I.L. Caragiale National College, 163 Calea Dorobanţilor St., Sector 1, , Bucharest, Romania,

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Revista Română de Geografie Politică Year XII, no. 2, November 2010, pp. 351-355 ISSN 1454-2749, E-ISSN 2065-1619 Article no. 122113-205 GEODEMOGRAPHIC REMARKS ON THE REFORMED CULT IN TRANSYLVANIA, 1930-2002 Ioan MĂRCULEŢ I.L. Caragiale National College, 163 Calea Dorobanţilor St., Sector 1, 041832, Bucharest, Romania, e-mail: ioan_marculet@yahoo.com Cătălina MĂRCULEŢ Institute of Geography Romanian Academy, 12 D. Racoviţă St., Sector 2, 023993, Bucharest, Romania, e-mail: cmarculet@yahoo.com Abstract: The Reformed Religion was brought into Transylvania in 1550 and swiftly adopted by a part of the Hungarian nobility and the urban patriciate. In the inter-war period, after the Greater Union of all the Romanian Provinces on December 1, 1918 the Reformed Church had two Episcopates: the Episcopate of Transylvania and Piatra Craiului Episcopate. Major changes in the numerical evolution and territorial distribution of the Reformed Transylvanian populations were the following: a) a decrease from 497,861 faithful in 1930 to 476,481 in 2002 due to negative birth-rates after 1990 which is not specific to this confessional group alone, but to most religious communities, and emigration to Central and West-European countries; b) changes in the distribution of the Calvinist believers by habitat, from 21 % in the town area of 1930 to some 53 % in the urban of 2002. Key words: population, Reformed Cult, Transylvania, Romania * * * * * * The founder of the Reformed or Calvinist Church religion, which exists in many European states Switzerland, Hungary, etc., was Jean Calvin. He was born at Nozan (Picardy) on July 10, 1509 and was viewed by his teachers as a remarkably religious person. In 1532, Calvin took his Ph.D. degree in Orleans and influenced by Martin Luther s (1483-1546) conceptions converted to Protestantism. In 1536, Calvin published Frankfurt am Main the first edition of his work Christianae religionis institution. Being considered a religious trouble-maker he was ousted from France, and took refuge in Geneva, where he proved to be a vigorous preacher. He died on May 27, 1564 and was buried in Geneva s Cemetery des Rois, but only the initials I.C. were carved on his tombstone. The Reformed Church acknowledges only two sacraments: Baptism and Communion, rejecting the dogma of the real presence of Christ s body and blood during Communion, the invocation of the saints, the episcopal institution, http://rrgp.uoradea.ro

352 Ioan MĂRCULEŢ, Cătălina MĂRCULEŢ etc. Those preaching the cult had to be chosen by believers and each Calvinist Church was to be led spiritually by an elected Council. The Reformed Religion was brought into Transylvania (a historical province situated in the centre of Romania and documented in 1159) in 1550 and swiftly adopted by a part of the Hungarian nobility and the urban patriciate. However, it soon had to compete with the Lutheran (Evangelical) creed which had been adopted by numerous Transylvanian Saxons in the first decades of the 14 th century. In 1558 Pastor Péter Meliuz Juhárez succeeded in determining the clergy of Cluj City to adopt Calvinism, which would shortly become the religion of a large part of the Principality s Hungarian and Szeckler populations. In 1564, the Synod held in Aiud city (Transylvania) decided that the two Protestant cults Calvinist and Lutheran, should separate definitively. As a result, they founded the Reformed Episcopate of Transylvania, initially located in Arad, and the language of the divine service and of administration was to be Hungarian. Throughout history to the present-day, the Reformed Church in Romania was known under the following denominations: Evangelico Reformată, vulgo Calviniana, Helvet Hitvallasu Evangeliumi Reformatus Egyhaz (Reformed Evangelical Church of Helvetian Confession), Reformatus Egyhaz (Reformed Church) and the Reformed Calvinist Cult. In the inter-war period, after the Greater Union of all the Romanian Provinces on December 1, 1918 the Reformed Church had two Episcopates: the Episcopate of Transylvania founded in the 14 th century when Protestantism had become the dominant religion of the Transylvanian Hungarians, with the Episcopal See in Cluj, and Piatra Craiului Episcopate set up in 1920, Episcopal See was in Oradea, for the faithful from the west of Romania. In 1930, Romania s Reformed believers numbered 710,706 people (3.9 % of the country s population, ranking fourth among the other denominations). They were concentrated mainly in Transylvania (497,861 people; Fig. 1) and represented 15.5 % of the Province s population. A greater proportion of Reformed had the following counties: Trei-Scaune (40.6 %), Odorhei (37.4 %), Mureş (30.3 %), Sălaj (24.5 %), Cluj (21.7 %), Târnava Mică (16.6 %), Turda (14.4 %) and Someş (12.8 %). The majority (79.3 %), 394,852 people, lived in the countryside and only 20.7 % - 103,009, in town mostly in the counties of Braşov (64.5 %), Sibiu (60.0 %), Făgăraş (45.1 %), Cluj (40.6 %), Ciuc (32.3 %), Târnava Mare (32.3 %) and Alba (30.8 %). High proportions registered the towns of Zalău (56.7 %), Huedin (48.6 %), Sfântu Gheorghe (47.3 %), Târgu Secuiesc (39.9 %), Aiud (38.7 %), Târgu Mureş (35.1 %) and Turda (30.9 %). With the advent of communism in Romania (1948), Piatra Craiului Episcopate was abolished, despite protests by its Bishop István Sulyók and by Károly Nagy, the Bishop of Transylvania, who considered the regime s policy to be discriminatory and fascist. And again for all the protests of the clergy, the Reformed Church in Romania lost the greatest part of its patrimony. After the abolishment of the communist regime on December 1989, Piatra Craiului Episcopate was re-established; the Synodal Session of December 5, 2007 adopted the statutes of the Reformed Church in Romania which stipulated that parishes, archdioceses and dioceses are juristic persons entitled to selfgovernance. Under the Statutes, parishes may be set up only by the express will of the faithful who live in a clearly delimited territory, and by approval of the

Geodemographic Remarks on the Reformed Cult in Transylvania, 1930-2002 353 higher Church bodies; dismantling them, in case they no longer meet the purpose they had been set up for, rests with the members of the Parish General Assembly. The patrimony of dismantled parishes is to be transferred to the parish their faithful have been directed to. Decisions to set up, dismantle or change the territorial boundaries of archbishoprics and of dioceses rest with the General Diocesan Assembly, and the Synod of the Reformed Church in Romania, respectively. The 1992 Population Census had in view also the country s confessional structure. At that time, Romania s Reformed population represented 3.51 % (802,454 people), coming third in the country s religious structure, after the Orthodox (ca. 87 %) and Roman-Catholics (5 %). In 1992, just like in 1930, Reformed believers lived mostly in Transylvania (66.86 % of Romania s Calvinist population 536,595 persons), especially in the counties of Mureş 174,616 persons (28.62 % of the county s inhabitants), Cluj 103,837 (14.10 %), Covasna 79,802 (34.21 %), Sălaj 54,175 (20.30 %) and Harghita 44,558 (12.79 %), where most Hungarians dwelt (41.3 % in Mureş, 19.8 % in Cluj, 75.2 % in Covasna, 23.7 % in Sălaj and 84.6 % in Harghita). 540000 530000 520000 510000 500000 490000 480000 470000 460000 450000 440000 1930 1992 2002 Figure 1. Numerical evolution of Transylvania s Reformed population (1930-2002). Unlike the 1930 Census figures, the 1992 returns showed 53.4 % of the Transylvanian Calvinists to be town-dwellers (298,897 faithful) and only 46.6 % villagers (240,698), a situation explained by the unprecedented development of the urban system in Romania, and obviously in Transylvania, too. Significant proportions of urban Calvinist believers had in the counties of Hunedoara (94.4 %), Sibiu (82.4 %), Braşov (71.2 %) and Cluj (65.6 %). Table 1. The Reformed population of Transylvanian counties, 1992 County Total Rural Urban Alba 17,673 8,686 8,987 Bistriţa-Năsăud 16,739 10,210 6,529 Braşov 18,891 5,423 13,468 Cluj 103,837 35,647 68,190 Covasna 79,802 38,718 41,084 Harghita 44,558 20,374 24,184 Hunedoara 15,534 867 14,667 Mureş 174,616 97,920 79,696 Sălaj 54,175 20,967 33,208 Sibiu 10,770 1,886 8,884 TOTAL 536,595 240,698 298,897

354 Ioan MĂRCULEŢ, Cătălina MĂRCULEŢ According to the 2002 Census figures there were 476,481 followers of the Reformed Church (11.1 % of Transylvania s total population), that is slightly fewer than in 1930 (497,861). This decrease over the 1992-2002 period was the consequence of the negative natural balance of Romania s population, the upsurge in emigration, Hungarians included, to Hungary and Western Europe. The 2002 distribution of Reformed faithful in the Transylvanian counties looked as follows: 157,046 in Mureş, 86,811 in Cluj, 74,312 in Covasna, 48,452 in Sălaj, 41,269 in Harghita, 14,805 in Alba, 14,489 in Braşov, 14,398 in Bistriţa- Năsăud, 11,466 in Hunedoara and 8,073 in Sibiu. The confessional structure of counties with an above-average ratio of Reformed people: Covasna (33.4 %), Mureş (27.0 %), Sălaj (19.5 %), Harghita (12.6 %), Cluj (12.3 %), (figure 2). A more numerous Calvinist population lived in the towns of Târgu Mureş (45,104), Cluj-Napoca (38,779), Sfântu Gheorghe (22,804), Odorheiu Secuiesc (11,138), Zalău (9,591), Braşov (7,193), Reghin (7,188) and Covasna (5,246). Figure 2. Distribution of the Reformed Transylvanian population in 2002 County ratio: 1, under 5 %; 2, 5-10 %; 3, 10-15 %; 4, 15-20 %; 5, 25-30 %; 6, over 30 %.

Geodemographic Remarks on the Reformed Cult in Transylvania, 1930-2002 355 As shown, major changes in the numerical evolution and territorial distribution of the Reformed Transylvanian populations were the following: a) a decrease from 497,861 faithful in 1930 to 476,481 in 2002 due to negative birth-rates after 1990 which is not specific to this confessional group alone, but to most religious communities, and emigration to Central and West- European countries; b) changes in the distribution of the Calvinist believers by habitat, from 21 % in the town area of 1930 to some 53 % in the urban of 2002. Likewise in the inter-war period, in 2002 the followers of this cult were concentrated mostly in the east and north-east Transylvanian counties of Covasna, Harghita, Mureş, Covasna, Cluj and Sălaj. REFERENCES BAROIU D., MĂRCULEŢ I., MĂRCULEŢ Cătălina, (2005), The dynamics of the main religious confessions in Transylvania (1930-2002), Revista Română de Geografie Politică, 2, Oradea; CREŢAN R., (1998), Structura confesională generală a populaţiei Banatului românesc, în perioada 1900-1992, Analele Univ. de Vest din Timişoara, Seria Geografie, Vol. VIII, Timişoara; DEICĂ P., CÂNDEA Melinda, (1992), Geografia confesiunilor religioase în România, Terra, 3-4; ERDELI G., CUCU V., (2005), România. Populaţie, aşezări umane, economie, Edit. Transversal, MĂRCULEŢ I., MĂRCULEŢ Cătălina, (2007), Etnii şi confesiuni religioase în Regiunea de Dezvoltare Centru a României. Observaţii geodemografice, Comunicări ştiinţifice, Vol. VI, Mediaş; MĂRCULEŢ I., MĂRCULEŢ Cătălina, (2007), Structura confesională a Transilvaniei (1930-2002), Comunicări ştiinţifice, Vol. VII/2, Mediaş; NOUZILLE J., (1995), Transilvania zonă de contacte şi conflicte, Edit. Enciclopedică, POPA-TUTOVEANU GH., MĂRCULEŢ I., MĂRCULEŢ Cătălina, (2005), Aspecte privind structura confesională populaţiei România la începutul secolului XXI, Liceul prezent şi viitor, Vol. II, ***(1938), Recensământul general al populaţiei României din 29 decembrie 1930, vol. II, Imprimeria Naţională, *** (1992), Recensământul populaţiei şi locuinţelor din 7 ianuarie 1992, I, C.N.S., *** (2002), Recensământul populaţiei şi locuinţelor din 18 martie 2002. Populaţia după religie, I.N.S. www.ministerulculturii.ro. Submitted: Revised: Accepted: Published online: June 11, 2010 October 4, 2010 October 26, 2010 November 3, 2010