Stephan Ludwig Roth


Stephan Ludwig Roth was a Transylvanian Saxon intellectual, teacher, pedagogue and Lutheran pastor.

Biography

Stephan Ludwig Roth was born in Mediasch, in the family of Marie Elisabeth Roth and Gottlieb Roth, the rector of the Mediasch Gymnasium. After studying in Mediasch, Hermannstadt and at the University of Tübingen, in 1818 Roth pursued his interest in the science of teaching by travelling to Switzerland, in order to gather experience from Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi's projects in Yverdon-les-Bains. He became a collaborator of Pestalozzi, publishing Der Sprachunterricht and finished a doctorate in philosophy at Tübingen.
Returning to Transylvania, Roth followed in the footsteps of his father as head of the Mediasch Gymnasium and became a pastor in 1837.
In the debates raised by the Transylvanian Diet in 1841, he proposed that laws should be published in Latin, Hungarian and German, the language of the Diet may remain Hungarian due to the old traditions but the public administration should communicate with the people simultaneously in Hungarian, German and Romanian, pointing out its ascendent over all others and its lingua franca status in the ethnical composition of the country - an idea made public in his 1842 work, Der Sprachkampf in Siebenbürgen: While he was against cultural assimilation of Romanians, Roth had always argued that the Saxon element in Transylvania could be strengthened by encouraging new German colonists to move in.
Stephan Ludwig Roth further irritated Hungarian sensibilities by rejecting any form of union between Transylvania and Hungary he initially supported in the March of 1848, after being dissatisfied of lack of guarantees of ethnic rights, trying instead to build a bridge between Saxons and Romanians. Thus, he attended the first ethnic Romanian gathering at Câmpia Libertății on 15 May and wrote about it in the local press - his articles show full support for the movement, and highlight Avram Iancu's contribution to the cause.
With the outbreak of the violent clashes between Imperial and Hungarian troops in October 1848, Roth became a member of the Hermannstadt Pacification Committee, and commissioner for Saxon villages in Nagy-Küküllő , as well as the administrator de facto of the respective county.
With the Hungarian victories in January 1849 came the end of local government structures. General Józef Bem offered the administrators amnesty, and Roth retired to Muzsna. However, in February Lajos Kossuth set up military tribunals with László Csányi, the government commissioner of Transylvania where also the pre-amnesty cases were trialed, backed by a parliament decree. On 21 April 1849, by the orders of Csányi he was arrested in his seat, under the following charges: Roth expressly prohibited the local peasants to exert violence in his defence against the authorities. He was brought to Kolozsvár and on 11 May 1849 - less than one month after Bem's amnesty has been cancelled - was court-martialed for high treason against Hungary and was swiftly executed. He wrote to his children before his death "dead or alive I've never been the enemy of the Hungarian nation. Believe this to me, a dying person in the very moment when all mendacity will cease to exist". Kossuth regarded the death penalty as a mistake, Bem argued if he'd known in time the sentence, he would have prevented it to be executed.