Transylvania - The Roots of Ethnic Conflict
Table of contents
Cover
Introduction
Contributors
A Chronology of Transylvanian History [I.]
[II.]
[III.]
PART ONE: The Dawn of National Consciousness
1. The Multiethnic Character of the Hungarian Kingdom in the Later Middle Ages [I.]
[II.]
2. Reformation Literature and the National Consciousness of Transylvanian Hungarians, Saxons, and Rumanians
3. The Transylvanian Concept of Liberty and Its Impact on the Kingdom of Hungary in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
PART TWO: Nationalism and the Polarization of National Destinies
1. The Horea-Closca Revolt of 1784-85: Some Observations
2. The Rumanian-Hungarian Confrontation, 1840-70
3. The Revolution of 1848--49 in Transylvania and the Polarization of National Destinies
4. From Horea-Closca to 1867: Some Observations [I.]
[II.]
5. National Oppression or Social Oppression? The Nature of Hungarian-Rumanian Relations in Transylvania
PART THREE: Transylvania in International Relations
1. The Transylvanian Question in War and Revolution [I.]
[II.]
2.The Great Powers and the Fate of Transylvania Between the Two World Wars
3. From the Second Vienna Award to Paris: Transylvania and Hungarian-Rumanian Relations During World War II [I.]
[II.]
[III.]
PART FOUR: Contemporary Rumanian Policies in Transylvania
1. Ideology and Political Culture in Rumania: The Daco-Roman Theory and the "Place of Minorities [I.]
[II.]
2.Education and National Minorities in Contemporary Rumania [I.]
[II.]
3. The Status of Minority Rights in Transylvania: International Legal Expectations and Rumanian Realities [I.]
[II.]
Concluding Comments
Appendices
A. Rumanian, Hungarian, and German Geographic and Historic Place Names in Transylvania [I.]
[II.]
[III.]
B. The Population of Rumania and Transylvania According to Nationality
C. Notes and Aide-Memoires of the Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, April 27, May 20, June 11, and July 15, 1946 [I.]
[II.]
[III.]
[VI.]
D. Statement by Paul Auer
Notes
Transylvania - The Roots of Ethnic Conflict