Moravița (Hungarian: Temesmóra; German: Morawitz; Serbian: Моравица, romanized: Moravica) is a commune in Timiș County, Romania.
[4] Hungarian historian Tivadar Ortvay [hu], analyzing the document Incipium rationes decimes sexenallis coletae in Hungaria an ano 1332 ad 1337, found today in the Vatican Library, concludes that Mora (Mura), which appears in this document, refers to Moravița.
[5] In 1337, due to a flood of the Moravița brook, the locals from Mora were to retreat on the hills of Butin, then forested.
[7] Zipser Germans (Romanian: țipțeri) coming from Alsace, Lorraine and Luxembourg built 145 new houses here.
After the war, the German delegation to the Paris Peace Conference would demand that the entire Banat be incorporated into Romania.
The interwar period marked a progress in cultural life, as in 1935 Moravița had two choirs and a brass band, a steam mill and a siphon factory, a people's bank, a post office and a train station.