Wayside crosses in Romania
Terminology and description
The standard term for the crosses is troiță (pl. troițe); they are also called cruci la răscruci (“crossroads crosses”, the northern part of Western Moldavia), răstigniri (“crucifixions”, Maramureș), icoane (“icons”, Vâlcea County), rugi (“stakes”, Ținutul Pădurenilor, Hunedoara County), cruci (“crosses”, Transylvania and Oltenia), lemne (“wood beams”, in old documents). Troiță is a word of Slavic origin, signifying three joined crosses, associated with the Holy Trinity.[1]
The crosses are a feature of the village landscape, where they were built for divine protection in places thought dangerous. They were meant to preserve the natural order; merely looking at one would confirm the presence of God. The cross is usually made of hardwood, painted on one or both sides. More rarely, they are carved with solar motifs.[1] Some are made of stone or metal. With time and technological advance, simple designs gave way to complex elements.[2]
Symbolic considerations
The crosses recall a pre-Christian time when people would set up ritual columns or altars in places where the cosmic peace was disturbed by evil spirits, hoping to restore order. Crossroads have also been attracted mystical powers since antiquity; their mythological significance acquired a religious one with the adoption of Christianity, given their cross shape.[3] Columns and poles gave way to crosses, so that the troiță represents “an ad hoc synthesis between the ancient and Christian strata”.[4]
According to Romulus Vulcănescu, the troiță is “the most primitive extant form of religious sanctuary and sacred popular worship”. He defines a sanctuary as a place proclaimed holy and respected as such by the people, out of magical, mythical or religious motives. These objects are found in the village center, at the village entrance and exit, at crossroads, unclean places, hillocks and, generally speaking, where the physical and spiritual worlds merge.[3]
Often, the crosses are surrounded by a shelter, with a door towards the road and windows at the sides. Travelers hit by rainstorms can wait inside. In the past, where the water source was farther away, villagers would leave a pitcher of fresh water for passersby. Shelters are rarer in hay and mountain areas; the crosses there are usually covered by tile roofs.[4] The shelters, which form a sort of chapel, are usually painted on the exterior and interior. Christ Pantocrator or the Trinity is on the ceiling, flanked by the Four Evangelists, angels or prophets. Saints and angels are found lower down, with empty spaces filled by grape leaves, ears of wheat, floral or geometric patterns. The exterior might feature medallions of saints or Biblical scenes. Inscriptions appear painted on the inside or carved into the cross.[5]
The magic associations of water means that crosses are found near streams, bridges and wells, superstition holding that well bottoms can hold evil forces. The troiță, pointing heavenward, guards against the dark forces in the depths of the earth. Crosses at village entrances served to guard the locals from plagues and enemies, and were also landmarks. Homeowners would raise crosses in front of their dwellings, seeking spiritual protection. Cemetery troițe do not commemorate the dead, instead watching the boundary between living and dead, amplifying the power of the cross symbol. Finally, a troiță can be a cenotaph, celebrating war heroes whose bodies have not been found, or other dead buried elsewhere.[6][7]
Historiography
The troiță has been a subject of academic study since the early 20th century. Tudor Pamfile included drawings of the crosses in a 1910 work. Nicolae Iorga considered them as “cheap establishments of believers who lacked the means to show their faith by raising churches”; he added, “at their origins, they were, I believe, something else”. They also preoccupied Alexandru Tzigara-Samurcaș (1909, 1928), Grigore Ionescu, Tache Papahagi and particularly George Oprescu, who called them “curious and impressive expressions of faith” that also satisfied “the remaining pagan superstition” left in the collective consciousness.[8]
It was Vulcănescu who undertook the most thorough research into the phenomenon. His 1947 study Funcțiunea magică a troiței remains a standard reference. In 1972, he substantially expanded his findings in Coloana cerului. In 2003, Ionel Oprișan published Troițe Românești. O tipologie. There, he proposed a classification drawing on Vulcănescu: sacred pre-Christian monuments (heavenly columns and poles), sacred Christian monuments (cross-shaped, icon-bearing and boundary troițe.[8] Further research continued into the 21st century, with a particular focus on Mărginimea Sibiului.[9]
List
The following wayside crosses are listed as historic monuments by Romania's Ministry of Culture and Religious Affairs. Nearly all are associated with the Romanian Orthodox faith.
Notes
- Totoianu and Anghel, p. 31
- Totoianu and Anghel, pp. 31, 33
- Totoianu and Anghel, p. 33
- Totoianu and Anghel, p. 35
- Stoia, p. 48
- Totoianu and Anghel, p. 36
- Stoia, p. 47
- Totoianu and Anghel, p. 28
- Totoianu and Anghel, pp. 28-29
- (in Romanian) List of historic monuments at the National Institute of Patrimony site
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wayside crosses in Romania. |
- Adrian Stoia, “Troițele din Mărginimea Sibiului, cu o privire specială asupra crucii din piatră de la Boița”, in Studia Universitatis Cibiniensis. Series Historica, vol. XIV/2017, pp. 45-61
- Radu Totoianu, Călin Anghel, Troițe și cimitire cu stâlpi funerari de pe Valea și din Munții Sebeșului. Cluj-Napoca: Editura Mega, 2018, ISBN 978-606-020-033-8