2009/03/11

Wissenswertes über Rumänien

In Rumänien läßt sich Geschichte hautnah erleben, seine Traditionen sind noch höchst lebendig und werden liebevoll gepflegt. Zur Bronzezeit 2000 v. Chr. wurden durch die indo-europäischen Thraker im Gebiet des heutigen Rumäniens Metall verarbeitet. Die Geto-Daker folgten 800 v. Chr. Von 700 v. Chr. an beherrschten die Griechen die Schwarzmeer-Küste, bis dann von 29 n. Chr. bis 580 die Römer weite Teile des Landes romanisierten, sich aber zwischenzeitlich mit den freien Dakern befehdeten und dazu noch mit einfallenden Wandervölkern wie Sarmaten, Markomannen, Kostoboken, Goten, Heruler, Bastarnen Hunnen, Gepiden, Awaren, Slawen und Ungarn herumschlagen mussten. In diese Zeit fiel die politische Zweiteilung des Römischen Reichs, bei der das Gebiet Rumäniens an Byzanz fiel.
Im 7. Jh. wurden in der Moldau und der Walachei die ersten Fürstentümer gegründet. Im 15. und 16. Jh. herrschten die Türken über die Moldau, Walachei und Transsilvanien. Die Fürstentümer waren zwar der Hohen Pforte tributpflichtig, wurden aber nicht besetzt.
Anfang des 18. Jh. kamen Siebenbürgen und die Bucovina unter die Herrschaft von Österreich-Ungarn. 1881 wird Karl von Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen als König Carol I gekrönt. Seinem Eingreifen in den russisch-türkischen Krieg verdankt Rumänien seine Unabhängigkeit. Im Ersten Weltkrieg bleibt Rumänien zunächst neutral, kämpft dann aber doch auf Russlands Seite gegen die Achsen-Mächte.
1940 muß Rumänien die nördliche Bucovina und Bessarabien an die UdSSR abtreten, das nördliche und westliche Transsilvanien an Ungarn und die südliche Dobrudscha an Bulgarien. Nach dem Staatsstreich des Generals Antonescu tritt es in den Krieg gegen die UdSSR ein, 1944 besetzen sowjetische Truppen Rumänien, 1945 wird das Land eine Volksdemokratie, vier Jahre später schließt es sich dem Warschauer Pakt an.
Eine gewaltsame Revolution beendet 1989 die fast ein Vierteljahrhundert währende Diktatur Nicolae Ceaucescus. Sozialisten unter Ion Iliescu nehmen die Zügel in die Hand. 1996 gewinnt Emil Constantinescu die Wahlen und 2000 löst dann Iliescu wieder die bürgerliche Koalition ab. Die neue sozialdemokratische Minderheitsregierung ist auf einen marktwirtschaftlichen Reformkurs orientiert. 1991 wird Rumänien Vollmitglied im Europarat, in 2003 NATO-Mitglied und soll 2007 EU-Mitglied werden. 2004 wird Traian Basescu zum Staatspräsident gewählt. 2005 bildet eine bürgerliche Koalitions unter Führung der Demokratischen Allianz die Regierung.

Rumänien - einfach erstaunlich


Einfach erstaunlich - Rumänien. Schauen Sie sich auf den folgenden Seiten Rumänien an. Rumänien hat Ihnen mehr zu bieten als jedes andere Land dieser Erde. Unberührte Natur finden Sie in Rumänien genauso wie Destinationen für Ihren Ski- oder Badeurlaub. Aber schauen Sie Sich Rumänien selber an:
Die schroffen Gipfel der Karpaten liegen direkt neben den unzähligen Tropfsteinhöhlen der Apuseni-Berge, die im Herbst gelb und rot leuchtenden Wälder des Karpatenvorlandes neben den verträumten Bauerndörfern des transsilvanischen Hugellandes. Und auch entlang der Donau reihen sich vom Eisernen Tor weg die Schönheiten der Auwälder bis hin zum weltweit einzigartigen Donaudelta.
Willkommen in Rumänien
dem Land, das viel mehr saubere und ungestörte Natur zu bieten hat als jedes andere Land in Europa.
Oft sieht man ja den Wald vor lauter Bäumen nicht, und so überlagerte die touristische Entwicklung der von Sonne und Sand verwöhnten Schwarzmeerküste eigentlich viel zu lange den erstaunlich großen, an unterschiedlichsten und einzigartigen Naturschönheiten reichen Rest dieses faszinierenden Landes. Nur wenig nördlich der Hotelanlagen der Schwartzmeerkuste liegt das Donaudelta, mit seinen 5.600 qkm eine ökologische Naturlandschaft in Reinkultur von globaler Bedeutung. Das Labyrinth aus Flussarmen, Seitenarmen, Altwassern, Seen und Schilfbeständen beheimatet über 300 Vogelarten und ist für Krauskopfpelikan, Zwergkormoran und viele andere gefährdete Arten seit jeher der wichtigste Lebensraum überhaupt. Nur wer das nächtliche Konzert der Frösche und Unken und das Gekreische der Ibis-, Reiher- und Kormorankolonien gehört oder den Zug der Gänse im Winterhalbjahr erlebt hat, weiß um die Magie dieses schier endlosen Sumpfgebietes in Rumänien. Und dank der Hausboote, Kanus und solarbetriebenen Kleinboote lässt sich das Delta heute so umweltfreundlich wie man es sich nur wünschen kann erschließen.
Ein ökologischer Schatz von Seltenheit sind auch die weite Teile Rumäniens dominierenden Karpaten. Während die südlichen Karpaten mit den Fagarascher Bergen ein imposantes und felsiges Hochgebirge mit Gipfeln bis über 2.500 m darstellen, sind die West-, Ost- und Nordkarpaten eher Waldberge wie aus dem Bilderbuch. Nirgendwo sonst in West- und Mitteleuropa gibt es noch ein so großes zusammenhängendes Waldgebiet wie in Rumänien. Die unvergleichlichen Karpatenwälder mit ihren erstaunlich glasklaren Mineralquellen sind nicht nur die Heimat von über einem Drittel aller europäischen Wölfe, Bären und Luchse, sie sind auch das letzte Gebiet, das noch ansehnliche echte Urwälder zu bieten hat.
Große Schafherden prägen das lebendige Bild der alpinen Regionen Rumäniens während der Sommermonate, und es gibt kaum mehr ein Land in Europa, in dem die jahrhundertealte Tradition der Schafbewirtschaftung mit den imposanten Herdenschutzhunden und der winterlichen Transhumanz so lebendig ist wie in Rumänien. Diese Form der Schafhaltung bringt auch die artenreichen Heuwiesen mit sich, die noch immer nur mit Hand und Sense gemäht und völlig ohne die geringste Spur von Dünge- und Spritzmitteln bearbeitet werden. Im Mai und Juni zeigen sich diese Wiesen als ein wahrer Ozean von Farben, und das intensiv duftende Heu ist die Grundlage für die schmackhafte Milch und die herzhaften Käsesorten Rumäniens.
Der Königstein (Piatra Craiului) und der Retezat Park sind nur zwei der zur Zeit am weitesten entwickelten Ziele, die der Bezeichnung ''Öko'' eine neue Qualität verleihen. Speziell im Norden des Landes und dem zentralsiebenbürgischen Hügelland Rumäniens finden sich dann noch unzählige Dörfer, die ihre traditionelle Siedlungsstruktur ganz natürlich erhalten haben. Nein, es sind keine künstlich belebten Museen, in diesen Dörfer wird echt wie es echter nicht geht gelebt, gelacht, gefeiert. Deutsch-Weisskirch (Viscri) ist dafür nur ein leuchtendes Beispiel von vielen, wo trotz des Massenexodus der siebenbürgisch-sächsischen Bevölkerung die verbliebenen Bewohner begonnen haben, die alten Traditionen mit den neuen Lebensbedingungen in Einklang zu bringen. Wenn man morgens von krähenden Hähnen geweckt wird, haben die Bewohner schon die Kühe gemolken, und alle größeren Haustiere werden von den Dorfhirten auf die kommunalen Weiden getrieben. Kaum zu glauben im durchorganisierten Europa: Nur wenige der vielen Flüsse Rumäniens sind bisher verbaut, und so bieten sich Boots- oder Floßfahrten entlang von Mures, Cris und Olt und anderen Flüssen an. Mancherorts kann man wieder Biber oder deren Burgen finden oder sich ohne größere Umstände als Goldwäscher versuchen. Rumänien liegt etwa gleich weit vom Nordpol und vom Äquator entfernt.

2009/03/05

Romanian economy

For many centuries Romania's economy was based on agriculture. In the 1930s Romania was one of the main European producers of wheat, corn and meats and it used to be called "the bread basket of Europe." In the 1950s the communist leader of Romania, Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej, began developing heavy industry.There has been a shift towards heavy industries since the 1970s but the agriculture is still economically important and employs about one-third of the workforce.Romania produces coal, natural gas, iron ore and petroleum but most raw material for the country's large industrial capacity potential are imported. Prominent industries include chemical (petrochemical, paints and varnishes), metal processing, machine manufacturing, industrial and transport equipment, textiles, manufactured consumer goods, lumbering and furniture.39.2% of Romania's territory is arable land, 28% forests, 21% pastures, hayfields and orchards and 2.5% vineyards. Corn, wheat, vegetable oil seeds, vegetables, apples and grapes for wine are the main crops and sheep and pigs the main livestock. Forestry and fisheries are being developed under long-term programs. Since 1990, successive governments have concentrated on turning Romania into a market economy.

Traffic fines

Most visitors who encounter Romanian Traffic Police officers believe that they are nice and friendly. In case that you will have to deal with Traffic Police please remember the following:
Traffic officers cannot collect fines on the spot. All fine payments must be made at a bank or local tax administration office. The officer will only write the ticket and will give instructions on how to pay/ dispute the fine.
Traffic laws indicate a minimum and a maximum fine for each traffic violation. The police officer has the authority to decide the fine amount, based on circumstances.
Fines are not differentiated based on income or citizenship.
Officers and judges have leeway in determining/ canceling traffic fines.

Romanian customs & etiquette

Romanians are friendly and open and foreigners are usually made very welcome. Chatting with visitors is very common for Romanians and they will find a way to communicate with you even if they cannot speak your language.
Foreign visitors consider Romanians among the friendliest and most hospitable people on earth. Romanians are by nature fun loving, warm, hospitable, playful, with an innate sense of humor.
Older people particularly appreciate old-fashioned politeness. It is respectful to use Mrs. or Mr. when using the name of a person that you just meet.
Handshaking is the most common form of greeting. When a Romanian man is introduced to a woman, he will probably kiss her hand, strictly avoiding her eyes.
If one refuses what a host offers to eat or drink, this will often be taken as a polite refusal by guest who really means to say "yes." If you want to refuse the offer find a polite excuse and say it firmly or ask for a replacement.
It is common to linger once the meal (luch or dinner) is over.
When visiting someone at home bring a small gift. Most common gifts include flowers or chocolate (for women only), a bottle of wine or liquor. The number of flowers that one offers must always be odd. Other well-appreciate gifts include cosmetics and clothing.
All gifts should be wrapped, but many Romanians might not unwrap their gifts in your presence.
In Romania as in many Latin countries life is lived at a more relaxed pace. Normal European courtesies should be followed on social occasions. Although casual dress is fine in most occasions, wearing a suit and tie, or the women's equivalent, is important at business meetings. Appointments are necessary and punctuality is expected.
It is not considered impolite to ask a person's age, politics, income or religion, so don't take such questions amiss.

Sales tax for goods and services

A sales tax (VAT) of 19 % is added to all retail sales, hotel stays and meals served in restaurants. It is usually included in the prices posted in stores, hotels and restaurants. Like in many countries hotels charge an additional tax (0.5% to 5% depending on the class of hotel). AT Refund VAT refund offices can be found at any Romanian border crossing point.
To claim you Sales Tax Refund please make sure that:
1. Your purchases were made at a store which can issue a legal invoice/ receipt as well as a tax refund form,
2. The total value of your purchases is higher than 250 Lei (approx. $100 US),
3. Your purchases were made 90 days or less before your date of departure from Romania,
4. You have the original receipts and store identified VAT Refund forms validated by the Customs Office.All refunds will be made in Romanian currency.

Rural tourism, the best way to discover Romania


People started to be more thoughtful of their vacation, the turisment becoming one of the frecvent hobby in world. Once with the first tendintions of relaxation of the vacations in the middle of mother nature, the tourists number starting to grow that wanted to have the vacation party in a rural enviroment.
The countryside and mountains have preserved their landscapes and their traditions. But although green tourism represents a very real opportunity for Romania, its growth threatens the authenticity of unique regions.
The Romanian rural space is renamed carpatho-danubiano-pontic because it is carpatic in relief, the Danube threw the hydrografic and pontic network with the opening in the Black Sea. Intalkable, this "geographic personality" must be doublet in time with turistic vocation.
The Romanian Territory prezents a big variety of cultural historic values - popular arts, etnographics, folklore, traditions, historic vestiges, a natural harmonious background combined with a variated and picturesque fond view. All of this are the valents of the romanian rural tourisment in a special mode.
Our accommodation providers give you the chance to stay in comfortable and welcoming small-scale guesthouses. Some of the guesthouses have been eco-certified as they attempt to operate to the highest green standards.
Transylvania
This is a guide to hotels, inns, pensions, accommodation, travel attractions in Romania. Being more than just a simple blog, we offer the possibility to any hotel or pension to present a complete offer for free so that visitors can have a large selection of alternatives. More than this, to help our visitors to choose the best alternative by our ratings!
Rural tourism allows you to discover the wonderful countryside and people of Romania, with its array of cultural treasures and diversified wildlife. Whether you come to Romania to visit its monasteries, to climb its mountains or to discover its history, we shall be able to provide information, the best guides and accommodation to meet your needs.
Now is the time to travel to Romania with prices for food and drink still much cheaper than most other European destination and still relatively un-touched by mass tourism.
The country people of Romania, have turned to rural tourism. Some of them, those who work abroad, have even put up new buildings to welcome the visitors in greater comfort than the traditional wooden houses. The development of these sanitized gueshauses is, however, a threat to the very thing that attracts the tourist to Romania: its authenticity. It could even risk disappearing altogether.
Yet despite all this, green tourism remains an asset for Romania. No other country in Europe has more variety to offer the tourist, but it is a potential that must be used intelligently.

All this and much more gives many reasons to visit Romania. For further information, please contact us!

Gambling in Romania


Bucharest provide one of the highest number of casinos in Europe. There are now approximately ten major casinos, offering varied standards of quality.
The only legal form of gambling in Romania is in casinos, so it doesn't look like Romania's casinos have much competition for the gambling dollar. Certainly nothing as liberal and open as allowing people to do as they wished with their own money would have been allowed. This meant that while there was indeed gambling (as of course there is everywhere), it was underground, in the black economy. When there was an uprising and the dictator, alongside his wife, was shot, then the country started to move back into the more normal state of affairs. Legalizing gambling, allowing Romania's casinos to start up, was an obvious part of this process.
A list of Romania's casinos includes: Astoria Casino, Casino Blindo Hotel Sofitel, Casino Bucharest Hotel Inter-Continental , Casino Bucur, Casino Kings, Casino Palace, Casino Victoria, Casino Vox,
Grand Casino, Lido Casino & Lido Hotel, Marriott Grand Hotel & Casino, Mirage Casino Hotel Ambasador, Planet Princess Slot Casino, Plaza Casino Club, Princess Casino Havana.
Bucharest Casino, Grand Casino and Havana Princess Casino are known to be the most reputed casinos in the city.
Looking for a Romania casino resort or hotel?
Book your reservation with us and find bargain pricing for great Casino Hotels in Bucharest....
We will provide you with information on the current events at the property that you are visiting, and make the reservations for you.
Enjoy your stay!

2009/03/04

Maramures

The fierce individuality of the Maramures mountain valleys in the north-west of Transylvania is legendary. Their inhabitants are of Dacian descent and their independence as a State reached its peak under Decebalus in the first century AD, before the Roman conquest. Wave after wave of invasions followed.
A unique lifestyle
Nonetheless the villagers here continued to vividly assert the independence of their customs and their folklore. Today you can visit and admire their unique lifestyle. Few other parts of Europe have developed so distinctive a rural culture.
Traditional headscarves during an outdoor religious celebration
An inheritance of folklore
Agriculture has always been the lifeblood of existence in the mountains. Local traditions reflect this, as there are festivals in April, May, August and December.
The one in December is held at Sighetu Marmatiei, with carnival parades and revellers wearing animal masks.
Sighetu Marmatiei
Sighetu Marmatiei is a typical Maramures town, famous for its markets, peasant costumes and lively atmosphere.
The Museum of Maramures has many carnival masks among its exhibits. Herefrom you may easily drive to the mountain resort of Borsa and such villages as Bogdan-Voda and Rozavlea, renowned for their wooden architecture.
Woodcarving skills are the dominant feature of Maramures crafts. Particularly characteristic of the villages are wooden churches, with tall steeples and shingled roofs, some dating back to the 14th century.
A typical high-steepled Maramures church
Highly developed too is the embroidery of traditional costumes. On Sunday afternoons both women and men often parade and dance as they have for centuries.
Women wear colourful headscarves and flowered skirts with black sheepskin jerkins; men wear black trousers and white jerkins, though costumes vary from village to village. The Easter festivals are a particularly good time to see them.
Touring the valleys
Baia Mare lies at the heart of this region. Its modern hotels make it the point of departure for many tours. A popular local expedition is to Surdesti, which has the tallest of the region's wooden churches.
Another is the one to Sapanta, famous for its "merry cemetery", where carved tombstones and humorous epitaphs are a remembrance of the dead.

BLACK SEA RESORTS

Marvellous weather from spring to autumn and miles of golden sand make Romania's Black Sea resorts the ideal destination for beach holidays.
One can find everything there: modern hotels and facilities, a busy night-life, a wide range of sports facilities and numerous inland attractions from castles to vineyards. Now, while the country is heading towards a promising future, the Black Sea is coming back onto the European touristic agenda.
From Wildlife to Watersports
Altogether, the Romanian Black Sea coast stretches out for 245 km (153 miles) from the fascinating unspoilt natural reserves of the Danube Delta to the leisure activities of numerous holiday centres. Whereas the Delta is strictly protected from intrusion, the southern 72 km (45 miles) area has been developed into a string of beach resorts and health spas catering for all ages and interests, from little children to exigent grandparents.
All waited on by the employees of the local touristic and transport services in the city of Constanta. Furthermore, the Black Sea tides are practically not-existent, so swiming is safer than in most parts of the world.
Constanta
With an international airport, a busy seaport, express trains linking it to Bucharest (2 1/2 hours) and a 2,500 year history (the Roman poet Ovid lived in exile here), Constanta is the very kind of cosmopolitan place a seaside vacation needs.
Hotels, shops, ancient monuments, a magnificent casino by the sea and interesting museums complete the picture. All the Black Sea resorts are easily accesible either by train or bus.

Mamaia
The major resort near Constanta is Mamaia, sited north of the city, between a magnificent 7 km (4.5 miles) long beach of unbelievably fine sand and a lake. It is especially designed for families with children.
Sports like sub-aqua diving and paragliding offer thrills from May to October. Restaurants, bars and nightclubs enliven the evenings. Typical country villages, the ruins of the ancient Greek fortress of Histria, and the Danube Delta are easily accessible.
South of Constanta - beauties and gods
From Constanta, a 50 km (31 miles) strip of fine golden sand stretches all the way to the border with Bulgaria; and it hosts a series of resorts poetically named after women and mythological gods.
The Black Sea at its Best
Among the most popular are Neptun and Olimp, built as leisure sites for the rich of the communist era, now offering de-luxe villas and excellent hotels, some on the beach, others in the quiet Comorova forest between the shore and a lake.
Tennis and other sports, open air restaurants, discos, night clubs and cabarets all cater for demanding visitors.
Economical and Youth Holidays
Southwards, the resorts of Jupiter, Cap Aurora, Venus and Saturn offer a variety of inexpensive hotels, campsites and rented accomodation, while Costinesti is mostly a youth resort, with basic accomodation and informal entertainment.
Mangalia is renowned for therapy treatments
The 6th century BC fortified town of Callatis became today's balneary spa of Mangalia, with a special cure hotel. Here, as in Eforie Nord, Eforie Sud and the spa in Neptun, a wide variety of therapeutic treatments are available, including mineral-rich mudbaths, thalassotherapy and the famous Romanian Gerovital cure.
Medical staff are highly qualified and clinics and consulting rooms remain open all through the year. So you can combine professional treatment with all the pleasures of a seaside holiday.
Local Tours
As well as long-distance tours to the Danube Delta with its birdlife and mysterious waterways, or even to Bucovina and the legendary decorated monasteries, or to Bucharest, there are plenty of sites available in the immediate hinterland to tempt you away from sunbathing for days. The 7th century BC Greek city ruins at Histria have already been mentioned.
At Adamclisi, 62 km (39 miles) inland from Constanta, stands the impressive circular monument built at the end of the first century AD to commemorate emperor Trajan's victory over the Dacians. Cottage industries like woodcarving and pottery thrive in the villages. Vineyards producing Romania's savoury wines, including the famous Murfatlar, cover the hillsides.
Traditional costumes are displayed in folklore centres. And, if you feel like getting to the heart of the warm welcoming Romanian experience, there are Romanian feasts with local dishes, plum brandy, wine, music and dancing that will remain in your memory as part of a special seaside holiday.

Romanian arts & architecture

Visiting Romania gives you the chance to see Constantin Brancusi's works in the marvelous setting of a park in Targu Jiu, near Hobita, his home village. "The Endless Column" (Coloana Infinita), "The Gate of the Kiss" (Poarta Sarutului), "The Table of Silence" (Masa Tacerii) and "The Alley of Chairs" (Aleea Scaunelor) are displayed among trees and lawns as Brancusi wanted them to be.Romania has a great diversity of museums preserving every facet of its history and arts. Some are small museums, catering to enthusiasts with a taste for special interests such as pharmacy, clocks, railway trains, folk arts and architecture, wine making and traditional crafts. Larger museums host regular exhibitions from around the world, as well as housing permanent collections of paintings and sculptures. Prominent museums include Romania's National Museum of Art, the Art Collections Museum, the Village Museum, the Museum of the Romanian Peasant in Bucharest, and the Bruckenthal Museum in Sibiu. Romanians' vivid imagination and intense spirituality have always been expressed through their architecture. Fortunately, they also have strong preservation instincts, resulting in village museums that display bygone ways of life through found and restored peasant houses, elaborately carved gates, barns and other architectural elements. The best and most comprehensive of these is the Village Museum (Muzeul Satului) in Bucharest. Constructed by a visionary during the 1930s on a large tract within the city, this is a fascinating collection of more than 300 houses and other structures from every region of Romania. It also has a small museum and shop of fine Romanian crafts. Other such village museums well worth visiting are Museum of Wood (Muzeul Lemnului) in Campulung Moldovenesc and Museum of Peasant Techniques (Muzeul Tehnicii Populare) in Sibiu. Both have collections of early farm tools and household implements.Monasteries, churches, synagogues, castles and palaces throughout the country, some dating from the 12th Century, depict the country's tumultuous history. Even its Communist era is expressed through Ceausescu's master planning and rebuilding of Bucharest. The best example of his testament to secularity is the Palace of Parliament — the world's second largest building after the U.S. Pentagon — whose 1,000 rooms reflect the country's best architects, artisans and building materials. Among the best examples of Romanian's Orthodox religion are the painted monasteries of Southern Bucovina, acclaimed as masterpieces of art and architecture, "perfectly in harmony with their surroundings and unique in the world for their painted exteriors." They hold UNESCO's Prix d'Or for "artistic, spiritual and cultural value." Of the five best known, the most famous is Voronet, also called the "Sistine Chapel of the East" whose blue exterior background lent its name to the color "Voronet Blue." These are essential sights for anyone interested in religious architecture, but they are only a few of Romania's architectural treasures.Romania's Architectural Treasures, by location:
BucharestPalace of Parliament, Cotroceni Palace, Royal Palace, Patriarchal Complex, St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Cathedral, Italian Church, Russian Church, Anglican Church, Armenian Church, Great Synagogue, Choral Temple, Sutu Palace, Mogosoaia Palace.WallachiaPeles and Pelisor Castles (Sinaia), Iulia Hasdeu Castle (Campina), Hurez Monastery, Dinu Mihail Palace (Craiova).MoldovaPainted Monasteries of Southern Bucovina (Voronet, Sucevita, Moldovita, Humor and Putna), Ruginoasa Palace, Metropolitan Cathedral, Great Synagogue, Palace of Culture (Iasi).TransylvaniaBlack Church (Brasov), Bran Castle (Bran), Brukenthal Palace (Sibiu), Hunedoara Castle (near Deva), Sighisoara Medieval Town, Sibiu — Old Town, Brasov — Old Town, Fortified Churches in Biertan, Harman and Prejmer.MaramuresWooden Churches, Wood Museum, Sighet Synagogue (Sighetu Marmatiei), Satu Mare Synagogue.

Festivals & Events


Throughout the year, Romanians celebrate their ancient heritage, changing seasons, religious holidays and life-cycle events, such as birth, marriage and death, with festivals that have remained unchanged for centuries. Some of Europe's most traditional folkways are meticulously preserved here, with young celebrants wearing the same costumes and dancing the same steps to tunes played on instruments traditional to their forefathers since time immemorial.Festivals provide wonderful opportunities for visitors to experience the amalgam of the people who make up this country whose Latin roots dating from the Roman Empire make it unique in East-Central Europe. Major festivals throughout the year include:
June
The Traditional Crafts Fair — Crafts enthusiasts from all over Romania gather at the Village Museum in Bucharest to offer free demonstrations of traditional woodcarving, rug weaving, textile weaving and embroidering, pottery molding, glass blowing, egg painting and more.
July
Bucharest of Old — Celebration of the city as it was 150 years ago. Parade of 1800s costumes, horse-drawn carriages, traditional food, music and special performances.Medieval Days — Three-day celebration of medieval arts, crafts, music. Recreating the atmosphere of medieval Sighisoara using medieval arts, music, and crafts.The Maidens' Fair (Targul de Fete) — Traditional matchmaking festival where villagers in traditional costume walk up to Gaina Mountain for dancing, feasting and choosing a mate.
August
Dance at Prislop (Hora de la Prislop) — Traditional celebration of ties among three of Romania's main regions: Transylvania, Moldova and Maramures; villagers parade in traditional costume to Prislop Pass in the Carpathian Mountains, then participate in traditional dances, singing and feasting.Romania's Folk Art Festival — Initiation in folk art creation (pottery molding, textile embroidering, woodcarving and more) offered, for free, by preeminent folk artists to those interested in traditional crafts.
September
Sambra Oilor — festival marking the return of the sheep herds from the Mountains.
October
Wine Making Festival — Celebration marking beginning of the grape harvest.Halloween in Transylvania — Tours, shows and celebrations following the footsteps of Bram Stoker's novel character, Count Dracula.
December
Christmas Traditions Festival.Of all the events enjoyed during the year, folk festivals are without a doubt the most spectacular. While some festival dates remain fixed, others change year by year so it's wise to check before your trip.

Danube River Cruises


The mighty Danube River, named by the Greek historian Herodotus "The King of the European Rivers," forms much of Romania's southern border. The Danube enters the territory of Romania at the famous Iron Gates (Portile de Fier) and ends its 670 mile journey through the country in the Black Sea. Before meeting the Black Sea, the Danube forms one of the most spectacular wetlands in the world, The Danube Delta - a unique 2,100-square-mile wildlife reserve - home to more than 300 species of birds and about 160 kinds of fish, both fresh and salt-water species.Sights along the Danube Among the many sights near or along the Romanian section of the Danube River, worth visiting are: the ruins of the Roman bridge at Drobeta, Topolnita Cave, The Iron Gates Dam, the cities of Drobeta Turnu Severin, Orsova, Giurgiu, Oltenita, Braila, Galati and Tulcea. Bucharest, Romania's capital city, is only 40 miles north of the cities of Giurgiu (Romania) and Ruse (Bulgaria), both situated on the banks of the Danube.
Among the many sights near or along the Romanian section of the Danube River, worth visiting are: the ruins of the Roman bridge at Drobeta, Topolnita Cave, The Iron Gates Dam, the cities of Drobeta Turnu Severin, Orsova, Giurgiu, Oltenita, Braila, Galati and Tulcea. Bucharest, Romania's capital city, is only 40 miles north of the cities of Giurgiu (Romania) and Ruse (Bulgaria), both situated on the banks of the Danube.
Sailing on the Danube, with privately owned boats, is allowed for the entire Romanian section of the river. The only formalities required when sailing from Vienna, Budapest or Belgrade are:- passport check,- yacht/ boat technical inspection.No inoculations are required, no visa for Americans, Canadians and citizens of the Europe Union countries.There are two Danube Border Checking Points :Orsova and Drobeta Turnu Severin (or Turnu Severin for short)Required documentation:- passport- yacht / boat proof of ownership & registrationThere is a yacht/ boat fee of $15.00 to $30.00 depending of the size of the boat.

2009/03/03

The Cismigiu Gardens Bucharest


One of Bucharest's erstwhile parks is still enchanting visitors with its beauty. Cismigiu is the capital's oldest public garden. Its unique charm has won the hearts of the inhabitants of Bucharest who have strolled along its paths throughout the years.
The main entrance into the 17-hectare park is along Regina Elisabeth Boulevard, guarded by the imposing building that house the capital's City Hall. To the left is another boulevard, Schitu Magureanu. At the crossing of these two arteries one finds the National Gheorghe Lazar College, an ancient seat of culture. As one walks along Schitu Magureanu Boulevard, one reaches Magureanu Church, adjacent to the old secret entrance into the subterranean gardens. Cismigiu has yet another entrance along Stirbei Voda Boulevard, near Cretzulescu Palace, whose stone steps descend into the park.
Around 1779, the Prince of Valachia, Alexandru Ipsilanti, desirous of good drinking water, ordered the construction of two fountains. The first was built near today's entrance on Stirbei Voda Boulevard, behind which the construction foreman and the great manager of public fountains (cismigiu in Romanian), Dumitru, built a house. From here comes the name of the park that is still used today, Cismigiu. Cismigiu was known as the Garden or Pool of Dura, the Merchant, until the beginning of the Nineteenth Century, and it was far greater then than it is today. Here was a mud pool, with subterranean springs, that never dried up. In it grew reeds and rush that provided protection for wild ducks.
When it rained heavily and the Dambovita River over flowed, the waters of the Cismigiu ran as far as the walls of Sarindar Monastery, the site of today's National Military Circle. Around 1830, General Pavel Kiseleff, ordered Baron Borroczyn to dry up the pool and make a public garden. This project was completed later, during the reign of Gheorghe Bibescu, by the Viennese landscape architect Carl Friedrich Wilhelm Meyer. The talented and hard-working youth fairly fought a battle with Cismigiu's swamps, subduing these and managing to transform this unsightly place into a veritable jewel.
Meyer used the pool, transforming it into a beautiful lake, with full canalization to allow for easy drainage and cleaning, and installing an artesian well in its midst. In winter, to the great delight of the people of Bucharest, the lake becomes a huge ice rink. It was this same man who carved out the paths, using every elevation for a more beautiful view of the whole. There are over 30 000 indigenous trees, some very rare ones. Artificial grottoes, floral carpets, and bridges were created, and benches were installed.
Meyer estimated that he would remain in Bucharest for a short time. Fate would have it otherwise: enchanted with Bucharest and its society, that received him with extraordinary warmth, and as a result of new contracts he was assigned by the Prince, Meyer kept postponing his departure. The young man was often seen in the company of the Chancellor Sutu, Prince Bogation, and other prominent persons of Bucharest society. The Otetelesanu and Cantacuzino Families received him with great delight. In the Salons that he frequented, he met and fell in love with Elena Lazarescu, the beautiful daughter of the Calvary Commander Manolache Lazarescu. The young woman's perents consented to their relationship.
In 1852, he suffered much grief at the loss of his 17-year-old sister,and died two weeks later, at the age of 38. He was buried in the cemetery of the Protestant Church, and his remains were later moved close to the Mavrogheni Church, near Cismigiu Park that he had loved so dearly.
Cismigiu was not created all at once, but rather in phases. Its size was increased with a parcel purchased from the Cretzulescu Family garden. Exotic fish, swans and pelicans were brought in. Much later a small zoo was established with bears, wolves, foxes and beavers. In 1852 the entire park was enclosed.
The Inner Minister took special care of this garden, issuing a series of provisions. Walks along the paths were permitted from sunrise to 10 p.m., and on bright nights until midnight. No one was allowed to enter the park on horseback or in a carriage, nor were dogs and other beasts permitted access. Street vendors were also prohibited, and fines were issued for anyone walking on the grass or picking the flowers. Even excessive noise was sanctioned.
The beautification of the gardens was completed in 1854, at which time the official inauguration took place. The lake, lawns and flowerbeds, trees and shrubs, hillocks and flats, grottoes and paths were all enticing by their exquisite grace. Military music and folk music fiddler bands were always present.
Another Viennese man, Ludwig Angerer fell in love with Bucharest, as had Meyer, and stayed to become one of its inhabitants. He was one of Bucharest's first and Vienna's finest photoghapher. In 1860, he was awarded the title of Imperial Court Supplier. Cismigiu Park was one of his favorite subjects.
This park was also the place for outdoor cultural shows, especially those put on to help the needy and victims of disasters, such as fires and floods, that occurred relatively often in those days. Prominent women dressed up as peasants, vendors or florists to sell sweets, delicacies, citric fruits and other souvenirs at specially equipped kiosks.
Romanian and foreign traveling actors performed in Cismigiu for a fee, especially in summer. One foreign acrobat, the name of "the Niagara Hero" is remembered from 1880.
In 1889, Leona Dare, a Frenchwoman, offered a series of shows in which she rose quite high in a balloon to which was attached a trapeze. Holding on to the trapeze with her teeth, she performed various acrobatic stunts. Spectators from all parts of the capital were crowded in to see this "wonder".
During the summer there were boat rides and swimming races on the lake,while in winter the same lake turned into a veritable ice rink, on which mostly young high-society people organized races, whose winners received monetary or material rewards.
One of the capital's first newspaper stands was established at the main Cismigiu entrance, opposite City Hall, at the end of the Nineteenth Century. Today, this kiosk can still be admired on the right-hand side of the Park.
One of Cismigiu's greatest attractions was a Romanian-style restaurant built by the Architect Ion Mincu, which was named Monte Carlo. Bombed during the War, the restaurant was restored and has kept the same name. Its terrace on the shores of the lake continues to attract customers eager to be served in a wonderful setting.
The area along Schitu Magureanu Boulevard has been developed as a green area, with a rotunda that can still be admired today: Roman Round. Inaugurated in 1943, the round shelters stone-sculpted busts on high pedestals of our great cultural personalities: Mihai Eminescu, Alexandru Odobescu, Titu Maiorescu, I.L.Caragiale, George Cosbuc, St.O.Iosif, Ion Creanga, AL. Vlahuta, Duiliu Zamfirescu, B.P.Hasdeu, N.Balcescu, and V. Alecsandri.
Other statues are found along the paths, Mother Smara, George Panu, the Monument of the French Heroes, and the Sissi Stefanidi Fountain - a mother distraught over the death of her daughter pours water from a pitcher. Another attraction in this park is the Eminescu Fountain, whose water people still come to drink today.
The first snowdrops, the colors of Autumn, and not least, the Summers's sun glittering like a diamond on the lake, tempt our steps along the paths of this garden. We want to see it over and over again, to fill our souls with joy, goodness and beauty.

Bran Castle Museum


Less then 30 km from Brasov, on the road from Brasov to Campulung Muscel, at the border of the Piatra Craiului and Bucegi Mountains, is located Bran.

The Bran fortress was built on a cliff between Măgura and The Hill of the Fortress, its position conferring an outstanding view towards both the hills of Moeciu and the ones from the Land of Bârsa. The building of the fortress was imposed by strategic and economic reasons. The strategic reasons underlined by the expansion of the Ottoman Empire which, by the end of the XIV century, began threatening the south-eastern borders of Transylvania; the economic reasons, given by the fact that the commercial road, one of the most important access ways connecting Transylvania to Wallachia, crossed this area. All these reasons determined the Hungarian king Louis I of Anjou to develop strengthening works of the Bran pass.
Jointly interested in raising the fortress were also the people of Braşov, aiming to secure their geographical position on one hand, and the economic one, on the other hand, by supervising the commercial road passing through the valley. These mutual actions materialize on November 19th 1377, when Louis I of Anjou grants the people of Braşov the privilege of building the fortress “unforced and unbound, but willingly they have generously and unanimously promised to build a new fort in Bran, on their own efforts and expenses, and to cut the forest thereabouts”. It was remarkable the fact that, by the death of the Hungarian king in 1382, the fortress was already built. After finalizing the construction, the fortress becomes property of the Hungarian royalty, who settles here a garrison of mercenaries, made up by archers and ballista men. In order to fulfill the needs of the fortress, the king grants it a domain formed by the villages Baciu, Cernatu, Satulung, Turcheş, Tărlungeni, Zizin, Purcăreni, Crizbav, Apaţa, Zărneşti and Tohan (the latter two until 1395), with permission to exploit the forests and waters, to hunt and fish, and to use the mutual fields and hay fields. The Hungarian royalty assumes its right to appoint a lord of the castle to run the fortress. The Szekler committee was sometimes entrusted with this prerogative, this position being mostly taken by the Voivodes of Transylvania. Yet, by the act of 1380, it is specified that, generally, a Saxon can be appointed in this position.
The lord of the castle fulfilled several military tasks (command of the garrison, organization and supervising of borders) and also administrative – jurisdictional tasks (as lord of the mansion, he checked the incomes resulted from the fees owed by the inhabitants of the domain, as well as from other economic activities related to the city of Braşov).
About the same time, a customs point was built in the vicinity of the fortress, collecting a duty of 3% from the value of the goods being transited on the commercial road connecting Transylvania to Wallachia.

At the beginning of the XV century, as product of the collaboration between the Hungarian king Sigismund of Luxemburg and the Wallachian ruler Mircea cel Bătrân with respect to the anti-Ottoman politics, the Bran fortress is transferred to the possession of the Wallachian ruler and to his descendants, with the purpose to strengthen the Transylvanian – Wallachian border. With this occasion, the customs point from the feet of the fortress was moved to Braşov.
Mircea cel Bătrân replaced the lord of the castle with one of his chief magistrates, appointing him with the supervising of the commercial road. On August 6th 1413, he grants the people of Braşov the well known commercial privilege, emphasizing “the establishments left by their forefathers for customs purposes through the boroughs from Wallachia and on the road from Braşov through the Bran pass up to Brăila”. The descendants of Mircea cel Bătrân disrespect the commercial privileges conferred to the people of Braşov, driving them to the Hungarian king with a complaint. This state of facts, corroborated with the persistent Turkish attacks (culminating with the one in 1421, when the Turks rob The Land of Bârsa) determine Sigismund of Luxemburg to entrust the Bran Fortress, on February 3rd 1426, to the Prince of Transylvania, entrusting him to appoint the lord of the castle. In exchange for granting new privileges to the people of Braşov, these had the obligation of supplying the fortress with food and informing the Transylvanian prince in case of imminent Turkish danger.

The summer of 1427, Sigismund seems to have personally come to Bran in order to check the defense works and yet, in spite of all safety measures taken, the Turks penetrate The Land of Bârsa through the Bran pass and rob it again
The summer of 1441 the Turks initiate a new incursion in Transylvania, but are defeated in the district of Bran by Iancu de Hunedoara, prince of this province, who paid an extreme attention to the Bran Fortress and to the commercial road passing through this area, confirming the old commercial privilege granted to the people of Braşov by Mircea cel Bătrân and confirmed by Sigismund. Within the first months of the year 1459 the armies of Vlad Ţepeş, a Wallachian ruler, attack the city of Braşov through Bran, burning the suburbs and the old church of Bartholomew; this action came as a consequence of a commercial litigation between the Wallachian ruler and the merchants from Braşov. Bran was also the pass used by the armies of prince Ştefan Bathory, when supporting Vlad Ţepeş in his second reign (1456-1462).
The acts of abuse committed by the lords of the castle from the fortress Bran caused inconvenience to the commercial activity of the city Braşov – which had become one of the most important commercial centers of Transylvania – making the people of Braşov try to get into its possession. In order to achieve this purpose the people of Braşov needed, besides the approval of the king, the actual owner, also the consent of the Transylvanian prince who, being appointed with the defense of the borders as representative of the Szekler committee, had military authority over the fortress of Bran.

The arrangement seems to have been made only between the people of Braşov and the King of Hungary Vladislav II Jagello, and on the 1st of January 1498, the latter pledging by himself the Bran fortress to the people of Braşov “along with all possessions and rights of usage” for ten years, in exchange for 1000 florins. In 1508, after expiration of this term, the Hungarian king renews for another twenty five years the pledge contract for the domain and the fortress of Bran, in favor of the city of Braşov. At the end of this period the royalty had to pay to the people of Braşov the amount of 6300 florins, as ransom, or else the fortress remained property of the city of Braşov. In 1513, King Vladislav Jagello issues an act by means of which he removes the Bran fortress from the jurisdiction of the prince of Transylvania, and grants it to the people of Braşov “to keep and administrate” for twenty five years, should they always be truthful to the king, ensure keeping the fortress and support the spies in Turkey. By means of this document the city of Braşov gains possession over the fortress and domain of Bran, having absolute rights as possessor.
Once the Bran fortress became property of the city of Braşov, the duties of the serfs grew ruthless and more numerous, making the serfs often complain and rise up against them. In addition to all that, by a decision ruled by the king, dating from the beginning of the XVI century, they were bound to perform the military duty for the city of Braşov and, in need, to take up arms at its request. This provision made the serfs from the villages in the Bran domain run away. This state of facts concurs with the riot of the Transylvanian villagers from 1514. The serfs from the Bran domain refused to rise up against the rebels – as presented in a letter from the voivode of Transylvania addressed to the king of Hungary – and above all that, “they refuse to pay their regular duty to our citizens from Braşov. This major disobedience came close to causing a riot of the common people even in our city of Braşov and in the Land of Bârsa”. The position of the villagers from Bran vexed the leaders of Braşov who, at first, did not dare take any actions, waiting for the denouement of the riot. Only after the riot was repressed the people of Braşov had the courage to ask the king for his support. By rule of the king, Ioan Zapolya, the prince of Transylvania, set off to Braşov, in order to punish the rebels. As a consequence of this action, Braşov was reinstated by use of weapons.
As expected, the Bran fortress had also been involved in this political action. Thus, at first, after the denouement form Mohacs, the people from Braşov, supporting Ferdinand of Austria, adopted a hostile attitude towards Ioan Zapolya, who had succeeded to take over Transylvania. This explains why, in 1529 when Lăudat, the commander of the Wallachian armies, tried to cross to Transylvania to help Ioan Zapolya, he came up against the resistance of the garrison from the Bran fortress, lead by the lord of the castle Ioan Hock. Although the siege lasted several days, the fortress could not be conquered. The year to come, the Bran fortress stands up against Mehmed Beg, stopping the Turks attempt to break into Transylvania, aiming to support the same Ioan Zapolya. In 1531, seeing that their resistance against Zapolya caused only prejudices, they cross to his side, being sworn in faithful to him. In exchange, the prince reinforces their privileges and grants them possession of the forests from the Transylvanian part of Buzău
Even after 1541, when Transylvania becomes an autonomous principality under Turkish suzerainty, the Bran fortress remains property of the city of Braşov. Yet, the serfs belonging to this domain are bound to pay the Turkish yearly toll until 1602, when the prince suspends it in favor of the people of Braşov. In December 1596 Mihai Viteazul, on his trip to Alba Iulia used the road passing through Bran and his wife is likely to have stayed in the fortress for three days.

In the year 1600, the son of Mihai Viteazul, Nicolae Pătraşcu, tries to penetrate The Land of Bârsa through the Bran pass, aiming to punish the people of Braşov, who had revolted against the domination of the Wallachian ruler. Unable to conquer the fortress, they had to withdraw.
In the decades to come, the prince of Transylvania, Gabriel Bathory, temporarily occupying the Bran fortress, contested the property rights of the city of Braşov over the fortress. This action caused major economic damage to the people of Braşov, by cutting the commerce with Wallachia, as well as political and military prejudices. In 1613 the people of Braşov regain the property rights over the Bran fortress, consequential to a treaty signed with Gabriel Bathory. The same year, during the campaign of the Turkish army lead by Ali Pasha Maghiaroglu, aiming to install Gabriel Bethlen as prince of Transylvania, the Pasha requests the lord of the Bran castle to use their cannons, in order to prevent the “Tartar sultan” from passing through Bran. The permanent tendency of the city of Braşov to interfere with the Transylvanian politics determines Gabriel Bethlen (in the meantime prince) to raise the question of verifying the endorsed possession rights over the Bran fortress and the inherent domain. In 1625 the Transylvanian prince agrees to let the Bran fortress and the domain remain property of the people of Braşov.
The spring of 1651, on 25th of April, Braşov signs with the prince of Transylvania Gheorghe Rackoczi a sale-purchase contract according to which the city “irrevocably and for ever” bought the Bran fortress and the inherent domain, including the villages belonging to the castle, as well as the communes: Purcăreni, Zizin, Tărlungeni, Satulung, Cernatu, Turcheş, Bacifalu, Crizbav and Apaţa, becomming owner with full legal rights over these estates. In exchange for yielding the rights over the fortress and the domain, the people of Braşov had to give up, besides the amount owed by Vladislav II, also the amount of 11.000 florins (paid to the exchequer), along with several villages being up to that point in their possession. The sale-purchase contract for the Bran domain was confirmed by the Transylvanian states through the law Approbatae constitutiones regni Transsilvaniae III, title 84, paragraph 1. After a constant and tenaciously fought fight of over one hundred fifty years, the city of Braşov succeeded to consolidate its lawful rights over Bran.
At the end of the XVII century, as a consequence of the defeats suffered by the Turks, first at the siege of Vienna in 1683, then at Zenta in 1687, The Habsburg Empire gets dominion over Transylvania. Since the “Leopold Diploma” from 1691 confirmed all privileges and donations made by the princes of Transylvania, acknowledging the old laws of the country, the old administrative and judicial stabilities, the old privileges granted to the Saxons and the Szeklers, the city of Braşov also remains rightfully owner of the Bran fortress and domain, in conformity with the contract from 1651. The Habsburg economic politics and military strategy in the XVIII century lead to a diminution of the fortresses purpose, hindering the commerce of the people of Braşov with Wallachia, and even the lords of the castle in fulfilling their responsibilities on the Bran territory.
This way, on May 1st 1706, a customs officer is appointed to administrate the Bran customs point, a clerk of the Austrian Treasury who, besides the task of collecting the customs duties, took over from the lord of the castle also the table lands and the paths in the mountains Bucegi and Piatra Craiului, in order to prevent the illicit commercial activity and the illegal crossing of the border. To the same purpose, the Austrian state set up a sanitary cordon along the mountains Carpaţi, establishing, middle of the XVIII century, a quarantine office at Bran. Planning to strengthen the Bran pass, the castle was restored in 1723, as results from an inscription on the inner wall. The basic purposes of the fortress were practically reduced to those of head office of the domain administration and residence of the lord of the castle. Yet, it still constituted a defense residence which could possibly face a potential attack.
In spite of all these impediments, the Bran fortress continued to be mentioned in chronicles and also to partially fulfill its military and customs point role. Carol XII, king of Sweden, after being defeated in Russia, passes through Bran on the way to his country, accompanied by his armies that took refuge at the Turks. In 1737 an Austrian army company passes through Bran, attacking the Turks in Câmpulung.
During the Russian-Austrian-Turkish war from 1787, the Bran pass was invaded by the Moslem armies, who attacked the fortress, but failed to conquer it.
The amplification of the economic crisis from the second half of the XVIII century made the Austrian state stiffen the taxation policy, introducing the so-called “cadastral registers” in Bran too.
The major decline in the living conditions of the tenants from Bran generated several riots. The most important one, in the context of the events that took place in the years of the uprising led by Horea, Cloşca and Crişan, was in July 1785, when the tenants from Bran refused to pay their taxes to the city of Braşov.
The XIX century brought the decay of the last military tasks of the Bran fortress. The fortress failed to remain an efficient keeper of the border, due to the change in the military strategy and to the spreading of the performing fire guns.
In 1836, along with the transfer of the Transylvanian borders with Wallachia upper in the mountain, at Pajura, the Bran fortress loses its task as customs point at the border of the Austrian state and, along with that, the control over the commercial transit from the area.
The activity of the fortress becomes exclusively focused on the administration of the domain, which will generate numerous abuses coming from the land agents and lords of the castle. In the context of the rebellious movements from 1848, these abuses lead to a local riot, when the inhabitants of Bran organized themselves in “national guards”, acting against the lord of the castle and the garrison, banishing them from the fortress.
The imminence of the Russian-Romanian-Turkish war from 1877 determined the Austrian army to execute defense works along the eastern border of Transylvania. In this context, the Austrians occupied the Bran fortress, replacing its roof (easily exposed to any shelling) with faggots, thing which caused its severe decline.
Taking into account all that the city of Braşov asked the Austrian authorities to restore the fortress. Eventually, they accepted to support the expenses made within the period 1883-1886, and on July 22nd 1888, they handed it over to the city of Braşov.
Not long after the city donated the fortress to the Forestry Administration from Braşov. From that point, the fortress was inhabited by forest keepers, foresters from Bran and, at times, in the expressly fit official chambers, by the forest inspectors came from Braşov. The Forestry Administration had the fortress in possession until 1918.

The Bran Museum is the holder of some valuable and diverse collections of museum objects, some of them belonging to the treasury of the national cultural patrimony. The collections are structured according to the main fields namely history, art history, ethnography, recognized in the thematic of the three departments of the museum: Castle, Medieval Customs Point and The Village Museum form Bran. Of great value is the collection of white weapons and fire arms, underlining the military purpose fulfilled by the Bran Fortress in the Middle Age. Of great importance are also the collections of decorative art (furniture, ceramics and silvery) and fine art (sculpture and wood paintings), having as source the old royal fund, diverse acquisitions and donations.

The village museum from Bran, organized over more than four decades ago in the park next to the castle, portraits the evolution of the traditional folk architecture in the villages from the Bran area, reported to the main occupations: cattle breeding, and work in the woods, combined with agriculture, domestic wool processing industry and wood processing trades.
Conceived as an open air museum, The Village Museum from Bran presents the main types of farmsteads and households, homestead annexes, economical buildings and folk technique hydraulically driven machineries for processing wood and wools.

Dracula - as perceived and promoted in tourist brochures today - is the result of legendary yet, genuine historical facts of Vlad the Impaler's reign, as recounted by revisionist historians, interspersed and dramatically accentuated by the Irishman Bram Stoker's 1897 fictional character, Dracula.

The Village Museum


The Village Museum is an open-air ethnographic museum located in the Herastrau Park, showcasing traditional Romanian village life. The museum extends to over 100,000 m2, and contains 272 authentic peasant farms and houses from all over Romania. Museum, lying in a specific romanian setting, on the lake shore in Bucharest, is one of the biggest and the oldest outdoors museum in Europe. Its exibits - genuine monuments including houses, pens, churches, water and wind mills, cloth mills, of great historic and artistic value - acquaint the visitors in two hours with the specific of the Romanian village. The objects inside the households - carpets, pottery, rugs, icons, furniture - point to the originality of the folk creation, the sensibility and care for the beauty of the rural people.

Romexpo


Romexpo, the Romanian leading fairs and exhibition organizer, is in the forefront of the Romanian economy, supplying to the local and international business communities competitive packages meant to enhance effective business contacts and promotion, at the European quality standards, between exhibiting companies, trade visitors and professionals during fairs, conventions and related events. Our customer's satisfaction builds up the common success, shared in a dynamic and business-challenging environment.
ROMEXPO S.A. is the largest and the most experienced Romanian company which stages exhibition events and contributes substantially to setting up business contacts among partners throughout the world. Its main activities consist in organizing trade fairs and exhibitions, providing full packages of related services, conventions of all types, business and private tourism. Presently ROMEXPO S.A. is the leading Romanian company in the trade fairs and exhibitions industry, joining tradition, expertise and high quality service standards for the benefit of the ever demanding customers in a challenging environment.
ROMEXPO Exhibitions Centre, Bucharest International Fair, situated on the Northern side of the city, in the midst of a beautiful landscape, is neighboring one of the most important junctions of motorways and air gates, within 10 -15 minutes drive from Bucharest downtown, the Henri Coanda International Airport and the main railway station. ROMEXPO Exhibitions Centre Bucharest International Fair stands as a multi-functional complex with an overall display area of 55,000 sqm indoors and over 45,000 sqm outdoors.
From 4 exhibitions only in 1991, nowadays ROMEXPO annual program comprises more than 40 specialized fairs, exhibitions and trade shows including also two traditional general fairs, TIB - Bucharest International Technical Fair and TIBCO - Bucharest International Fair for Consumer Goods. These trade events play an important role in the process of the restructuring of the economy, development and modernization of the infrastructure, re-engineering of the industries, assisting IT-based activities etc. and stand as the major showcase of technologies and equipment made in Romania as well as of the world-reputed producers' offer to our commercial companies. The international trade fairs and exhibitions brought together in 2004 almost 6,500 exhibitors (28 % foreigners) on a total display area of 150,000 sqm. These figures place ROMEXPO S.A. among the medium-sized organizers of trade exhibition events in Europe.
Hundreds of thousands of people come to ROMEXPO Exhibitions Centre every year. They try to learn about the latest worldwide novelties in their line of work, to introduce themselves to specialists and business partners, to identify new outlets or just to spend some good time visiting one exhibition or another.



We can offer accommodation, breakfast and package features for corporate travellers and exibitors!

Nadia Comaneci


It is practically impossible to talk about Gymnastics without mentioning Nadia Comaneci!!!

If the world remembers nothing else about Romanian gymnast November, it will be this: 10. A perfect score. It was the first the world had seen in gymnastics, and she received seven of them at the 1976 Summer Olympics. Born in 1961 in Onesti, Moldova, Romania, Nadia Elena Comaneci started school in 1968, where she caught the attention of talent scouts for the Romanian National Junior Team. Scout Bela Karolyi saw her playing on the courtyard, pretending to be a gymnast with another child. "I knew I would never leave that school until I found those two little girls," he later said. Nadia was accepted into the new Gymnastics High School, where she spent four hours a day in the gym and five in the classroom. At age 8, she competed in the 1970 Romanian National Championships, and in 1971 and 1972 she won all-around titles for her age group. She won first place in her first international competition in 1971 in Yugoslavia. She arrived at the 1976 Olympics suffering from sciatica, which made strong movements of her legs painful. She was 4'11" tall, barely 86 pounds. She had no hopes of taking home the gold. But then she hit the uneven bars, scoring a perfect 10 -- a world first. She would score six more before the end of the Olympics and became an international media darling in the process. She left Montreal with seven perfect 10s, three gold medals (uneven bars, balance beam, all-around), one silver medal (team) and one bronze (floor exercise). Four years later in Moscow, she grabbed two gold medals (balance beam and floor exercise) and two silver medals (all-around and team).

Nadia's last major competition was the World University Games in Bucharest in 1981. She retired in 1984, just weeks before the Los Angeles Olympics. Later she became an international judge, and coach to the Romanian national team. In 1989 she defected to the United States via Hungary and began a career as a model.

She currently lives in Norman, Okla., where she is a gymnastic coach at her husband Bart Conner's Gymnast Academy.

Romanian dictator Ceausescu


Have you heard about CEAUSESCU?

Nicolae Ceauşescu was the leader of Romania from 1965 until he was overthrown and killed in the revolution of 1989. Early in his life he played an active role in the Communist party, which resulted in imprisonment in 1936 and 1940. In 1939 he married another highly devoted Communist, Elena Petrescu. Once the Communists fully gained power in Romania in 1947, Ceausescu headed the nation's ministry of agriculture and served as deputy minister of the armed forces. Eventually he rose up to the second highest position in the party, holding important posts in the Politburo and Secretariat. After Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej's death in 1965, Ceausescu became the leader of the state and president of the State Council. In the 1960s he ended Romania's participation in the Warsaw Pact and condemned the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union. After becoming President in 1974, Ceausescu began to run the country in a militant fashion. His secret police held tight control of free speech and the media. In 1982 he ordered most of Romania's products to be exported in order to pay off a ballooned foreign debt due to his mismanagement. The lack of agricultural and industrial resources crippled the country and the lack of medicine, food, energy, and other basic necessities drove the people to the brink of starvation, while the Ceausescu's outrageous consumption continued unabated. The population finally rebelled when Ceausescu ordered his forces to fire on antigovernment demonstrators in Timisoara. On December 22, 1989 he and his wife were captured and on Christmas Day they were both executed by a firing squad.
Elena Ceausescu was born on January 7, 1919. Born into a poor family - her father was a plowman - her formal education ended after the fourth grade. In the 1930s she met her future husband Nicolae while being active in an underground Communist party. They were then married in 1939 and from that point on they were a team, never parting. Nicolae appointed her to the Nation Council of Scientific Research. Two years later Elena was awarded her Ph.D. in industrial chemistry despite having had other people do the work for it. All her supposed scholarly achievements and awards were entirely fraudulent. Indeed, she was seen many times dozing off, open mouth, when scientific papers were discussed. In 1980 she was appointed the first deputy Prime Minister in the Council of Ministers, the number two position behind her husband. By the time Elena started to gain power in her husband's government the country was starting its downfall. In the end, the much despised Elena was executed by her husband's side on December 25, 1989.
Although originally regarded by the West as a sort of maverick Communist, due to his opposition to the 1968 Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, it soon became apparent that he was one of the most brutal leaders that Europe has ever seen through his attempts to personally dominate the Romanian people.
Nevertheless, Ceausescu was actually very consistent in his policies. His unyielding Stalinist ideology to create a 'homogenous Socialist population out of the traditionally peasant based Romanian people' was what caused Romania to be in the situation that it is today. To achieve his aims, the population would have to be subjected to his control - most easily achieved if they were contained in large urban centres.
The economic consequences of such a policy was an all out drive to create a heavy industrial base in Romania and a determination to make Romania self sufficient through the elimination of its foreign debt. A policy of 'systemisation' was also proposed in which the rural population was to be moved to larger urban centres - but this was later abandoned.
Initially, the development strategy was very successful, as vast pools of underutilised labour in agriculture was mobilised for industry with the proportion of the non-agricultural labour force increasing from 30.3% in 1956 to 63.5% in 1977. However, this growth was not sustainable - being based on structural shifts - and soon the labour force was faced with inadequate employment and income opportunities with a reduced supply of food and other consumer goods. However, Ceausescu's ideological inflexibility allowed for no changes in his policy and the regime resorted to coercion to achieve the production targets which enterprise managers were then forced to fabricate.
The effects of this flawed system soon became apparent as the benefits from the labour force shift were reduced. Economic growth fell from 10% in the early 1970's to 3% in 1980 with food and other consumer goods becoming very short in supply.
The situation was worsened by the energy crisis of the early 1980's. Despite the fact that Romania had one of the best endowments of natural resources in Europe and in 1985 produced more electricity per capita than Spain, Italy or Portugal (excluding imports of electricity) the streets were dark and people died from the cold in their homes. In 1989, household consumption of electricity accounted for only 5.1% of the total.
This crisis was a consequence of the continuation of the drive towards heavy industry, making Romania a net importer of electricity at a time when World energy prices were at a peak. When the crisis became apparent, instead of curbing this drive, it was, in fact speeded up - hitting the population more.
Apart from the obvious social consequences of this policy, the demand for many household appliances fell sharply while light industry was often forced to run at less than full capacity. Agriculture was also affected as a high proportion of irrigation couldn't be used.
Yet Ceausescu's vision was not swayed and he turned to even more ambitious projects such as the Danube-Black Sea canal and the Bucharest civic centre - to create a capital worthy of the New Socialist Man. All this while his people starved and sat in the dark at night.
Ceausescu's policies soon became seen for what they were as the economy became unable to meet the basic needs of the population such as food and health care. In 1981, rationing was reintroduced as agricultural output fell sharply. This was mainly due to unrealistic food prices and agricultural wages that were too low. As a consequence, the private sector became more important for providing food and by 1985 it accounted for over half the total production of milk, wool, eggs and potatoes despite only holding 13% of arable land.
Ceausescu's response? The 'new agrarian revolution'. A plan which aimed to incorporate the agricultural sector properly into the plan. Economically it made no sense as farmers were now forced to deliver quotas of food to the state at a third of the market price - with these quotas being even higher for private farms. University graduates were forced to spend several years in the countryside and the introduction of the 'closed town' scheme made it very difficult to get back to the cities.
To worsen the situation, in 1988 Ceausescu announced that systemisation was being reintroduced. The idea behind this was to structure all villages into a well-defined hierarchy with some 300-500 villages selected for promotion into modern towns while another 6, 500 villages were to be phased out entirely.
It can be seen, therefore, that by this time Ceausescu had completely lost control of himself. He was now insisting on visiting factories himself and choosing their production targets according to his own personal whims. In other words, by 1989 he had succeeded in subordinating the entire Romanian economy to his own personal 'off the wall' ideologies. Happily, Ceausescu was deposed before either the New Agrarian revolution or systemisation could do damage but it is clear what their effects would have been. Firstly, the agricultural production base would have been eroded further while removing any form of production incentives from the farmers. Furthermore, the systemisation imposed rural-urban migration would have reduced the supply of labour further while alienating the Romanian peasantry even more. Ironically the net result of this would have been to increase the population's dependence further on private production - something which Ceausescu abhorred.
Eventually, in 1989 as GNP fell by 10%, shortages became more pronounced and unemployment began to rise, Ceausescu was deposed. The economy was in a shambles. The entire information base for planning had been eroded and physical infrastructure was severely run down - despite high government investment rates. The actual physical well-being of the population had deteriorated through malnutrition, pollution and the decline in the health sector. Furthermore, the fall in investment in education had been so severe that the numbers enrolled in University education had actually fallen despite the increases in the size of the 18-22 age bracket.
Thus, Ceausescu left Romania with an ineffective, underproductive industrial base, a highly weakened, unmotivated agricultural sector and an unhealthy, unproductive population. It is this legacy which provides the foundation for the 'basic needs' approach to the Romanian economic programme. Many economic resources have been diverted back to the population with the net effect of providing confidence in the economy and through the increased supply of food, reducing the need to hoard.
Nevertheless, it would be wrong to think that all of economic problems have been resolved. Although the population has a sense of real improvement, the macroeconomic indicators show a bleak situation. Output has plummeted, labour productivity has fallen and hard currency imports have risen significantly. Much of this decline is merely due to the adjustment process that is necessary in economic transition. However, it would be wrong to underestimate the extent to which structural factors such as oversized industries, price controls and highly inefficient managers have contributed to the decline. It is these factors for which the Ceausescu regime is responsible and it is these distortions which will prove the greatest challenge to reformers.

Luxury Bucharest apartments for short term rental


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Howard Johnson, 5*
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Crowne Plaza, 5*
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Ramada Majestic, 4*
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IBIS Parliament, 3*
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Hotel Opera, 3*
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2009/03/02

Vlad the Impaler or Dracula?


Dracula, one of the most famous characters in the world, is always linked to Romania. More precisely, with Transylvania (a Romanian province), which is believed to be a foggy mysterious land, with lots of vampires and castles.The legend of this famous Dracula has its starting point in a historical character, who played a very important role in the 15th century in this part of the world. Several reasons were put together in order to transform the ruler of Wallachia (another Romanian province) in the bloody vampire of today.

The real history tells us that Vlad the Impaler (in Romanian: Vlad Tepes) ruled in Wallachia for three times (1448; 1456-1462; 1476), the last reign being finished with his death. Let`s not forget that in those times the rulers came to the throne and left it, according to the interests and the support of the boyars and of the Turks, too.Vlad Tepes was born in November or December 1431, in the fortress of Sighisoara, Romania. His father, Vlad Dracul, at that time appointed military governor of Transylvania by the emperor Sigismund, had been inducted into the Order of the Dragon about one year before. The order - which could be compared to the Teutonic Order of Knights - was a semimilitary and religious society, originally created in 1387 by the Holy Roman Emperor and his second wife, Barbara Cilli. The main goals of such a secret fraternal order of knights was mainly to protect the interests of Catholicism, and to crusade against the Turks. There are different reasons why this society is so important to us. First, it provides an explanation for the name "Dracula;" "Dracul" in Romanian language, means "Dragon", and the boyars of Romania, who knew of Vlad Tepes' father induction into the Order of the Dragon, decided to call him "Dracul." "Dracula," a diminutive which means "the son of Dracul," was a surname to be used ultimately by Vlad Tepes. A second major role of this Order as a source of inspiration for Stoker's evil character is the Order's official dress - a black cape over a red garment - to be worn only on Fridays or during the commemoration of Christ's Passion.In the childhood, for about 6 years, from 1442 to 1448, Vlad and his brother Radu were hostages of the Turks. But in 1447 their father, Vlad Dracul was murdered at the order of Iancu of Hunedoara, ruler of Transylvania, who imposed another ruler for Wallachia, called Vladislav the 2nd. The year 1448 is the year of Vlad the Impaler`s first reign. Returned in the country, he took the throne of Wallachia, but only for a short period of time (2 months), as Vladislav the 2nd came back with an army in order to take back the throne. An exile period came next for Vlad, who wandered in Moldavia and Transylvania from 1448 to 1456. The years spent at the Turks, the years of exile, but the death of his father and elder brother (Mircea, buried alive) also, influenced his personality for ever.In 1456, with help from Transylvania, it seems, Vlad the Impaler returned to rule Wallachia. His home policy was based on an idea which can be found in a letter written to the merchants from the city of Brasov: “When a man or a ruler is powerful and respected (inside the country), he can do the peace however he wants it, but when he has no power, a more powerful one will come over him and he`ll do whatever he`ll want with him”. In order to impose the honesty and the justice as values, Vlad used the impaling punishment. He didn`t only impale thieves, but he also impaled the unfaithful and dishonest boyars and obviously, the Turks. This punishment who brought this nickname for Vlad wasn`t though invented by the Romanians. It was very typical for those mediaeval times, characterized by cruelty and torture. The victims were tied with the hands and feet spread and a pale was sticked through their rectum. They were then lifted and let to die in agony. If Vlad had applied this punishment only to the Turks, so to the pagans, maybe it wouldn`t have seemed so unusual. Anyway, the fact that he used to impale not only the Turks, but the Christians also, was a real shock for those times.
The moment when Vlad revenged the death of his brother and father became famous. In the first Easter day of the year 1459 he impaled some of the boyars and he forced the rest of them to work at the building of the Poienari fortress. Another story tells how Vlad killed in the same way about 500 boyars, who have lived during more than 7 reigns, punishing them for their infidelity and treason proved like this. The beggars weren`t spared either. They were called at a feast in the city of Targoviste (the capital of Wallachia in those times) and asked if they want to be released from the difficulties of life. As the answer was affirmative, Vlad burnt them all, so none of them won`t suffer anymore.There are many anecdotes about the philosophy of Vlad Tepes Dracula. He was for instance particularly known throughout his land for his fierce insistence on honesty and order. Almost any crime, from lying and stealing to killing, could be punished by impalement. Being so confident in the effectiveness of his law, Dracula placed a golden cup on display in the central square of Tirgoviste. The cup could be used by thirsty travelers, but had to remain on the square. According to the available historic sources, it was never stolen and remained entirely unmolested throughout Vlad's reign.
In these conditions, the thefts weren`t so common in Wallachia. A legend said that a merchant who was passing through Wallachia asked Vlad for protection. The ruler assured him that nothing bad would happen. As 160 golden coins had disappeared after the first night, the merchant complained to Vlad. The ruler caught the thief and impaled him, returning the money to the trader. He didn`t return 160, but 161 coins. The merchant saw that and said that he received one more golden coin. Then Vlad said to him that if he hadn`t told the truth, he also would have been impaled for fraud.
Very special relations were between Vlad the Impaler and the Saxon merchants from the cities of Sibiu and Brasov. The Saxons were brought to the south of Transylvania in the 12th and 13th centuries, in order to defend the borders with Wallachia, but also for colonizing the lands. Famous merchants, they had always benefited of commercial privileges. But in the year 1459 Vlad began a policy of protecting the merchants from Wallachia, which caused the conflict with the Saxons. This conflict was stressed by the fact that the Saxons always supported other claimants to the throne of Wallachia. One of these claimants, Dan the 3rd, was forced by Vlad to dig his own grave and then was beheaded and thrown into it. In his campaign against the merchants from Brasov, Vlad burnt the city and impaled them on the hills around.The battle against the Turks began in 1459 with Vlad`s refusal to pay the requested tribute. More than this, the Impaler fixed by nails the Turkish messengers` turbans on their head, as they didn`t want to uncover themselves, saying that it was forbidden by their religion. The alliance with Mattia Corvin, king of Hungary, played a very important role for Vlad. In the winter of 1461-1462, he organized a surprise campaign in the south of Danube, during which more than 20.000 Turks were killed. In his letter to Mattia Corvin, the Impaler enumerated with a macabre accuracy the burnt places, but the number of victims also: 23.884 exactly, without counting the ones burnt alive in their houses or the ones whose heads weren`t presented to my officers. The reply came quickly. In the spring of 1462, the sultan Mehmed the 2nd crossed the Danube with a 60.000 soldiers army (almost the double of the army which Vlad had at his disposal) and went directly to Targoviste. The famous night attack of the Impaler`s army happened in June, this attack causing panic in the Turkish camp, making them retire. But this doesn’t prevent the Turkish army from going forward.
Finding himself without allies, Vlad, forced to retreat towards Tirgoviste, burned his own villages and poisoned the wells along the way, so that the Turkish army would find nothing to eat or drink. Moreover, when the Sultan, exhausted, finally reached the capital city, he was confronted by a most gruesome sight: thousands of stakes held the remaining carcasses of some 20,000 Turkish captives, a horror scene which was ultimately nicknamed the "Forest of the Impaled." This terror tactic deliberately stage-managed by Dracula was definitely successful; the scene had a strong effect on Mehmed's most stout-hearted officers, and the Sultan, tired and hungry, admitted defeat. Nevertheless, following his retreat from Wallachian territory, Mehmed left the next phase of the battle to Vlad's younger brother Radu, the Turkish favorite for the Wallachian throne. At the head of a Turkish army and joined by Vlad's detractors, Radu pursued his brother to Poenari castle on the Arges river.
According to the legend, this is when Dracula's wife, in order to escape Turkish capture, committed suicide by hurling herself from the upper battlements, her body falling down the precipice into the river below - a scene exploited by Francis Ford Coppola's production. Vlad, who was definitely not the kind of man to kill himself, managed to escape the siege of his fortress by using a secret passage into the mountain. Helped by some peasants of the Arefu village, he was able to reach Transylvania where he met the new king of Hungary, Matthias Corvinus. However, instead of providing some help, Matthias arrested Dracula and imprisoned him at the Hungarian capital of Visegrad.
Vlad`s decline was due to a fake letter, written most probably by the Saxon merchants, letter which proved the ties between the Impaler and the Turks. Thus Vlad was accused of treason and arrested at the order of Mattia Corvin. There was also another reason for which the Hungarian king acted like this. In the winter of 1462, Vlad had asked for help from Mattia Corvin, who had received money from the Pope in that purpose. So, the accusing and arresting of the Wallachian ruler hid also the fact that Mattia Corvin didn`t help Vlad, but didn`t return the money received for the Crusade either. Between 1462 and 1474 Vlad the Impaler was prisoner at Visegrad and Pesta. Moreover, his defamation began. The German stories, spread by Mattia Corvin and the Saxon merchants would create a bloody and cruel image of Vlad in all the Western Europe.In 1475, after the intervention of Stephan the Great (the Moldavian ruler), Vlad was released and he returned in 1476 on the throne of Wallachia. It would only last one month, as he was killed in December, after a conspiracy of the boyars. The legend goes that Vlad was buried at the Snagov monastery (only the body, as the head had been taken to the Turks, at Constantinople), but the archaeological research from 1930s only discovered some horse bones. His body lies in front of the altar. In 1935, a richly dressed but beheaded corpse was exhumed at Snagov, a fate known to have overtaken Dracula, whose head was supposedly wrapped, perfumed and dispatched as a gift to the Turkish sultan.The legend of DraculaThe name of the already well-known Wallachian prince became even more famous after Bram Stoker from Dublin (1847-1912) has published his novel "Dracula" in 1897. The author was a stage director, member in the Golden Down parapsychology association in London and a passionate researcher of Irish and Hindu vampirism. His novel, published in millions of copies, has as its main hero a vampire, Szekler count, named Dracula. The action develops against a Transylvanian background about which the author himself says: " I read that every known superstition in the world is gathered into the horseshoe of the Carpathians, as if were the centre of some sort of imaginative whirlpool." In the first pages of this book we meet a young attorney (Jonathan Harker) who has been asked to journey out to Dracula's castle to arrange certain real estate transactions. Harker's carriage, driven by a man whose hands are claws, hurtles at the edges of precipices until he is finally discharged in the darkness to be met and taken to Dracula's castle. There, everything is more or less as we expect it, only much more so. His staying there becomes full of terror as he finds out part of Count's secrets. He writes a diary for his fiancee, Mina Murray, who is waiting for him in England. Think of the monstrous ego of the vampire. He thinks himself so important that he is willing to live forever, even under the dreary conditions imposed by his condition. Avoiding the sun, sleeping in coffins, feared by all, he nurses his resentments.The Count leaves to London. One of his victims, Lucy Westenra, is a free spirit who has three suitors and is Mina's best friend. Lucy becomes an Un-Dead after her death. Her soul is saved by Lord Arthur and his friends: Dr. Seward, Professor Van Helsing and Quincey Morris. Mina becomes the next target. Professor Van Helsing is the brain behind all the actions against The Count. Using his magical powers, Dracula is cooling off his thirst with Mina's blood. Will she become an "undead" too? Her friends are decided to not let this happen. Without a safe place to rest Dracula is forced to go back home, in Transylvania.The story has a happy end. After following for days the group in charge with delivering the chest containing Dracula's body, Dr. Steward, Quincey Morris, Jonathan and Van Helsing managed to do their job right in the last minute of the sunset. On the instant, came the sweep and flash of Jonathan's great knife through his throat whilst at the same moment Mr. Morris's bowie knife plunged into the heart.
Beside the negative fame brought by the name of Dracula and by the stories of the Transylvanian Saxon merchants, at the end of the 19th century another decisive element was added at the future renown of the Romanian ruler. The Bram Stoke’s book. Bram Stoker had never traveled to Romania. His information came from the London libraries, as Jonathan Harker himself, one of the main characters of the novel, stated: “Having had some time at my disposal when in London, I had visited the British Museum, and made search among the books and maps in the library regarding Transylvania; it had struck me that some foreknowledge of the country could hardly fail to have some importance in dealing with a nobleman of that country. I find that the district he named is in the extreme east of the country, just on the borders of three states, Transylvania, Moldavia, and Bukovina, in the midst of the Carpathian mountains; one of the wildest and least known portions of Europe. The region that Harker describes is the Bargau region, near Bistrita. He tells that just in the pass which links Transylvania with Moldavia, in the ruins of a castle, Dracula, a Transylvanian (!!) count lives and every night he turns into a vampire.

The place where the castle is isn`t identified: “I was not able to light on any map or work giving the exact locality of the Castle Dracula, as there are no maps of this country as yet to compare with our own Ordance Survey Maps”. So, the famous Dracula`s castle is not located at Bran (wrongly linked to the legend)), but at Bargau, where, in order to exploit the legend, a mediaeval looking hotel, called “Dracula Castle” was built in the 1980s.


Life certainly seems stranger than fiction: the real story of Dracula makes Bram Stoker's vampire seem quite tame!
He has been known by many names: Vlad Tepes and Vlad the Impaler. Admired by us as a hero; feared by his enemies as a butcher.