Constantin Daicoviciu
Constantin Daicoviciu | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | May 27, 1973 | (aged 75)
Nationality | Romanian |
Occupation(s) | Historian, archaeologist |
Children | Hadrian Daicoviciu |
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Cluj |
Academic work | |
Institutions | University of Cluj |
Constantin Daicoviciu (Romanian pronunciation: [konstanˈtin ˈdajkovitʃju]; February 22, 1898[1] – May 27, 1973) was a Romanian historian and archaeologist, professor at the University of Cluj, and titular member of the Romanian Academy.
He was born in
From 1923 to 1968 he was a faculty member of the University of Cluj, advancing to associate professor in 1932 and full professor in 1938. After Northern Transylvania (including the city of Cluj) was transferred to Hungary in the wake of the Second Vienna Award of August 1940, Daicoviciu moved to the University of Sibiu, where he was dean of the philology department in 1940–41.[3]
After
He was the main representative of the Daco-Romanian continuity theory that was actively promoted in Communist Romania as the accepted ethnogenesis theory of the Romanian nation. An 1978 public letter by anonymous Hungarian intellectuals claims that, in his political testament, Daicoviciu withdrew his theses, calling his theory (by the time adopted by the state in education) only hypothetical.[4][5]
He married Lucia Bugnariu in 1931.[2] Their son, Hadrian Daicoviciu (1932–1984), was also a historian.
He died in 1973 in Cluj, and was buried in the city's Hajongard Cemetery. Since his death, the commune in the Banat where he was born in bears his name.
Book
- ISBN 0-214-65256-4
Notes
- ^ a b Brătescu, p. 591
- ^ a b Brătescu, p. 592
- ^ Lavinia Betea, "Partea lor de adevăr", p. 64
- ^ A 62-ek levele: 62 romániai magyar értelmiségi levele román értelmiségiekhez, 1978. máj. 25.
- ^ Király Ibolya, 62 romániai magyar értelmiségi levele román értelmiségiekhez, 1978. máj. 25.
References
- Constantin Brătescu, “Contribuții la cunoașterea datei nașterii, botezului și înscrierii în documentele oficiale a academicianului Constantin Daicoviciu”, in Banatica, vol. 31-2/2021, pp. 587-93