Areas Of Involvement:
Eastern Orthodoxy
Related People:
Justinian

Romanian Orthodox Church, the largest autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, Eastern Orthodox church in the Balkans today. It is the church to which the majority of Romanians belong, and in the late 20th century it had a membership of more than 16 million.

Christianity first reached Dacia (roughly coextensive with modern Romania) under the Roman Empire at least as early as the 4th century ad. By the late 9th century, the Vlachs (i.e., ethnic Romanians) appear to have accepted a Slavonic liturgy and Bulgarian ecclesiastical jurisdiction. The first ecclesiastical metropolitanates for the Romanian provinces were not created until the 14th century, however, and Church Slavonic remained the liturgical language until the 17th century, when Romanian began to replace it. The translation of Scripture and liturgical texts into Romanian was not completed until the 19th century.

The Romanian Orthodox Church helped to keep alive a sense of national identity both under Ottoman Turkish rule and, in Transylvania, under Hungarian rule. In Transylvania the church was accorded no recognition in the post-Reformation settlement, and consequently, by an act of union in 1698, a large proportion of the Romanian Orthodox clergy and laity in Transylvania accepted papal jurisdiction, becoming Eastern-rite Roman Catholics. They were reaccepted into the Romanian Orthodox Church in 1950 after their church had been suppressed [1948] by the communist government.

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The Romanian Orthodox Church proper, in the meantime, became an important factor in the eventual emancipation of ethnic Romanians in Transylvania and in the integration of the greater Romania that came into being after 1918. An outstanding figure was the first metropolitan of Transylvania, Andreiu Saguna, who in 1868 authored a constitution that would influence the development of the entire Romanian church after 1918.

The present Romanian patriarchate was created in 1925, uniting the Romanian Orthodox population of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire with the autocephalous Romanian church established in Moldavia and Walachia in 1865 and recognized by the ecumenical patriarchate of Constantinople (now Istanbul) in 1885. The liturgical language of the modern Romanian church is Romanian. The church is divided into 14 dioceses.

After World War II, the communist regime in Romania never formally separated church and state, and it allowed the church to maintain two theological faculties, in Bucharest and in Sibiu, as well as six seminaries. There were also many active monasteries and several ecclesiastical and theological publications. In spite of these advantages, the church was tightly controlled by the state, and the remarkable revival of monastic life that occurred in communist Romania was severely limited by the government after 1958.

In the 1990s, after the fall of Romania’s communist dictatorship, churches and seminaries reopened. Church leaders proposed building a new cathedral in Bucharest, and the Romanian government built new churches in ethnically Hungarian areas of Romania, provoking criticism. The number of members is estimated at nearly 19 million.

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Romania, country of southeastern Europe. The national capital is Bucharest. Romania was occupied by Soviet troops in 1944 and became a satellite of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.) in 1948. The country was under communist rule from 1948 until 1989, when the regime of Romanian leader Nicolae Ceaușescu was overthrown. Free elections were held in 1990. In 2004 the country joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and in 2007 it became a member of the European Union (EU).

The Romanian landscape is approximately one-third mountainous and one-third forested, with the remainder made up of hills and plains. The climate is temperate and marked by four distinct seasons. Romania enjoys a considerable wealth of natural resources: fertile land for agriculture; pastures for livestock; forests that provide hard and soft woods; petroleum reserves; metals, including gold and silver in the Apuseni Mountains; numerous rivers that supply hydroelectricity; and a Black Sea coastline that is the site of both ports and resorts.

Quick Facts
Romania
See article: flag of Romania
Audio File: National anthem of Romania
Head Of Government:
Prime Minister: Marcel Ciolacu
Capital:
Bucharest
Population:
(2025 est.) 19,079,000
Currency Exchange Rate:
1 USD equals 4.664 Romanian new leu
Head Of State:
President: Klaus Iohannis
Form Of Government:
unitary republic with two legislative houses (Senate [136]; Chamber of Deputies [3291])
Official Language:
Romanian
Official Religion:
none
Official Name:
România (Romania)
Total Area (Sq Km):
238,397
Total Area (Sq Mi):
92,045
Monetary Unit:
(new) leu2 (RON; plural [new] lei)
Population Rank:
(2025) 69
Population Projection 2030:
17,974,000
Density: Persons Per Sq Mi:
(2025) 207.3
Density: Persons Per Sq Km:
(2025) 80
Urban-Rural Population:
Urban: (2023) 52.1%
Rural: (2023) 47.9%
Life Expectancy At Birth:
Male: (2022) 70.7 years
Female: (2022) 78 years
Literacy: Percentage Of Population Age 15 And Over Literate:
Male: not available
Female: not available
Gni (U.S.$ ’000.000):
(2023) 317,458
Gni Per Capita (U.S.$):
(2023) 16,660
  1. Includes a maximum of 18 elective seats for ethnic minorities.
  2. The leu was redenominated on July 1, 2005. As of that date 10,000 (old) lei (ROL) = 1 (new) leu (RON).

The Romanian people derive much of their ethnic and cultural character from Roman influence, but this ancient identity has been reshaped continuously by Romania’s position astride major continental migration routes. Romanians regard themselves as the descendants of the ancient Romans who conquered southern Transylvania under the emperor Trajan in 105 ce and of the Dacians who lived in the mountains north of the Danubian Plain and in the Transylvanian Basin. By the time of the Roman withdrawal under the emperor Aurelian in 271, the Roman settlers and the Dacians had intermarried, resulting in a new nation. Both the Latin roots of the Romanian language and the Eastern Orthodox faith to which most Romanians adhere emerged from the mixture of these two cultures.

From the arrival of the Huns in the 5th century until the emergence of the principalities of Walachia and Moldavia in the 14th century, the Romanian people virtually disappeared from written history. During this time Romania was invaded by great folk migrations and warriors on horseback who traveled across the Danubian Plain. It is believed that in the face of ceaseless violence the Romanians were forced to relocate, finding safety in the Carpathian Mountains. As military chief Helmuth von Moltke observed: “Resistance having nearly always proven useless, the Romanians could no longer think of any other way of defense than flight.”

For the next 600 years the Romanian lands served as battlegrounds for their neighbours’ conflicting ambitions. The Romanians were unable to withstand the imperial pressures first from the Byzantines and then from the Ottoman Turks to the south in Constantinople (now Istanbul), or later from the Habsburg empire to the west and from Russia to the east.

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In 1859 the principalities of Walachia and Moldavia were united, and in 1877 they proclaimed their independence from the Ottoman Empire as the modern Romania. This was accompanied by a conversion from the Cyrillic alphabet to the Latin and by an exodus of students who sought higher education in western Europe, especially France.

Despite its late start as a European nation-state, Romania in the 20th century produced several world-renowned intellectuals, including composer Georges Enesco, playwright Eugène Ionesco, philosopher Emil Cioran, religion historian Mircea Eliade, and Nobel laureate George E. Palade. On the eve of World War II, journalist Rosa Goldschmidt Waldeck (Countess Waldeck) described her strongest impression of the Romanians:

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Two thousand years of severe foreign masters, barbarian invasions, rapacious conquers, wicked princes, cholera, and earthquakes have given Rumanians a superb sense of the temporary and transitory quality of everything. Experience in survival has taught them that each fall may result in unforeseen opportunities and that somehow they always get on their feet again.

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