The Romanians' struggle In Transylvania for equality…
1744 CE to 1755 CE
The Romanians' struggle In Transylvania for equality has found its first formidable advocate in a Uniate bishop, Inocentiu Micu Klein, who, with imperial backing, has became a baron and a member of the Transylvanian Diet.
Klein has from 1729 to 1744 submitted petitions to Vienna on the Romanians' behalf and stubbornly taken the floor of Transylvania's Diet to declare that Romanians are the inferiors of no other Transylvanian people, that they contribute more taxes and soldiers to the state than any of Transylvania's "nations," and that only enmity and outdated privileges have caused their political exclusion and economic exploitation.
Klein fights to gain Uniate clergymen the same rights as Catholic priests, reduce feudal obligations, restore expropriated land to Romanian peasants, and bar feudal lords from depriving Romanian children of an education.
The bishop's words fall on deaf ears in Vienna; Hungarian, German, and Szekler deputies jealously cling to their noble privileges, openly mock the bishop and snarl that the Romanians are to the Transylvanian body politic what "moths are to clothing."