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  2. Transylvanian Saxons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transylvanian_Saxons

    Lived since the High Middle Ages onwards in Transylvania as well as in other parts of contemporary Romania. Additionally, the Transylvanian Saxons are the eldest ethnic German group in non-native majority German-inhabited Central-Eastern Europe, alongside the Zipsers in Slovakia and Romania (who began to settle in present-day Slovakia starting in the 13th century).

  3. Villages with fortified churches in Transylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villages_with_fortified...

    Listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Villages with Fortified Churches in Transylvania are seven villages (six Saxon and one Székely) founded by the Transylvanian Saxons. They are dominated by fortified churches and characterized by a specific settlement pattern that has been preserved since the Late Middle Ages. [1]

  4. Deportation of Germans from Romania after World War II

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deportation_of_Germans...

    The first expellees unsuited for work were returned to Transylvania at the end of 1945. Between 1946 and 1947, about 5,100 Saxons were brought, by special transports for the sick, to Frankfurt an der Oder, a city then in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany. 3,076 of the deportees died while in the USSR, [5] three quarters of them being male ...

  5. House of Soterius von Sachsenheim - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Soterius_von...

    The Soterius von Sachsenheim is a Transylvanian Saxon noble family originating from the village Stein (present-day Dacia), in the former Saxon Repser Stuhl administrative division. [1] Among its members were politicians and bureaucrats in the Transylvanian state administration and also army officers, scholars, pastors and artists.

  6. Principality of Transylvania (1711–1867) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principality_of...

    The area around Sibiu (Hermannstadt) had been colonized by Transylvanian Saxons since medieval times; here the Landler had to settle in regions devastated during the Great Turkish War. The majority of the Transylvanian population was Romanian, many of them peasants working for Hungarian magnates under the precarious conditions of serfdom.

  7. History of Transylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Transylvania

    Transylvania is a historical region in central and northwestern Romania.It was under the rule of the Agathyrsi, part of the Dacian Kingdom (168 BC–106 AD), Roman Dacia (106–271), the Goths, the Hunnic Empire (4th–5th centuries), the Kingdom of the Gepids (5th–6th centuries), the Avar Khaganate (6th–9th centuries), the Slavs, and the 9th century First Bulgarian Empire.

  8. Bukovina Germans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bukovina_Germans

    A small, compact community of Transylvanian Saxons (German: Siebenbürger Sachsen) previously lived in the town of Suceava during the Middle Ages.. Ethnic Germans known as Transylvanian Saxons (who were mainly craftsmen and merchants stemming from present-day Luxembourg and Rhine-Moselle river area of Western Europe), had sparsely settled in the western mountainous regions of the Principality ...

  9. History of German settlement in Central and Eastern Europe

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_German...

    The fortress Ordensburg Marienburg in Malbork, founded in 1274, the world's largest brick castle and the Teutonic Order's headquarters on the river Nogat.. The medieval German Ostsiedlung (literally Settling eastwards), also known as the German eastward expansion or East colonization refers to the expansion of German culture, language, states, and settlements to vast regions of Northeastern ...