Ioan Moța
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Ioan Moța | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | 20 November 1940 | (aged 71)
Citizenship | Austria-Hungary, Romania |
Known for | journalistic activity |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Politics, Theology |
Influenced | political thought in Austria-Hungary and Romania |
Ioan Moța (Romanian pronunciation: [iˈo̯an ˈmot͡sa]; Nojag, Hunedoara County, 15 December 1868 - Bucharest, 20 November 1940) was a Romanian priest and journalist, as well as father to prominent Iron Guard personality Ion Moța. Moța is buried at Orăștie.
In March 1917, Moța was a member of a group of exiled Romanian Habsburg subjects who were sent as a delegation to the United States to champion Romania's cause.
Journalistic works[]
- "Foaia Poporului", Sibiu (1893-1895),
- "Revista Orăștiei" (1895- 1898),
- "Telegraful Român" (1898-1899)
- "Bunul Econom", Orăștie (1899 - 1901)
- "Libertatea" (1902-1915, 1919-1933), Orăștie
- "Libertatea" (1917), Cleveland, Ohio
- "Foaia Interesantă" (1917), Cleveland, Ohio
See also[]
- Ion Moța, his son
References[]
- Vasile Stoica, "In America pentru cauza romaneasca", Tip. Universul, București 1926.
- Florin Mirghesiu - "Iași - Washington via Siberia, Coreea, Japonia și Hawaii", in Magazin Istoric, no. 12, December 2004.
- Lucian Boia, "On the history of rumanian immigration to America," in Romanian Studies, 1973-1975.
External links[]
Categories:
- 1868 births
- 1940 deaths
- People from Hunedoara County
- People from the Kingdom of Hungary
- Romanian Austro-Hungarians
- Romanian Orthodox priests
- Romanian biographers
- Romanian male writers
- Male biographers
- Romanian textbook writers
- Romanian journalists
- Romanian memoirists
- 19th-century Eastern Orthodox priests
- 20th-century Eastern Orthodox priests
- Romanian writer stubs