Category
page 1Culture of Transylvania

Endre Ady
Hungarian poet (1877–1919)
The Castle From Carpathians
1892 novel by Jules Verne
historical coat of arms of Transylvania
coat of arms
Transylvanian School
organization

Transylvania
2006 film by Tony Gatlif
Traian Herseni
Romanian sociologist, historian and psychologist (1907-1980)
Octavian Smigelschi
Transylvanian painter (1866–1912)
Păcală
Păcală (Romanian, from a păcăli, "to dupe"; Romanian Cyrillic: Пъкалъ; sometimes rendered Pâcală or Pîcală) is a fictional character in Romanian folklore, literature and humor. Primarily associated with Transylvania and Oltenia, he is depicted as a native of Vaideeni, located in an area of contact between those two regions. An irreverent young man, seemingly a peasant, he reserves contempt and irony for the village authorities (whether Orthodox priest, boyar or judge), but often plays the fool, or displays an erratic and criminal behavior that scholars attribute to the eclecticism of sources w
Asociația Transilvană pentru Literatura Română și Cultura Poporului Român
organization based in Romania
Transylvanian Museum
museum in Gundelsheim
Transylvanian Saxon University
Biertan Donarium
4th-century Christian votive object found in Romania
Transylvanian Romanian
group of dialects of Romanian
Mitică
thumb|320px|The "real-life Mitică", in a 1909 cartoon by Ion Theodorescu-Sion: his derelict home vs. his fashionable lifestyle
Mitică () is a fictional character who appears in several sketch stories by Romanian writer Ion Luca Caragiale. The character's name is a common hypocoristic form of Dumitru or Dimitrie (Romanian for Demetrius). He is one of the best-known figures in Caragiale's 1901 collection Momente și schițe, as well as in Romanian humor at large. Mitică is a male resident of Bucharest whose background and status are not always clear, generally seen as an allegory of the average Bu
Siebenbürgenlied
Siebenbürgenlied ''(literally Transylvania song or Transylvania's song)'' is a regional anthem composed by Johann Lukas Hedwig with lyrics by Maximilian Leopold Moltke originally as a regional anthem for the Transylvanian Saxons. The anthem has been translated into both Hungarian by Ritoók János and Romanian by Dan Dănilă, thus becoming an unofficial anthem for Transylvania as a whole.
Jewish Party
political party in Romania
Transylvania State Philharmonic Orchestra
Vasile Stroescu
Moldovan politician (1845-1926)
National Museum of Transylvanian History
museum in Cluj-Napoca, Romania