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APPENDIX

Churches of the Árpádian Age

in East-Hungary

Assembled by János Gyurkó

The following documentation was written independently from Árpád Kosztin's work; it nevertheless supports his statements.

The following Appendix contains the list of the Hungarian Medieval (10th-13th Century) Churches located in the territories annexed by Rumania in 1920. We do not know any early Christian (Roman or Germanic) cultic places from the era before the Árpád's conquest of Hungary, because these places vanished without leaving a trace behind, in the storms of the Great Migrations.

The conversion of Hungarians to Christianity started right in Transylvania in the 10th Century. The first bishop of Hungary, Hierotheos - who had been brought to Transylvania from Constantinople by Gyula, - was working there. The Greek-Orthodox Catholicism did not take root in Hungary. The orthodox Church lost most of its Hungarian followers by the end of the 13th Century.

Géza, the ruling prince called Western missionaries to the country in 972. The conversion work widened under the rule of his son, Saint Stephen. The first Hungarian king ordered "...every ten village to build a church..." (decem ville ecclesiam edificent)

Most of the churches, being built after the enactment of the law, were made out of wood or other not durable material, and long since disappeared. This explains the low number of the relics from the 10th-11th centuries. Not only the village churches of lesser importance, but also several well-known, important buildings were made of perishable materials. The Benedictine Abbacy of Szentjobb (Sâniob), where Saint Stephen's right hand was protected from 1083 until the 15th Century, was still a wood building in the 11th century.

At the end of the Árpádian Age in Hungary, excluding Croatia and Slavonia, there were 10,000 - 11, 000 villages. Two thirds of them had a church. It is the peculiarity of the era in question, that sculpture and painting did not yet exist independently from architecture. That is why the whole spatial art can be discovered by studying the historic sacred buildings. The border areas of Hungary are very important in the history of art. Under the Turkish rule, the relics of the Medieval culture almost totally vanished in Central Hungary, but the remnants of historical centres can still be found in upper Northern Hungary (presently in Slovakia), Transylvania, and in the western border zone where the scale of devastation was much smaller. The territories detached from Hungary happen to be the richest in ancient buildings, ruins and relics. Since the loss of the territories in the Trianon Peace Treaty in 1920, Hungarian medieval research has been struggling with outrageous artificial obstacles.

Hungarian historians are often forced to discover the truth behind the unscientific phantasmagorias of the neighboring countries' historians, since they usually do not have the opportunity of local excavations. The best example was the Jesus Chapel at Székelyudvarhely. M. Beldie, Rumanian historian, found a coin of Ferdinand I beside a basement wall. On the basis of this find, she stated in a paper that the building originated from the 16th Century. The chapel was a small temple in Gyárosfalva, a village that no longer exists. In the 16th Century this settlement was already in its declining period, and the tax list of 1567 found only two(!) households capable of paying tax. It is unimaginable that such a weak, disintegrating community would have undertaken temple building. Moreover, such quatrefoil plan chapels are known from the 12th-13th centuries, - that in Székely-udvarhely would be the only one from the 16th century.

In the following list only those relics are listed, from which there is some kind of positive material (we can call it physical), architectual data. Churches mentioned only in documents or contemporary written sources, are left out of the catalogue, because they would have enlarged the size of the book without providing significant data for the history of architecture. Like any other collection, this cannot be complete and perfect either. Since a large part of the subject matter was attained from the literature, it should be augmented with local research.

The examination of the village churches often bring surprising results. The fact that a building that originated from the 19th century contains Medieval parts comes to light only at the time when the covering plaster is removed. This is probably true also in the case of those Transylvanian churches which are considered to have been built in modern times. Systematical protection of monuments and historical architectural excavations have not existed in Rumania since 1977. New findings and observations, being discovered during renovation of local churches, do not get published in the technical journals. The number of discovered or identified Medieval Transylvanian churches would significantly grow if systematic research could be carried out.

Papal tithe collectors rambled all over Hungary between 1332 and 1337. They collected taxes to provide enough money to restart the Crusades to the Holy Land. From their surviving accounts, it can be concluded that they found approximately 1,000 parishes in Eastern Hungary. This high number indicates that the Eastern part of the country was rebuilt during the couple of decades following the Tatar attacks. Rumanian historiography has misinterpreted also these data. In his work titled Ce este Transilvania?(What is Transylvania?) - in the Hungarian translation Mit jelent Erdély? (1984), Stefan Pascu, academician, wrote on the basis of the Papal tithe collector's list, that in the 13th century two thirds of Eastern-Hungary's population had already been Rumanian.

The author accepted that the places, listed by the tithe collectors with Roman-Catholic parishes, had been populated mainly by Hungarians and Germans. He assumed, however, that only Rumanian Orthodox population lived in every other village. The basis of this distorsion was that Pascu did not pay attention to the outparishes, being on the lowest level of the Church organization which did not have a priest. The organization on the lowest level of the Church was the same as today. Thus, almost every parish had one or two out-parishes belonging to it, where, in many cases, also a church existed. At the end of the Árpádian Age (1301), approx-imately 2,000 churches existed on the territories in question. Since the devastations caused by the Turks in central Hungary were much more severe than those in Transylvania, the ratio of the surviving and known relics should be higher in Transylvania than in other parts of the country - so far it is, however, even lower.

Witnesses of the Hungarian history in Transylvania remain silent. A lot of them can be silenced forever. Academician Pascu's primitive confabulation can be disproved by simple counting the listed relics in the Appendix.

70% of the early churches in the observed territories are Hungarian, while 28% German and 2% are Rumanian artworks. Several relics of the Hungarian population survived from the conversion period (for example Csanád.) The German immigration started in the middle of the 12th century, while Rumanians did not immigrate to Transylvania until the beginning of the 13th century, as proven also by our documentation. No Orthodox Rumanian Church built before the 13th century exists - and never existed - on the territory of today's Rumania.

Daco-Roman-Rumanian Continuity, the "two-thousand -year-old dream" vanishes in the daylight of undeniable facts.

CHURCHES OF FORMER EASTERN HUNGARY

Hungarian name

Rumanian name

Built in

Abafája

Apalina

13th century

Abrudbánya

Abrud

13th century

Ákos

Aca_

13th century

Albis

Albi_

13th century

Alcina

Al_ina

12th century

Algyógy

Geoagiu de Jos

13th century

Almakerék

Malicrav

13th century

Alvinc

Vin_u de Jos

13th century

Aranyosgerend

Luncani

13th century

Aranyospolyán

Poiana

13-15th

Árkos*

Arcu_

13th century

Asszonyfalva

Axente Sever

13-15th

Baca*

Ba_a

12-13th

Bádok

B_de_ti

13th century

Bálványosváralja

Ungura_

13th century

Bályok

Balc

13th century

Bánffyhunyad

Huedin

13th century

Bányabükk

Vâlcele

13th century

Barcarozsnyó-Vár

Râ_nov

12th century

Barcaszentpéter *

Sîmpetru

13th century

Belényesszentmiklós

Sânnicolau

13th century

Beszterce

Bistri_a

13th century

Bibarcfalva

Bibor_eni

13th century

Bihar

Biharia

13th century

Bihardiószeg

Diosig

12th century

Bodonkút

Vechea

12th century

Bögöz

Mugeni

13-14th

Bokajalfalu

B_c_in_i

13th century

Bonchida

Bon_ida

13-18th

Borbánd

B_r_bant

13th century

(*): demolished

Hungarian name

Rumanian name

Built in:

Borosjen_

Ineu

12th century

Boroskrakkó

Cric_u

13th century

Botháza

Boteni

13th century

Brassó-Cenk

Bra_ov-Tâmpa

12th century

Brassó-Szt. Bertalan

Bra_ov

13th century

Brulya

Bruiu

13th century

Cege

_aga

13th century

Csernáton-Szentkert

Cernat

12-13th century

Csicsókeresztúr

Criste_tii

13-15th century

Csíkdelne

Delni_a

13-15th century

Csíkrákos

Racu

13th century

Csíkszentdomokos

Sândominic

13th century

Csíkszentkirály

Sâncr_inei

13th century

Csíkszereda-SomlyóMiercurea Ciuc

13th century


Csomak_rös

Chiuru_

13th century

Csomaköz

Ciume_ti

13th century

Dálnok

Dalnic

13-16th

Dés-Óvár

Dej

13th century

Déva*

Deva

13th century

Doborka

Dobârca

13th century

Dolmány

Daia

13th century

Domokos

D_m_cu_eni

13th century

Egeres

Aghire_u

13th century

Egres

Igri_

12th century

Egrest_

Agri_teu

13th century

Érábrány

Abram

13th century

Erd_f_le-Dobópuszta

Filia

13th century

Erked

Archita

13-14th

Feketehalom

Codlea

13-16th

Felek

Avrig

13th century

Felmér

Felmer

13th century

Fels_boldogfalva

Feliceni

13th century

Fels_tök

Tiocul de Sus

13th century

Firtosváralja-Vár

Firto_u

13th century

Földvár

Feldioara

13-14th

Fugyivásárhely

O_orhei

13th century

Garat

Dacia

13th century

Gelence

Ghelin_a

13-15th

Gidófalva

Ghidfal_u

14th century

Gogánváralja

Goganvarolea

13-15th

Guraszáda

Gurasada

13th century

Gyergyószentmiklós

Gheorgheni

13th

Gyergyóalfalu

Joseni

13-18th

Gyulafehérvár

Alba Iulia

11th century

Gyulafehérvár

Alba Iulia

11-13th

(*): demolished

Hungarian name

Rumanian name

Built in

Hajó

Haieu

13th century

Halmágy

Halmeag

13th century

Harcó

H_r__u

13th century

Harina

Herina

13th century

Hegyközszentimre

Sântimreu

12th century

Hegyközújlak

Uileacu de Munte

13-18th

Holcmány

Hosman

13-18th

Höltövény

Halchiu

13-19th

Homoród

Homorod

11-18th

Homorodalmás

Mere_ti

13th century

Homoróddaróc

Drau_eni

13th century

Homoródjánosfalva

Ione_ti

13-14th

Homorodszentmárton*

Martini_

13th

Ikafalva

Icafal_u

13th century

Jára-Alsójára

Iara

13th century

Kaca

Ca_a

13-15th

Kajántó

Chinteni

13th century

Kakasfalva

Hamba

13-16th

Kalotadámos

Domo_u

13-14th

Kaplony

C_pleni

12-19th

Káposztásszentmiklós

Nicole_ti

13th

Karacsonyfalva

Cr_ciunel

13th century

Kecsed

Aluni_

13-15th

Kerc

Câr_a

13th century

Keresztényfalva

Cristian

13-15th

Kereszténysziget

Cristian

13th century

Ketesd

Teti_u

13-15th

Kézdiszentlélek-Perk_

Sânzieni

13th century

Kide

Chidea

13th century

Kiscs_r

_ura Mica

13-15th

Kisdisznód

Cisn_dioara

13th century

Kisenyed

Sângatin

13th century

Kiskászon

Casinu Mic

13th century

Kispeleske*

Peli_or

13th century

Kispetri

Petrincel

13th century

(*): demolished

 


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