Berliner Boersenzeitung - Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages

EUR -
AED 3.816824
AFN 72.952252
ALL 98.438583
AMD 415.214404
ANG 1.871662
AOA 947.704654
ARS 1065.882528
AUD 1.667322
AWG 1.87047
AZN 1.762145
BAM 1.954004
BBD 2.096853
BDT 124.101169
BGN 1.956564
BHD 0.391992
BIF 3070.948111
BMD 1.03915
BND 1.411189
BOB 7.176405
BRL 6.435196
BSD 1.038536
BTN 88.400905
BWP 14.423605
BYN 3.398644
BYR 20367.339516
BZD 2.089759
CAD 1.493144
CDF 2982.360366
CHF 0.936087
CLF 0.037309
CLP 1029.464941
CNY 7.581115
CNH 7.592591
COP 4545.148469
CRC 527.310304
CUC 1.03915
CUP 27.537474
CVE 110.159518
CZK 25.136875
DJF 184.677456
DKK 7.461331
DOP 63.26186
DZD 140.508292
EGP 52.886082
ERN 15.58725
ETB 132.231473
FJD 2.411659
FKP 0.822988
GBP 0.829585
GEL 2.920501
GGP 0.822988
GHS 15.26597
GIP 0.822988
GMD 74.818437
GNF 8975.405716
GTQ 7.999571
GYD 217.28031
HKD 8.07113
HNL 26.386749
HRK 7.453725
HTG 135.793893
HUF 410.282908
IDR 16844.880887
ILS 3.793318
IMP 0.822988
INR 88.499314
IQD 1360.449687
IRR 43735.229742
ISK 145.085757
JEP 0.822988
JMD 161.805066
JOD 0.737069
JPY 163.422979
KES 134.216802
KGS 90.406309
KHR 4174.123628
KMF 484.373758
KPW 935.234397
KRW 1514.867615
KWD 0.320277
KYD 0.865496
KZT 538.010367
LAK 22711.908192
LBP 93000.628319
LKR 306.06693
LRD 189.014468
LSL 19.310667
LTL 3.06834
LVL 0.628571
LYD 5.098118
MAD 10.472672
MDL 19.161206
MGA 4898.450968
MKD 61.524406
MMK 3375.118585
MNT 3531.031481
MOP 8.308085
MRU 41.456304
MUR 48.912776
MVR 16.071811
MWK 1800.844944
MXN 20.93311
MYR 4.662652
MZN 66.405559
NAD 19.310852
NGN 1608.187574
NIO 38.214879
NOK 11.803845
NPR 141.441648
NZD 1.842889
OMR 0.400072
PAB 1.038546
PEN 3.867097
PGK 4.214964
PHP 60.790791
PKR 289.11646
PLN 4.258385
PYG 8099.556151
QAR 3.777129
RON 4.974307
RSD 116.995843
RUB 103.913498
RWF 1448.754589
SAR 3.90135
SBD 8.711771
SCR 14.671682
SDG 625.049715
SEK 11.540748
SGD 1.414117
SHP 0.822988
SLE 23.743241
SLL 21790.458555
SOS 593.548791
SRD 36.430535
STD 21508.306454
SVC 9.087299
SYP 2610.89574
SZL 19.319059
THB 35.465649
TJS 11.361558
TMT 3.647416
TND 3.311457
TOP 2.43379
TRY 36.582121
TTD 7.057446
TWD 33.97501
TZS 2514.742726
UAH 43.544105
UGX 3801.469699
USD 1.03915
UYU 46.225737
UZS 13407.162145
VES 53.594628
VND 26435.975372
VUV 123.369966
WST 2.870951
XAF 655.348399
XAG 0.035028
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.808354
XDR 0.796261
XOF 655.329498
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.177178
ZAR 19.401278
ZMK 9353.59695
ZMW 28.741585
ZWL 334.605868
  • RIO

    -0.0300

    59.2

    -0.05%

  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    59.8

    -1.17%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    11.73

    +0.68%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    36.26

    +0.11%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    23.65

    +0.42%

  • CMSC

    -0.1321

    23.77

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    58.86

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.0000

    7.25

    0%

  • RELX

    0.3000

    45.89

    +0.65%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    8.43

    +0.71%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    22.9

    +0.26%

  • GSK

    -0.0300

    34.03

    -0.09%

  • BP

    0.0400

    28.79

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    0.9500

    123.19

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    -0.3300

    66.3

    -0.5%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.15

    +0.41%

Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages
Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages / Photo: Mihai Barbu - AFP

Transylvania's last Saxons revive its stunning ghost villages

Carmen Schuster was a young woman when she left the Transylvanian village of Cincsor in Romania for West Germany in search of a better life 40 years ago.

Text size:

After returning to Romania for work many years later, she was overcome by the urge to stay, attempting to save the centuries-old Saxon community she once called home.

Schuster is a member of the dwindling ethnic German minority, descendants of Saxons and others who were recruited by the Hungarian kings to settle in Transylvania from the 12th century onwards.

"We had to save the school, which was in ruins," Schuster, who is now in her 60s, told AFP.

Together with her husband Michael Lisske, she has been carefully restoring the historical heart of Cincsor for more than a decade -- including its former Saxon school -- and transforming the buildings into guesthouses.

"Other buildings have also been restored and the village once again revolves around its Protestant church," which still holds services for its seven remaining parishioners, Schuster said.

Britain's King Charles III -- who claims descent from a notorious 15th-century Transylvanian prince known as Vlad the Impaler -- also owns a number of properties nearby, renting out some to tourists.

- 'Belated victory' -

Before World War II, Romania boasted a Saxon population of up to 300,000. Today, there are only about 10,000, much of the population having emigrated in the 1970s and the 1980s to escape persecution by the communist dictatorship of Nicolae Ceaucescu.

Transylvania's abandoned Saxon villages were gradually repopulated by Romanians, who often had no connection to the region's 800-year-old history.

But the unique atmosphere of these historic villages at the foot of the Carpathian mountains never fully faded, with many of their fortress-like churches listed as UNESCO world heritage sites.

"In the 15th century, they fortified their churches so they could serve as a refuge for the inhabitants in the event of an attack," said 71-year-old Lisske.

"The Hungarians had promised the Saxons freedom in exchange for bringing them here, so they had no royal protection," the former history teacher said.

For Schuster, preserving the Saxon heritage symbolises a "belated victory" over the "inhumane and contemptuous" treatment during Ceaucescu's communist rule that "did everything to erase it".

- Idea 'catching on' -

Schuster's year-round guesthouses have become the village's main employer, she said, boosting tourism in a region heavily dependent on agriculture and farming.

Ramona Amariei is one of 15 locals who found work there as a chambermaid and waitress and seamstress during the off-season.

"There is no discrimination," said Amariei, who has Roma roots, and feels proud to be part of the "family". "Mrs Schuster is trying to integrate pretty much all types of people."

Adrian Boscu, a cook, said he is committed to putting a modern twist on "old Saxon recipes" to revive them, incorporating local produce as much as he can.

The guesthouse business has been booming, with the tower in a church now being converted into a bedroom, and the idea is spreading.

"I think that's catching on," said Schuster, with nearby villages also restoring their centuries-old heritage to revitalise the local economy. "There are lots of people who have interesting projects."

The house next door has also been renovated. Its Romanian owner, Nicolas Mioque, returned from France after 57 years.

Schuster and her husband "have breathed new life into this village," he said, noting that Cincsor without the guesthouses would be "sad".

(H.Schneide--BBZ)