Its development from the origins to the Peace of Bucharest and the attitude of Austria-Hungary was the first modern publication in German on these people, who were scattered across half the Balkans.
[citation needed] Soon after receiving his doctorate in 1971, Peyfuss became a member of the editorial team at Österreichische Osthefte, an Austrian journal on Eastern Europe.
[citation needed] After being appointed associate professor for Southeast European History at the University of Vienna in 1992- Peyfuss began a two-semester lecture on Balkan Studies., He also worked on the relocation of the institute to its new campus in the IX.
[citation needed] As a bibliophile, Peyfuss had an extensive library that contained many rarities on the history of southeastern and eastern Europe.
Tirka, who has had a wealth in Maria Enzersdorf since 1840, came from an Aromanian family from Moscopole, now Albania, a member of a small people scattered across the Balkans who find their identity in a Romance language related to Romanian.
Max Peyfuss is popular among historians as a modern-day specialist in Aromanian history with settlements in northern Greece, Albania, Macedonia and Bulgaria.