Doștat

Doștat (German: Thorstadt; Hungarian: Hosszútelke) is a commune located in Alba County, Transylvania, Romania. It has a population of 1,072 and is composed of three villages: Boz, Dealu Doștatului and Doștat.

Doștat
Location in Alba County
Doștat
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 45°58′N 23°50′E
Country Romania
CountyAlba
Population
 (2011)[1]
956
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Vehicle reg.AB

Villages

Boz

Boz (German: Bußd or Bussd, Hungarian: Buzd) is a village in the Doștat commune. The name means elder bush in Romanian.[2]

The village is part of Doștat commune. The first document that mentions the village is from 1290. In 1786 there were 571 inhabitants recorded, in 1936 there were 1013 inhabitants, from which 342 Transylvanian Saxons.

In 1992, after almost all Ethnic Germans emigrated (mainly to Germany), there remained only 371 inhabitants.[3]

Things of interest

It is the birthplace of the Lutheran priest Mathias Schuster who has founded the village Rosenau in Seewalchen commune in Austria, as a refuge place for the German population (Saxons and Lander) from Transylvania and other parts of Central and Eastern Europe who had to flee after World War II in order to escape the communist deportation to the Soviet Union and imprisonment.

In the period of war, on their way to the Russian front, being enrolled in the German army (as Waffen SS), the men from Bussd wrote on the walls of the train in their home dialect: "Holt Dich, Stalin, un der Grunn, denn de Bussder kunn", "Tremble for your moustache, Stalin, 'couse the people from Bussd are coming!" .

A meaningful joke about Bussd can be found in a German journal: In the train from Kronstadt to Vienna, a peasant from Bussd is sitting next to a merchant from Vienna, who was continuously rhapsodizing about his beautiful city. Because the peasant wasn't paying any attention, the merchant asked him: So tell me, you really haven't been in Vienna before? The peasant then answered drily: Well, have you ever been in Bussd?[4]

References

  1. "Populaţia stabilă pe judeţe, municipii, oraşe şi localităti componenete la RPL_2011" (in Romanian). National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
  2. "Bussd".
  3. "Population of Transylania".
  4. "Der Berggeist" (19). June 2006: 2. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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