The Massacre at MadĂ©falva (in Latin: Siculicidium, âmurder of SzĂ©kelysâ)
(Source of the photo:Â https://europebetweeneastandwest.files.wordpress.com/2015/03/monument-to-the-siculicidium-in-madefalva-siculeni-romania.jpg?w=584)
No event was so horrifying in the history of SzĂ©kely people, than the mass murder committed against SzĂ©kelys by the Habsburg army in 1764. In 1763, the Court of Vienna ordered three SzĂ©kely and two Romanian regiments to guard the borders, under Maria Theresa. However, szĂ©kelys resisted to this command, as they did not want to resign from their hundred-year military traditions and privileges. As a result, Maria Theresa commissioned general Joseph von Siskovics to attack MĂĄdĂ©falva (today Siculeni), where the meeting of SzĂ©kely leaders was supposed to take place. The night of January 7 in the year of 1794, was unimaginably dark for over 400 SzĂ©kely people, including women and children. Habsburg hessians unsuspectedly entered the village and massacred all innocent people. As this coup de main lived on vividly in their collective memory, an obelisk was placed at MĂĄdĂ©falva, on the top of which a Turul-bird is represented and the following inscription can be seen at the bottom: âSICVLICIDIVMâ. Interesting may seem, adding up the values of the letters as Roman numbers, it results the exact year of the massacre.











