Basta ordered the dwellers of Bistrița to guard the roads the passes and the paths towards Moldavia to prevent the Transylvanian serfs getting the Principality In 1607 the Transylvanian Diet urged the Prince of Transylvania to demand from the Moldovan Voivode the restitution of the runaway serfs to their original lords In 1609 the Transylvanian Diet requested that there should be taken measures to stop their Transylvanian serfs crossing towards the Principates 54 In 1635 the delegates of Vasile Lupu solicited the movement of serfs near Cluj to Moldavia Similarly in 1662 Michael I Apafi urged the dwellers of Bistrița to stop the movement of the impoverished people towards Moldavia 60 61 From the 16th century some ethnic Romanians started moving from Transylvania towards Poland Silesia and Moravia where they formed the ethnoregion of Moravian Wallachia 59 According to Arpad Kosztind the Romanians were not affected by the Counter Reformation and no Romanians was forced to flee for religious reasons 55 On other hand according to Bolovan Ioan and Ștefan Meteș the fact that Romanians belonged to the Orthodox Church and not to any Western Christian denomination was the cause of their remaining of political economic and cultural inferiority to Hungarians Szekelys and Saxons making them more willing to emigrate towards Moldova and Wallachia 42 59 Not by chance a good part of the Romanian elite but sometimes also simple people emigrated passing south and east of the Carpathians to the Romanian states of Moldavia and Wallachia where they were able to assert themselves unfettered on all levels It is also true that a small part of the Romanian nobility as much as survived after the attempts of the Hungarian royalty to Catholicize in the previous centuries in some places embraced one of the new reformed confessions 42 Food shortages the famine of 1684 1686 caused by an increase in the price of grains lead some of inhabitants to leave Transylvania and many of the villages in the Fundus Regius remained abandoned The Diet of Vasarhely of December 1694 claims that one third of the population of Făgăraș Country emigrated to Wallachia On 7 May 1699 the Austrian Emperor Leopold I blamed the Transylvanian ruling class for the fleeing of the population towards the Danubian Principalities and other Ottoman controlled areas 50 By the 18th century the emigration of Romanians towards Moldavia and Wallachia further increased 50 59 42 Gallery edit nbsp The partition of medieval Kingdom of Hungary between the Ottoman and Habsburg empires lasted more than 150 years 62 after the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 nbsp The Principality of Transylvania the successor of Eastern Hungarian Kingdom 1570 Partium is depicted in the darker colourReferences edit Tamasne Szabo Csilla Az Erdelyi Fejedelemseg koranak jogi nyelve The jurisdictional language in the age of the Principality of Transylvania Szabo T Attila Erdelyi Magyar Szotorteneti Tar Historical dictionary of the Transylvanian Hungarian vocabulary Compillatae Constitutiones Regni Transylvaniae 1671 Approbatae Constitutiones Regni Transylvaniae 1677 a b Transylvania Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 2008 06 26 Engel Pal Andrew Ayton 2005 The Realm of St Stephen London Tauris p 27 ISBN 1 85043 977 X Helmut David Baer 2006 The struggle of Hungarian Lutherans under communism Texas A amp M University Press pp 36 ISBN 978 1 58544 480 9 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Eric Roman 2003 Austria Hungary amp the successor states a reference guide from the Renaissance to the present Infobase Publishing pp 574 ISBN 978 0 8160 4537 2 Retrieved 14 July 2011 J Atticus Ryan Christopher A Mullen 1998 Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization yearbook Martinus Nijhoff Publishers pp 85 ISBN 978 90 411 1022 0 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Ivan Boldizsar 1987 NHQ the new Hungarian quarterly Lapkiado Pub House p 41 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Marshall Cavendish 2009 Greece and the Eastern Balkans World and Its Peoples Europe Vol 11 Marshall Cavendish p 1476 ISBN 978 0 7614 7902 4 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Paul Lendvai 2003 The Hungarians a thousand years of victory in defeat C Hurst pp 106 ISBN 978 1 85065 673 9 Retrieved 14 July 2011 Richard C Frucht Eastern Europe An Introduction to the People Lands and Culture Volume 1 ABC CLIO 2004 p 408 a b Diarmaid MacCulloch The Reformation Viking 2004 p 443 Katalin Peter Beloved Children History of Aristocratic Childhood in Hungary in the Early Modern Age Central European University Press 2001 p 27 a b c Dennis P Hupchick Conflict and chaos in Eastern Europe Palgrave Macmillan 1995 p 62 Peter F Sugar Southeastern Europe under Ottoman rule 1354 1804 University of Washington Press 1993 pp 150 154 Martyn Rady Customary Law in Hungary Courts Texts and the Tripartitum Oxford University Press 2015 p 141 ISBN 9780198743910 Karoly Kocsis Eszter Kocsisne Hodosi Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications LLC 1998 p 106 Transylvania article of Encyclopaedia Britannica Istvan Lazar Hungary a Brief History 1989 ISBN 963 13 4483 5 Peter F Sugar Southeastern Europe Under Ottoman Rule 1354 1804 p 332 a b c d e Richard Bonney David J B Trim 2006 Persecution and Pluralism Calvinists and Religious Minorities in Early Modern Europe 1550 1700 Peter Lang pp 99 ISBN 978 3 03910 570 0 Retrieved 1 June 2012 Instytut Historii Polska Akademia Nauk Historicky ustav Akademie ved Ceske republiky Political Culture in Central Europe Middle Ages and early modern era Institute of History Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic 2005 p 338 Istvan Keul Early Modern Religious Communities in East Central Europe Ethnic Diversity Denominational Plurality and Corporative Politics in the Principality of Transylvania 1526 1691 Brill 2009 p 61 Anthony Endrey The Holy Crown of Hungary Hungarian Institute 1978 p 70 Soldiers from the age of Gabor Bethlen PDF Magyar Elektronikus Konivtar 31 December 2017 Retrieved 23 January 2023 Transylvania The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Columbia University Press Eniko Baga 2007 Towards a Romanian Silicon Valley Local Development in Post Socialist Europe Campus Verlag pp 46 ISBN 978 3 593 38126 8 Retrieved 1 June 2012 Religiones and Nationes in Transylvania During the 16th Century Between Acceptance and Exclusion Mircea Dogaru Mihail Zahariade 1996 History of the Romanians From the origins to the modern age Vol 1 of History of the Romanians Amco Press p 148 ISBN 978 9739675598 a b Laszlo Foszto Ritual Revitalisation After Socialism Community Personhood and Conversion among Roma in a Transylvanian Village Halle Wittenberg 2007 1 Stefan Pascu 1990 A History of Transylvania Dorset Press p 101 ISBN 978 0880295260 Lucian Leuștean 2014 Orthodox Christianity and Nationalism in Nineteenth century Southeastern Europe Oxford University Press p 132 ISBN 978 0823256068 Csukovits Eniko 2005 Keso kozepkori leirasok Erdely kepe Image of Transylvania in late medieval descriptions PDF in Hungarian In hac sunt quatuor diverso genere nationes Hungari Siculi Saxones Walachi Olahus Nicolaus Hungaria et Athila PDF in Latin Szigethy Gabor 2003 Olah Miklos Hungaria in Hungarian Nyarady R Karoly Erdely nepesedestortenete c keziratos munkajabol Megjelent A Kozponti Statisztikai Hivatal Nepessegtudomanyi Kutato Intezetenek torteneti demografiai fuzetei 3 sz Budapest 1987 7 55 p Erdelyi Muzeum LIX 1997 1 2 fuz 1 39 p Nations and Denominations in Transylvania 13th 16th Century Universita di Pisa Dipartimento di Storia Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine PDF Retrieved on 2012 06 01 Pop Ioan Aurel 2009 Romanii și Națiunile Nationes Transilvănene in secolele XVI și XVII Intre excludere și acceptare Pop Ioan Aurel 2010 Testimonies on the ethno confessional structure of medieval Transylvania and Hungary 9th 14th centuries PDF Transylvanian Review 2010 vol 19 supplement No 1 pp 9 41 Retrieved 2017 12 01 a b c d Transilvania pana la Primul Razboi Mondial a b Karoly Kocsis Eszter Kocsisne Hodosi Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Simon Publications LLC 1998 p 102 Table 19 a b Kosztin Arpad 2003 Magyar tervesztes roman ternyeres Erdelyben Hungarian loss of space Romanian win of space in Transylvania in Hungarian p 77 ISBN 963 9289 60 4 Sandor Szilagyi 1890 Erdely es az eszakkeleti haboru Levelek es okiratok Transylvania and the Northeastern War Letters and Diplomas PDF in Latin Budapest pp 255 256 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Miklos Molnar A Concise History of Hungary Cambridge University Press 2001 p 113 Dennis P Hupchick Conflict and Chaos in Eastern Europe p 64 George W White 2000 Nationalism and Territory Constructing Group Identity in Southeastern Europe Rowman amp Littlefield pp 132 ISBN 978 0 8476 9809 7 Retrieved 1 June 2012 Ion Ardeleanu Arhivele Statului Romania Biblioteca Centrală de Stat a Republicii Socialiste Romania 1983 Mihai Viteazul in conștiința europeană ediție de documente Editura Academiei Republicii Socialiste Romania Retrieved 1 June 2012 a b c Louis Roman 1999 Romanii transilvăneni in secolele XVI XVII o abordare demoistorică Revista Istorică tomul IX nr 3 4 in Romanian Editura Academiei Romane pp 188 192 193 196 a b c Varkonyi Agnes R 2001 Demographic Change History of Transylvania Volume II From 1606 to 1830 VI The Last Decades of the Independent Principality 1660 1711 2 Economic Reorganization and Social Transformation New York Columbia University Press The Hungarian original by Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences ISBN 0 88033 491 6 a b Trocsanyi Zsolt 2001 Demographic Changes History of Transylvania Volume II From 1606 to 1830 VII A New Regime and an Altered Ethnic Pattern 1711 1770 2 Society and the Economy After the Peace of Szatmar New York Columbia University Press The Hungarian original by Institute of History Of The Hungarian Academy of Sciences ISBN 0 88033 491 6 Demographic Changes Mek niif hu Retrieved on 2012 06 01 a b Florin Pintescu 2004 Romanii din Transilvania la sfarsitul secolului XVI si inceputul secolului XVII in Romanian Suceava Editura Universității Suceava pp 36 38 42 43 112 113 a b Kosztin Arpad 2003 Magyar tervesztes roman ternyeres Erdelyben Hungarian loss of space Romanian win of space in Transylvania in Hungarian Budapest p 82 ISBN 963 9289 60 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Celebi Evliya Evlia Celebi Turkish world traveler s trips to Hungary in Turkish Karacson Imre Seyahatname PDF in Hungarian a b c d Kosztin Arpad 2003 Magyar tervesztes roman ternyeres Erdelyben Hungarian loss of space Romanian win of space in Transylvania in Hungarian Budapest p 83 ISBN 963 9289 60 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f Ștefan Meteș 1925 Emigrări romanești din Transilvania in secolele XIII XX Cercetări de demografie istorică in Romanian pp 35 41 102 156 a b c d Vlad Georgescu 1995 Istoria romanilor de la origini pină in zilele noastre in Romanian Bucharest Editura Humanitas pp 34 35 ISBN 9789732805480 David Prodan 1968 Iobăgia in Transilvania in secolul al XVI lea in Romanian Vol 2 Bucharest Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică A Country Study Hungary Federal Research Division Library of Congress Retrieved 2009 01 11 External links editEthnic and Religious Mentalities in Transylvania during the time of Nicolaus Olahus at bcucluj ro History of Transylvania Volume I III 2001 2002 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Principality of Transylvania 1570 1711 amp oldid 1185769295, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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