Ip massacre
Ip massacre | |
---|---|
Hungarian troops marching in nearby Zalău, five days earlier | |
Location |
Ipp, Kingdom of Hungary (now Ip, Romania) |
Date |
13/14 September 1940 23:00 (CET) |
Attack type | Genocide (targeted killing of the local ethnic Romanians), ethnic cleansing |
Weapons | Machine guns, rifles, revolvers, bayonets |
Deaths | 158 ethnic Romanians |
Perpetrator | Hungarian Army, locals, Nemzetőrség members |
The Ip massacre took place in the early hours of 14 September 1940, in Ip, Sălaj - a village in Northern Transylvania. The Hungarian Army was apparently supported by a local vigilante group,[1] and together they killed 158 Romanian civilians.[2]
In 1990, a monument was erected in Ip to remember the victims, and the Romanian Armed Forces produced a film for Romanian Television.
Background
After the Vienna Award of 30 August 1940, as a result of the German-Italian political arbitration, northwestern Transylvania came under Hungarian rule. Horthyist-occupied territory during the Second World War became Northern Transylvania and it contained the northwestern part of the homonymous region and the Székely lands. A total of eight of 23 Transylvanian counties included in the interwar period were entirely alienated, and another three were split. Thus, Sălaj County is also, now, attached to Hungary. On 8 September 1940, the Second Army entered the city of Zalău.[3] Immediately after the occupation of the Transylvanian territory, they started a series of massacres against the Romanian civilian populace. The area most affected by Horthyist terror was Sălaj, where 477 Romanians were massacred..[4]
See also
References
- ↑ Lehrer, Milton G. (1991). Pătroiu, Ion, ed. Ardealul pământ românesc. Problema Ardealului văzută de un american. Cluj-Napoca: Vatra Românească. ISBN 973-29-0010-5.
- ↑ Ţurlea, Petre (1996). Ip și Trăznea: Atrocități maghiare și acțiune diplomatică românească. Bucharest: Encyclopedic Publishing House. ISBN 973-45-0181-X.
- ↑ Fătu, Mihai; Mușat, Mircea; Bodea, Gheorghe (1985). Teroarea horthysto-fascistă în nord-vestul României: septembrie 1940 - octombrie 1944. Bucharest: Political Publishing House.
- ↑ "VII - Transilvania în cel de-al Doilea Război Mondial". Istoria României. Transilvania II. Cluj-Napoca: George Barițiu Publishing House. 1997. p. 34.
External links
- Ip massacre (Romanian)