PEDDLERS, PEASANTS, ICONS, ENGRAVINGS: THE PORTRAIT OF THE TSAR AND ROMANIAN NATION‑BUILDING, 1888‑1916 Cover Image

PEDDLERS, PEASANTS, ICONS, ENGRAVINGS: THE PORTRAIT OF THE TSAR AND ROMANIAN NATION‑BUILDING, 1888‑1916
PEDDLERS, PEASANTS, ICONS, ENGRAVINGS: THE PORTRAIT OF THE TSAR AND ROMANIAN NATION‑BUILDING, 1888‑1916

Author(s): Andrei Dan Sorescu
Subject(s): History, Developing nations, 19th Century, Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919)
Published by: NEW EUROPE COLLEGE - Institute for Advanced Studies
Keywords: nation-building; nineteenth century Eastern Europe; cultural history of nationalism;

Summary/Abstract: The present contribution examines how, in late‑nineteenth‑century Romania, a subversive political object transformed the dynamics of nation‑building. Brought in by Russian peddlers selling religious icons on transregional routes, engravings of the Russian tsar in peasants’ homes attracted the attention of political elites and catalysed top‑down attempts at nationalising the peasant majority. By considering a case in which the rural masses were exposed to the “wrong” political symbols before official nationalising and dynastic paraphernalia could reach them, the study homes in on the attempts of both state and church to solve a surprisingly long‑standing state of affairs, from 1888 to 1916.

  • Issue Year: 2020
  • Issue No: 2019+20
  • Page Range: 209-246
  • Page Count: 38
  • Language: English