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Prussian Socialism Episode 22: The German Settlement of Transylvania

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Contenido proporcionado por Prussian Socialism Podcast. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente Prussian Socialism Podcast o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.

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Prussian Socialism Episode 22 The German Settlement of Transylvania [featuring Jazzhands]
You have heard of America’s Wild West… but what about Europe’s Wild East?
In the 1100s, several hundred Western Europeans came to Transylvania at the invitation of the Hungarian king, Geza II. Their mission: to secure the Carpathian Mountains against the attacks of the horse-archer peoples of the Eurasian Steppe.
Over the next four centuries, they built castles, churches and cities, holding the south-easternmost outpost of Western Christendom. Briefly vassals of the Turks, they returned to the Hapsburg fold after the 1683 siege of Vienna and played a crucial role in the politics of Austro-Hungary and later Romania.
The settlers—known as the Transylvanian Saxons—were reinforced by later inflows of colonists from northern Germany and the Low Countries. By the 1930s, they numbered 300,000.
The Transylvanian Saxons are just one piece of a larger, millennium-long tale of settlement, trade, and conquest—the Drang nach Osten, the “Push to the East”. Starting in the 1100s, Germanic peoples pushed eastward into the Baltic, the Balkans and even farther afield. They brought cities and agriculture to the sparsely populated and disorganized East. Their movements surged and ebbed throughout the centuries, but by the 1700s, Germanic settlements reached as far as the Volga.
Unlike the later sea-borne expansions of the Spanish, Portuguese and others, it is almost unknown in the English-speaking countries.
Join Greg Conte and Fash the Nation’s Jazzhands McFeels for a discussion of this little-known but highly consequential history. Jazzhands brings not only knowledge, but also relates his own experiences in Saxon Siebenbürgen—the land of the seven cities.
Books mentioned:
Migrating Memories Romanian Germans in Modern Europe by James Koranyi.
Die deutsche Ostsiedlung im Mittelalter by Charles Higounet.
(No English version available. Originally published in French as Les Allemands en Europe centrale et orientale au Moyen Age)
End-song: Oostlandlied, text by Jaap van Kersbergen. This song—a favorite of the Dutch SS—was based off of the “Lied der Ostlandfahrer” a medieval folk-song about migrating eastward.
See der Spiegel "Nach Ostland wollen wir reiten": https://archive.ph/T84sP#selection-5043.4-5043.26
And here: https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oostlandlied
Image: Kirchenburg Deutsch-Weisskirch
  continue reading

40 episodios

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iconCompartir
 
Manage episode 348507421 series 3358918
Contenido proporcionado por Prussian Socialism Podcast. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente Prussian Socialism Podcast o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.

thumbnail

Prussian Socialism Episode 22 The German Settlement of Transylvania [featuring Jazzhands]
You have heard of America’s Wild West… but what about Europe’s Wild East?
In the 1100s, several hundred Western Europeans came to Transylvania at the invitation of the Hungarian king, Geza II. Their mission: to secure the Carpathian Mountains against the attacks of the horse-archer peoples of the Eurasian Steppe.
Over the next four centuries, they built castles, churches and cities, holding the south-easternmost outpost of Western Christendom. Briefly vassals of the Turks, they returned to the Hapsburg fold after the 1683 siege of Vienna and played a crucial role in the politics of Austro-Hungary and later Romania.
The settlers—known as the Transylvanian Saxons—were reinforced by later inflows of colonists from northern Germany and the Low Countries. By the 1930s, they numbered 300,000.
The Transylvanian Saxons are just one piece of a larger, millennium-long tale of settlement, trade, and conquest—the Drang nach Osten, the “Push to the East”. Starting in the 1100s, Germanic peoples pushed eastward into the Baltic, the Balkans and even farther afield. They brought cities and agriculture to the sparsely populated and disorganized East. Their movements surged and ebbed throughout the centuries, but by the 1700s, Germanic settlements reached as far as the Volga.
Unlike the later sea-borne expansions of the Spanish, Portuguese and others, it is almost unknown in the English-speaking countries.
Join Greg Conte and Fash the Nation’s Jazzhands McFeels for a discussion of this little-known but highly consequential history. Jazzhands brings not only knowledge, but also relates his own experiences in Saxon Siebenbürgen—the land of the seven cities.
Books mentioned:
Migrating Memories Romanian Germans in Modern Europe by James Koranyi.
Die deutsche Ostsiedlung im Mittelalter by Charles Higounet.
(No English version available. Originally published in French as Les Allemands en Europe centrale et orientale au Moyen Age)
End-song: Oostlandlied, text by Jaap van Kersbergen. This song—a favorite of the Dutch SS—was based off of the “Lied der Ostlandfahrer” a medieval folk-song about migrating eastward.
See der Spiegel "Nach Ostland wollen wir reiten": https://archive.ph/T84sP#selection-5043.4-5043.26
And here: https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oostlandlied
Image: Kirchenburg Deutsch-Weisskirch
  continue reading

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