Balcanica (Jan 2018)

What exactly did Romanian post-war nationalism mean?

  • Theodorescu Răzvan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/BALC1849183T
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2018, no. 49
pp. 183 – 188

Abstract

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In the last century nationalism as a spiritual element - according to the 1919 state­ment of the historian, archaeologist and philosopher Vasile Pârvan - was a blessed plant grown on Romanian soil during the ’48 revolution, the ’59 union under Prince Cuza, the ’77 war of independence and the preparation of such a national project as the Union with the Romanian Kingdom of several Romanian-speaking provinces dominated by two em­pires - the Austrian and the Russian - epitomized by Transylvania which came finally to the motherland on the 1st of December 1918, the same day when the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was born. In the nationalism project, the Union Transylvania was a political priority. But we must add immediately that in the events of 1914-1916 in the neighbourhood of Romania a symbol of the national struggle became what Nicolae Iorga, in a famous lecture of 1915, called “the heroic and martyr Serbia”.

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