1. Elementary Education and Nationality Acts of 1868.
2. (1) The national and ethnic minorities living in the Republic of Hungary share the power of the people; they are constituent factors in the state;
3. (2) The Republic of Hungary grants protection to national and ethnic minorities, it insures the possibilities for their collective participation in public life and enables them to foster their own culture, use the mother tongue, receive school instruction in the mother tongue and freedom to use their names as spelled and pronounced in their own languages.
4. Imre Madách, trans. Thomas R. Mark, The Tragedy of Man (New York: Columbia University Press, 1989), scene XIII, 121.
5. Trócsányi, 545-46. Wesselényi's nationality bill provided that: 1) all of Transylvania's Christians, whether Orthodox or related faiths, would be entitled to equal religious treatment; 2) vital statistics kept by religious authorities could be filed in either the Hungarian or Romanian languages; 3) primary school instruction could be in either Romanian or Hungarian; 4) official records which were filed with a notary could be written in either Romanian or Hungarian; 5) documents written in Romanian could be filed in any government office provided those documents were written in Latin, as opposed to Cyrillic, letters. Fónagy, 87-88; Trócsányi, 546.