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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Transylvania colony

Lester, William Stewart. January 1935 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Kentucky, 1934. / Without thesis note. Bibliography: p. 282-288.
2

The vampires of Transylvania : ethnic accommodation and legal pluralism

Crai, Eugen. January 1999 (has links)
This thesis presents a theoretical discussion of how legal pluralism and the idea of parallel systems of justice can address issues of ethnic accommodation. / It is divided into four chapters: (I) an introduction why Transylvania has been selected as a site of analysis; (II) a brief presentation of the ethno-history of Transylvania; (III) an analysis of law focusing on the possibility of applying parallel legal systems, in contemporary states, taking as a case study how Romania might deal with Transylvania; (IV) finding conclusions between utopia and reality. / The evolution of the ethnic composition of Transylvania over the centuries is used to illustrate the complexity of the legal and political issues that must be addressed. Several questions of legal theory are then addressed. When does a norm become legal? What is the relationship between Law and state institutions or the relationship between Law and society? Is Law a singular or a pluralist phenomenon? How is Law culturally, historically or politically determined? How can ethnicity or cultural membership be defined in legal terms? / The two main justifications for accommodating ethnic minorities through parallel legal systems are then examined: the argument based on the collective rights of national groups; and the argument based on protecting the cultural continuity of a national group. The thesis suggests that thinking about parallel legal system must be grounded in the specific historical, political, ethnic, and legal context of a region. / The goal of "The Vampires of Transylvania" is to challenge contemporary legal thinking rather than to provide an absolute final conclusion on the topic of parallel legal systems. Final answers in this field are possible only after legal mythology and ethno-cultural taboos have both been demolished.
3

Material desires cultural production, post-socialist transformations, and heritage tourism in a Transylvanian town /

Câmpeanu, Claudia Nicoleta, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
4

The vampires of Transylvania : ethnic accommodation and legal pluralism

Crai, Eugen. January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
5

The politics of identity Transylvanian Saxons in socialist Romania : a dissertation /

McArthur, Marilyn. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Massachusetts, 1981. / Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references.
6

Les minorités en Transylvanie ...

Boteni, Viorica. January 1938 (has links)
Thesis--Paris, 1938. / Includes bibliographical references.
7

Emigrări româneşti din Transilvania în secolele XIII-XX (Cercetări de demografie istorică).

Meteș, Ștefan. January 1971 (has links)
Summary in French, German, and Russian. / Includes bibliographical references.
8

Forts, fields and towns : communities in northwest Transylvania from the first century BC to the fifth century AD

Wanner, Robert January 2010 (has links)
This thesis examines the social landscape of Northwest Transylvania in the Late Iron Age, Roman and post-Roman periods. This region consists of the modern Romanian counties of Cluj and Sălaj and roughly encompasses the Roman province of Dacia Porolissensis and part of Free Dacia. Roman Dacia represents an extraordinary case of Roman imperial occupation: it was one of the last major territories to be conquered and one of the first to be released. Special emphasis is placed on how Roman occupation as a phenomenon transformed the landscape; but unlike previous research the military is neither the primary focus of analysis nor the only agent of change. In the years after the Trajanic conquest of Dacia in AD 106, immigrants swarmed into the new province from all over the Empire to colonise the land which written sources indicate was severely depopulated. It was this migration as a whole that led to the destabilisation of existing Iron Age territorial units and radical transformations of settlement patterns, burial, ritual and land-use. To analyse these issues, archaeological sites and find spots of material dating to between the first century BC and the fifth century AD within the study area were entered into a database along with spatial coordinates. These data were then integrated into a Geographic Information System to facilitate geospatial analyses. These analyses indicated stark discontinuity between the Late Iron Age and Roman period in all forms of settlement and strong regional variation in every period. From the annihilation of the native communities, new ones with distinct identities emerged which found resonance after the departure of the Romans in the late third century.
9

Der erste Feldzug des Gabriel Bethlen, Fürsten von Siebenbürgen, gegen Kaiser Ferdinand den Zweiten, König von Ungarn, bis zum Waffenstillstand von Pressburg im December 1619 ...

Stamm, Alfred. January 1894 (has links)
Inaug.-Diss.--Jena. / Cover title. "Quellenschriften": 2d prelim. leaf.
10

Material desires : cultural production, post-socialist transformations, and heritage tourism in a Transylvanian town / Cultural production, post-socialist transformations, and heritage tourism in a Transylvanian town

Câmpeanu, Claudia Nicoleta, 1976- 29 August 2008 (has links)
This dissertation explores the transformation of a small town in South East Transylvania, Sighisoara, historically defined through a strong German presence. Despite the small number of Germans remaining in the region after the massive migrations of the last decades, historical German privilege (made visible through and materialized in the long-lasting architecture) is reformulated and re-configured in the present precisely through processes connected to valuing and producing this built landscape as historical heritage. Claims for stakes in the development of the area become entangled with an interest in heritage preservation publicly performed by a diverse set of (mostly foreign) actors. By analyzing a failed development project, the gentrification of the historical citadel, transformations in public spaces, and NGO and historical preservation funding, I argue that Germanness offers a discursive space in which local desires for a developed West are able to articulate, productively, with Western nostalgias for a developmental do-over, as well as with fears for an endangered European heritage at the 'margins' of Western civilization. This dissertation contributes to the anthropology of post-socialist transformations in Eastern Europe by drawing attention to the relationship between ethnicity and participation in a global capitalism. It shows how a continuous, living engagement with the "outside," the "West," with consumer capitalism has been part of local quotidian subjectivities and understandings of the world, all mediated by desire and access to mobility and possibility. Understandings of people's current relationship with development, consumption, the idea and reality of capitalism cannot be disentangled from these continuities, and I argue for locating analysis precisely in these relationships. This dissertation also brings a critical native voice to the body of English language Eastern European anthropology. At the same time, it attempts to both build on and disrupt historical approaches to the region by forging analytical and substantive continuities with discipline-wide approaches to ethnicity, development, and heritage tourism. / text

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