1st Edition

Wallachian Mobility and Settlement along the Carpathian Arc

236 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

236 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

236 Pages 11 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The story of Wallachian mobility and settlement is remarkably central to the human condition. At its core, it reflects a fundamental drive to enhance daily life by migrating to new territories. The Wallachian features not only shaped their own existence but also left a lasting impact on the regions they inhabited along the Carpathian Arc. Through their migration beginning roughly in the 14 th... Read more

Introduction: Current research, debates and controversies surrounding Wallachian mobility and settlement

Mihai Dragnea, Miloš Marek, and Grzegorz Jawor

 

Chapter 1

Theodore Skoutariotes’ Synopsis Chronike: a neglected source for the history of the Vlachs (12th-13th centuries)

Anna Kotłowska

Chapter 2

The Romanian Consuetudinary Law (Ius Valachicum). A Comparative Perspective and a Few Sources (14th-18th Centuries)

Ela Cosma

Chapter 3

Wallachian colonization and its traces in the toponymy of Slovakia (14th-18th centuries)

Miloš Marek

Chapter 4

Wallachian Colonization and its Impact on the Landscape: A Case Study of Central Slovakia in the Late Middle Ages and Early Modern Period

Oto Tomeček

Chapter 5

Speaking to the Morlachs: A discussion of the language, state agents and mechanisms involved in communicating with the Morlachs in 16th-century Venetian Dalmatia

Dana Caciur-Andreescu

Chapter 6

On the Heritage of Carpathian Settlers in Eastern Moravia: Early Modern Linguistic Borrowings into the Wallachian Dialect

Marta Šimečková and Vít Boček

Chapter 7

The Image of Highlanders in the Czech Republic: The Disputed Land and History of Moravian Wallachia (17th-18th centuries)

Petra Košťálová

Chapter 8

Economic activity of the hereditary subject classes in southeastern Moravia in the shadow of the military conflicts of the 17th and early 18th centuries

Petr Odehnal

Chapter 9

Historical Anoikonyms and Oikonyms in Relation to Wallachian Colonization of Halenkov from 17th to 19th centuries (Moravian Wallachia)

Ivana Spitzer Ostřanská

 

Biography

Mihai Dragnea, PhD, is the president of the Balkan History Association and Editor-in-Chief of Hiperboreea, the journal affiliated with the association and published by the Pennsylvania State University Press. Since December 2019, he is an associate researcher at the University of Southeastern Norway. He is a member of several public and private research units in Czechia, Poland, Serbia, UK, Romania, and editorial board member of journals in Croatia, Slovenia, Germany, Ukraine, and Romania. He is editor for the Peter Lang series: “South-East European History.” His interests include cultural, social, and political relations between Germans, Scandinavians and Slavs during the Middle Ages, early Slavic ethnicity and state formation, and identity and conflict in South-Eastern Europe.

Miloš Marek is a professor in the Department of History in the Faculty of Philosophy and Arts at Trnava University, Trnava, Slovakia, and a member of the Balkan History Association. He received his education at the same university and earned a PhD in Slovakian history. He specializes in history and medieval Latin, and from 2006, he has conducted regular scientific research in the Vatican Apostolic Archives. His research interests focus on the history of medieval settlement, medieval ethnic groups, church history and editing of medieval sources. He has published many articles, books, source editions and a comprehensive dictionary of medieval and modern Latin.

Grzegorz Jawor earned his History degree from Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin. He joined the School of History at UMCS as an assistant intern in 1984, obtaining his PhD in 1989 and advancing to Assistant Professor in 2000. He was conferred the title of Professor of the Humanities in 2014. Currently, he serves as the Director of the Department of Medieval Polish History and Economic History and as Associate Director of the School of History UMCS. Jawor specializes in medieval Polish history, particularly focusing on the rural landscape during the transition from the Middle Ages to modern times.

John Polemikos is a teacher at Harlem High School in Machesney Park, Illinois. He is an active member of the Balkan History Association, Rockford Historical Society and Southeast European Studies Association. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in History from Northern Illinois University and a Master of Arts in Teaching from Rockford University, focusing on teaching history to students with special needs. He recently published "When Greek Meets Greek: Foundations of the Rockford Greek Orthodox Parish of Sts. Constantine and Helen" in Nuggets of History 61/4 (2022):1–12.