Regat Germans

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Regat Germans or Altreich Germans are German-speaking people who live in the eastern and southern parts of Romania . In this context, “ Regat ” or “ Altreich ” refers to the Kingdom of Romania before the First World War . This area includes the Moldau (Rum. Moldova ), the Dobrudscha ( Dobrogea ) and Wallachia .

According to the 1930 census, 12,581 Germans lived in the Romanian Altreich in the Dobrudscha ( Dobrudschadeutsche ) and a further 32,366 Germans in Wallachia (including 14,200 in Bucharest ) and in western Moldova.

The political representation of the Regat Germans and the other German-speaking groups in today's Romania is the Democratic Forum of Germans in Romania ( DFDR ).

literature

  • Archive of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Bucharest, the collection of the magazines "Bucharest Catholic Sunday Gazette", (1913–1942) and "Jugendfreund"
  • Archive of the Evangelical Parish in Bucharest, “Bucharest Municipality Gazette” (1904), E. Heift, organ of the Evangelical Synodal Association on the Lower Danube
  • Catholic Germanship in Romania. Published by the Reich Association for Catholic Germans Abroad e. V., Gilde Verlag GmbH, Cologne 1933
  • Central archive of the Evangelical Church AB in Romania of the culture and meeting center "Friedrich Teutsch", Hermannstadt, Abtl. Parishes, parishes in the Altreich
  • Emil Fischer: The cultural work of Germans in Romania. Sibiu 1911
  • Hans Petri: From five decades. History of the German Evangelical Congregation Turn-Severin 1861–911. Tip. EJ Knoll, Turnu - Severin, 1911 in the Evangelisches Zentralarchiv in Berlin (ZA 5091/107), signature: EZA Bibl. 81/154 in “Echo of the Lecture Series”, number 12/2007, Reschitz 2007
  • Hans Petri: History of the Evangelical Community in Bucharest. (= Contributions to the knowledge of Germanness in Romania, 2), Verlag S. Hirzel, Leipzig 1939
  • The collection of newspapers "Bukarester Tagblatt", "Neuer Bucharester Zeitung", "Bukarester Deutsche Zeitung" (1844), "Bukarester Allgemeine Zeitung" (1864), "Turn - Severiner Anzeiger" (1903 by Franz Teigl), "Bukarester Morgenblatt" (1900), “Bucharest Morning Post” (1905), in the library of the Romanian Academy
  • "Germanii din Dobrogea, Istoria si Civilizația lor", (The Germans in Dobruja, their history and civilization, Romanian), Hanns Seidel Foundation, Bucharest, 2006
  • “From the German School System in Bucharest” in the German Daily Mail from March 14, 1920
  • "Cronica Congregatiei Fratilor Scolilor Crestine", traducere din germana de Barbu Violeta, in revista Verbum, no. 7, anii VI-VII, Bucuresti, 1996

Web links

swell

  1. http://www.isha-international.org/carnival/revista_erasmus/nr13_2002.pdf ( Memento from January 27, 2007 in the Internet Archive )