Székely Land (Hungarian: Székelyföld; Romanian: Ţinutul Secuiesc, Latin: Terra Siculorum) is used today in a cultural-ethnographical sense to refer to the territories inhabited by the Székelys, a Hungarian minority laying on the eastern side of Transylvania, in the valleys and hills of the Eastern Carpathian Mountains, corresponding to the present day Harghita, Covasna and parts of Mureş counties in Romania. Originally, the name Székelyföld denoted an autonomous region during the Kingdom of Hungary. It ceased to exist as a legal entity after the Habsburg Empire took control of the region.
There is a local Szekler initiative to attain regional autonomy for the Székely Land, within similar boundaries to those of Romania's Hungarian Autonomous Region (1952-60). Most Romanians, however, oppose this idea. It is also doubtful whether the present constitution of Romania (which defines the country as a unitary nation-state) could accommodate any autonomous regions based on ethnicity.
In 1876, a general administrative reform abolished all the autonomous areas in the Kingdom of Hungary and created a unified system of counties. As a result, the autonomous Szeklerland came to an end as well. Four counties were created in its place: Udvarhely, Háromszék, Csík and Maros-Torda.As a matter of fact, only half of the territory of Maros-Torda originally belonged to Székelyföld, as the other half belonged to other regions. Roughly speaking, present-day Harghita county encompasses Udvarhely (capital city: Székelyudvarhely, now Odorheiu Secuiesc) and Csík (capital city: Csíkszereda, Miercurea Ciuc), present-day Covasna covers more or less the same territory as did Háromszék (capital city: Sepsiszentgyörgy, Sfântu Gheorghe), and what used to be Maros-Torda (capital city: Marosvásárhely, Târgu-Mureş) is part of present-day Mureş.
The period between 1918/1920-1940: to be written
In 1940, Romania was forced to cede the northern half of Transylvania to Hungary in the Second Vienna Award (this included most of the historically Szekler areas). Hungarian authorities subsequently restored the pre-Trianon administrative structure (with slight modifications).
After World War II, a Hungarian Autonomous Region was created, which encompassed most of the land inhabited by the Székelys. This region lasted until 1964 when the administrative reform divided Romania into the current counties.
Geography of Romania | Transylvania
Sikullando | Székelyföld | Szeklerland | Ţinutul Secuiesc | Seklerlandet
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"Székely Land".
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