This article examines the academic interests and intellectual formation of Romanian students at the University of Vienna during the interwar period. The study aims to analyze the main disciplinary orientations pursued by these students and to highlight the role of the Viennese academic environment in shaping their intellectual, cultural, and professional trajectories. Particular attention is given to the attraction exercised by fields such as philosophy, art history, psychology, medicine, law, and other areas of higher learning that contributed to the formation of Romanian intellectual and professional elites. Methodologically, the article adopts a historical-analytical approach based on biographical evidence, archival sources, and specialized literature in order to reconstruct the educational options and formative experiences of Romanian students in Vienna. The analysis shows that the University of Vienna functioned not only as a prestigious center of higher education, but also as a space of intellectual legitimization, disciplinary specialization, and cultural self-definition. The study also underlines that the Viennese academic environment played an important role in shaping personalities who later became influential in Romanian cultural, scientific, and professional life. It concludes that the interwar presence of Romanian students at the University of Vienna represents a significant chapter in the broader history of academic mobility, elite formation, and intellectual exchange in Central and Eastern Europe
Horia Mihai Raut Babuta (Thu,) studied this question.