";s:4:"text";s:4060:" In the Middle Ages, the Vlachs and the Moldavians were members of the Serbian tribes, and their ruling dynasties were also Serbian. Most Balkan girls are raised like this.Hungarian Culture: Everything An Outsider Needs to Know About[…] Has this reader even BEEN to Eastern Europe? In smaller villages only younger people and children usually speak foreign languages. they have the same ancestors (you’d have to look way back in time) and they speak similar languages. […][…] as other Eastern Europeans. Several competing theories have been generated to explain the origin of modern Romanians, although constant ongoing linguistic and geo – historical research and analysis tend to indicate that Romanians have coalesced as a major ethnic group both South and North of the Danube. And because of this, the Romanians are frowned upon all over Europe. We’ll get to that next.There is a very particular image that’s associated with “Slavic girls”. Some historical evidences document that, prior the ‘Romanian language’ was imposed in the near history, the Romanians obviously used the Likewise their compatriots south of Sava and Dunube rivers, the Serbs in the southeaster part of the Pannonian plain were Christianized by the Byzantine Empire in the second half of the 9th century. Some Balkan girls are also Slavic. Girls are raised to value education and career, just as much as they value looks and relationships.Here is the thing: Balkan women are the best of both worlds.They are feminine, family-orientated, and caring like their Russian and Ukrainian counterparts.But, they’re also driven, smart, and ambitious like Western ladies.And here’s yet another illustration of this that comes from my grandma. In the middle years of the 19th century the term Dacia was frequently used to refer to what we know now as Romania, that is, the entire territory inhabited by Romanians. The last Dacian Kingdom was defeated in two wars against the Roman conquerors, in 101–102 and 105–106, after which the Roman province of Dacia was established, the point which is used to mark the end of the Iron Age and start of the Classical period. Hungary is home to a Finno-Ugric language (related to that of Finland; a non-Indo-European language group).