Slavery in Romania

Slavery existed on the territory of present-day Romania from the founding of the principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia in 13th14th century, until it was abolished in stages during the 1840s and 1850s before the Romanian War of Independence and the formation of the United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in 1859, and also until 1783 in Transylvania and Bukovina (parts of the Habsburg monarchy). Most of the slaves were of Romani ethnicity. Particularly in Moldavia there were also slaves of Tatar ethnicity, probably prisoners captured from the wars with the Nogai and Crimean Tatars.[1][2]

Romani slaves belonged to boyars (aristocrats), Orthodox monasteries, or the state. They were used as blacksmiths, goldsmiths and agricultural workers, but when the principalities were urbanized, they also served as servants.

The abolition of slavery was achieved at the end of a campaign by young revolutionaries influenced by the ideas of the Enlightenment. Mihail Kogălniceanu, who drafted the legislation on the abolition of slavery in Moldova, remains the name associated with the abolition. In 1843, the Wallachian state freed its slaves, and in 1856, in both principalities, slaves of all classes were freed. Many formerly enslaved Romani people in Romania went to the United States and became the Romani Americans.[3]

After the abolition, there were attempts (both by the state and by private individuals) to settle the nomads and to integrate the Roma into Romanian society, but their success was limited.

Origins

The exact origins of slavery in the Danubian Principalities are not known. Historian Nicolae Iorga associated the Roma people's arrival with the 1241 Mongol invasion of Europe and through the Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe, taking the Roma from the Mongols as slaves and preserving their status.[4] Other historians consider that they were enslaved while captured during the battles with the Tatars.[4] The practice of enslaving prisoners may also have been taken from the Mongols.[4] The ethnic identity of the "Tatar slaves" is unknown, they could have been captured Tatars of the Golden Horde,[5] Cumans, or the slaves of Tatars and Cumans.[4]

While it is possible that some Romani people were slaves or auxiliary troops of the Mongols or Tatars, the bulk of them came from south of the Danube at the end of the 14th century, some time after the foundation of Wallachia. By then, the institution of slavery was already established in Moldavia, at the time enslaving the rumani,[6] but the arrival of the Roma made slavery a widespread practice. The Tatar slaves, smaller in numbers, were eventually merged into the Roma population.[7]

Roma historian Viorel Achim also explained that "slavery was not a phenomenon characteristic only of Wallachia and Moldavia. In the Middle Ages there were slaves in neighboring countries: the Byzantine Empire, and in the Ottoman Empire, and in the Slavic countries south of the Danube. Moreover, slavery in our country is older than the arrival of gypsies. It is known about Tatar slaves, for example, who are older than Gypsy slaves, and for a time there were two well-defined categories even from a legal point of view: Tatar slaves, Gypsy slaves. But there were also Romanians who had the status of slaves."[8]

Slavery was a common practice in Eastern Europe at the time (see Slavery in medieval Europe). Non-Christians in particular were taken as slaves in Christian Europe: in the Kingdom of Hungary, Saracens (Muslims) and Jewish Khazars were held as slaves until they were forced to convert to Christianity in the 13th century; Russians enslaved the prisoners captured from the Tatars (see Kholop), but their status eventually merged with the one of the serfs.[9]

Christians from Eastern Europe were enslaved by the Crimean Tatar Khanate, the Ottoman Empire and the Nogai Horde.

There is some debate over whether the Romani people came to Wallachia and Moldavia as slaves or not. In the Byzantine Empire, they were slaves of the state in Bulgaria and Serbia until their social organization was destroyed by the Ottoman conquest, which would suggest that they came as slaves who had a change of "ownership".[10] The alternative explanation, proposed by Romanian scholar P. P. Panaitescu, was that following the Crusades, an important east–west trade route passed through the Romanian states and the local feudal lords enslaved the Roma for economic gain for lack of other craftsmen. However, this theory is undermined by the fact that slavery was present before the trade route gained importance.[10]

A legend tells that the Roma came to the Romanian Principalities at the invitation of Moldavian ruler Alexander the Good, who granted in a 1417 charter "land and air to live, and fire and iron to work", but the earliest reference to it is found in Mihail Kogălniceanu's writings and no charter was ever found.

Historian Djuvara argues forward hypotheses concerning the origin of the Romanians, such as advancing the theory that the vast majority of the nobility in the medieval states that made up the territory of modern-day Romania was of Cuman origin and not Romanian: "Romanians were called the black cumans".[11]

The very first document attesting the presence of Roma people in Wallachia dates back to 1385, and refers to the group as aţigani (from athinganoi, a Greek-language word for "heretics", and the origin of the Romanian term ţigani, which is synonymous with "Gypsy").[12] The document, signed by Prince Dan I, assigned 40 sălaşe (hamlets or dwellings) of aţigani to Tismana Monastery, the first of such grants to be recorded.[13] In Moldavia, the institution of slavery was attested to for the first time in a 1470 Moldavian document, through which Moldavian Prince Stephan the Great frees Oană, a Tatar slave who had fled to Jagiellon Poland.[14]

Anthropologist Sam Beck argues that the origins of Roma slavery can be most easily explained in the practice of taking prisoners of war as slaves, a Mongol practice with a long history in the region, and that, initially, free and enslaved Roma coexisted on what became Romanian territory.[15]

There are some accounts according to which some of the Roma slaves had been captured during wars. For instance, in 1445, Vlad Dracul took by force from Bulgaria to Wallachia around 11,000–12,000 people "who looked like Egyptians", presumably Roma.[15]

Nomadic Roma family traveling in Moldavia, Auguste Raffet, 1837

Condition of the slaves

General characteristics and slave categories

The Danubian Principalities were for most of their history the only territory in Eastern and Central Europe where Roma slavery was legislated, and the place where this was most extended.[16] As a consequence of this, British sociologist Will Guy describes Romania as a "unique case", and one of the fort main "patterns of development" in what concerns the Roma groups of the region (alongside those present in countries that have in the recent past belonged to the Ottomans, Austria-Hungary and the Russian Empire).[16]

Traditionally, Roma slaves were divided into three categories. The smallest was owned by the hospodars, and went by the Romanian-language name of țigani domnești ("Gypsies belonging to the lord").[11] The two other categories comprised țigani mănăstirești ("Gypsies belonging to the monasteries"), who were the property of Romanian Orthodox and Greek Orthodox monasteries, and țigani boierești ("Gypsies belonging to the boyars"), who were enslaved by landowners.[17] The status of the țigani domneşti was better than the one of the slaves held by boyars or the monasteries and many slaves given by the Prince to private owners or to monasteries ran away and joined the communities of the Prince's slaves.[18]

A Roma smith and his forge in Wallachia, Dieudonné Lancelot, 1860
Roma gold miners (Boyash, Aurari or Rudari) at work, gold panning

Each of the slave categories was divided into two groups: vătrași and lăieși; the former was a sedentary category, while the latter was allowed to preserve its nomadism.[19] The lăieși category comprised several occupational subgroups: alongside the Kalderash căldărari or "copper workers"), Lăutari ("string instrument players"), Boyash (lingurari or "spoon makers") and Ursari ("bear handlers"),[20] all of which developed as distinct ethic subgroups, they comprised the fierari ("smiths").[21] For a long period of time, the Roma were the only smiths and ironmongers in Wallachia and Moldavia.[22] Among the fierari, the more valued were the specialized potcovari ("farriers").[13] Women owned by the boyars were often employed as housemaids in service to the boyaresses,[23] and both them and some of the enslaved men could be assigned administrative tasks within the manor.[13] From early on in the history of slavery in Romania, many other slaves were made to work in the salt mines.[13]

Another category was the Aurari or Rudari (gold miners), who were slaves of the Prince who panned for gold during the warm season in the mountain rivers of the Carpathians, while staying in the plains during the winter, carving wooden utensils. The gold miners, through their yield of gold, brought much more income to the treasury than the other types of slaves and initially they were in large numbers, but as the deposits became exhausted, their number dropped. By 1810, there were only 400 Aurari panning for gold in Wallachia.[24]

During the 14th and 15th centuries very few slaves were found in the cities. Only since the beginning of the 16th century, monasteries began opening in the cities and they brought with them the Roma slaves and soon boyars and even townfolks began to use them for various tasks.[25] The sălașe of Roma slaves were settled in the outskirts, and soon, almost all cities had such a district, with the largest being in the largest cities, including Târgoviște, Râmnic or Bucharest.[25]

Medieval society allowed a certain degree of social mobility, as attested by the career of Ștefan Răzvan, a Wallachian Roma slave who was able to rise to the rank of boyar, was sent on official duty to the Ottoman Empire, and, after allying himself with the Poles and Cossack groups, became Moldavian Prince (April–August 1595).[26]

Status and obligations

The Roma were considered personal property of the boyar,[27] who was allowed to put them to work, selling them or exchanging them for other goods and the possessions of the slaves were also at the discretion of the master, this form of slavery distinguishing itself from the rumâni, who could only be sold together with the land. The boyar was allowed to punish his slaves physically, through beatings or imprisonment, but he or she did not have power of life and death over them, the only obligation of the master being to clothe and feed the slaves who worked at his manor.[28]

A deed of donation through which Stephen III of Moldavia donates a number of sălașe of Roma slaves to the Rădăuţi bishopric

The social prestige of a slave master was often proportional to the number and kinds of skilled slaves in his possession, outstanding cooks and embroiderers being used to symbolically demonstrate the high status of the boyar families.[29] Good musicians, embroiderers or cooks were prized and fetched higher prices: for instance, in the first half of the 18th century, a regular slave was valued at around 2030 lei, a cook would be 40 lei.[30]

However, Djuvara, who bases his argument on a number of contemporary sources, also notes that the slaves were exceptionally cheap by any standard: in 1832, a contract involving the dowry of a boyaress shows that thirty Roma slaves were exchanged for one carriage, while the British diplomat William Wilkinson noted that the slave trade was a semi-clandestine matter, and that vătrași slaves could fetch the modest sum of five or six hundred Turkish kuruş.[31] According to Djuvara's estimate, lăieși could be worth only half the sum attested by Wilkinson.[31]

In the Principalities, the slaves were governed by common law.[14] By the 17th century, the earliest written laws to mention slavery appeared. The Wallachian Pravila de la Govora (1640) and Pravila lui Matei Basarab (1652) and the Moldavian Carte Românească de Învățătură (1646), which, among other things, regulated slavery, were based on the Byzantine law on slavery and on the common law then in use. However, customary law (obiceiul pământului) was almost always used in practice.[14]

If a slave owned property, one would have to pay the same taxes as the free men. Usually, there was no tax on privately owned slaves, excepting for a short period in Moldavia: between 1711 and 1714, Phanariote Prince Nicholas Mavrocordatos introduced the țigănit ("Gypsy tax"), a tax of two galbeni (standard gold coins) on each slave owned.[32] It was not unusual for both boyars and monasteries to register their serfs as "Gypsies" so that they would not pay the taxes that were imposed on the serfs.[18]

The domnești slaves (some of whom were itinerant artisans), would have to pay a yearly tax named dajdie.[32] Similarly, boyar-owned lăieși were required to gather at their master's household once a year, usually on the autumn feast of Saint Demetrius[23] (presently coinciding with the October 26 celebrations in the Orthodox calendar). On the occasion, each individual over the age of 15 was required to pay a sum of between thirty and forty piastres.[23]

A slaveowner had the power to free his slaves for good service, either during his lifetime or in his will, but these cases were rather rare. The other way around also happened: free Roma sold themselves to monasteries or boyars in order to make a living.[33]

A shatra (village) founded by Roma slaves, as depicted in an 1860 engraving by Dieudonné Lancelot

Initially, and down to the 15th century, Roma and Tatar slaves were all grouped into self-administrating sălaşe (Old Church Slavonic: челѣдь, čelyad') which were variously described by historians as being an extended family, a household or even a community.[34] Their leaders, themselves slaves, were known as cneji, juzi or vătămani, and, in addition to sorting legal disputes, collected taxes and organised labour for the owners.[13] With time, disputes between two Roma slaves were usually dealt by the community leaders, who became known as bulibaşi.[35] Occasionally, the larger slave communities elected themselves a başbulibaşa, who was superior to the bulibaşi and charged with solving the more divisive or complicated conflicts within the respective group.[36] The system went unregulated, often leading to violent conflicts between slaves, which, in one such case attested for the 19th century, led to boyar intervention and the foot whipping of those deemed guilty of insubordination.[36]

The disputes with non-slaves and the manslaughter cases were dealt by the state judiciary system.[32] Slaves were not allowed to defend themselves or bear witness in front of a court,[37] but they were also not responsible to damage done to free men, the owner being accountable for any such damages, the compensation being sometimes the renunciation of the ownership of the slave to the other party.[32] A slave who killed another slave was sentenced to death, but they could also be given to the owner of the dead slave. A freeman killing a slave was also liable for death penalty and a boyar was not allowed to kill his own slaves, but no such sentencing is attested.[32] It is, however, believed that such killings did occur in significant numbers.[38]

The Orthodox Church (Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople), itself a major slaveholder, did not contest the institution of slavery,[39] although among the early advocates of the abolition was Eufrosin Poteca, a priest.[40] Occasionally, members of the church hierarchy intervened to limit abuse against slaves it did not own: Wallachian Metropolitan Dositei demanded from Prince Constantine Ypsilantis to discourage his servants from harassing a young Roma girl named Domniţa.[41] The young woman was referred to as one of the domneşti slaves, although she had been freed by that moment.[42]

Like many of the serfs in the two principalities, slaves were prone to escape from the estates and seek a better life on other domains or abroad, which made boyars organize search parties and make efforts to have them return.[43] Fugitive slaves would settle abroad in Hungary, Poland, lands of the Cossacks, the Ottoman Empire, Serbia, or from Moldavia to Wallachia and the other way around.[44] The administrations of the two states supported the search and return of fugitive slaves to their masters. Occasionally, the hospodars organized expeditions abroad in order to find runaways, or through diplomacy, they appealed to the rulers of the lands where the runaways settled. For instance, in 1570, logofăt Drăgan was sent by Bogdan IV of Moldavia to the King of Poland to ask for the return of 13 sălaşe of slaves.[44]

In the 16th century, the duties of collecting wartime tithes and of retrieving runaways were performed by a category called globnici, many of whom were also slaves.[13] Beginning in the 17th century, much of the Kalderash population left the region to settle south into the Balkans, and later also moved into other regions of Europe.[45]

A small section of the native Roma population managed to evade the system (either by not having been originally enslaved as a group, or by regrouping runaway slaves).[36] They lived in isolation on the margin of society, and tended to settle in places where access was a problem. They were known to locals as netoţi (lit. "incomplete ones", a dismissive term generally used to designate people with mental disorders or who display poor judgment).[36] Around 1830, they became the target of regular manhunts, those captured being turned into ţigani domneşti.[36]

A particular problem regarded the vătraşi, whose lifestyle was heavily disrupted by forced settlement and the requirement that they perform menial labour.[46] Traditionally, this category made efforts to avoid agricultural work in service of their masters. Djuvara argues that this was because their economic patterns were at a hunter-gatherer stage.[11] Christine Reinhard, an early 19th-century intellectual and wife of French diplomat Charles-Frédéric Reinhard, recorded that, in 1806, a member of the Moldavian Sturdza family employed a group of vătraşi at his factory. The project was reputedly abandoned after Sturdza realised he was inflicting intense suffering on his employees.[11]

Roma artisans were occasionally allowed to practice their trade outside the boyar household, in exchange for their own revenue. This was the case of Lăutari, who were routinely present at fairs and in public houses as independent tarafs.[23] Slaves could own a number of bovines, but part of their other forms of revenue was collected by the master.[38] In parallel, the lăieşi are believed to have often resorted to stealing the property of peasants.[23] According to Djuvara, Roma housemaids were often spared hard work, especially in cases where the number of slaves per household ensured a fairer division of labour.[23]

Marriage regulations

Marriage between two slaves was only allowed with the approval of the two owners, usually through a financial agreement which resulted in the selling of one slave to the other owner or through an exchange.[47] When no agreement was reached, the couple was split and the children resulting from the marriage were divided between the two slaveholders.[47] Slave owners kept strict records of their lăieşi slaves, and, according to Djuvara, were particularly anxious because the parents of slave children could sell their offspring to other masters.[23]

The slaveowners separated Roma couples when selling one of the spouses. This practice was banned by Constantine Mavrocordatos in 1763 and discouraged by the Orthodox Church, which decreed in 1766 that "although they are called gypsies [i.e. slaves], the Lord created them and it is indecent to separate them like cattle".[48] Nevertheless, splitting married spouses was still common in the 19th century.[49]

Marriage between a free person and a slave was initially possible only by the free person becoming a slave,[50] although later on, it was possible for a free person to keep one's social status and that the children resulting from the marriage to be free people.[51]

During several periods in history, this kind of intercourse was explicitly forbidden:

In Moldavia, in 1774, prince Alexander Mourousis banned marriages between free people and slaves. A similar chrysobull was decreed by Alexandru Mavrocordat Firaris in 1785, which not only banned such marriages, but invalidated any such existing marriage.[52]

In Wallachia, Alexander Ypsilantis (1774–1782) banned mixed marriages in his law code, but the children resulting from such marriages were to be born free.[48] In 1804, Constantine Ypsilantis ordered the forceful divorce of one such couple, and issued an order to have priests sealing this type of unions to be punished by their superiors.[53]

Marital relations between Roma people and the majority ethnic Romanian population were rare, due to the difference in status and, as Djuvara notes, to an emerging form of racial prejudice.[42] Nevertheless, extra-marital relationships between male slave owners and female slaves, as well as the rape of Roma women by their owners, were widespread, and the illegitimate children were themselves kept as slaves on the estate.[54]

Transylvania, Bukovina and Bessarabia

A Roma family, Sibiu, Transylvania, c.1862, photo by Theodor Glatz

The slavery of the Roma in bordering Transylvania was found especially in the fiefs and areas under the influence of Wallachia and Moldavia, these areas keeping their practice of slavery even after they were no longer under Wallachian or Moldavian possession.[55] The earliest record of Roma in Transylvania is from around 1400, when a boyar was recorded of owning 17 dwellings of Roma in Făgăraş, an area belong to Wallachia at the time. The social organization of Făgăraş was the same as in Wallachia, the Roma slaves being the slaves of boyars, the institution of slavery being kept in the Voivodate of Transylvania within the Kingdom of Hungary and in the autonomous Principality of Transylvania, being only abolished with the beginning of the Habsburg domination in the 18th century. For instance, in 1556, Hungarian Queen Isabella Jagiełło confirmed the possessions of some Recea boyars, which included Roma slaves. The deed was also confirmed in 1689 by Prince Michael I Apafi.[55]

The estates belonging to the Bran Castle also held a large number of slaves, around 1500 at the beginning of the 16th century, the right of being a slaveholder being probably inherited from the time that the castle was owned by Wallachia.[56] Areas under the influence of Moldavia also held slaves: for instance, it is known that Moldavian Prince Petru Rareş bought a family of Roma from the mayor of Bistriţa and that other boyars also bought slaves from Transylvania.[56] However, only a minority of the Transylvanian Roma were slaves, most of them being "royal serfs", under the direct authority of the King, being only required to pay certain taxes and perform some services for the state, some groups of Roma being given the permission to travel freely throughout the country.[57]

In 1775, Bukovina, the scene of the 1821 incidents, was annexed from Moldavia by the Habsburgs, and inherited the practice of slavery, especially since the many monasteries in the region held a large number of Roma slaves. The number of Roma living in Bukovina was estimated in 1775 at 800 families, or 4.6% of the population.[58] Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor issued an order abolishing slavery on June 19, 1783, in Czernowitz, similar to other orders given throughout the Empire against slavery (see Josephinism). The order met the opposition of the large slaveholders: the Romanian Orthodox monasteries and the boyars. The boyars loudly pleaded their case to the authorities of Bukovina and Galicia, arguing that the banning of slavery was a transgression against the autonomy and traditions of the province, that bondage is the appropriate state for the Roma and that it was for their own good.[59] It took a few more years until the order was fully implemented, but toward the end of the 1780s, the slaves officially joined the ranks of the landless peasantry. Many of the "new peasants" (as they were called in some documents) remained to work for the estates for which they were slaves, the liberation bringing little immediate change in their life.[59]

After the eastern half of Moldavia, known as Bessarabia, was annexed by the Russian Empire in 1812 and later set up as a Bessarabia Governorate, the slave status for the Roma was kept. Slavery was legislated in the "Establishment of the organisation of the province of Bessarabia" act of 1818, by which the Roma were a social category divided into state slaves and private slaves, which belonged to boyars, clergy or traders.[60] The Empire's authorities tried the sedentize the nomadic state slaves by turning them into serfs of the state. Two villages were created in Southern Bessarabia, Cair and Faraonovca (now both in Ukraine) by settling 752 Roma families. However, things did not go as expected, the state of the villages "sank to deplorable levels" and their inhabitants refused to pay any taxes.[61] According to the 1858 census, in Bessarabia, there were 11,074 Roma slaves, of which 5,615 belonged to the state and 5,459 to the boyars. Slavery, together with serfdom, was only abolished by the emancipation laws of 1861. As a consequence, the slaves became peasants, continuing to work for their former masters or joining the nomadic Roma craftsmen and musicians.[61]

Estimates for the slave population

The Roma slaves were not included in the tax censuses and as such, there are no reliable statistics about them, the exception being the slaves owned by the state. Nevertheless, there were several 19th century estimates. According to Djuvara, the estimates for the slave population tended to gravitate around 150,000–200,000 persons, which he notes was equivalent to 10% of the two countries' population.[31] At the time of the abolition of slavery, in the two principalities there were between 200,000 and 250,000 Roma, representing 7% of the total population.[62]

Year Source Moldavia Wallachia
1819 Dionisie Fotino 120,000[63]
1837 Mihail Kogălniceanu 200,000[64]
1838 Félix Colson 139,255[62] 119,910[62]
1844 Ferdinand Neigebaur 180,000[62]
1849 Paul Bataillard 250,000[62]
1857 Jean Alexandre Vaillant 137,000[62] 125,000[62]
1857 Jean Henri Abdolonyme Ubicini 100,000[62] 150,000[62]
1859 census (emancipated slaves) 250,000[65]

Emergence of the abolitionist movement

The moral and social problems posed by Roma slavery were first acknowledged during the Age of Enlightenment, firstly by Western European visitors to the two countries.

The evolution of Romanian society and the abolition of serfdom in 1746 in Wallachia and 1749 in Moldavia had no effect on the Roma, who, in the 19th century, were subject to the same conditions they endured for centuries. It was only when the Phanariote regime was changed, soon after 1821, that Romanian society began to modernise itself and various reforms were implemented (see Regulamentul Organic). However, the slavery of the Roma was not considered a priority and it was ignored by most reformers.[66]

Nevertheless, the administration in the Danubian Principalities did try to change the status of the state Romas, by attempting the sedentarization of the nomads. Two annexes to Regulamentul Organic were drafted, "Regulation for Improving the Condition of State Gypsies" in Wallachia in April 1831, and "Regulation for the Settlement of Gypsies" in Moldavia. The regulations attempted to sedenterize the Romas and train them till the land, encouraging them to settle on private estates.[67]

By the late 1830s, liberal and radical boyars, many of whom studied in Western Europe, particularly in Paris,[67] had taken the first steps toward the anti-slavery goal. During that period, Ion Câmpineanu, like the landowning brothers Nicolae and Ştefan Golescu, emancipated all his slave retinue,[68] while boyar Emanoil Bălăceanu freed his slaves and organized for them the Scăieni Phalanstery, an utopian socialist community.[69] In 1836, Wallachian Prince Alexandru II Ghica freed 4,000 domneşti slaves and had a group of landowners sign them up as paid workforce, while instigating a policy through which the state purchased privately owned slaves and set them free.[68]

The emancipation of slaves owned by the state and Romanian Orthodox and Greek Orthodox monasteries was mentioned in the programme of the 1839 confederative conspiracy of Leonte Radu in Moldavia, giving them equal rights with the Romanians. In Wallachia, a memorandum written by Mitică Filipescu proposed to put an end to slavery by allowing the slaves to buy their own freedom.[70] The 1848 generation, which studied in Western Europe, particularly in Paris, returned to their countries with progressive views and a wish to modernize them following the West as an example. Slavery had been abolished in most of the "civilized world" and, as such, the liberal Romanian intelligentsia viewed its slavery as a barbaric practice, with a feeling of shame.[71]

In 1837, Mihail Kogălniceanu published a book on the Roma people, in which he expressed the hope that it will serve the abolitionists. During the 1840s, the intellectuals began a campaign aimed at convincing the slaveholders to free their slaves. The Wallachian Cezar Bolliac published in his Foaie pentru Minte, Inimă şi Literatură an appeal to intellectuals to support the cause of the abolitionist movement.[70] From just a few voices advocating abolitionism in the 1830s, in the 1840s, it became a subject of great debate in Romanian society.[70] The political power was in the hand of the conservative boyars, who were also owners of large numbers of slaves and as such disagreed to any reforms that might affect them.[70]

Abolition by category of slaves[72]
Country State
slaves
Church
slaves
Private
slaves
Wallachia 1843 1847 1856
Moldavia 1844 1844 1855

Laws on abolition

Slave liberation certificate issued during the Wallachian Revolution of 1848
Allegory of the abolition of slavery during the Wallachian Revolution of 1848, drawing by Theodor Aman

The earliest law which freed a category of slaves was in March 1843 in Wallachia, which transferred the control of the state slaves owned by the prison authority to the local authorities, leading to their sedentarizing and becoming peasants. A year later, in 1844, Moldavian Prince Mihail Sturdza proposed a law on the freeing of slaves owned by the church and state.[73] In 1847, in Wallachia, a law of Prince Gheorghe Bibescu adopted by the Divan freed the slaves owned by the church and the rest of the slaves owned by the state institutions.[73]

During the Wallachian Revolution of 1848, the agenda of the short-lived Provisional Government included the emancipation (dezrobire) of the Roma as one of the main social demands.[74] The Government decreed the complete emancipation of the Roma by compensating the owners and it made a commission (made out of three members: Bolliac, Ioasaf Znagoveanu, and Petrache Poenaru), which was intended to implement the decree. Some boyars freed their slaves without asking for compensation, while others strongly fought against the idea of abolition. Nevertheless, after the revolution was quelled by Ottoman and Imperial Russian troops, the slaves returned to their previous status.[75]

By the 1850s, after its tenets were intensely popularized, the movement gained support from almost the whole of Romanian society, the issues of contention being the exact date of Roma freedom, and whether their owners would receive any form of compensation (a measure which the abolitionists considered "immoral").[76]

In Moldavia, in December 1855, following a proposal by Prince Grigore Alexandru Ghica, a bill drafted by Mihail Kogălniceanu and Petre Mavrogheni was adopted by the Divan; the law emancipated all slaves to the status of taxpayers (that is, citizens). The measure was brought about by a personal tragedy: Ghica and the public opinion at large were scandalized when Dincă, the slave and illegitimate child of a Cantacuzino boyar, was not allowed to marry his French mistress and go free, which had led him to murder his lover and kill himself.[77] The owners would receive a compensation of 8 galbeni for lingurari and vătraşi and 4 galbeni for lăieşi, the money being provided by the taxes paid by previously freed slaves.[78]

In Wallachia, only two months later, in February 1856, a similar law was adopted by the National Assembly,[79] paying a compensation of 10 galbeni for each slave, in stages over a number of years.[80] The freed slaves had to settle to a town or village and stay there for at least two censuses and they would pay their taxes to the compensation fund.[80]

The condition of the Roma after the abolition

A Roma village in Romania after the abolition of slavery, 1884

The Romanian abolitionists debated on the future of the former slaves both before and after the laws were passed. This issue became interconnected with the "peasantry issue", an important goal of the being eliminating the corvée and turning bondsmen into small landowners.[81] The Ursari (nomadic bear handlers) were the most reticent to the idea of settling down because they saw settling down as becoming slaves again on the owner of the land where they settled.[81] The abolitionists themselves saw turning the former slaves into bondsmen as not something desirable, as they were bound to become dependent again. Nevertheless, the dispute ended after the Romanian Principalities adopted a liberal capitalist property legislation, the corvée being eliminated and the land being divided between the former boyars and the peasants.[82]

Many abolitionists supported the assimilation of the Roma in the Romanian nation, Kogălniceanu noting that there were settled Roma slaves who abandoned their customs and language and they could not be told apart from the Romanians.[83] Among the social engineering techniques proposed for assimilation were: the Roma to be scattered across Romanian villages (within the village and not on the fringes), encouraging inter-ethnical marriages, banning the usage of Romany language and compulsory education for their children.[84] After the emancipation, the state institutions initially avoided the usage of the word țigan (gypsy), when needed (such as in the case of tax privileges), the official term being emancipat.[84]

Despite the good will of many abolitionists, the social integration of the former slaves was carried out only for a part of them, many of the Roma remaining outside the social organization of the Wallachian, Moldavian and later, Romanian society. The social integration policies were generally left to be implemented by the local authorities. In some parts of the country, the nomadic Roma were settled in villages under the supervision of the local police, but across the country, Roma nomadism was not eliminated.[85]

Legacy

Support for the abolitionists was reflected in Romanian literature of the mid-19th century. The issue of the Roma slavery became a theme in the literary works of various liberal and Romantic intellectuals, many of whom were active in the abolitionist camp. Cezar Bolliac published poems such as Fata de boier şi fata de ţigan ("The boyar's daughter and the Gypsy daughter", 1843), Ţiganul vândut ("Sold Gypsy", 1843), O ţigancă cu pruncul său la Statuia Libertăţii ("A Gypsy woman with her baby at the Statue of Liberty", 1848), Ion Heliade Rădulescu wrote a short story named Jupân Ion (roughly, "Master John", from the Romanian-language version of Župan; 1844), Vasile Alecsandri also wrote a short story, Istoria unui Galbân ("History of a gold coin", 1844), while Gheorghe Asachi wrote a play called Ţiganii ("The Gypsies", 1856)[86] and V. A. Urechia the novel Coliba Măriucăi ("Măriuca's cabin", 1855).[87] A generation later, the fate of Ştefan Răzvan was the inspiration for Răzvan şi Vidra ("Răzvan and Vidra", 1867), a play by Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu. The topic of Roma slavery was taken up again by the arts in the early 21st century, being a subject explored by Radu Jude's 2015 film Aferim!, set in early 19th-century Wallachia.[88]

The Romanian abolitionist movement was also influenced by the much larger movement against Black slavery in the United States through press reports and through a translation of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. Translated by Theodor Codrescu and first published in Iaşi in 1853, under the name Coliba lui Moşu Toma sau Viaţa negrilor în sudul Statelor Unite din America (which translates back as "Uncle Toma's Cabin or the Life of Blacks in the Southern United States of America"), it was the first American novel to be published in Romanian, and it included a foreword study on slavery by Mihail Kogălniceanu.[71] Beecher Stowe's text was also the main inspiration behind Urechia's 1855 novel.[87]

The impact of slavery on Romanian society became a theme of historiographic interest in the decades after the Romanian state coup of 1989. In 2007, Prime Minister Călin Popescu-Tăriceanu approved the creation of Comisia pentru Studierea Robiei Romilor ("Commission for the Study of Roma Slavery"), which will present its findings in a report and will make recommendations for the Romanian education system and on promoting the history and culture of the Roma.[89] The commission, presided upon by Neagu Djuvara, will also recommend the creation of a museum of the Roma, a research center, a Roma slavery commemoration day and the building of a memorial dedicated to Roma slavery.[90]

See also

References

  1. Roşu, Felicia, ed. (29 November 2021). Slavery in the Black Sea Region, c.900–1900. Brill. ISBN 9789004470897 via Google Books.
  2. Beck 1989, pp. 53–61.
  3. "Roma slavery in Romania - a history". 7 July 2021.
  4. Achim 2004, pp. 27–28.
  5. Achim (2004), pp. 27–28; Ştefănescu (1991), p. 42
  6. Achim (2004), p. 29; Ştefănescu (1991), pp. 41, 42
  7. Achim 2004, p. 29.
  8. Historia.ro
  9. Achim 2004, p. 28.
  10. Achim 2004, pp. 29–30.
  11. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 267.
  12. Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 267; Ştefănescu (1991), p. 42
  13. Ştefănescu 1991, p. 42.
  14. Achim 2004, p. 36.
  15. Beck 1989, p. 56.
  16. Guy 2001, p. 44.
  17. Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 267; Guy (2001), pp. 43–44
  18. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 103
  19. Istodor & Djuvara (2007), pp. 267–268; Guy (2001), pp. 43–44
  20. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 267–268.
  21. Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 268; Ştefănescu (1991), p. 42
  22. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 105
  23. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 268.
  24. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 107
  25. Rădvan, Laurenţiu (2010). At Europe's Borders: Medieval Towns in the Romanian Principalities. Brill. p. 213. ISBN 9789004180109.
  26. Achim 2004, p. 41.
  27. Achim (2004), p. 35; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), pp. 270, 272; Guy (2001), p. 44; Ştefănescu (1991), p. 42
  28. Achim (2004), p. 35; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), pp. 270, 272; Ştefănescu (1991), p. 43
  29. Beck (1989), p. 60; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 268
  30. Beck 1989, p. 60.
  31. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 270.
  32. Achim 2004, p. 37.
  33. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 97-98
  34. Costăchel, Panaitescu & Cazacu (1957), p. 143. See also Ştefănescu (1991), p. 42
  35. Achim (2004), p. 37; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), pp. 268–269
  36. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 269.
  37. Costăchel, Panaitescu & Cazacu 1957, p. 159.
  38. Ştefănescu 1991, p. 43.
  39. Achim (2004), p. 97; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), pp. 270–271
  40. Achim 2004, p. 97.
  41. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 270–271.
  42. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 271.
  43. Ştefănescu 1991, p. 42, 43.
  44. Costăchel, Panaitescu & Cazacu 1957, p. 162.
  45. Guy 2001, pp. 43–44.
  46. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 267, 272.
  47. Achim (2004), pp. 38–39; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 268
  48. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 99
  49. Mihail Kogălniceanu, wikisource:ro:Dezrobirea țiganilor, ștergerea privilegiilor boierești, emanciparea țăranilor
  50. Achim (2004), pp. 38–39; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 271
  51. Achim 2004, pp. 38–39.
  52. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p. 99-100
  53. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 271–272.
  54. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 272–275.
  55. Achim 2004, p. 42.
  56. Achim 2004, p. 43.
  57. Achim 2004, pp. 43–44.
  58. Achim 2004, pp. 127–128.
  59. Achim 2004, p. 128.
  60. Achim 2004, p. 130.
  61. Achim 2004, p. 131.
  62. Achim 2004, pp. 94–95.
  63. Achim (2004), pp. 94–95; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 269
  64. Achim (2004), pp. 94–95; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 269–270
  65. Achim 2004, p. 23.
  66. Achim 2004, p. 96.
  67. Achim 2004, p. 24.
  68. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, p. 275.
  69. Marushiakova and Vesselin, p.22
  70. Achim 2004, pp. 99–100.
  71. Achim 2004, p. 98.
  72. Raluca Toma, "Aboliţionismul românesc la 1848. Influenţe, trăsături", in Revista istorică, t. XX, 2009, nr. 1–2, p. 47–61.
  73. Achim (2004), pp. 108–109; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 275
  74. Achim (2004), pp. 96, 110; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 275
  75. Achim (2004), p. 110; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 275
  76. Achim 2004, pp. 101–102.
  77. Istodor & Djuvara 2007, pp. 275–278.
  78. Achim 2004, p. 111.
  79. Achim (2004), p. 110; Istodor & Djuvara (2007), p. 278
  80. Achim 2004, p. 110.
  81. Achim 2004, p. 27.
  82. Achim 2004, pp. 27–29.
  83. Achim 2004, p. 30.
  84. Achim 2004, pp. 31–32.
  85. Achim 2004, p. 34.
  86. Achim 2004, pp. 100–101.
  87. Marcel Cornis-Pope, "The Search for a Modern, Problematizing Historical Consciousness: Romanian Historical Fiction and Family Cycles", in Marcel Cornis-Pope, John Neubauer (eds.), History of the Literary Cultures of East-Central Europe, Vol. I, John Benjamins, Amsterdam & Philadelphia, 2004, p.500. ISBN 90-272-3452-3
  88. Gillet, Kit (8 September 2015). "'Aferim!' an Oscar Contender, Explores the Enslavement of the Roma". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  89. (in Romanian) "Tăriceanu face comisie pentru studierea robiei romilor", in Gândul, 21 February 2007
  90. (in Romanian) "Comisia pentru Studierea Robiei Romilor – la prima întâlnire, în faţă abordării unui subiect controversat", press release of the National Agency for the Roma, 28 August 2007

Bibliography

Sources

  • Viorel Achim, "Romanian Abolitionists on the Future of the Emancipated Gypsies", in Transylvanian Review, Vol. XIX, Supplement no. 4 (2010) p. 22-36
  • Elena Marushiakova, Vesselin Popov. 2009. "Gypsy Slavery in Wallachia and Moldavia". In: Kamusella, Tomasz and Krzysztof Jaskulowski, eds. Nationalisms Today. Oxford: Peter Lang, ISBN 9783039118830 p. 89-124.
  • Djuvara, Neagu (1995). Între Orient şi Occident. Ţările române la începutul epocii moderne [Between East and West. The Romanian countries at the beginning of the modern era] (in Romanian). Bucharest: Humanitas. ISBN 973-28-0523-4.

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