Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The first professor of Romanian language and literature in West Germany; Vlad Mugur (1927–2001), theater director; Dan Petrescu (1953–2021), Romanian businessman and billionaire, one of the richest people in Romania at the time, stayed in West Germany for around a decade and had German citizenship; Ion N. Petrovici, neurologist
While an ancient Germanic presence on the territory of present-day Romania can be traced back to late antiquity and is represented by such migratory peoples as the Buri, Vandals, Goths (more specifically Visigoths), or the Gepids, the first waves of ethnic Germans on the territory of modern Romania came during the High Middle Ages, firstly to Transylvania (then part of the Kingdom of Hungary ...
An entire German army came under Romanian command in May 1944, when it became part of Romanian general Petre Dumitrescu's Armeegruppe. For the first time in the war, German commanders came under the actual (rather than nominal) command of their foreign allies. This Romanian-led army group had 24 divisions of which 17 were German. [5] [6]
Illustration from 'Die Gartenlaube' (1884) depicting a group of Transylvanian Saxons during the Middle Ages. The Transylvanian Saxons, a group of the German diaspora which started to settle in Transylvania, present-day Romania, since the high medieval Ostsiedlung, have a regional culture which can be regarded as being both part of the broader German culture as well as the Romanian culture.
in Romanian and English Național (7plus) National: tabloid: Nine O'Clock – generic: in English Oglinda: The Mirror: generic: Ropublica: Ropublica: Civic journalism: Romanian, English România liberă: Free Romania: generic: Ziarul: The Newspaper: generic: dormant Ziarul Financiar: The Financial Newspaper: financial: in Romanian and English ...
Wagner was a member of one of Romania's German minorities, called Banat Swabians, like his wife, Herta Müller [1] He studied German and Romanian literature at Timișoara University. He then worked as a German language school teacher and as a journalist, and published poetry and short stories in German.
The Evangelical Church of the Augsburg Confession in Romania (German: Evangelische Kirche A.B. [Augsburgischen Bekenntnisses] in Rumänien, Romanian: Biserica Evanghelică de Confesiune Augustană în România) is a German-speaking Lutheran church in Romania, mainly based in Transylvania. As a Lutheran church, it adheres to the Augsburg Confession.
The Union for Aromanian Language and Culture was the first Aromanian cultural organization to adopt a uniquely Aromanian identity and not a foreign one such as Greek or Romanian. [2] It promotes the use of armîn as an ethnonym (name given to an ethnic group) to stress the separate identity of the Aromanians from the related Romanians. [ 3 ]