WATCH THIS VIDEO FOR MORE WEIRD EASTERN EUROPEAN CUSTOMS: kzbin.info/www/bejne/jIewp52ddq-Mmrc&ab_channel=AnnaLeWild
@licsipondi2 жыл бұрын
I would love to see a video about Eastern European/ Balkan cuisine, food related traditions, and the variations of the same food across this region (e.g. ajvar/zakuszka, töltött káposzta/sarma/sarmale, etc.)
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
That's a great idea 😁 I'm adding it to my list of future video plans
@remuslazar2033Ай бұрын
@@AnnaLeWild 2025 here, you didn't
@vlastimirmilojevic33762 жыл бұрын
RIP r/2balkan4you...
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
:(
@mushroommagic16972 жыл бұрын
Crying in Balkan :,,(((((()
@carpathianwolf35232 жыл бұрын
Eastern Europe = best Europe Also, BALKAN STRONG 💪💪💪
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
I 100% agree 😎
@Halucygeno2 жыл бұрын
While I spent some of my childhood moving between Poland and Bulgaria, my parents moved out to Western Europe when I was 5 y.o., so I have only vague recollections and scraps of cultural traditions from Bulgaria. Still, I'll try to do my best: - The tradition I remember the most distinctly are martenitsas (мартеници) - small, hand-made dolls or wrist-bands made from red-and-white wool. Like their names suggest, people start wearing them on the 1st of March, and keep them on until they see a stork or blossoming tree. When they do, they take them off and hang them on the tree, I think. It's supposed to be a symbol of the coming spring, but I never understood how Baba Marta ties into all of it (is it some kind of deity or guardian spirit?). And I think there was a specific saying or phrase you were supposed to exchange on March 1st, but I've forgotten it now. - My grandpa makes his own homebrew "rakia". This is apparently very common, at least in the provinces. Me and my father once went into a store to buy some rakia for a meetup with friends, and since we're not exactly alcohol connoisseurs, we asked an old lady in the same isle which one she'd recommend. She said "oh, my husband makes his own homebrew, I can sell you the same amount for half the price". And in the end, we ended up not buying anything from the supermarket and instead poured this lady's homebrew into a plastic water bottle we had. Apparently, this is also very common, with my grandpa's house being littered with repurposed "Coca Cola" bottles. I distinctly remember drinking some when I was young, assuming it was water, but that may just be a false memory that I've invented because of how plausible it sounds. - Food feels very fat and oily, no offense. Lots of cheeses, butters, meats... Not sure if any of these are Bulgarian in origin (some may be cultural imports from Turkey, from the occupation), but I remember moussaka (potatoes chopped into small cubes with ground beef and a specific type of cheese / yoghurt poured on top), yufka (very simple - any kind of pasta, mixed with butter and feta cheese. Sugar is optional), popara (very simple - a bowl with milk and scraps of bread, with sugar sprinkled onto the bread) and banitsa (a tube-like wrap, often arranged into a spiral and made from a layer - or I think maybe several layers? - of filo dough, filled with cheese, egg, and other such. Very good with honey). - There are, like, only 2 dubbing studios, and only 8 voice actors who do all the voices on TV (you start recognising them after a while), and only children's cartoons get proper dubs. Everything else is a "voice-over" dub, though they are not done by a single narrator like Polish "lektor" dubs - they have multiple voice-actors, recording like for a normal dub, but the audio is layered over the original audio track. Makes me wonder about what goes into securing the rights to have the clean, dubbing-studio audio track - does it cost extra? I'm very curious... - This is not really about Bulgaria, but rather Bulgaria-adjecent. Moldova has a Bulgarian minority which have their own village, Taraclia, with a museum of their founding, their own theatre and their own local news organisation, which reports on local happenings. What I immediately noticed when there is that they speak an accented version of Bulgarian, with the "e" sound being pronounced like the Russian "e" sound - "ye". I assume this is because Russian is a very widespread language in Moldova, so the Bulgarians living there may have picked up the pronunciation from that? Don't quote me on this, I'm not an anthropologist. I got to speak to an elderly local historian who had written a lot on the subject, but I'm not sure if any of their work is available online, and I've forgotten most of what they told me. Shame. Yeah, but that's about all I remember. Sorry, I've grown increasingly distant from my home culture as I've grown, and now I feel more like an outsider than an insider in Poland and Bulgaria... Not sure if I want to reconnect, because my family is obnoxious and I don't like them, but the history, especially the literature and poetry, are very interesting...
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
Wow! That's a lot of interesting information about Bulgaria, and I really appreciate it. Accidentally drinking rakija/țuică out of Coca Cola bottles, thinking it is water, is a very common childhood experience in this region. Fun fact, there are a few Polish villages in Romania too. The most famous one is called Nowy Sołoniec (Solonețu Nou). I always wanted to visit that place. Cheers!
@licsipondi2 жыл бұрын
Such an underrated video!
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
I agree 😉
@rosieblue16892 жыл бұрын
Tall and knowledgeable in the kitchen???? Almost a mythical creature. "Greece is a country whose mythology is constantly appropriated by western fantasy authors" that hit hard 😂. Also it's amazing how much research you guys did and i love the editing
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
Maybe he's just a figment of my imagination 🤔 And yes, I am genuinely annoyed by how Greek mythology is portrayed in some movies and books 😂 Anyways, thanks for helping out with the Greece-related stuff. I couldn't have found all that without you.
@rosieblue16892 жыл бұрын
@@AnnaLeWild ❤️ you're welcome
@rosieblue16892 жыл бұрын
@Cropnik 😂
@iamunabletousername1200 Жыл бұрын
Another wedding-related character from Prekmurje is the pozvačin, he invites people to the wedding
@hedvigjudit73502 жыл бұрын
Balkan people were the original furries lol
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
Y e s :)
@IvoraIsOnlineAgain10 ай бұрын
Western furries are just appropriating Slavic culture
@MargaretHorsley-q2r Жыл бұрын
Great funny and interesting video !
@MTubic.2 жыл бұрын
20:57 Our family is actually in the sport Bull fighting (Korida) and our bull has won the Grmečka Korida and Kočićev Zbor. Our bull Jablan is fighting in a week to be come a chamipon of Balkan.
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
That is amazing! Congrats to your family, and keep up the good work! :) Good luck to Jablan
@MTubic.2 жыл бұрын
@@AnnaLeWild thanks 👍
@Mirandajanewyatt9 ай бұрын
The diversity there is so beautiful! Very underrated by the media!
@anikonemes44112 жыл бұрын
Hoping for a long video
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
I hope 27 minutes were long enough ;) Thanks for watching!
@stjepanloncaric9944 Жыл бұрын
Jako dobro. Nastavite tak. A i ne treba se sramiti biti. KZbinri uglavnom probaju biti " pogled sa strane" . Očito se događaju nove kombinacije med ljudima. Djecu je tolko fino odgajati. Očito puno državnih poreza ode na nerealne stereotipe i nepraktične savjete i znanja. Samo napred ekipo !!!
@boreanonekatto81462 жыл бұрын
Great vid and collab! Love your video editing and the memes you use, keep it up new sub tho 🗿
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@gdl-nik Жыл бұрын
Nice made video
@Blablabla-zc9cx2 жыл бұрын
Correction. Catholic tatoos were mostly popular in Bosnia and Herzegovina since the ottoman empire was here for couple centuries. Never seen a Croat from Croatia having such tatoos. But in central Bosnia were I come from, croats have those. Even my grandmother had those tattoos. It is mostly, if not exclusively a tradition from bosnian croats.
@snokehusk2232 жыл бұрын
Croats from almost all Croat occupied territories by Turkey had it but how some of territory was reclaimed they stopped having them.
@ssir59274 ай бұрын
It has nothing to do with the Ottomans, it is a millennia old tradition that predates the Slavs and Christianity itself
@BoboSLO1 Жыл бұрын
When Slovenes go to the croatian sea, they spread slovenian dna to croatian women very often 💪 , answer to the " femboy" provocation
@HladniSjeverniVjetar5 ай бұрын
You are just Alpine Croats.. xD cope harder Jožek.
@brucenatelee Жыл бұрын
I had to remember that I was looking into the Balkan cultures because the movie Mid Sommar (set in Sweden, I know) featured some things I saw in a Marina Abramovic documentary called "Balkan Erotic Epic," mostly cultural practices often related to eroticism (not pornographic, but cultural; immature minds are immature).
@AnnaLeWild Жыл бұрын
Sounds interesting! I need to check out Marina Abramovic's work. Thanks for the recommendation.
@ΝικόλαοςΔημητρίου-ν3δ2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video! I am from Greece and I think that usually Greece is the most "forgotten" Balkan country. That's because the West considers as Balkans only the former socialist club of which Greece has never been a part. During the 50's and 60's Greece has been relatively westernised and brought to friendship with Italy as Italy is the closest to Greece non-Balkan country. That's why you could hear then from Greeks more the thesis that Greece is a Mediterranean country rather a Balkan. However, nowadays when the Cold War ended up the Balkan countries began somehow to reunite (culturally speaking). That became a motivation to the Greeks to revive pure Balkan traditions in our country which were about to get lost. In Northern Greece Russian is a common language because of the Pontic migration during 90's. That means that therelations between Greeks, Serbs and especially Bulgarians became easier. We started to find more and more slavic words in demotic Greek, revived our white voice polyphony (Polyphonic Caravan) including Epirus, Macedonia, Thrace. Many immigrants from Albania share their customs and traditions with us: we have indeed very close cultures (maybe the closest ones because of the huge Arvanite cultural impact in Central Greece and Peloponnesus). In my opinion the most unusual Greek tradition is the Sarakosti calendar followed by wearing a red-white bracelet during March (I know this is VERY common throughout the Balkan peninsula). Sarakosti is a woman with seven or fourty legs each of them representing a week or a day during the Great Lent respectively. She does not have a mouth, her hair is coverd and she stands in a prayer position. As the Great Lent passes through March always there is a common phrase: "there is no March without Sarakosti". Thank you again)
@MarfTaylor Жыл бұрын
From what I've read so far you are saying that greeks forget about the balkans when things go bad and if its okay they consider themselves as a balkan country... Well typical greek stuff right there :). I am Bulgarian and yeah, we can argue about your culture if you want ;)
@ΝικόλαοςΔημητρίου-ν3δ Жыл бұрын
@@MarfTaylor Може и да продължим и на български тогава. Мисля че в историята нямаше още едно време, което могъло би да покаже че гърците забравяват за Балканите когато там е лошо, освен Хладната война. Ако имате нещо друго като пример давайте, ще ви послушам. Аз мисля че Гърция е в същото време и балканска и средиземноморска и източна страна благодаря на многообразието на гръцките общини от Сицилия през Тракия до Понт
@MarfTaylor Жыл бұрын
@@ΝικόλαοςΔημητρίου-ν3δ Аз бих внимавал как употребявам "Тракия". Голяма пробойна е във гръцката пропаганда :)
@ΝικόλαοςΔημητρίου-ν3δ Жыл бұрын
@@MarfTaylor Защо да не употребявам? Имало ли в миналото гръцката община в Тракия? Да, имало. Била ли тя като малцинство? Да, знам. Били ли там българи като мнозинство? Да, знам. Е ли това общ културен и историчен регион? Да, е. Аз не сьм националист и разбирам къде е пропаганда, а къде не е. Много ми мързи политика.
Honestly only those who grew up and lived in the Balkans and experienced life here can really understand this area, the rest are theories, guesses, just information without anything practical
@bigboss_87-14s2 жыл бұрын
bizarre but the best place on earth
@antepilic74222 жыл бұрын
You are bizarre
@bigboss_87-14s2 жыл бұрын
@@antepilic7422 says you
@bigboss_87-14s2 жыл бұрын
@@antepilic7422 are you alright
@antepilic74222 жыл бұрын
@@bigboss_87-14s yes. Unlike you as I can see
@bigboss_87-14s2 жыл бұрын
@@antepilic7422 why am i not alright
@eelmohamed Жыл бұрын
The only thing I know about Coatia is its president, Luka Modric.😂😂😂
@nips48652 жыл бұрын
😰 me scared to open comment section
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
This comment section is surprisingly mild
@Sytheduke Жыл бұрын
There should be more goat festivals around the world. There's one in the United States where they dress goats up in costumes and parade them around before judging which goat has the best costume.
@АлександърАтанасов-я6и3 ай бұрын
Advice: don't even think about mentioning anything related with: Kosovo and Macedonia. Completely not for discussion!
@vasil.kamdzhalov2 жыл бұрын
Bulgaria the best :D and then "balkan nationalism intensifies" If anything Croatia looks the most orderly now.
@Astronixxe2 жыл бұрын
The "mascații" And the "capra" are horror asf They give me nightmares Even if they come to my house 💀
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video! Balkans for ever! Na zdrawe/Živeli/Noroc/Yiamas! 🍻🍻 🇭🇷🇧🇬🇷🇸🇲🇪🇬🇷🇷🇴🇦🇱🇸🇮🇧🇦🇲🇰 (🇽🇰)(🇲🇩🇨🇾)
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
Cyprus is an island in the middle east. Romania is Carpathian. If you were in front of me I swear I wouldn’t stop beating you up until you bleed “Cyprus balkan” blood
@IvoraIsOnlineAgain2 жыл бұрын
20:06 Looks amazing. I wanna smash pots too
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
It looks fun!
@mikhailbakunin47762 жыл бұрын
Why is YT deleting views?
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
They hate us because they ain't us 😎
@brucenatelee Жыл бұрын
19:42 *_THIS IS WHAT I'M TALKING ABOUT!!!_* I love mythology, but I want to imagine other cultural myths from the "eyes" of the actual people, no British accents or made-up hoplite armor. Spartans in 300 don't dress like that in battle!
@brucenatelee Жыл бұрын
A Chinese professor was actually fired because their version of "umm" sounded like the n-word. "He kept repeating it!" Yeah! "Umm" is often used like a studder! Not everybody is offended by MonteNEGRO.
@TooGumbica Жыл бұрын
"Kolo originates in Greece"... yeas sure, linearly every indo European culture has some kind of circular dance with holding hands. Most prominently practiced in Slavic countries atm
@ClarkeAsimov2 жыл бұрын
Great video! Thanks for the effort!
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the feedback!
@am-cj3xo2 жыл бұрын
Romania is not a Balkan country, not a part of the Balkan Peninsula and has nothing to do with Balkan mountains. Romanians do not consider themselves as part of the Balkans.
@ssir59274 ай бұрын
The parts of Bulgaria south of the Danube that Romania currently illegitimately occupies are most certainly in the Balkans...
@greendalf12313 күн бұрын
Whoa whoa whoa, that tattooing tradition is from Bosnian Catholics, not from Croatia
@PeoplecallmeLucifer2 жыл бұрын
7:25 do Croats really go crazy when you say We're in the Balkans? Because..... we are
@snokehusk2232 жыл бұрын
We are in central Europe and Balkan.
@PeoplecallmeLucifer2 жыл бұрын
@@snokehusk223 geographically? yes Culturally? Just Balkans
@snokehusk2232 жыл бұрын
@@PeoplecallmeLucifer Actually Northern Croatia is geographically central Europe and culturally while south is south European culturally while Balkan geographically.
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
Yes, I've met some Croatians (also Slovenes and Romanians - but mostly online, so can be just kids for what I know) claiming they aren't Balkans and honestly it's irritating and partially offensive. I am English-born Bulgarian, meaning I have to travel through the entirety of Europe to get from England to Bulgaria or Vice versa. Trust me when I tell you Croatia (and Slovenia) is Balkan. The moment we drive from the rest of Europe into Slovenia-Croatia, it is immediately obvious we have entered the Balkans. First there are the beautiful green-covered mountains that are typical for the Balkans, unmatched by anywhere else in the world. The architecture: drive into Slovenia-Croatia and immediately you get nostalgic countryside houses with orange tiled roofs scattered across the mountain road. The radio changes station. The immediately recognisable Balkan folk singing, beautiful unmatched. Either that or you have the old-timey radio on, with hits known by every parent from their childhood and/or bachelor years, you immediately want to dance. Don't like the music? Ah, you've turned on turbo-folk Station - it appears everywhere in Balkans - just change the station to the glorious Balkan traditional folk music, if you don't like it. Tired from driving? Balkans have unmatched cuisine. The moment you drive into Croatia, the scent of traditional foods arrives to your nose. Stop in the town and have a typical grill meal, with cheese, tomatoes, olives and/or cucumber as a side. Take a sip of the Balkans traditional drink: Rakija. I honestly do not understand which Croatian you are to actively deny being Balkan. It is a heritage to be proud of - Culture should never have a back turned at it. Be proud!
@PeoplecallmeLucifer2 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 "Don't like the music? Ah, you've turned on turbo-folk Station" I love that line XD And there is a saying here in Croatia translated to "Being a bigger catholic than the pope" basically meaning: Going overboard to appear as something you are not because you see your own attributes as inferior And unfortunately a lot of people in the Balkans are trying to be "bigger Catholics than the pope"
@landmine93022 жыл бұрын
strange...
@alienx69312 жыл бұрын
you don't know history, traditions, culture of Romania... why do u spread false info???
@anikonemes44112 жыл бұрын
Bwhahaha @Serbs competition to commit more *censored*
@AnnaLeWild2 жыл бұрын
That joke alone will get me banned from Serbia 😂
@BoboSLO1 Жыл бұрын
Slovenija je 33% balkan ;)
@sunflower89183 ай бұрын
“In the past time was populated with Ilirians, Croatians…” So because you are with Croatian pal you erased the Serbs and invented that Croats as natives?? Learn a little history before you give the lesson on YT.
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
If you added Romania because of the 4.6 percent out of 100. You should add Germany Austria and Hungary because Munich is under the Danube so is half of Austria and Hungary you just added Romania into the list. This video is a joke why are you promoting a false Image of Romania?
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
You joined 2 years ago. You're probably 13, stop speaking in the name of Romania. Go visit your Grandmother, she will laugh at you for denying Balkan culture. Stop spamming. Balkan forever. The Balkans are underrated, and it's obvious they haven't visited, they'll be amazed. Great food, salad, soups, etc. All the foods that are animal/meat based will make your mouth water, but plenty delicious foods for veggies too. If you are into more simpler foods: We can make anything with Potatoes, bread is everywhere, and our tomatoes, cucumbers, other organic ingredients are unmatched and 100% bio. We differentiate between yellow/orange and white cheese - if you are into feta and feta-esque white cheese, we're your place. You'll immediately fall in love with our grilled foods. We have rich history, and you can try our more traditional dishes and drinks. Compote runs in our blood. If you're an adult, our alcohol is greatest too. The best part: you're always welcomed with open hands, the locals will in most cases treat you nicely, be kind to them back, and you'll have your new source of food. Come during the holidays, and you'll find food Paradise. Balkans for ever! Na zdrawe/Živeli/Noroc/Yiamas! 🍻🍻 🇭🇷🇧🇬🇷🇸🇲🇪🇬🇷🇷🇴🇦🇱🇸🇮🇧🇦🇲🇰 (🇽🇰)(🇲🇩🇨🇾)
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
No he added Romania, because it is officially Balkans: I don’t understand why Romania would aim to distance themselves from the term. Romania is Balkans. “Balkans” is not signified based on your GDP (in fact the term existed far before the idea of GDP). “Balkans” is no more than a geographical region, marked by culture - you are Balkan, and should be proud of it (don’t erase culture)! It has nothing to do with GDP or economy, and the term is no better or worse than “south-eastern European”, as it is a geographic and cultural term. “Balkans” carries no negative connotations either - that is unless you ask extra-nationalists which try to inflict a negative connotation, and far-right westerners which have recently adopted “balkanisation” as a negative adjective (which to be honest, I have not heard in proper use once). ------ Etymology: The term “Balkans” is an adopted term meaning “wooded mountain range” (something Romania has plenty of). Alternative etymology states Balkans may derive from “balk” meaning area or part of land, referring to the fact the it is a peninsula (one which Romania is clearly attached to). Balkans is no more than a cultural and geographical term, something that we should be proud of. ------ Due to apparent “negative connotations”, the definition of where the Balkans is located may vary from person to person, however there are three major definitions: • Balkan Mountain Range border definition = this definition is slowly becoming outdated; it states that the Balkan border is defined by the countries under the Balkan mountain range. It has a few flaws. First: some countries with more land under a mountain range may come out as “More politically relevant” - never a good thing. Second, which mountains? Is it specifically the ‘Balkan’ range, which spans Serbia and Bulgaria. Sometimes the range across Bosnia is included, and other times, anything below the Carpathians is included. Depending which mountain range you use, it may cut of countries obviously in the peninsula or cultural realm, which makes the definition one bad to use. • Sava-Danube borders definition. To find a ‘better’ definition than the one above, this was a resort. It cuts countries badly off from the peninsula and cuts nations tied culturally with it, completely getting rid of the use of having a term “Balkans” anyway. Usually only extra-nationalists use this version to cut their country off from the Balkans, by coming up with a sub-definition to fit their wish. Sadly, it’s gaining traction and popularity to those who are unaware. It states that the northern Balkan border is designated by Danube and Sava rivers. Then depending on who creates the map, sub-variants are created: Sava-Soča-Danube, Danube-Sava-Kopa, etc. • Historian’s (Historical) border definition. This groups the countries usually used by historians when referring to the Balkans, hence the name. This, in my opinion, is the best possible definition of the Balkans. It focuses on linking countries that are historically, culturally, (geographically), and to an extent even linguistically tied together. It also keeps the peninsula definition. Countries included: Romania, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Croatia, BiH, Serbia, (Kosovo, if you see it as independent), Montenegro, North Macedonia, Albania and Greece. Many like to add Moldova and Cyprus, although they aren’t always included. Turkey (Turkiye) is rarely seen as Balkan, apart from it’s European/Thrace region, which is far more similar culturally and geographically, to say Greece, than Turkey. ------ No point in disliking the term, terms Academia: In addition, I find it silly to strive away from the term “Balkan”, just because it sounds weird to some. That is the professional term. It is an official term used by Academics, Historians (hence the Historical border definitions) and Linguists - “Balkan Sprachbund” and “Paleo-Balkan” are all official academic terms that Romania is included in.
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 its my grandfather and my school that explained where we are. Im not gonna read the whole text and I’m 56 years old. Balkans as you said is a geographic term. Romania is not there. You can go to Bulgaria and talk as much as you want on the balkans. Cheers from CARPATHIA
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 you also added Cyprus a non European island in the first place. You are the weirdest guy I met online. As you said I have never visited the balkans. Because we don’t have them. We have the carpathians. Goodbye!
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 Palkans doesn’t sound weird. “ the geographical term is becoming outdated” “mountain range” so what you are saying that Norway is Palkans because they have mountains? And we are now Bulgaria because Geography is becoming outdated? Are you reading what you are typing? Is this a joke? I’m serious are you joking? It’s a prank?
@pharaohs63472 жыл бұрын
Najjak narod sme nikoj nisho ne ni mojt
@aleskosir2727 Жыл бұрын
Showing the slovenian kurent as croatian? Wtf
@AnnaLeWild Жыл бұрын
That footage is from the Croatian Rijeka carnival, but it had some participants from Slovenia as well, who were dressed as Kurents. If you take a good look at that clip, you can see that not everyone is dressed at Kurents.
@pedjaalbijanic7259 Жыл бұрын
Bisare?! Wiered?! Wtf you talk about?
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
Romania has Carpathian Mountains not Balkan. The culture is Carpathian like Poland Hungary Austria Czechia all these countries are Carpathian not Balkan.
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
Hahaha, nope. Romania is culturally Balkans! The food, music, mountains, culture. Be proud to be Balkans. Stop listening to Hungarian oppressors
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 also mountains cool so now we have palkans and paltic not the actual Carpathian Mountains I don’t know what food or music you are talking about there is Carpathian folk and traditions. They’re everywhere. Maybe you are talking about manele? That is very palkans like you.
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
Romania is Carpathian not Balkan
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
You are referring to the mountain ranges only. Apart from the Hungarian-influnced Transilvania regions, Romania is Balkans. Culturally, historically, geographically. Be proud - our Balkan culture is unique and unmatched! Balkans for ever! Na zdrawe/Živeli/Noroc/Yiamas! 🍻🍻 🇭🇷🇧🇬🇷🇸🇲🇪🇬🇷🇷🇴🇦🇱🇸🇮🇧🇦🇲🇰 (🇽🇰)(🇲🇩🇨🇾)
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
If you added Romania why didn’t you add Hungary into the balkans! Stop putting Romania into the balkans!!! It has CARPATHIAN MOUNTAINS
@cerebrummaximus37622 жыл бұрын
You joined two years ago. Your grandparents will be offended that you are ignoring your culture. How is Romania closer to Hungary and Switzerland than Balkans?
@klaus67402 жыл бұрын
@@cerebrummaximus3762 we are bordering Hungary btw there is something called a map it shows you where we are. Hungary is a small country. So is Austria. They were one country before. And Dacia “Romania” was made of Slovakia Hungary Austria modern day Romania Poland and Ukraine.