when I last visited this village it was in 1978. As one can imagine, it was more difficult then. The village was at the end of an axel-breaking dirt road. The main population was German, with Romanian-speakers at one end of town (with their own church), and Roma living at end of town. I knocked on the door of one of the houses to get the key to the church. The whole complex was astounding then. I am happy to see it is being preserved for a new life.
Sorry, but Germans and Romanians have never lived here. Today there are one or two Romanians, because there are some mixed marriages. 99% percent Hungarians (Szeklers) lived and still live there!
You may have your villages mixed up. This village has old houses with the names of the old owners written in German script. The unrestored fortified churches in the area have German script on the walls. And, again, people were definitely speaking German to each other and to their Children in 1978. This is very different from the obvious Hungarian spoken farther east (and west of Kolozsvar, as well as in parts of the Mezoseg. The Hungarian census before WWI even lists the area in the so-called Seibenburgen as mostly German. You are thinking of prince Charles private residence in the Szekely area of east Transylvania which is, as you say, mostly Hungarian. This village, Viscri, is in southern Transylvania and was German.
An English pun, There were brass bed-steds, With knobs on. The word finyiol is not used, The display of a large satanic looking wooden pitch fork- Ominous. Well this is Transylvania. Oòo. I do not beleave in ghosts, But I do not think I would like to spend the nighte there. Ooo.
when I last visited this village it was in 1978. As one can imagine, it was more difficult then. The village was at the end of an axel-breaking dirt road. The main population was German, with Romanian-speakers at one end of town (with their own church), and Roma living at end of town. I knocked on the door of one of the houses to get the key to the church. The whole complex was astounding then. I am happy to see it is being preserved for a new life.
Sorry, but Germans and Romanians have never lived here. Today there are one or two Romanians, because there are some mixed marriages. 99% percent Hungarians (Szeklers) lived and still live there!
You may have your villages mixed up. This village has old houses with the names of the old owners written in German script. The unrestored fortified churches in the area have German script on the walls. And, again, people were definitely speaking German to each other and to their Children in 1978. This is very different from the obvious Hungarian spoken farther east (and west of Kolozsvar, as well as in parts of the Mezoseg. The Hungarian census before WWI even lists the area in the so-called Seibenburgen as mostly German. You are thinking of prince Charles private residence in the Szekely area of east Transylvania which is, as you say, mostly Hungarian. This village, Viscri, is in southern Transylvania and was German.
A gente fica tão feliz vendo isso ! Obrigado por preservar isso ! Obrigado por postar !
Wonderful 👏🏻👏🏻
Quel bonheur de voir ça ! On dirait que la vie simple et heureuse existe encore dans ces parages. À conserver absolument !
Foarte frumos.
Ce e frumos chiar și lui Dumnezeu ii place.Frumoasă Românie
Nice place
Gyönyörű. Tényleg. Miért nem lehet a falu nevét magyarul is odaírni?
Viscri în Romana
@@marinlupu2706 Yes. And what is the name in Hungarian?
I always thing about the history
Superb!!!!!!!!!
I like this video.
Guter Beitrag. Transylvania
Immobilie einfach schön.
Rumänien Heimat einfach.
Empfehlung!
Bun
What? Prince Charles in Transylvania? Back to his roots!
Kolik toho má...jeden clovej to všechno stačí užít? 😤
An English pun, There were brass bed-steds, With knobs on. The word finyiol is not used, The display of a large satanic looking wooden pitch fork- Ominous. Well this is Transylvania. Oòo. I do not beleave in ghosts, But I do not think I would like to spend the nighte there. Ooo.
Nem székely, szász.
Ma inkább roma falu, mert 90%-ban romák lakják.
insuportabil