and
Zmeul, 1927 art by Nadia Bulighin, depicting characters of Romanian folk fairy tales The development of Romanian literature has taken place in parallel with that of the rich
Romanian folklore – lyric, epic, dramatic and didactic – which continues in modern times. Romanian
oral literature includes
doine (lyric songs),
balade (
ballads),
hore (dance songs),
colinde (carols),
basme (
fairy tales),
snoave (
anecdotes),
vorbe (
proverbs), and
ghicitori (
riddles). The folk pastoral ballad
Miorița is one of the best known examples of Romanian folk literature. Folk literature has been transcribed by authors, notably
Petre Ispirescu, who collected folk tales.
Medieval Slavonic literature The Script of
Old Church Slavonic began to be used in the
territories of current day Romania as early as the 10th Century, with the oldest surviving manuscripts being dated as far back as the 12th Century. The earliest dated texts in Slavonic, originally from Wallachia and Moldavia, consist of a series of Religious Songs by Nicodim & Filotei and a Hagiographical text by Grigore Țamblâc, all being dated between 1385 and 1391. Also by the 15th century many copies of medieval Slavonic texts have been created by the scribes of the Danubian Principalities. and his son Teodosie In the meantime numerous Slavonic and Greek translations of popular
medieval romances were in circulation across the
Danubian Principalities, like the
Alexander Romance and
Barlaam and Josaphat. Particularly of note is
The Teachings of Neagoe Basarab to his son Theodosie: a series of teachings on morality and politics, written between 1519 and 1521, by the
Wallachian Lord Neagoe Basarab, a work written in the spirit of the
Renaissance and considered one of the oldest great works of Southeastern European literature. Moldavian historical chronicles written by court order in the 16th century include the chronicles of Macarie, Azarie and Eftimie.
Beginning of writing and publishing in Romanian The earliest books in Romanian were translated from
Slavonic religious texts in the 15th century.
Psaltirea Hurmuzaki,
Codicele Voronețean,
Psaltirea Voronețeană,
Psaltirea Scheiană, and others are religious texts from Moldavia that carry evidence of being translations of manuscripts written in the other languages in the Banat-Hunedoara area. Of them,
Hurmuzaki Psalter, a Romanian copy of a bilingual Church Slavonic - Romanian Psalter, has been dated between 1491–1504 by watermarks, making it the oldest preserved manuscript in Romanian. The earliest surviving document in Romanian that can be precisely dated is
Neacșu's letter written in 1521, to the
jude ("judge and mayor") of
Brașov, Hans Benkner. The first book printed in Wallachia was a Slavonic religious book, printed in 1508 at
Târgoviște. The first book printed in the Romanian language was
Catehismul românesc by
Filip Moldoveanul in 1544. Other translations from Greek and Slavonic books were printed later in the 16th century.
Dosoftei, a Moldavian Bishop, in 1673, published the first Romanian metrical psalter, the earliest collection of poems written in Romanian. in
Chișinău Early efforts to publish the Bible in Romanian started with the 1582 printing in the small town of
Orăștie of the so-called
Palia de la Orăștie – a translation of the first books of the
Old Testament – printed by Deacon Șerban (the son of Deacon
Coresi) and
Marien Diacul (Marien the Scribe).
Palia was translated by Bishop
Mihail Tordaș et al. from the Pentateuch printed at
Kolozsvár in 1551 by
Gáspár Heltai and a version of
Vulgate. The entire Bible was not published in Romanian until the end of the 17th century, when the Metropolitanate's Press of Bucharest printed
Biblia de la București ("The Bucharest Bible") in 1688, compiled by the Greceanu Brothers. In
Transylvania, there was also an attestation of the explicit use of a Latin model, with the appearance of the first Romanian dictionary,
Dictionarium Valachico-Latinum (
Caransebeș, about 1650), while the first grammar of the Romanian language written in Latin was
Institutiones linguae Valachicae (
Crișana, circa 1770).
Humanism The first appearances of
humanism in
Moldavia and
Wallachia were in the 16th century with the likes of and
Petru Cercel, but it took another century for these ideas to fully flourish. This delay can be attributed to the continuation of
Byzantine culture in the Danubian Principalities, or to the different
social classes compared to Western Europe. During the 17th century, humanism spread to Moldavia via Poland and its
Jesuit schools, having as representatives the likes of
Grigore Ureche,
Miron Costin, and
Ion Neculce with their chronicles on the history of Moldavia. Following the example of
Petro Movilă's
Kyiv Colegium, the
Lords Matei Basarab and
Vasile Lupu established
Neoclassical schools such as the Schola Graeca et Latina and the
Iași Colegiu. In Wallachia,
Mihail Moxa,
Kyr Gavriil and
Stoica Ludescu wrote historical chronicles; while the
Cronica Buzeștilor (The Chronicle of the Buzești House) was written by an anonymous writer.
Constantin Cantacuzino was a nobleman and historian and a notable humanist scholar.
Nicolae Milescu was a Moldavian-born writer, diplomat and traveler, who lived and worked in the
Tsardom of Russia. The most significant Romanian humanist was
Dimitrie Cantemir, who wrote histories of Wallachia, Moldavia and the
Ottoman Empire, and philosophical and religious treaties such as ''
, The Indescribable Image of Sacred Science
, and The Little Compendium of Logic
. He also wrote the Roman à clef A Hieroglyphic History'' in 1705.
Enlightenment monument in Cluj-Napoca, depicting
Petru Maior,
Gheorghe Șincai, and
Samuil Micu-Klein. In 18th century Transylvania, throughout the
Blaj Schools of
Inocențiu Micu-Klein, a Latinist and
Enlightenment movement, the
Școala Ardeleană emerged, producing
philological studies of the
Romantic origin of the Romanian language. Among the many works on
Romanian history and the Romanian language by
Samuil Micu-Klein,
Gheorghe Șincai and
Petru Maior, the "Heroic-comic-satiric Poem"
Țiganiada by
Ion Budai-Deleanu, can also be found, promoting democratic and enlightenment ideals. In Wallachia and Moldavia, the Enlightenment can be seen in the Poems and Prose of
Iancu Văcărescu,
Costache Conachi, and
Dinicu Golescu. ==National awakening==