What does Jow Forums know about Romania?
What does Jow Forums know about Romania?
fastest internet in the world
Gypsies
Best place to adopt a kid
my ancestors
Gypsy
Copper
They are always angry
half of their territory doesn't belong to them
but......why?
all the wiring gypsies steal had to go somewhere
It's where Corbeelu Corblangoblango (or however your supposed to spell it) comes from
the big internet companies couldn't cuck us like the rest of the world
That also applies to Russia but I don’t see you complaining
Transylvania is fair game, it has always been inhabited by both hungarians and romanians
>The Romanian policy in cultural affairs was quite different. Where the Hungarian governments had acted consistently and aggressively to suppress minority culture, and Romanian culture especially, Bucharest adopted a turn-the-other-cheek policy by granting minorities the rights and social participation they themselves had been denied. Thus, a minority school system was established in which Hungarians and Germans were constrained to attend Romanian schools only where their population was too small to justify separate schools. Broad educational rights were supplemented with the freedom to speak, publish, or perform in any language. Although it would be foolish to suggest that these laws were applied with 100% uniformity and lack of prejudice, it's also notable that Hungarians took for granted a freedom and cultural independence that they themselves had never allowed Romanians.
>Minorities other than Hungarians and Germans were less well treated, in part because of their smaller numbers, and because they had no major European power to come to their support. The status of Jews was of special concern. Although they comprised only 4% of interwar Romania's population, they were 15-20% of the eastern part of the country, and almost 50% of many larger towns including the provincial capitals of Iasi and Chisinau. Nationally, Jews owned 20% of factories, and about the same percentage of traders. Nearly 3/4ths of artisans--watchmakers, bookbinders, jewelers, and tinsmiths, were Jews, and significantly, most of the small moneylenders and tavernkeepers of the eastern countryside were Jews. Virtually all Romanian Jews had fled Ukraine during the pogroms and tended to settle in compact groups. Very few knew more than a handful of Romanian words and almost none had any knowledge of or interest in Romanian history or culture. This was broadly similar to Polish Jewry, although the latter at least contained a fair number of individuals who could speak Polish and function in both societies. Given these facts about Romanian Jewry, it is no surprise that interwar Romania was a smoldering hotbed of anti-Semitism. It was an important, although by no means the only factor in the rise of Romanian fascism.
>Education in interwar Romania was a microcosm of society as a whole. The educational system of Greater Romania developed from a weak and uneven base. It was brilliant because the Romanian elite had a centuries old tradition of sending their sons to the finest Western European universities, consequently Romania's leaders were very much in the center of European intellectual life. But the inheritance was also dismal because the educated elite comprised a tiny minority. The huge peasant population were near-totally unaffected by any sort of training. Transylvania was in a much better situation as the centuries-long struggle for independence had brought about widespread literacy, although Hungarian discrimination sometimes made access to education difficult, it was achieved by a surprisingly high number. Bessarabia lay on the other extreme. The nearly worthless tsarist educational system, combined with the province's physical distance from Russia's major population centers, left its peasants in an isolated backwardness only broken either by the direct or indirect consequences of war.
>Official figures at the start of the interwar period claimed that 65% of the population was literate, in reality it must have been much lower. Although the law mandated four years of schooling, it is estimated that less than three quarters of children actually went. Like most European educational system, Romanian schooling was designed to make the quick and early distinction between those who would advance further and those who would not. A special preparatory school for secondary education took children at the age of 7 (normally in their second year of school). Limited resources probably made this the best option, but it also created a barrier that prevented the mass of Romanian peasants from escaping the cycle of poverty. A mere 6% of Romanian children went on to continue their education.
>The secondary schools in Romania were modeled on the fashionable French pattern. The emphasis was on liberal arts, the curricula rigid and inflexible, and those who managed to pass and earn a degree were very well educated. A high school degree in Romania was more comparable to a college degree in the United States. Higher education was also of good quality. There were four universities, two polytechnic institutes, and several small, specialist institutions. The number of Romanian students in higher education proportionate to the total population was greater than that of Czechoslovakia and about comparable to Germany. Unfortunately, the usual Eastern European situation cropped up where most students preferred to study abstract subjects such as art, philosophy, and religion rather than more practical ones such as medicine or engineering. Romania's intellectual life flourished even as its society crumbed.
We host NSA servers.
people used to spell it "Rumania" for whatever reason
uummmm sweite, Siebenbürgen ist DEUTSCH!
Romania cigani
kek
somehow they speak a romance language that looks nothing like a romance language.
Transylvania was a mostly independent state for long, despite appearing as part of the Hungarian Kingdom on most maps. It even spawned several revolutions against its neighbours including the Hungarian Crown, the Habsburgs, the occupier Ottoman too. Budapest had Sharia Law at one time, the ""shithole"" I live in didn't.
Most cities were built by Saxons, Schwab, local Hungarians; the Romanians weren't allowed to live in them. They were the forced disposable labour class. It was like the cast system of India.
And Vlad Țepeş lived in Wallachia, spoke Hungarian too since he was related to the Hungarian ruler Corvinus Mátyás Király, the only one with this name.
i live in it!!!
age of consent is 14 or 15 last time i checked. all penetrative sexual acts are allowed after that.
you're legally allowed to receive blowjobs from 13yo's as well and 13yo's are also legally allowed to give you blowjobs.
Hmm
Bazat si rosupastilat?
Die Sachsen sind luxemburgisch, mein Lieber. Die Schwaben kommen aus Baden, sie sprechen den bayerischen Dialekt.
>the Romanians weren't allowed to live in them. They were the forced disposable labour class. It was like the cast system of India.
yikes
În Ungaria e 12 la futut dacă n-ai 18. Și 14 la sex dacă ai peste 18. La 16 mama ia custodia copiilor în ambele țări, diferența e numai că în România se poate mărita la 16 când în Ungaria numai la 18.
Min csodálkozol? Kellett volna tanuljad te is. Nem propaganda.
It's a relatively primitive Romance language that retains features of Latin most other languages in the family have lost.
>let me tell you about your country
It's a Latin based language full with Slavic and Turkish words, Romanians used to write in Cyrillic even up until the end of the 19th century. Lots of pronunciation was changed too.
>Let me tell you about your country
If only I had a dime for every time someone on Jow Forums did that with my country...
>Romanians used to write in Cyrillic
and polish use Latin script doens't mean they are romance
Cute girls
Well maybe you should leave Jow Forums too. It's time.
>I found a semantic mistake
Good for you. Reddit awaits.
All of it seem to have moved here.
Bryndza, Valaška and a lot of other shepherding traditions we pride ourselves in are actually Romanian in origin but dont tell anyone.
All hail illegal immigrant vegetable pickers.
retarded macaco
>the Romanians weren't allowed to live in them.
Cities in whole of Europe had privileges. They could deny anybody to settle in them. Not just Romanians.
>They were the forced disposable labour class.
Just like 95% of the population who lived from plowing the land and herding the sheep?
>It was like the cast system of India.
Serfdom is now class system? ok. Laci te kibaszott retardált majom.
>Romanian
Not romanian but vlahic, there are vlachs in Greece too (and they too have some dances that are vlahic but say they are Greek)
Vlach shepherds spread even to Poland
Hookers
When I was studying in Germany I met an intelligent qt Romanian girl
The hookers are all in western Europe