Abstract

Aim. The Romanian Orthodox Church in Hungary and Yugoslavia encountered a series of shortcomings between the two world wars.
 Conclusion. Regardless of the political realities of the times, the Romanians coalesced around the Romanian Orthodox Church. That is why, not by chance, the great poet Mihai Eminescu identifies the Romanian Orthodox Church with the institution that preserved the Latin element near the Danube. The activity of the Romanian Orthodox Church in Hungary and Yugoslavia in the interwar period was mainly performed by priests.

Highlights

  • The Romanian Orthodox Church and the Unity as a Nation in Central Europe and the Balkan Peninsula. 1700-191

  • Elena Lelea, a scholar, admits that the Romanian cultural dimension is richer here than in Muntenia (Lelea, 2005, p. 3). These cultural elements were carefully preserved by the Romanian spirituality

  • Today, as in the interwar period, Romania is the only country in Europe surrounded by fellow countrymen who are called Romanians, Vlachs, Moldavians, Aromanians, Macedonians and are, in compact groups, from countries such as: the Russian Federation, the Republic of Moldova, Ukraine, Hungary, Slovakia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece and the former Yugoslavia

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Summary

Introduction

The Romanian Orthodox Church and the Unity as a Nation in Central Europe and the Balkan Peninsula. 1700-191. Romanians from Serbian and Hungarian territories considered the Romanian Orthodox Church one of the most important institutions, which contributed signiÞcantly to the preservation of national identity Through the ministries of the Romanian churches in Yugoslavia and Hungary, the Romanian language has been cultivated and preserved unaltered. These cultural elements were carefully preserved by the Romanian spirituality (the Romanian Orthodox Church).

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