Three shadows of Post-Habsburg Transylvanian Right : From Critical moderate nationalism to Fascism, or how to integrate national Romania
National Transylvanian elites have provided Greater Romania with new political personal whose political culture was partly inherited from the imperial debates, but contributed to the new spectrum of ideologies and political practices, while maintaining a sort of regional specificity in the new Romanian State. If Iuliu Maniu appeared as a model of democratic and pluralistic Statesman, Octavian Goga and Alexandru Vaida-Voevod offered cultural and political transitions between Nineteenth Century nationalism and interwar radicalism, whereas Emil Cioran and Ion Moța have been among the most radical young intellectual and political personal of the important Romanian fascism.