Historical Narratives and Spatial Strategies of Reappropriation in Three Romanian Orthodox Monasteries

Authors

  • Giuseppe Tateo ICUB University of Bucharest
  • Ioan Cozma Pontificio Istituto Orientale
  • Giulia Massenz Politecnico di Torino

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.29312

Keywords:

multi-religious interaction, Romania, Orthodoxy, pilgrimage, Greek-Catholicism, lived religion, Islam

Abstract

Contrary to the abundance of shared religious places throughout south-eastern Europe, multi-religious interaction is not a regular feature in Romania. Pilgrimages and visits to the popular Orthodox monasteries of Prislop and Nicula in Transylvania and Dervent in Dobruja are an exception to this trend. Unsurprisingly, these two regions are historically characterized by a remarkable ethnic and religious diversity. The two Transylvanian monasteries attract practitioners of different Christian denominations (Orthodox, Greek-Catholic, Roman-Catholic and Evangelical), while Dervent is a devotional site for Christians and Muslims (Tatars, Turks and Roma) alike. Common to all three monasteries is the presence of allegedly miracle-working objects, artefacts and bodies: a stone cross at Dervent, the Virgin Mary icon at Nicula, and the tomb of the charismatic monk Arsenie Boca at Prislop, respectively. Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in the three monasteries during both important feasts and everyday monastic life, this article is a multidisciplinary exploration of the workings of inter-religious competition, sharing and interaction. It combines the methods typical of ethnographic research with observations on how the religious space is navigated and socialized through the support of cartography and archival satellite images. The article casts light on how the historical narratives and spatial strategies enacted by the Romanian Orthodox Church overlap in the attempt to reclaim legitimate ownership and exclusive primacy over three popular devotional sites with a composite ethnic and religious past. 

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Author Biographies

  • Giuseppe Tateo, ICUB University of Bucharest

    Giuseppe Tateo is postdoctoral fellow at the Research Institute of the University of Bucharest and researcher at the Bruno Kessler Foundation (Trento, Italy). After earning his PhD from the Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, he taught at Charles University (Prague) and at Riga Stradins University and was a post-doctoral researcher in Bucharest, Prague and Leipzig. His current research interests focus on the link between political authority and religious architecture in post-socialist Europe with a specific focus on Romania. 

  • Ioan Cozma, Pontificio Istituto Orientale

    Ioan Cozma is an independent researcher and invited professor of Byzantine Canon Law at the Faculty of Eastern Canon Law of the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome. Besides his academic activities, he coordinates the Romanian American Cultural Heritage Center in Jackson (Michigan) and is a member of the Sharing Religious Places Laboratory (ShaRP Lab). His expertise includes Byzantine canon law, comparative religious law, monasticism, interreligious dialogue, and religious places. 

  • Giulia Massenz, Politecnico di Torino

    Giulia Massenz is a PhD Candidate in Urban and Regional Development at the Interuniversity Department of Regional and Urban Studies and Planning (DIST) of the Polytechnic of Turin and the University of Turin. Her interests lie at the crossroads between minority rights, urbanity, secularity and religions, focusing on 
    the interplay between the legal sphere and the spatial realm. Her current research project investigates how African Pentecostal churches are perceived in Italy through the lens of spatial conflicts.

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Published

2024-06-24

How to Cite

Tateo, G., Cozma, I. ., & Massenz, G. . (2024). Historical Narratives and Spatial Strategies of Reappropriation in Three Romanian Orthodox Monasteries. Fieldwork in Religion, 19(1), 90–119. https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.29312