- Ancient history of Transylvania
The Romans exploited the gold mines in the province extensively, building access roads and forts to protect them, like
Abrud . The region developed a strong infrastructure and economy, based on agriculture, cattle farming and mining. Colonists fromThracia ,Moesia , Macedonia,Gaul ,Syria , and other Roman provinces were brought in to settle the land, developing cities like Apulum (nowAlba Iulia ) and Napoca (nowCluj Napoca ) intomunicipium s and colonias.The Dacians rebelled frequently, with the biggest rebellion occurring at the death of Trajan.
Sarmatians andBur s were allowed to settle inside Dacia Trajana after repeated clashes with the Roman administration. During the3rd century increasing pressure from the free Dacians (Carpians ) andVisigoths forced the Romans to abandon exposed Dacia Trajana.In
271 , the Roman emperorAurelian abandoned Dacia Trajana and reorganised a new Dacia Aureliana inside former Moesia Superior. The abandonment of Dacia Trajana by the Romans is mentioned byEutropius in his BREVIARIVM LIBER NONVS.The province of Dacia, which
Trajan had formed beyond the Danube, he gave up, despairing, after allIllyricum andMoesia had been depopulated, of being able to retain it. The Roman citizens, removed from the town and lands ofDacia , he settled in the interior of Moesia, calling that Dacia which now divides the twoMoesiae , and which is on the right hand of the Danube as it runs to the sea, whereas Dacia was previously on the left.The first wave of the Great Migrations, (300 to 500 AD) brought the influence of migratory tribes, especially the
Germanic tribes . TheVisigoths established a kingdom north ofDanube and Transyilvania between 270-380. The region was known by Romans as Guthiuda and includes the region between Alutus (Olt) and Ister (Danube) too. It is unclear whether they used the term Kaukaland (land of the mountains) for Transylvania proper or the whole Carpathians. The (Vizi)Goths were unable to preserve the region's Roman era infrastructures. The goldmines of Transylvania were ruined and unused during the Early Middle Age.Ulfilas had carried (around 340) Homoean Arianism to the Goths living in Guthiuda with such success that the Visigoths and other Germanic tribes became staunchArians . When the Goths entered the Roman Empire (around 380) and founded successor-kingdoms, most had been Arian Christians.In
380 a new power reached Transylvania, theHuns . They drow back every Germanic people from theCarpathian Basin except theGepids . TheAlans ,Vandals ,Quads left the region toward theRoman Empire . The Huns extended their rule over Transylvania after 420AD. After the disintegration of Attila's empire, Transylvania was inhabited by the remnants of various Hunnic, and a Germanic tribe, theGepids . The Transyilvanain Gepids had a semiindependent status inside the Kingdom of Gepids, but this relative autonomy came to an end in the late 6th century.The rule of Gepids was crushed by a
Langobards andEurasian Avars attack in year 567 AD. In fact the Gepids were exterminated from the region. We know only about slight Gepid remnants (cemeteries) in theBanat region after 600. In Transyilvania we have no traces which indicate a Gepids continuity after 567.By 568, the Avars under the capable leadership of theirKagan , Bayan, established in the Carpathian Basin an empire that lasted for 250 years. During this 250 years theSlavs were allowed to settle inside Transylvania and they started to clear the Carpathian's virgin forests. The Avars meet their demise with the rise of Charlemagne's Frankish empire. After a fierce seven year war andcivil war between theKagan andYugurrus which lasted from 796-803 A.D., the Avars were defeated.The Transylvanian Avars were, subjugated by theBulgars under KhanKrum at the beginning of the9th century and Transylvania, along with easternPannonia , was incorporated into the First Bulgarian Empire.
thumb|left|Magyars in Transylvania (10-11th century) In 862, Moravian PrinceRatislav rebelled against his lord, hired Magyar troops to help him, and with their aid he won his independence. This is the first time when Magyar expedition troops entered the Carpathians Basin. After a devastating Bulgar and Pecheneg attack the Magyar tribes crossed the Carpathians and occupied the entire basin without significant resistance. According to the prime Gesta Ungarorum from the 11th century they entered Transylvania first, where Prince Almos was killed: "Almus in patria Erdelw occisus est, non enim potuit in Pannoniam introire". According to some archeological findigs nearTurda (Golds of Prince Berthold of Bavaria) Transylvanian Magyars also participated in several raids against the West,Italy , or the Balkans. Although the defeat in theBattle of Lech in955 stopped the Magyar raids against western Europe, the raids on the Balkan Peninsula continued for one more decade.The history of Transylvania during the early
Middle Ages is difficult to ascertain due to the scarcity of reliable written orarcheological evidence . There are two majorconflicting theories concerning whether or not the RomanizedDacian population (one of the ancestors of theRomanians ) continued to live in Transylvania after the withdrawal of the Romans, and therefore whether or not the Romanians were present in Transylvania at the time of the
Great Migrations, particularly at the time of the Magyar migration; see:Origin of Romanians . These conflicting hypotheses are often used to back competingnationalistic claims by Hungarian and Romanian chauvinists. ["The importance of historical myths for the ethnic consciousness of Romanians and ethnic Hungarians in Transylvania" by Greet Van de Vyver "Dialectical Anthropology" Volume 21, Numbers 3-4 / September, 1996 [http://www.springerlink.com/content/h1230737027586k2/ abstract] ]References
Further reading
*"History of Transylvania" by Béla Köpeczi Boulder, Colo. : Social Science Monographs ; New York : Distributed by Columbia University Press, 2001- 2002 ISBN 0880334797
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