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Ozun got its name, according to oral tradition also mentioned by Balázs Orbán, from a leader named Úz. The earliest documentary mention of the settlement appears in the papal tithe register of 1332, where it is listed as “Uzun.” A later record from 1567 refers to it as “Wzon” and notes that it had 68 gates.
The village is located about 9 km southeast of Sfântu Gheorghe, on the right bank of the Negru River.
The first documented mention under the name Uzun dates from 1332. The area has been inhabited since ancient times; Bronze Age settlement traces have been discovered on the terrace of the Negru River. In 1612, the village was devastated by Saxons, in 1704 by Habsburg troops, and in 1706 by Kuruc forces. Between 1717 and 1719, the locality was affected by a plague epidemic. In 1764, Székely border guards were sworn in here for loyalty to the emperor, and the village became the headquarters of the battalion command. In 1810, it had the right to hold fairs. In 1738, the fortified church was damaged by an earthquake; after another earthquake in 1802, it was demolished in 1819, and the current church was completed in 1829. The bell tower was built in 1844 on the site of the old gate tower. The defensive walls were demolished in 1901. In the Battle of Uz, on July 2, 1849, Gábor Áron, major in the Székely revolutionary army and commander of the Székely artillery, fell. In 1910, the village had 1,777 inhabitants. Until the Treaty of Trianon, the village belonged to the Sepsi district of Háromszék County.
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