Ethnic Continuity in the Carpatho-Danubian Area

 

Elemér Illyés

 

First edition: East European Monographs, no. CCXLIX, 1988

Second (revised) edition: Hunyadi Öcs. MK., Hamilton, ON., Struktura Press, 1992

 

 

Contents

The book in .pdf format (122 Mb)

Preface  —  Abbreviations

 

I. HISTORY

 

ABOUT THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE PEOPLES OF SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE

    Introduction  —  The Thracians  —  The Scythians  —  Moesia (Misia)

 

ABOUT THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE ROMANIANS

    The First Written Sources About Early Vlachs. The Testimony of Byzantine Authors

 

MEDIEVAL CHRONICLERS. THE RUSSIAN PRIMARY CHRONICLE. THE GESTA HUNGARORUM

    A Summary of the Gesta Hungarorum  —  Ethnical Criteria in the Gesta Hungarorum and the Russian Primary Chronicle  —  The Passages of the Gesta that Refer to Eastern Hungary and Transylvania  —  An Analysis of the Treatment of the Gesta Hungarorum as an Historical Source by Modern Romanian Historians  —  Place Names Mentioned by Anonymus in Transylvania and the Banat

 

THE HUMANISTS

    The Latinity of the Romanians  —  Transylvanian German (Saxon) Historians of the Seventeenth to Eighteenth Centuries on the Origin of the Romanians

 

THE MOLDAVIAN AND THE WALLACHIAN CHRONICLERS

    The Origins and Development of the Idea of Roman Continuity North of the Danube  —  The Muntenian Chroniclers

 

THE ROOTS OF THE ROMANIAN NATIONAL AWAKENING

    The Development of the Theory of Continuity as a Political Tool  —  The Transylvanian School (Şcoala Ardeleană)  —  Maior's Theories About the Presence of a Roman Population in Dacia After 275 A.D.  —  Transylvania in the Tenth Century in Maior's Work

 

THE ROMANTIC WRITING OF HISTORY

    The Rise of Modern Nationalism in Europe  —  Romanian Nationalism  —  The Beginnings of Modern Romanian Historiography  —  The Period Between the Two World Wars

 

THE DOMINATION OF MARXIST IDEOLOGY

    The Period After the Second World War  —  The Re-evaluation of Nationalism  —  History and Ideology

 

 

II. ARCHAEOLOGY

 

    Methodological Problems (The Significance of Archaeology in Current Romanian Historiography, Conclusion)  —  The Roman Cultural Influence on the non-Romanic Peoples of Europe: Roman Imports in Barbaricum  —  The Roman Influence on Culture  —  The Circulation of Roman Coins in Barbaricum  —  The Role of Roman Coins in Free Germania and Other Territories Outside the Roman Empire

 

THE QUESTION OF ROMANIZATION NORTH OF THE DANUBE

    Dacia  —  Roman Influence Before 106 A.D.  —  The Degree of Romanization in Dacia Traiana from 106 to 275 A.D. The Definition of Romanization and the Problem in Dacia  —  Towns and Rural Settlements in Dacia Traiana  —  Dacian Settlements After the Conquest. The Number of Dacians in Dacia Romana  —  The Rural Settlements in Dacia Traiana  —  Rural Farms (villae rusticae)  —  Cemeteries and Funeral Rites  —  Roman Influence on Primitive (Dacian) Earthenware  —  The Inscriptions of the Roman Period in Trajan's Dacia

 

THE FOURTH CENTURY A.D. IN TRANSYLVANIA

    The Former Roman Towns  —  Cemeteries in Rural Areas  —  The Western Group of Settlements  —  Non-Roman Settlements and Tombs in Transylvania from the Mid-Third to End of the Fourth Century. The So-called Sfîntu Gheorghe (Eastern) Group of Settlements  —  The Cemetery from the Fourth and Fifth Centuries A.D. at Bratei  —  The Černjachov-Sîntana de Mureş Culture  —  The Roman Coins from 275 to 395 A.D. Found in Transylvania  —  An Analysis of the Ethnic Significance Attributed to the Roman Coins  —  Finds of Single Coins  —  The Hoards of Coins  —  Conclusions  —  Christianity in Transylvania in the Fourth to Seventh Centuries: A Critical Analysis of Its Alleged Significance for Romanian Ethnogenesis  —  The Geographical Distribution of Christian Finds in Romania  —  The Inscriptions  —  The Donarium Found at Biertan  —  Conclusions

 

THE FIFTH AND THE SEVENTH CENTURIES IN TRANSYLVANIA

    The Old Germanic Peoples  —  The Goths  —  The Gepidae

 

THE HUNS

 

CEMETERIES IN TRANSYLVANIA FROM THE SIXTH TO NINTH CENTURIES

    The Avars

 

THE APPEARANCE OF THE SLAVS IN THE CARPATHIAN BASIN

    Archaeological Remnants of the Slavs in Transylvania  —  The Extension of the Theory of Romanization to Territories Beyond Roman Dacia  —  The Assumed Romanization in Muntenia  —  The Assumed Romanization in Moldavia  —  The Material Remains at Costişa-Botoşana  —  The Hypothesis of the "Daco-Roman"-Slav Symbiosis in the Fifth to Seventh Centuries in Moldavia  —  Theories About the Material Culture in the First Millenium in the Territory of Romania  —  Conclusions

 

THE CARPATHIAN BASIN IN THE NINTH TO ELEVENTH CENTURIES

    The Hungarian Conquest  —  The Bulgars  —  The Theory of the Dual Hungarian Conquest. The Onogur Bulgars  —  The Székelys (Szeklers)  —  The Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós  —  The Bijelo Brdo Culture. Early Archaeological Remnants of the Hungarians in the Carpathian Basin  —  Fortifications of the Tenth to Twelfth Centuries in Transylvania. Doboka

 

 

III. LINGUISTICS

 

THE ROMANIAN LANGUAGE

    The Testimony of Language  —  Language Community  —  The Apennino-Balkan Group of Romance Languages. The Descendants of East Latin  —  Danubian Latin  —  The Characteristics of East Latin Phonology  —  Late Latin  —  The Changes of Late Latin Continued in Romanian  —  Late Latin Characteristics Not Found in Romanian  —  The Relationship of the Territory of Former Dacia Traiana to the Roman Provinces South of the Danube During the Late Latin Period

 

THE PROBLEM OF THE ETHNO-LINGUISTIC SUBSTRATUM

    Ancient Indo-European Elements in Romanian  —  The pre-Roman Languages of Southeastern Europe  —  The "Thraco-Dacian" Linguistic Data  —  Thracian and Dacian  —  The Problem of the Dacian Elements in Romanian  —  A Comparison of the pre-Roman Lexical Elements in Romanian with Thracian and Dacian Words  —  Why "Thraco-Dacian"?  —  The Origin of Albanian  —  The Relationship of the Substratum of Romanian to Albanian  —  The pre-Latin Lexical Elements in the Romanian Language  —  A Comparison of Two Groups of Words: Those with and Those Without an Albanian Counterpart  —  Theories Based on the Distribution of the Assumed Substratum Words Among the Romanian Dialects  —  Albanian-Romanian Contacts in the Late Latin Period  —  Common Romanian. The Early Slavic Influence  —  The Development of Dialects

 

THE ROMANIAN LINGUISTIC LITERATURE

    Correspondences Between the Latin Elements of Albanian and Romanian  —  The "Carpatho-Balkan Territory" as the Assumed Area of the Origin of the Romanian Language  —  About the Relationship of Latin to Gothic and Its Assumed Relevance to the Romanian Language  —  The Alleged Gothic influence on the Romanian Language  —  The Inherited Latin Words in Romanian

 

THE THEORY OF THE "CORE REGIONS" (KERNGEBIETE) OF THE ROMANIAN LANGUAGE (Sextil Puşcariu)

    Other Proponents of the Kerngebiet Theory  —  The Kerngebiet Theory and the Romanian Dialects  —  Dardania and the Origin of Romanian  —  The Kerngebiet Theory in Romanian Historiography

 

 

IV. GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES

 

    Theories About Early Romanian Geographical Names  —  The Preservation of the Slavic Nasal Vowels  —  The Rise and Disappearance of the Nasal Vowels in Slavic  —  Romanian Geographical Names Borrowed Directly from Slavs  —  Romanian Geographical Names in Transylvania Borrowed Directly from Slavs  —  Romanian Geographical Names Assumed to Be Older Than the Hungarian Toponymy  —  A Review of the Geographical Names Existing Before 1400 in Hunedoara (Hunyad) County  —  Dubious Etymologies, Place Names Assumed To Be Inherited Directly from Latin

 

PLACE NAMES

    The Romanian Place Names  —  The Formal Peculiarities of Romanian Place Names  —  Differences Between Northern Romanian Place Names Recorded on the Balkan Peninsula and Those from the Territories North of the Danube  —  A Comparison of Place Names in Transylvania with Those of the Transcarpathian Areas of Romania  —  The Names of Rivers in Romania  —  Place Names of Slavic Origin in Transylvania (Hungarian, German, Romanian)  —  Romanian Geographical Names of Slavic Origin. The Definition of Geographical Names Borrowed from Slavs  —  The Slavic Elements of the Romanian Language  —  The Geographical Names of Slavic Origin  —  The Discrepancy Between the Geographical Names of Slavic Origin and the Slavic Elements of the Romanian Language  —  Hungarian Geographical (Place) Names  —  The Appearance of Parallel Hungarian and Romanian Place Names  —  German (Transylvanian Saxon) Place Names  —  Geographical Names in the Transylvanian Area of the Carpathian Basin in the 12th to 13th Centuries  —  The name of Transylvania

 

Appendices

    Notes (The notes have been moved to the corresponding chapters, V.K.)

    Selected Bibliography

    Name Index  —  Gazetteer  —  Subject Index

 

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