RRI Live!

Listen to Radio Romania International Live

Archaeology and the Securitate in Communist Romania

Scientific research in a totalitarian regime or a dictatorship is strictly controlled by the state apparatus

Archaeology and the Securitate in Communist Romania
Archaeology and the Securitate in Communist Romania

, 09.05.2022, 14:00

Scientific research in a totalitarian regime or a dictatorship is strictly controlled by the state apparatus. Censorship is an essential element in the structure of such a state, and the repressive apparatus is its hard core. The communist state had as its basis ideology. Knowledge of history was essential, and got special attention from the Securitate, the repressive apparatus of Communist Romania, which it controlled ideologically. The process of ideologizing social sciences and the humanities was part of the propaganda. History was no exception, it was subject to ideology like everything else, and part of that was archaeology. Even more than that, the heritage of historical sciences was struck brutally, and in the case of some historians, we can talk about physical brutality. The repressive apparatus jailed historians of the old regime, either for the political positions they held, or for their scientific opinions. Illustrious historians like Gheorghe Brătianu, Constantin C. Giurescu, Petre P. Panaitescu, Silviu Dragomir, and others, were put in prison starting in 1950. Some died there, like Gheorghe Brătianu, others managed to survive until 1964, the year of the general amnesty for political detainees.



Archaeologist Marian Cosac is a professor with the Valahia University of Targoviste, and editor of a volume of select documents from the archives of the former Securitate, about the manner in which the intelligence service of communist Romania directed archaeological research before 1989. It has to be said that archaeology was another area in which the Securitate stepped in with brutality, setting the topics and imposing conclusions. It was about the ideas and theses that could be ideologically supported, and appointing the panels of archaeologists that could do research on a given site. The formation of the Romanian people and their continuity in Transylvania, Maramures, Banat, and Dobrogea were more than ideas that had to transpire from any and all archaeological digs. It was an obsession, it was the most important conclusion. Hand in hand with continuity was historical truth. The above mentioned provinces were assigned special attention because of the historical differences with Hungary and Bulgaria. It had to be that Romania’s arguments must derive from any research into the territories that united with Romania in 1878 and 1918.



However, this was not an exclusive practice of the Romanian Securitate. Other repression apparatuses from other communist states had the same kind of intervention for purposes of justification. We asked Marian Cosac how the Securitate assigned archaeologists research tasks and the conclusions they had to reach:


“The Securitate had a vast, extremely vast, network of informants in all history museums in Romania. This network of informants guaranteed the correct scientific interpretation of archaeological data. The officers of Direction I of the Securitate did not have the ability to understand the language of archaeology. Unfortunately, accusations of non-compliance with historical truth came from colleagues, not Securitate officers. To the extent that the data reached the officers, they intervened by opening a surveillance case. Some archaeologists found themselves in the situation in which, while expressing well supported scientific arguments, they became enemies of the Romanian state, placed in the category of those who warped historical truth.



The intervention of the Securitate in archaeological research also had personal consequences. There were cases of archaeologists who, to their merit, had the courage to put up opposition to the egregious meddling of the authorities in the meticulous work of archaeologists. Florin Medelet, from the Timis Museum of History had to suffer for his opposition, says Marian Cosac, who found in the archives his surveillance file:



“Florin Medelet was one of the archaeologists who came to the attention of the Securitate because of an unfortunate find. This find consisted of three Roman bricks found while digging near the foundation of a block of flats. The three Roman bricks were interpreted by a historian specializing in the modern period, Ioan Dimitrie Suciu, as being clear proof of the continuity and presence of the Roman factor in the Banat area. He identified the presence of a Roman castrum in the founding area of the city of Timisoara, with the three bricks presented as incontestable proof. As an archaeologist, Medelet rejected this hypothesis. This rejection resulted in a surveillance case being opened, and this had dire consequences on his scientific, and even personal, evolution. He was dismissed from his managerial position, he got demoted to the lowest rank, that of museographer. He was banned from publishing studies in archaeology, he was put under surveillance, and was prevented from applying for a PhD. The direct effects on Florin Medelet were catastrophic. Medelet is an undisputed personality in archaeological research in the Banat area, he shaped an entire school of archaeology.



Between 1945 and 1989, archaeology was a science heavily influenced by ideology. Neutral research had a lot to suffer, and many honest scientific conclusions gathered dust on a shelf, forgotten.

The History Show
The History Show Monday, 01 June 2026

The events in Tatarbunar

The events that unfolded in Tatarbunar, in the fall of 1924 constitute a textbook case of state sponsored terrorism. They also illustrate how a...

The events in Tatarbunar
Photo: Artyom Korshunov / unsplash.com
The History Show Monday, 25 May 2026

The nationalisation of the mines

Mining is an old occupation in the Romanian lands, present in the earliest records of the inhabitants of these parts. A peculiarity of Romanian...

The nationalisation of the mines
Sighet Memorial (Photo: Mariana Chirita/ RRI)
The History Show Monday, 18 May 2026

Romulus Rusan

The name of the writer Romulus Rusan is synonymous with the recovery of the memory from the years of communism, a memory that suffered severely...

Romulus Rusan
RRI
The History Show Monday, 11 May 2026

Romania and the Group of 77

From 1945 until well after 1958,  the year the Red Army withdrew, Romanian diplomacy, like that of all other socialist states in Central and Eastern...

Romania and the Group of 77
The History Show Monday, 04 May 2026

The Royal Hunts

Hunting also carried a magical‑religious dimension, served as a marker of belonging to an elite, and functioned as a symbol of authority embodied...

The Royal Hunts
The History Show Monday, 27 April 2026

Pharmaceuticals in the Phanariot era

According to historians, the Phanariot era in the Romanian Principalities began in 1718 and ended more than a century later, in 1822. It is named...

Pharmaceuticals in the Phanariot era
The History Show Monday, 20 April 2026

Feminism in Romania after World War II

After 1945, the feminist movement in Romania was subordinated to the policies of the communist regime and ideology dictated what should be done....

Feminism in Romania after World War II
The History Show Monday, 13 April 2026

Aron Pumnul High School in Chernivtsi (Cernăuți)

School is what has mostly shaped human beings starting with the 18th century, when humanity began to understand that only through education can human...

Aron Pumnul High School in Chernivtsi (Cernăuți)

Partners

Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român
Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS
Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online
Institului European din România Institului European din România
Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti
Muzeul Național de Artă al României Muzeul Național de Artă al României
Le petit Journal Le petit Journal
Radio Prague International Radio Prague International
Muzeul Național de Istorie a României Muzeul Național de Istorie a României
ARCUB ARCUB
Radio Canada International Radio Canada International
Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti” Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti”
SWI swissinfo.ch SWI swissinfo.ch
UBB Radio ONLINE UBB Radio ONLINE
Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl
creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti
italradio italradio
Institutul Confucius Institutul Confucius
BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți

Affiliates

Euranet Plus Euranet Plus
AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters
Digital Radio Mondiale Digital Radio Mondiale
News and current affairs from Germany and around the world News and current affairs from Germany and around the world
Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona

Providers

RADIOCOM RADIOCOM
Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company