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Lucia Apolzan
Lucia Florica Apolzan (15 February 1911 – 2001) was a Romanian anthropologist, educator, ethnologist, geographer, folklorist, memorialist, educator, poet, and sociologist, an interdisciplinary researcher of the Romanian hill and mountain village, of the ancestral civilization on the territory of Romania, as well as of its uninterrupted continuity in the territories where the Romanian language is spoken. She was considered the right-hand collaborator of sociologist Dimitrie Gusti, but with her own distinct personality. Called by many the Lady of the Carpathians, Apolzan was a thorough and tenacious researcher of the Romanian village.
Apolzan was born in 1911 in Sibiu. She was an orphan raised by a grandmother and came from a family of fierce Transylvanian peasants.
She graduated in geography from the Babeș-Bolyai University of Cluj, where she was a close collaborator of Romulus Vuia, creator of the Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania. She went on to study at the University of Bucharest, and earn her doctorate in sociology (magna cum laude) with her mentor Dimitrie Gusti.
With her doctorate in hand, she began field research.
"Between 1942 and 1943, she was sent by the Central Institute of Statistics to Plasa Câmpeni in the Apuseni Mountains, where she researched with great success the scattered settlements – grove settlements. She was part of the team of sociologists and ethnographers coordinated by Henri H. Stahl and Anton Golopenția, after the Second World War, when she studied the popular costume from Hodac and the Maramureș region."
Apolzan was one of the many interwar Romanian intellectuals and people of value who were persecuted (in various forms, from abuse and harassment to imprisonment and death sentences) by the communist state of Romania. When she was ostracized by the communist regime, she was punished by being sent to do "low-level work," at the Apaca weaving mill, where she spent several years until 1956 when she was allowed to return to the Central Institute of Statistics.
In 1967 she became a member of the complex research team of the Danube Gorge – called Iron Gates I, studying ethnography in the area of the Almaju and Mehedinți Mountains in Romania.
Lucia Apolzan's most important revelations are found in the complex field of anthropological interdisciplinary study of the continuity of habitation of the Carpathian lands for thousands of years. Her first complex study was on the Land of Moților or the Land of Stone, an ethnogeographical region of the Apuseni Mountains. She published her research on folk costumes, myths, landscapes and animals only after she had traveled the entire region on foot.
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Lucia Apolzan
Lucia Florica Apolzan (15 February 1911 – 2001) was a Romanian anthropologist, educator, ethnologist, geographer, folklorist, memorialist, educator, poet, and sociologist, an interdisciplinary researcher of the Romanian hill and mountain village, of the ancestral civilization on the territory of Romania, as well as of its uninterrupted continuity in the territories where the Romanian language is spoken. She was considered the right-hand collaborator of sociologist Dimitrie Gusti, but with her own distinct personality. Called by many the Lady of the Carpathians, Apolzan was a thorough and tenacious researcher of the Romanian village.
Apolzan was born in 1911 in Sibiu. She was an orphan raised by a grandmother and came from a family of fierce Transylvanian peasants.
She graduated in geography from the Babeș-Bolyai University of Cluj, where she was a close collaborator of Romulus Vuia, creator of the Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania. She went on to study at the University of Bucharest, and earn her doctorate in sociology (magna cum laude) with her mentor Dimitrie Gusti.
With her doctorate in hand, she began field research.
"Between 1942 and 1943, she was sent by the Central Institute of Statistics to Plasa Câmpeni in the Apuseni Mountains, where she researched with great success the scattered settlements – grove settlements. She was part of the team of sociologists and ethnographers coordinated by Henri H. Stahl and Anton Golopenția, after the Second World War, when she studied the popular costume from Hodac and the Maramureș region."
Apolzan was one of the many interwar Romanian intellectuals and people of value who were persecuted (in various forms, from abuse and harassment to imprisonment and death sentences) by the communist state of Romania. When she was ostracized by the communist regime, she was punished by being sent to do "low-level work," at the Apaca weaving mill, where she spent several years until 1956 when she was allowed to return to the Central Institute of Statistics.
In 1967 she became a member of the complex research team of the Danube Gorge – called Iron Gates I, studying ethnography in the area of the Almaju and Mehedinți Mountains in Romania.
Lucia Apolzan's most important revelations are found in the complex field of anthropological interdisciplinary study of the continuity of habitation of the Carpathian lands for thousands of years. Her first complex study was on the Land of Moților or the Land of Stone, an ethnogeographical region of the Apuseni Mountains. She published her research on folk costumes, myths, landscapes and animals only after she had traveled the entire region on foot.