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The Rumanian Orthodox church and the west

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Eric Tappe*
Affiliation:
University of London, School of Slavonic and East European Studies

Extract

The title of this paper raises a problem at the very outset. What is meant by ‘the Rumanian Orthodox church’ when one is talking of a period before the notion of ‘Rumania’ had been conceived? In this paper it will be taken to mean the Orthodox church as it existed in the principalities of Wallachia, Moldavia and Transylvania from the fourteenth century and has continued in those territories to the present day.

A few words first about the prehistory of the Rumanian Orthodox church as thus defined. The Roman province of Dacia had been created by Trajan in AD 106, and the administration had been withdrawn south of the Danube by Aurelian in 271, after which the territories in question were controlled first by the Goths and then by a succession of other invaders for about ten centuries. During this millenium they remain for us in a darkness lit by very few rays. It is therefore not surprising that there is little evidence for church organisation north of the Danube during this period, especially when we remember that the Dacian lands ceased to belong to the empire half a century before Christianity became a tolerated religion. The first church building so far discovered in the lands north of the lower Danube is at Sucidava, a bridgehead held by the Romans after their withdrawal, destroyed by the Huns in 447, and refounded by Justinian in his first years as emperor. This basilica is apparently from Justinian’s time, and being in a bridgehead, may be presumed to have depended on a church organisation south of the Danube.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1976

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References

1 I[storia] B[isericii] R[omâne; manual pentru Institutele Teologice], 1 (Bucharest 2 1957) pp 99-100.

2 IBR, 1 pp 130-7.

3 The word ‘orthodox’ here refers to members of the Roman church, not the eastern.

3 Documente privind istoria României, Veacul XI, XII & XIII, C. Transilvania, 1 (Bucharest 1951) pp 403-4.

5 Iorga, N., Histoire des Roumains et de la romanité orientale, 3 (Bucharest 1937) p 137 Google Scholar.

6 IBR, 1, pp 163-7.

7 Ibid pp 147-50.

8 Ibid p 166.

9 Ibid pp 167-9.

10 Ibid p 226.

11 Ibid p 230.

12 Ibid pp 262-3.

13 Ibid p 379.

14 Deletant, D.J., ‘A Survey of Rumanian Presses and Printing in the Sixteenth Century’, [The] S[lavonic and] E[ast] E[uropean] R[eview], 53, no 131 (London, April 1975) p 163 Google Scholar.

15 Giurescu, C.C., Istoria Românilor, 2 (Bucharest 1943) pp 196-9Google Scholar.

16 IBR, 1, pp 371-4.

17 Tappe, E.D., Documents concerning Rumanian History 1427-1601 collected from British Archives (The Hague 1964) p 61 Google Scholar.

18 Ibid p 62.

19 IBR, 1, p 403.

20 IBR, 2 (1958), p 27.

21 Ibid p 22.

22 Ibid p 58.

23 Ibid p 97.

24 [M.] Păcurariu [Istoria bisericii ortodoxe române] (Sibiu 1972) p 204.

25 IBR, 2, p 150.

26 Ibid p 215.

27 Păcurariu, p 258. Slightly different figures are given in IBR, 2, p 227.

28 Ibid p 321.

29 Tappe, E.D., ‘Rumania and the Bible Society until the Crimean War’, SEER, 46, no 106 (January 1968) pp 91104 Google Scholar.

30 IBR, 2, p 544.

31 Report of the Conference at Bucarest from fune 1st to June 8th, 1935, SPCK (London 1936).

32 Beeson, Trevor, Discretion and Valour (London 1974) p 309 Google Scholar.

33 Quoted from Balan, N., Biserica şi viaţa (Sibiu 1947) in Păcurariu, pp 348-9Google Scholar.