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Maria Berényi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Maria Berényi
Born(1959-04-15)15 April 1959
NationalityHungarian
Occupation(s)Historian, poet
AwardsOrder of Cultural Merit [ro] in the "Commander" rank (2011)
Academic background
Alma materEötvös Loránd University
Babeș-Bolyai University
Websitemariaberenyi.hu

Maria Berényi (born 15 April 1959; Hungarian: Mária Berényi[1]) is a Hungarian historian and poet of Romanian ethnicity. Born in Méhkerék (Romanian: Micherechi), she studied in the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest and has a doctorate in philology from the university and a doctorate in history from the Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. She has been the director of the Research Institute of the Romanians of Hungary in Gyula (Jula, Giula) since 1993.

Berényi has published several volumes on the Romanian community in 19th-century Transylvania and Hungary. She has also published several volumes of verses in both Romanian and Hungarian, standing out as a bilingual poet. For her research and works, she has received multiple awards and distinctions, including Romania's Order of Cultural Merit [ro] in 2011.

Biography

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Maria Berényi was born on 15 April 1959 in Méhkerék (Romanian: Micherechi), Hungary.[1] She is a member of the Romanian minority in Hungary.[2][3] She studied in the Faculty of Humanities of the Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest, from which she graduated in 1983.[1] Berényi obtained a doctorate in philology from the same university in 1986 and a doctorate in history from the Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, in 2001. Between 1983 and 1993, she collaborated in the Press Service of the Minorities of Hungary.[4] As of 2023, she was the director of the Research Institute of the Romanians of Hungary,[5] which she has been leading since 1993. Seated in Gyula (Jula, Giula),[1] the institute was founded on 29 May 1993 to study the culture, history and traditional life of the Romanians in Hungary.[5]

As of 2014, Berényi had published seven volumes of studies on the Romanians of Transylvania and Hungary and over 100 studies published in multiple countries, and had participated in several scientific events organized in Romania, Austria, Serbia and Ukraine.[6] Her research topics include, among others, the history of the Romanian Orthodox Church and the Romanian Greek Catholic Church in Hungary in the 18th and 19th centuries, the role of the church and of private foundations in 19th-century Transylvania and Hungary, the formation of Romanian intellectual elites in the University of Budapest in the 19th century and the role of women in Romanian culture and society in Transylvania and Hungary in the 19th century.[1] An example of her work is the volume Poveștile caselor. Români în Buda și Pesta ("The Tales of the Houses. Romanians in Buda and Pest"), published by the Romanian Academy in 2011. According to Romanian journalist Bogdan Stanciu, the volume was the first book by a member of Hungary's Romanian minority to be published by the Romanian Academy in over a century.[4] Berényi has been an important collaborator for Foaia Românească, a newspaper of the Romanian minority of Hungary.[7]

As a poet, Berényi has published volumes of verses in both Romanian and Hungarian.[8] Romanian literary critic and historian Ecaterina Țarălungă defined Berényi as "the most prolific bilingual poet of the Romanian community of Hungary".[3] Her debut volume was Autodefinire ("Self-definition", 1987), followed by Fără titlu/Cím nélkül ("Untitled", 1989, a bilingual volume), Pulsul veacului palid ("The Pulse of the Pale Century", 1997) and În pragul noului mileniu ("On the Verge of the New Millennium", 2002). University of Szeged lecturer Iudit Călinescu described Berényi's use of bilinguism as a formula to more adequately meet the needs of lyrical expression and find answers to existential questions. Eötvös Loránd University professor Tiberiu Herdean characterized Berényi's poetry as sincere, confessional and with rich themes and a high emotional and intellectual charge.[8] Țarălungă highlighted as the main themes in Berényi's poetry the years of childhood, the "grass of childhood", the "tears of the 20th century" and the century's children without childhood and "street children".[3]

On 1 December 2011, Berényi was awarded the Order of Cultural Merit [ro] in the rank of "Commander" by President of Romania Traian Băsescu for her actions for Romanian culture and identity as a member of the Romanian diaspora.[9] Other awards she has received are the Eminescu Award from Editura Eminescu [ro] and the Oradea-based magazine Familia, the "For Méhkerék" medal and diploma, an honorary diploma from the Romanian Cultural Institute's branch in Budapest and the "Golden Platelet" distinction from the Vasile Goldiș Western University of Arad.[6] She was an honorary guest at the Transylvania International Book Festival celebrated from 3 to 8 October 2017 in Cluj-Napoca,[1] in which she received the award "Honorary Citizen of Romanian Culture" for her studies and volumes on Romanian history.[10]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Berényi Mária lesz a FITC díszvendége". Szabadság (in Hungarian). 3 September 2017.
  2. ^ Călinescu 2023, p. 98.
  3. ^ a b c Țarălungă 2011, p. 90.
  4. ^ a b Stanciu, Bogdan (17 October 2016). ""A fost o vreme când la Buda se tipărea mai multă carte românească decât la Iași sau București"". Sinteza (in Romanian).
  5. ^ a b Matiș, Dorina (29 May 2023). Badea, Anda (ed.). "Institutul de Cercetări al Românilor din Ungaria a împlinit 30 de ani de la înființare" (in Romanian). Agerpres.
  6. ^ a b Bădoi, Ion (28 April 2014). ""Românii au jucat un rol important în modernizarea Ungariei"". Opinia Teleormanului (in Romanian).
  7. ^ Călinescu 2023, p. 97.
  8. ^ a b Călinescu 2023, p. 101.
  9. ^ "Președintele Traian Băsescu a decorat zece români pentru păstrarea și promovarea identității naționale". HotNews (in Romanian). 6 December 2011.
  10. ^ Pecican, Ovidiu (12 October 2017). "FICT și FESTLIT 2017: două evenimente literare clujene". Observator Cultural (in Romanian). No. 893.

Bibliography

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