Tag: Bistrita

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup


    The world’s no.
    2 tennis player, Simona Halep, has won the WTA tournament in Prague, a
    competition with more than 202 thousand dollars in prize money. On Friday the Romanian
    clinched a two-set win, 6-2, 7-5 against Elise Martens of Belgium. This has
    been Halep’s 21st title and the second this year after the one in Dubai, in
    February shortly before the Coronavirus pandemic.






    In the doubles
    finals of the same tournament in Prague, Romanians Monica Niculescu and Raluca
    Olaru lost to Lucie Hradecka and Kristyna Pliskova 6-2, 6-2. Niculescu and
    Olaru have so far won 9 WTA titles in doubles competitions each, but none as
    partners.






    The Romanian
    women’s handball side Minaur Baia Mare on Saturday clinched a 29-22 win against
    Slovakian champions Iuventa Michalovce in a friendly away game. Minaur had also
    won a first game against Iuventa a day before 33-23. Another Romanian women’s
    side, Gloria Bistrita, lost to German challenger Thuringer HC 34-26 on Friday
    in their first game of the Most tournament hosted by the Czech Republic.






    Mirel Radoi the selector of Romania’s national side has announced the
    preliminary lineups in the two games Romania is about to play in the Nations
    League, against the Northern Ireland and Austria. Romania will first take on
    Northern Ireland in a home match on September 4th. Three days later
    our footballers will be up against Austria.






    Romanian midfielder Erik Bicfalvi scored a goal for his side Ural
    Ekaterinburg, which ended in a one-all draw their away game against Rubin
    Kazan, on Saturday in the second leg of Russia’s football championship.
    Bicfalvi converted a penalty kick in the 12th minute of the game
    helping Ural to get their first point in the championships. The team is
    presently ranking 11th in a championship attended by 16 sides.






    Romanian fullback Cosmin Moti scored a goal for his side Ludogorets
    Razgrad, which secured a 3-0 win against Slavia Sofia in Bulgaria’s football
    championships.


    Another Romanian, striker Claudiu Keseru has been left out of the lineup
    as he got infected with the coronavirus. And that’s all from our sports desk.

    (translated by bill)

  • Sports roundup

    Sports roundup


    The world’s no.
    2 tennis player, Simona Halep, has won the WTA tournament in Prague, a
    competition with more than 202 thousand dollars in prize money. On Friday the Romanian
    clinched a two-set win, 6-2, 7-5 against Elise Martens of Belgium. This has
    been Halep’s 21st title and the second this year after the one in Dubai, in
    February shortly before the Coronavirus pandemic.






    In the doubles
    finals of the same tournament in Prague, Romanians Monica Niculescu and Raluca
    Olaru lost to Lucie Hradecka and Kristyna Pliskova 6-2, 6-2. Niculescu and
    Olaru have so far won 9 WTA titles in doubles competitions each, but none as
    partners.






    The Romanian
    women’s handball side Minaur Baia Mare on Saturday clinched a 29-22 win against
    Slovakian champions Iuventa Michalovce in a friendly away game. Minaur had also
    won a first game against Iuventa a day before 33-23. Another Romanian women’s
    side, Gloria Bistrita, lost to German challenger Thuringer HC 34-26 on Friday
    in their first game of the Most tournament hosted by the Czech Republic.






    Mirel Radoi the selector of Romania’s national side has announced the
    preliminary lineups in the two games Romania is about to play in the Nations
    League, against the Northern Ireland and Austria. Romania will first take on
    Northern Ireland in a home match on September 4th. Three days later
    our footballers will be up against Austria.






    Romanian midfielder Erik Bicfalvi scored a goal for his side Ural
    Ekaterinburg, which ended in a one-all draw their away game against Rubin
    Kazan, on Saturday in the second leg of Russia’s football championship.
    Bicfalvi converted a penalty kick in the 12th minute of the game
    helping Ural to get their first point in the championships. The team is
    presently ranking 11th in a championship attended by 16 sides.






    Romanian fullback Cosmin Moti scored a goal for his side Ludogorets
    Razgrad, which secured a 3-0 win against Slavia Sofia in Bulgaria’s football
    championships.


    Another Romanian, striker Claudiu Keseru has been left out of the lineup
    as he got infected with the coronavirus. And that’s all from our sports desk.

    (translated by bill)

  • Ţara Dornelor

    Ţara Dornelor

    Astăzi vă invităm alături de noi să exploraţi o zonă în care natura este
    principala atracţie. Mergem astfel, într-un loc cu nume de legendă: Ţara
    Dornelor. O destinaţie de ecoturism, care invită la un turism de tip
    responsabil, din care vizitatorul experimentează natura şi cultura locală. Ne
    îndrumă paşii Cazimir Ciuc Maricica, managerul destinaţiei Ţara Dornelor: Destinaţia în care vă invităm este Ţara Dornelor, a cincea destinaţie
    de ecoturism din România şi singura de acest fel din Bucovina, recunoscută
    oficial de Ministerul Turismului. Poziţionată în partea de nord-vest a
    Bucovinei, ea se compune din municipiul Vatra Dornei şi nouă comune, una mai
    frumoasă ca alta. Iar oferta ecoturistică este extrem de atractivă. Putem vorbi
    de peste 400 de kilometri de trasee turistice de drumeţie, omologate,
    semnalizate şi marcate, în masivele Suhard, Bistriţei, Giumalău şi Călimani,
    peste 150 de kilometrii de trasee de cicloturism, cinci pârtii de schi cu
    lungimi cuprinse între 800 şi 3200 de metri, o pistă naturală de sanie, singura
    omologată din sud-estul Europei.


    Pe
    cei care vor să pătrundă tainele naturii, să cunoască despre speciile de floră
    şi faună, îi invităm în Parcul Naţional Călimani. Acesta protejează pe
    teritoriul său ecosisteme şi habitate valoroase. Ne tentează cu alte atracţii
    Cazimir Ciuc Maricica, managerul destinaţiei Ţara Dornelor: Ţara Dornelor îţi oferă posibilitatea practicării turismului ecvestru,
    fie că eşti începător, prin lecţii de iniţiere şi plimbări uşoare, fie că eşti
    mai experimentat, prin excursii călare pe trasee de mai multe zile, cu campare
    la cort sau trasee în stea cu campare la pensiune. Iarna poţi admira peisajul
    terific dintr-o sanie trasă de cai, într-o plimbare de câteva ore în Vatra
    Dornei, dar şi în zona rurală. Să nu uităm de river rafting şi caiac, o
    activitate foarte antrenantă şi apreciată şi căutată de vizitatori. Ca turism
    sau schior admiri în toată splendoarea ei Depresiunea Dornelor, munţii Rodnei
    şi Călimani, într-o plimbare de 25 de minute, cu telescaunul, pe o lungime de 3
    kilometri, până la altitudinea de 1300 de metri.


    Iar pentru cei ce îşi doresc să retrăiască amintirile din copilărie, din
    casa bunicilor, muzeele din Ţara Dornelor pot oferi şi această experienţă. Tot
    în Ţara Dornelor, ne putem opri în Vatra Dornei, staţiune balneară ce dispune
    de baze de tratament cu remedii naturiste, ce folosesc apa minerală şi o paletă
    foarte largă de factori naturali şi de cură: băi calde cu ape minerale,
    împachetări cu nămol şi parafină, electroterapie, hidroterapie, masaj,
    gimnastică medicală, saună, mofete artificiale, kinetoterapie. Şi pentru cei
    interesaţi să descopere cultura populară Ţara Dornelor reprezintă o atracţie,
    după cum ne-a spus Cazimir Ciuc Maricica, managerul destinaţiei Ţara Dornelor: În Ţara Dornelor meşteşugul încondeierii ouălor se practică de mai bine
    de 100 de ani şi este strâns legat de arta broderiei de pe costumele populare,
    fiind o adevărată comoară a culturii populare bucovinene. La Vatra Dornei,
    şezătoarea este şezătoare! În fiecare sâmbătă, la Muzeul etnografic, poţi
    învăţa să coşi brâie, cu mărgele şi cămeşi, să ţeşi covoare, să torci, să
    încondeiezi ouă, să cânţi o doină. Şi nu numai atât. Se spun secretele
    zacuştilor de hribi şi gălbiori, ale celor mai bune plăcinte cu urdă şi mărar,
    ale dulceţii de merişoare sau ale dulceţii pătate, adică din mai multe fructe
    de pădure şi câte şi mai câte. Peste 40 de evenimente culturale, sportive,
    educaţionale se organizează anual în Ţara Dornelor: Săptămâna plutăritului,
    Festivalul naţional al ouălor încondeiate, Festivalul păstrăvului de la
    Ciocăneşti, Festivalul fructelor de pădure de la Cojna, Festivalul
    obivceiurilor de iarnă sunt doar câteva exemple.


    Ţara Dornelor este un loc în care odată ajunşi, sigur veţi dori să reveniţi.

  • Bistrița

    Bistrița

    Ne îndreptăm azi către
    nordul României și ne oprim în județul Bistrița-Năsăud. Se pot practica aici
    toate formele de turism. Și, deși partea montană atrage majoritatea turiștilor,
    noi ne oprim azi în reședința de județ, în orașul Bistrița. Acesta se prezintă
    ca un burg săsesc păstrat foarte bine. Ovidiu Bozbici, consilier în cadrul
    Direcției Educație Turism din cadrul Primăriei municipiului Bistrița, spune că
    prima mențiune despre oraș este din anul 1241, când tătarii au venit dinspre
    Moldova și au năvălit în Transilvania, Bistrița fiind primul oraș călcat de ei.

    Vechile manuscrise arată că, în momentul respectiv, ar fi ucis 6.000
    de locuitori, ceea ce demonstrează că era un oraș populat. Este cel mai nordic
    oraș săsesc din Transilvania, face parte din cele șapte cetăți-târguri ale
    Transilvaniei fondate de sași. Aceștia au venit, în principal, de pe Valea
    Moselei și din Luxemburg. Localitatea s-a numit la început Nosa, iar prima
    mențiune documentară cu numele actual Bistrița sau Bistricea, datează din anul
    1264. Fiindcă e la granița cu Moldova și poartă de intrare în Transilvania, s-a
    adoptat ca slogan al orașului Poarta Transilvaniei. Avem și o mascotă: struțul.
    În perioada medievală, fiindcă era puțin cunoscut, era considerată singura
    viețuitoare care poate digera fier. Aceasta e și emblema de coif a regelui
    Ungariei Ludovic I de Anjou, care, în 1363, a dat Bistriței statut de oraș
    liber regal, laolaltă cu dreptul de a ține târg, timp de două săptămâni, în
    luna august.


    În prezent,
    orașul Bistrița e liniștit, modern, însă vechile monumente rămân mărturie a
    trecutului său bogat. Acestea pot fi vizitate printr-o plimbare la pas. Ovidiu
    Bozbici, consilier în cadrul Direcției Educație Turism din cadrul Primăriei
    municipiului Bistrița. Am începe cu vechea mănăstire minorită,
    actualmente biserică ortodoxă. Este construită în 1270 și e cea mai veche
    biserică din Bistrița. A fost mănăstire franciscană, apoi biserică catolică,
    iar acum e ortodoxă. Apoi, avem simbolul principal al orașului, Biserica
    Evanghelică, construită undeva în secolul al XIV-lea, pe ruinele unei vechi
    biserici în stil romanic. I s-au adus în timp adăugiri. Ultima, care i-a dat
    înfățișarea actuală, e din anul 1560-1563, în stil renascentist.

    Lucrările au
    fost executate de către un meșter italian, rămas în istorie drept Petru Italus.
    Biserica are și un turn de 75 de metri înălțime. E cel mai înalt turn de piatră
    din Transilvania și e dotat cu lift. În 2008 a început o lucrare mai amplă de
    reconstrucție în urma unui incendiu devastator, al doilea din istoria turnului
    și bisericii. Primul a fost în 1857, al doilea , în 2008. În urma renovării,
    turiștii pot admira panorama orașului de undeva de la 40 de metri înălțime. Mai
    avem Casa Argintarului, o casă care e centru cultural german acum. E construită
    de același meșter care a renovat biserica la 1560.



    Printr-o simplă plimbare pe aleile liniștite ale
    orașului veți mai remarca clădiri reprezentative precum Muzeul Județean Bistrița-Năsăud,
    Palatul Culturi, Biserica Evanghelică, Sinagoga din Bistrița sau Casa lui
    Johannes Lapicida, cea mai veche clădire din zonă. Iar, dacă veți vedea forfotă
    în anumite locuri din centru, n-ar trebui să fiți surprinși. Agenda de
    evenimente a orașului este mereu plină. Veți putea participa la spectacole de
    folclor sau târguri ale meșteșugarilor, în perioada toamnei remarcându-se
    Festivalurile Toamnă Bistrițeană și Oktoberfest. În concluzie, fie că vă doriți
    un sejur pentru relaxare sau o vacanță activă, aici veți găsi oferte pentru
    toate gusturile și pentru toate buzunarele. De asemenea, tradițiile și
    meșteșugurile sunt bine păstrate, astfel încât puteți achiziționa diverse
    obiecte de artizanat

  • נשיא הקהילה היהודית ביסטריצה-נאסאוד הלך לעולמו

    נשיא הקהילה היהודית ביסטריצה-נאסאוד הלך לעולמו

    FREDI DEAC, נשיא הקהילה היהודית של ביסטריצה-נאסאוד שבצפון מערב רומניה, נפטר ב -11 ביוני, בגיל 75 שנים. הוא נפטר שבוע לאחר אירועי יום השנה ה -75 לגירוש היהודים ממחוז מגוריו אל מחנות ההשמדה אושוויץ ובירקנאו, במהלכם אורגנה שורה של אירועים בעיר ביסטריצה ונחשפה אנדרטת זיכרון החיים.



    משפחתו של FREDI DEAC סבלה רבות בתקופת השואה, כאשר יהודי ביסטריצה הושמדו בשיעור של 90%. אמו שלDEAC שרדה את מחנות טרנסניסטריה. בשנת 2012 נפטר ביסטריצה ניצול השואה האחרון, סימיון רוזנברג. במהלך 6 שנים הלכו לעולמם 7 ניצולי השואה האחרונים שחיו במחוז. . לאחר מותו של FREDI DEAC רק 18 יהודים נותרו בחיים במחוז BISTRITA.

  • Attractions touristiques dans le département de Bistrița-Năsăud

    Attractions touristiques dans le département de Bistrița-Năsăud

    Nous commencerons par un tour de la ville de Bistrița, pour nous diriger ensuite vers la station balnéaire de Sângeorz-Băi et nous aventurer finalement en montagne. Ovidiu Bozbici, conseiller municipal chargé de l’éducation et du tourisme est notre guide aujourd’hui à travers la ville de Bistrița. Cette ville ancienne a été mentionnée pour la première fois dans un document datant de 1241, lorsque les Tatars venant de Moldavie sont entrés en Transylvanie. Bistrița a été la première ville envahie.

    Ovidiu Bozbici : « Selon les manuscrits anciens, 6.000 habitants auraient été tués lors de cette incursion tatare, ce qui prouve que cette ville était bien peuplée. Bistrița est la ville saxonne la plus septentrionale du pays. Elle compte parmi les 7 cités-forteresses fondées en Transylvanie par les Saxons, qui arrivaient notamment de la Vallée de la Moselle et du Luxembourg. Au début, la bourgade s’est appelée Nosa et la première mention de son nom actuel – Bistrița ou Bistricea – date de 1264. Puisque cette ville est située à la frontière avec la Moldavie, elle est considérée comme une porte d’entrée en Transylvanie. Nous avons pour mascotte l’autruche. L’autruche étant peu connue à l’époque médiévale, elle était considérée comme la seule bête capable de digérer le fer. L’autruche figurait sur le cimier du heaume du roi de Hongrie, Louis Ier d’Anjou, qui, en 1363, a octroyé à Bistrița le statut de ville royale libre, ainsi que le droit d’organiser une foire, pendant deux semaines, au mois d’août. »

    A présent, Bistrița est une ville calme et moderne, pourtant ses monuments témoignent de son riche passé historique. Ovidiu Bozbici nous invite à un tour de la ville : « On pourrait commencer par le vieux monastère minime, devenu monastère franciscain, ensuite église catholique et finalement église orthodoxe. Le monastère a été construit en 1270 et c’est la plus ancienne église de la ville. L’emblème de la ville est pourtant l’église évangélique, bâtie au 14e siècle sur les ruines d’une vieille église de style roman. Elle a été modifiée à plusieurs reprises, les derniers changements ayant été apportés en 1560-1563, dans le style Renaissance. Les travaux ont été réalisés par un bâtisseur italien connu dans l’histoire sous le nom de Petru Italus. La tour de cette église, qui s’élève à 75 mètres, est la plus haute tour en pierre de Transylvanie et elle est prévue d’un ascenseur. D’amples travaux de reconstruction ont été entrepris en 2008, suite à un incendie dévastateur, le deuxième dans l’histoire de la tour, après celui de 1857. Suite à sa rénovation, les touristes peuvent admirer le panorama de la ville du haut de cette tour. Mentionnons également la Maison de l’Argentier – demeure qui accueille de nos jours un centre culturel allemand. Elle a été construite par le même bâtisseur qui a rénové l’église, en 1560. »

    Les touristes, qui ont plusieurs jours à leur disposition, choisissent de continuer leur séjour en se dirigeant vers les principales destinations touristiques du département de Bistriţa-Năsăud. Leur liste est bien longue, précise Ovidiu Bozbici : « A la frontière avec le département de Suceava se trouve le col de Tihuța, où a été érigé un hôtel appelé « Le Château de Dracula ». L’administration de l’hôtel y a prévu une crypte, dont un acteur sort le soir, incarnant le comte Dracula. Au cœur de la montagne se trouve le beau monastère de Piatra Fântânele. Une autre destination importante du département est la station de Sângeorz-les-Bains. Située à une cinquantaine de km de la ville de Bistrița, au pied des Monts Rodnei, elle très connue pour ses eaux minérales, très efficaces dans le traitement des maladies digestives. Mention spéciale pour la Grotte Tăușoare, ainsi que pour les châteaux et les églises évangéliques de la contrée. »

    De nombreux touristes choisissent de se diriger vers Colibița, véritable porte d’entrée du Massif de Călimani. Andreea Spânu, agent touristique au Centre d’information et de promotion touristique de Bistrița Bârgăului, prend la relève : « Colibița est en fait un petit village de 600 habitants faisant partie de la commune de Bistrița Bârgăului, qui compte, elle, quelque 4.500 habitants. Colibița est un petit village de montagne, 90% de son territoire se trouvant sur les hauteurs, qui dispose de 24 lieux d’hébergement. »

    Entre 1923 et 1975, Colibița a été une station balnéaire. Les histoires racontées par les malades de tuberculose qui s’y sont guéris grâce aux propriétés curatives de l’air de cette région ont été confirmées par une étude commandée par le Conseil départemental de Bistrița-Năsăud, qui a voulu savoir si l’air de Colibița était vraiment spécial. En effet, il l’est. Le lac de retenue de Colibița se trouve à 900 mètres d’altitude et s’étale sur quelque 270 hectares, mesurant 13 km de long. A Colibița on mange des produits traditionnels, on fait de l’exercice et on visite les ateliers des artisans.

    Andreea Spânu : « Je vous conseille de goûter le fameux « balmoș » une sorte de tarte au fromage fermenté et aux pommes de terre préparée dans les bergeries. Il y a aussi de nombreux itinéraires de randonnée, plus faciles dans la zone de Tăul Zânelor, entre 12 et 14 kms aller-retour. Les touristes plus expérimentés peuvent se diriger vers le sommet Bistricior, qui s’élève à 1990 mètres d’altitude. Si vous voulez apprendre à faire du pain, vous pouvez participer à un atelier animé par une dame qui s’y connaît. A Bistrița Bârgăului il y a des femmes qui tissent des couvertures et des tapis en laine et qui confectionnent des costumes traditionnels. Tout près, à Tureac, un artisan travaille des vestes et des manteaux en fourrure, qui sont chers, mais très beaux. Il met 3 mois pour réaliser un tel manteau. »

    Dans ce petit village de montagne, les événements ne manquent pas. Andreea Spânu : « Au mois d’août, est organisé le marathon Via Maria Theresia, suivi d’un Festival de cyclisme et d’un Festival de musique folk. Les touristes étrangers peuvent vivre des expériences inoubliables, en se promenant en calèche et en savourant des fruits rouges fraîchement cueillis. »

    Voilà pour aujourd’hui. Rendez-vous la semaine prochaine, pour une nouvelle destination touristique roumaine. (Trad. : Dominique)

  • Colibiţa

    Colibiţa

    Ne îndreptăm spre nordul ţării în judeţul Bistriţa-Năsăud, tărâm al legendelor şi al peisajelor frumoase. Este un judeţ cu un peisaj mirific, de mărime medie, cu aproximativ 300.000 de locuitori. Veţi întâlni aici şi două parcuri naţionale: Munţii Rodnei şi Călimani, o zona cu un aer foarte ozonat, fapt dovedit în urma cercetărilor. Însă azi ne oprim la marea de la munte”, după cum îi spun localnicii destinaţiei noastre. Este un loc, retras, în munte, pe marginea unul lac foarte mare, unde oamenii îşi duc traiul liniştiţi, ocupându-se de creşterea animalelor şi de agricultură. În ultimii ani au apărut pensiuni noi, unele chiar şi de patru stele, însă ele completează peisajul şi nu incomodează liniştea locuitorilor.



    Situată la o altitudine de 900 de metri, localitatea Colibiţa este poarta de intrare în Munţii Călimani. Din 1923, Colibiţa a funcţionat ca staţiune balneo-climaterică până în 1975. Poveştile celor care s-au vindecat de tuberculoză datorită proprietăţilor curative ale aerului din zonă au fost confirmate printr-un studiu comandat de Consiliul Judeţean Bistriţa-Năsăud, care a vrut să vadă dacă aerul de la Colibiţa este într-adevăr special. Potrivit legendei, în anul 1883, o fetiţă din Bistriţa, fiica unui sas înstărit, Hans Lewi, s-a vindecat de tuberculoză datorită aerului din această zonă, extrem de bogat în ozon. Lacul artificial de acumulare Colibiţa se află la o altitudine de 900 de metri având o suprafaţă de aproximativ 270 de hectare şi o lungime de 13 kilometri. Andreea Spânu, agent de turism în cadrul Centrului de Informare Turistică Bistriţa Bârgăului ne prezintă oferta turistică.



    Zona este specifică ariei depresionare. În mijlocul depresiunii există un lac de acumulare, iar acesta constituie elementul principal de atracţie al zonei. Depresiunea este situată în partea de est a judeţului Bistriţa Năsăud şi este chiar în punctul de întâlnie al Munţilor Bârgăului cu Munţii Călimani. De altfel, aproximativ 2% din teritoriul Rezervaţiei Naturale Călimani se află pe teritoriul comunei noastre. Cel mai practicat tip de turism în zonă este cel de relaxare. Se pot practica drumeţiile, se poate face echitaţie, se pot face plimbări cu trăsura sau cu sania. Resursele naturale, respectiv calitatea aerului, apele naturale, flora şi fauna sunt deosebite. Dar se mai poate practica şi turismul de aventură: caiac, rafting, zbor cu parapanta, alpinism, escaladă, vânătoare. Oferta zonei este foarte bogată.



    În sejurul la Colibiţa nu trebuie să rataţi punctele de atracţie din zonă, spune Andreea Spânu, agent de turism în cadrul Centrului de Informare Turistică Bistriţa Bârgăului: Pe lângă lacul Colibiţa, punctul de atracţie, mai există rezervaţia naturală Tăul Zânelor, unde se poate merge pe jos. O parte din drum este accesibil şi cu maşina. Avem patru arii protejate. Avem Drumul Romanilor, Castelul Dracula din Pasul Tihuţa, dar şi multe izvoare de apă minerală sau sărată.”



    Din meniul tradiţional, nu ocoliţi plăcinta cu brânză iute şi cartofi, care este la foarte mare căutare, laptele acru de oaie şi balmoşul de la stână. Invitaţia a fost lansată. Până data viitoare, drum bun şi vreme frumoasă!

  • Christmas Traditions

    Christmas Traditions

    Starting December 6th, the feast day of Saint Nicholas, and
    until January 6th, the day when we celebrate the Epiphany, winter
    holidays are in full swing. In the past, people used to organize handicraft
    evening sittings where householders would spin wool and knit warm woolen or
    hemp clothing for the family members and would tell stories on the latest
    gossip in the village. They would eat boiled corn grains, dried fruit, nuts and
    other relishes the host had prepared on that occasion. On that day
    carol-singers start making Christmas arrangements. This is when lads’ groups
    assemble, when masks are made and carols are sung. In traditional villages, it
    is a time when people start tidying their homes and prepare to cook pork meals.
    Pigs are slaughtered on a special day, called Ignat, and the meat is used to
    make sausages, black pudding, haggis, sarmale (mincemeat cabbage rolls) and
    pork steaks that people cook in large earthen pots on Christmas Eve.


    The large snowflakes, the scented smell of freshly-baked pound cake,
    white-bearded Santa Claus and carolers’ voices echoing in the village, all
    these add up to the fairy-tale atmosphere setting in around Christmas time. Starting
    on Christmas Eve, children bearing sleigh-bells and whips start caroling,
    enlivening the entire village. According to tradition, it is bad omen not to
    welcome them, since they bring the blessed news of our Lord’s birth and ward
    off evil by the flick of their whips. Until late into the night, villages hum
    with carol tunes. Carol-singers are often rewarded with nuts, knot-shaped
    bread, apples and, nowadays, money.


    Northern Bukovina is well-known for keeping tradition alive concerning
    Christmas Eve rituals. 12 plates with 12 fasting dishes are placed on a table,
    which in Bukovina is usually square. A
    fish is placed between the 12 dishes as a symbol of Christ. Next the family
    enacts a ritual about the marriage of earth and sky. A round-shaped bread is
    placed in the middle of the table, standing for the Sun and the Moon, next to a
    candle representing the pillar of the sky.


    This is followed by a special ceremony: the eldest member of the family
    exits the house carrying a tray with 12 spoons and one of each of the 12 food
    types, the round-shaped bread and the candle. He circles the house, stopping by
    each corner to conjure the spirit of the rain to come in due time and
    reasonable quantity, so that the earth can bear fruit again. The food is then given
    to the cattle, while the man of the house goes in and places the bread and the
    candle on the table.


    Then, the entire family says Our Lord’s Prayer and thanks God for
    blessing them with another year of happiness and for allowing all of them to be
    there, since all the relatives get together at Christmas. Only then do they sit
    down at the table. However they don’t eat until they remember all those
    departed.


    Even today, it is believed that on December 24th, the
    spirits of the dead come back to life and they have to eat and drink. For this
    reason, once the Christmas Eve meal is ceremoniously concluded, all the
    leftovers are gathered on a big platter and are left by the window along with a
    cup of water until the Epiphany Eve, when they are either given to the cattle
    or thrown away in a river or spring.

    On Christmas morning, the first who
    wake up are the children who rush into finding the presents Santa has left for
    them under the Christmas tree. On Christmas Day people sing carols on the
    Bethlehem narrative in the Bible or enact Nativity episodes from the Bible.
    Performances are often followed by a symbolic clash between the old year and
    the new one, which concludes in the form of a wishing ceremony.


    The star boys’ singing procession is
    another custom performed by children in all areas of the country to commemorate
    the star announcing the birth of our Lord. The star boys are children or young
    boys clad in traditional costumes with multicolored ribbons, sometimes wearing
    wizards’ hats bearing Biblical names. The carolers’ reward is all the more
    generous as the carol itself is more touching. The boys are given a big bread
    roll, bacon and sausages; the food is collected by the Baggers. The food is
    then used at another youth celebration, named the beer, on the second day of
    Christmas. To prepare that, the lads place barley or oat somewhere to sprout,
    well in advance, and then make the beer, a drink they would have for the
    Christmas Party.


    In the Apuseni Mountains, boys go
    caroling with a fiddler, and visit the houses of eligible girls. In the Mures
    region the custom of the drums is widespread; these are a sort of drums made of
    animal skin. Householders receive the drummers with a lot of respect and joy,
    welcoming them to carol and sing in every house. The boys’ group is the
    best-known group of carolers in Fagaras Country.


    The boys group custom unfolds
    according to a well-designed pattern, handed down from generation to
    generation; first, the group is formed on Sanicoara’s Day, then the host is
    chosen, as well as the hierarchy, the key positions being those of the great
    bailiff, of the small bailiff, of those responsible with taking the girls out
    to dance; then there are the boys who play an administrative role (the publican
    tending to the drinks, the cashier, who collects the pay and the gifts for the
    fiddlers, while the flag keeper tends to the flag – the group’s most precious
    object). In the villages across Brasov County there are three types of boys’
    groups: boys’ groups with flags, typical for villages at the foot of the
    mountain, then there are the boys’ groups with tip-cats, and boys’ groups with
    clubs, which speaks about the archaic initiation kit.


    The flag is usually made of two
    vividly colored headscarves, which are tied to a stick 1 to 2 meters long,
    wrapped up around sticks with a cross at the top, as well as various other
    adornments. When the group is caroling, the flag is pinned either at the loft
    of the host’s home, or at the gates, and is hoisted on a very long stick. Those
    who are not part of the group have the right to steal the flag, and if they
    can do that, the group needs to take it back by paying for so much drink as the
    thieves ask for (usually about 10 to 20 litres of wine) and the boys’ group is
    usually put to shame if their flag is stolen.


    The Bistrita region also preserves
    old customs and traditions. On Christmas Night, kids’ teams are formed:
    hobbyhorse dancers, Turks, green stars, Herods, who go caroling around the
    village. The caroling starts from both ends of the village and when teams
    travel halfway through, a big round dance is formed. Then the elders get ready,
    they also split in groups and first carol their neighbors, their friends, and
    then their distant relatives. One to three people join the group at every house
    that receives the carolers, and in the end, at daybreak, they sing a carol
    called The day dawny-dawn. Then they go home, change clothes and go to
    church, attend Mass, and after that, they sing the carol O, hear the glad
    tidings, in the church yard. Then they come home, make merry, and the
    following evening they visit the relatives they did not get round to visiting
    the first day. That’s how people used to spend their holidays a long time ago,
    and that the custom has endured to this day.


    In some villages in Moldavia there is
    also the belief that the heavens open on Christmas Night. Nowadays, festivals
    are organized around Christmas, re-enacting habits and customs, which are still
    preserved in the Romanian traditional village.





  • Christmas Traditions

    Christmas Traditions

    Starting December 6th, the feast day of Saint Nicholas, and
    until January 6th, the day when we celebrate the Epiphany, winter
    holidays are in full swing. In the past, people used to organize handicraft
    evening sittings where householders would spin wool and knit warm woolen or
    hemp clothing for the family members and would tell stories on the latest
    gossip in the village. They would eat boiled corn grains, dried fruit, nuts and
    other relishes the host had prepared on that occasion. On that day
    carol-singers start making Christmas arrangements. This is when lads’ groups
    assemble, when masks are made and carols are sung. In traditional villages, it
    is a time when people start tidying their homes and prepare to cook pork meals.
    Pigs are slaughtered on a special day, called Ignat, and the meat is used to
    make sausages, black pudding, haggis, sarmale (mincemeat cabbage rolls) and
    pork steaks that people cook in large earthen pots on Christmas Eve.


    The large snowflakes, the scented smell of freshly-baked pound cake,
    white-bearded Santa Claus and carolers’ voices echoing in the village, all
    these add up to the fairy-tale atmosphere setting in around Christmas time. Starting
    on Christmas Eve, children bearing sleigh-bells and whips start caroling,
    enlivening the entire village. According to tradition, it is bad omen not to
    welcome them, since they bring the blessed news of our Lord’s birth and ward
    off evil by the flick of their whips. Until late into the night, villages hum
    with carol tunes. Carol-singers are often rewarded with nuts, knot-shaped
    bread, apples and, nowadays, money.


    Northern Bukovina is well-known for keeping tradition alive concerning
    Christmas Eve rituals. 12 plates with 12 fasting dishes are placed on a table,
    which in Bukovina is usually square. A
    fish is placed between the 12 dishes as a symbol of Christ. Next the family
    enacts a ritual about the marriage of earth and sky. A round-shaped bread is
    placed in the middle of the table, standing for the Sun and the Moon, next to a
    candle representing the pillar of the sky.


    This is followed by a special ceremony: the eldest member of the family
    exits the house carrying a tray with 12 spoons and one of each of the 12 food
    types, the round-shaped bread and the candle. He circles the house, stopping by
    each corner to conjure the spirit of the rain to come in due time and
    reasonable quantity, so that the earth can bear fruit again. The food is then given
    to the cattle, while the man of the house goes in and places the bread and the
    candle on the table.


    Then, the entire family says Our Lord’s Prayer and thanks God for
    blessing them with another year of happiness and for allowing all of them to be
    there, since all the relatives get together at Christmas. Only then do they sit
    down at the table. However they don’t eat until they remember all those
    departed.


    Even today, it is believed that on December 24th, the
    spirits of the dead come back to life and they have to eat and drink. For this
    reason, once the Christmas Eve meal is ceremoniously concluded, all the
    leftovers are gathered on a big platter and are left by the window along with a
    cup of water until the Epiphany Eve, when they are either given to the cattle
    or thrown away in a river or spring.

    On Christmas morning, the first who
    wake up are the children who rush into finding the presents Santa has left for
    them under the Christmas tree. On Christmas Day people sing carols on the
    Bethlehem narrative in the Bible or enact Nativity episodes from the Bible.
    Performances are often followed by a symbolic clash between the old year and
    the new one, which concludes in the form of a wishing ceremony.


    The star boys’ singing procession is
    another custom performed by children in all areas of the country to commemorate
    the star announcing the birth of our Lord. The star boys are children or young
    boys clad in traditional costumes with multicolored ribbons, sometimes wearing
    wizards’ hats bearing Biblical names. The carolers’ reward is all the more
    generous as the carol itself is more touching. The boys are given a big bread
    roll, bacon and sausages; the food is collected by the Baggers. The food is
    then used at another youth celebration, named the beer, on the second day of
    Christmas. To prepare that, the lads place barley or oat somewhere to sprout,
    well in advance, and then make the beer, a drink they would have for the
    Christmas Party.


    In the Apuseni Mountains, boys go
    caroling with a fiddler, and visit the houses of eligible girls. In the Mures
    region the custom of the drums is widespread; these are a sort of drums made of
    animal skin. Householders receive the drummers with a lot of respect and joy,
    welcoming them to carol and sing in every house. The boys’ group is the
    best-known group of carolers in Fagaras Country.


    The boys group custom unfolds
    according to a well-designed pattern, handed down from generation to
    generation; first, the group is formed on Sanicoara’s Day, then the host is
    chosen, as well as the hierarchy, the key positions being those of the great
    bailiff, of the small bailiff, of those responsible with taking the girls out
    to dance; then there are the boys who play an administrative role (the publican
    tending to the drinks, the cashier, who collects the pay and the gifts for the
    fiddlers, while the flag keeper tends to the flag – the group’s most precious
    object). In the villages across Brasov County there are three types of boys’
    groups: boys’ groups with flags, typical for villages at the foot of the
    mountain, then there are the boys’ groups with tip-cats, and boys’ groups with
    clubs, which speaks about the archaic initiation kit.


    The flag is usually made of two
    vividly colored headscarves, which are tied to a stick 1 to 2 meters long,
    wrapped up around sticks with a cross at the top, as well as various other
    adornments. When the group is caroling, the flag is pinned either at the loft
    of the host’s home, or at the gates, and is hoisted on a very long stick. Those
    who are not part of the group have the right to steal the flag, and if they
    can do that, the group needs to take it back by paying for so much drink as the
    thieves ask for (usually about 10 to 20 litres of wine) and the boys’ group is
    usually put to shame if their flag is stolen.


    The Bistrita region also preserves
    old customs and traditions. On Christmas Night, kids’ teams are formed:
    hobbyhorse dancers, Turks, green stars, Herods, who go caroling around the
    village. The caroling starts from both ends of the village and when teams
    travel halfway through, a big round dance is formed. Then the elders get ready,
    they also split in groups and first carol their neighbors, their friends, and
    then their distant relatives. One to three people join the group at every house
    that receives the carolers, and in the end, at daybreak, they sing a carol
    called The day dawny-dawn. Then they go home, change clothes and go to
    church, attend Mass, and after that, they sing the carol O, hear the glad
    tidings, in the church yard. Then they come home, make merry, and the
    following evening they visit the relatives they did not get round to visiting
    the first day. That’s how people used to spend their holidays a long time ago,
    and that the custom has endured to this day.


    In some villages in Moldavia there is
    also the belief that the heavens open on Christmas Night. Nowadays, festivals
    are organized around Christmas, re-enacting habits and customs, which are still
    preserved in the Romanian traditional village.





  • Colibița

    Colibița

    Partons aujourdhui au nord de la Roumanie dans une région très particulière, située dans le département de Bistriţa-Năsăud, et arrêtons-nous au bord de ce que les habitants du coin appellent la « Mer de la montagne », ou, selon les géographes, le lac de Colibiţa, sis près du village du même nom. Létendue deau est située en contrebas des monts Calimani, à une quarantaine de km de la ville de Bistrita et à 17 km du col de Tihuta, qui sépare la Transylvanie de la Bucovine, et que Bram Stoker a appelé le col «Bargaului», dans son célèbre roman «Dracula».



    Ion-Costin Corboianu, professionnel du tourisme, nous parle des attractions de la région: « Colibiţa est le nom dun barrage artificiel, inauguré en 1991 et situé dans une région singulière, à 1.850 mètres daltitude. Il paraît que cest bien autour de ce lac que lon trouve lair le plus pur de toute la Roumanie. Le lac est une attraction en soi, car on peut y faire du pédalo ou bien on peut se promener en chaloupe ou en barque. Et puis il y a aussi des randonnées en montagne ».



    Et, en effet, les touristes sont gâtés à Colibiţa. Une auberge de luxe les attend au bord du lac, avec son cellier, son restaurant, son centre fitness et son spa, des terrains de sport aménagés à lextérieur, des embarcations de plaisance mises à la disposition des touristes. Le tourisme actif nest pas en reste et loffre est adaptée à tous les goûts. Il ny a que lembarras du choix entre les off road, la pêche à la ligne, les randonnées guidées en montagne, vers les cimes des monts Calimani, perchées à 2.000 m daltitude.





    Le col de Tihuta constitue une autre attraction naturelle, prisée des touristes. Ce col, bien connu en Roumanie est aussi lun des plus difficiles à franchir. Ce nest pas un passage nouvellement découvert, car les Romains lutilisent déjà depuis des époques lointaines. Dailleurs, tout près de là, se trouve une route romaine pavée, qui gardent encore des éléments dorigine. Elle est appelée de nos jours la « Voie de Marie-Thérèse », du nom de lancienne impératrice autrichienne. Chaque année, une course à pied denvergure est organisée le long de cette voie. Le monastère Piatra Fântânele, situé dans le col de Tihuta, constitue un autre repère à ne pas louper. Peu savent quil sagit du monastère le plus ancien de toute la région du nord-ouest transylvain. Une croix érigée à lépoque actuelle, haute de 31 mètres et éclairée la nuit, vous aidera, de toutes manières, à ne pas rater ce monastère. Une piste skiable, équipée de remontées mécaniques, a été aménagée à proximité. En hiver, vous allez pouvoir vous adonner à la pratique de votre sport favori, voire même prendre part à des concours de ski amateurs. (Trad Ionut Jugureanu)

  • Une visite à Bistrita Nasaud

    Une visite à Bistrita Nasaud

    Amis auditeurs, nous vous invitons aujourd’hui dans le centre-nord de la Roumanie, au comté de Bistrița Năsăud. Nous commencerons par une halte dans la ville de Bistrița, ancien bourg saxon et important centre historique datant de 1264. Ensuite, nous ferons une incursion dans la zone de montagne du comté, pour découvrir le grand lac de retenue de Colibița, surnommé « la mer des montagnes » et le col de Tihuța, par lequel on passe de Transylvanie en Bucovine. Selon notre guide d’aujourd’hui, Claudia Andron, présidente de l’Association pour la promotion du tourisme « Touriste à Bistrița Năsăud » « tout d’abord, que pour voir cette contrée dans toute sa splendeur, il est préférable de la visiter en automne. C’est le moment de la cueillette des fruits et des vendanges et la nature est particulièrement belle dans cette région. Nous avons des montagnes, nous avons une sorte de mer – un très grand lac de retenue, celui de Colibița. Et pour goûter à tous les délices que la contrée offre aux visiteurs, il est préférable de s’y rendre en automne. »

    Claudia Andron nous conseille de commencer notre séjour par une visite de la ville de Bistrița. Nous y découvrirons la Maison de l’orfèvre, monument d’architecture datant du début de la Renaissance, et la Tour des tonneliers, la seule conservée de l’ancienne cité de Bistrița, remontant aux XVe – XVIe siècles. Nous y admirerons de beaux édifices, dont l’église évangélique, la synagogue, le musée départemental, le Palais de la Culture ou encore la Maison de Johannes Lapicida – la plus ancienne construction de la ville. Claudia Andron affirme « Je vous conseille de grimper en haut de la tour de l’église évangélique, la plus haute tour de Transylvanie. Nos Saxons de Bistrița ont été très malins. Il y a plus d’un siècle, des habitants de la ville de Sibiu sont venus, pendant la nuit, mesurer la hauteur de notre tour, dans l’intention d’en construire une pareille chez eux. Ils l’ont mesurée donc, à l’aide d’une ficelle, mais nos Saxons ont coupé deux mètres de leur ficelle. De retour à Sibiu, ils ont donc construit une tour plus petite que la nôtre. Du haut de la tour on découvre le panorama de la ville, et ce petit bourg saxon très bien conservé. Ensuite, vous pouvez franchir le seuil de nos restaurants traditionnels de la zone piétonne, pour découvrir les saveurs de l’automne. Tout le monde a préparé des légumes en saumure et de la zacusca, spécialité roumaine à base d’aubergines et de poivrons. Si vous êtes là un samedi, ne ratez pas le marché local. Vous y trouverez des produits traditionnels faits maison. Tous les samedis, de 9 h à 14 h, une foire des produits traditionnels est ouverte sur le plateau entourant l’église évangélique. »

    Aux deux festivals traditionnels organisés à Bistrița chaque automne, à savoir le Festival « L’Automne à Bistrița » et « Oktoberfest », s’ajoutent cette année de nombreux autres événements, notamment culturels, qui marquent le Centenaire de la Grande Union de 1918. La musique, la poésie et le théâtre s’y donnent rendez-vous. Dans la zone rurale, de nombreuses foires sont organisées, où l’on trouve des produits artisanaux. Claudia Andron nous invite à présent à une incursion en montagne. Première halte : Colibița. « C’est à Colibița que se trouve « la mer des montagnes ». Le décor est unique. En automne, la forêt change de couleur d’un jour à l’autre et elle est plus belle que jamais. Je vous conseille également une randonnée dans les Monts Rodnei, avec leurs paysages à couper le souffle. Vous pouvez vous diriger aussi vers le col de Tihuța, où les services d’hébergement et de restauration se sont beaucoup développés ces dernières années. Un château du comte Dracula y a été érigé en 1976. Un monastère y a également été construit par la suite, pour protéger ce lieu des esprits maléfiques du château. »

    Le col de Tihuța est situé à 1.200 mètres d’altitude et il assure le passage entre la Transylvanie et la Moldavie. Des gens passionnés par la légende de Dracula visitent les lieux. Pourquoi un château de Dracula dans les parages ? Parce que l’écrivain Bram Stoker a imaginé un voyage de son personnage, Jonathan Harker, dans ces lieux. Une statue de l’écrivain a été érigée devant le château, inaugurée il y a 12 ans, en présence de l’ambassadeur d’Irlande accrédité à l’époque à Bucarest. Claudia Andron, présidente de l’Association « Touriste à Bistrița Năsăud », a rencontré beaucoup de touristes de passage à Bistrița. Leur nombre n’a cessé d’augmenter, ces dernières années. « C’est une destination touristique nouvelle. Nous sommes conscients du potentiel touristique de la zone depuis assez peu de temps et notre association a contribué à mieux la faire connaître. La moyenne d’hébergement est de 3 nuitées. En participant aux foires internationales de tourisme, nous avons pu constater que les vacanciers recherchent plutôt les destinations qui leur permettent de vivre des expériences inédites. Ils souhaitent voir comment nous vivons, ce que nous mangeons etc. de ce point de vue, le comté de Bistrița Năsăud est de plus en plus recherché. Là, si l’on aime la nature, on y trouve une nature magnifique, si l’on aime les choses archaïques et les métiers traditionnels, on peut se rendre dans les villages où se trouvent encore des tourbillons pour laver le linge. On peut y trouver encore des femmes – peu nombreuses, il est vrai – qui travaillent des costumes traditionnels. C’est une expérience rare et inoubliable pour ceux qui souhaitent voir comment les gens vivaient jadis. »

    Voilà pour aujourd’hui. Nouvelle destination sur les ondes, dans la prochaine édition de notre rubrique. (Trad. : Dominique)

  • Bistrita Nasaud

    Bistrita Nasaud

    Today we are heading to northern Romania, to the county of Bistrita Nasaud. We start in Bistrita, a city built in Medieval German style, and a historic locality, first documented in 1264, and then we will be heading to the mountain area. Among the landmarks we review will be the great Colibita dam lake, also known as the sea in the mountains, and Tihuta Pass, linking Transylvania and Bukovina.



    The guide today is Claudia Andron, president of the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association for the promotion of tourism: “First of all, in order to take in the beauty of Romania you have to come here in autumn. I recommend an autumn vacation in Bistrita Nasaud. It is harvest time, and the environment changes into something beautiful. We have mountains, and a sea in the mountains, a huge lake, Colibita. Coming here in autumn is a must in order to witness the beauty of this area.”



    Claudia Andron recommends we start our trip in the city of Bistrita. Here you can visit Casa Argintarului (Silversmith House), a Renaissance architectural monument, and the Tower of Coopers, built in the old citadel of Bistrita between the 15th and 16th centuries. You can also visit old monuments such as the Evangelical Church, the Synagogue in Bistrita, the Bistrita Nasaud County Museum, the Palace of Culture, or the Johannes Lapicida Memorial House, the oldest building standing in Bistrita.



    Claudia Andron: “I recommend you climb the tower of the Evangelical Church, the tallest in Transylvania. The Saxons in Bistrita were quite crafty. Over 100 years ago, they tricked the people coming from Sibiu, who had come during the night to measure the height of the tower. They used a long piece of string to measure the height, but before they left, the Saxons here cut two yards out of the string. When they went to Sibiu, the tower there came up smaller in height. You have to climb the tower in order to enjoy the beauty of the city, and the beauty of a former small Saxon town, few of which have been so well preserved. After that, I recommend you go to one of the restaurants in the pedestrian area, and in the Evangelical Church area, to taste the autumn properly. Everyone is preparing their pickles at this time, and if you get there on a Saturday, you should go to the local farmer market, called Made in Bistrita Nasaud. There you find all kinds of traditional products made by the local peasants, it is a not-to-be-missed experience. On Saturday, between 9 AM and 2 PM, the area around the Evangelical Church is the venue for this traditional fair.”



    Two autumn events have just wrapped up in Bistrita, the Autumn Festival and Oktoberfest. In the year of the Centennial, however, the citys agenda is full, with lots of cultural events dedicated to music, poetry, and theater. There is no lack of such events in the rural area either, with mostly crafts fairs. Claudia Andron suggests we head to the mountainous area of the county. She recommends the first stop: “In Colibita, where the lake is, you can admire some of the most beautiful landscapes we have. The forest is changing colors these days, and seems more beautiful than ever. I highly recommend Rodna Mountains. You have to take a trip there, the view is breathtaking. Tourists should also visit Tihuta Pass, where we have increased lodging capacity recently. We have very good accommodation venues. In the last three years, the area has developed a great deal. You should also go visit the monastery there, which has a great story. It is built in antithesis to the castle of Count Dracula, erected in 1976. The monasterys role is to fend away evil spirits from the castle. You should listen to some of the stories the locals tell about this place.”



    Tihuta Pass lies at an altitude of 1,200 meters, between Transylvania and Moldavia. The scenery is extraordinary, especially for the people who are fascinated by the myth of Dracula, who come here to follow the sojourn made by Johanthan Harker in Bram Stokers novel, which took him to these parts in the book. Here you can find a mansion bearing the name of the count, with Bram Stokers statue in front of it. It was placed there 12 years ago in a ceremony attended by the Irish ambassador of the time.



    Claudia Andron, president of the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association for the promotion of tourism, told us that in the last four years the number of tourists coming to the area has increased a great deal: “This is a new tourist destination. We have only recently started recognizing the tourist potential of the area, and the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association worked a lot to take advantage of that. First and foremost we wanted to raise awareness among the locals regarding the tourism potential we have. This can be seen reflected in the large number of tourists who have started arriving. We have an average of three nights accommodation per tourist now. At the tourism fairs we have taken part in, we saw that tourists seek destinations that offer them the local experience. They want to experience what the locals experience, in terms of food or scenery. If you like natural sights, you can find them right here. If you like traditions and the archaic, you can easily reach here villages where you can find ancient traditions. Some women in the area still sew by hand traditional garb. It is an unforgettable experience for people who want to see how Romanians lived in olden times.”


  • Bistrita Nasaud

    Bistrita Nasaud

    Today we are heading to northern Romania, to the county of Bistrita Nasaud. We start in Bistrita, a city built in Medieval German style, and a historic locality, first documented in 1264, and then we will be heading to the mountain area. Among the landmarks we review will be the great Colibita dam lake, also known as the sea in the mountains, and Tihuta Pass, linking Transylvania and Bukovina.



    The guide today is Claudia Andron, president of the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association for the promotion of tourism: “First of all, in order to take in the beauty of Romania you have to come here in autumn. I recommend an autumn vacation in Bistrita Nasaud. It is harvest time, and the environment changes into something beautiful. We have mountains, and a sea in the mountains, a huge lake, Colibita. Coming here in autumn is a must in order to witness the beauty of this area.”



    Claudia Andron recommends we start our trip in the city of Bistrita. Here you can visit Casa Argintarului (Silversmith House), a Renaissance architectural monument, and the Tower of Coopers, built in the old citadel of Bistrita between the 15th and 16th centuries. You can also visit old monuments such as the Evangelical Church, the Synagogue in Bistrita, the Bistrita Nasaud County Museum, the Palace of Culture, or the Johannes Lapicida Memorial House, the oldest building standing in Bistrita.



    Claudia Andron: “I recommend you climb the tower of the Evangelical Church, the tallest in Transylvania. The Saxons in Bistrita were quite crafty. Over 100 years ago, they tricked the people coming from Sibiu, who had come during the night to measure the height of the tower. They used a long piece of string to measure the height, but before they left, the Saxons here cut two yards out of the string. When they went to Sibiu, the tower there came up smaller in height. You have to climb the tower in order to enjoy the beauty of the city, and the beauty of a former small Saxon town, few of which have been so well preserved. After that, I recommend you go to one of the restaurants in the pedestrian area, and in the Evangelical Church area, to taste the autumn properly. Everyone is preparing their pickles at this time, and if you get there on a Saturday, you should go to the local farmer market, called Made in Bistrita Nasaud. There you find all kinds of traditional products made by the local peasants, it is a not-to-be-missed experience. On Saturday, between 9 AM and 2 PM, the area around the Evangelical Church is the venue for this traditional fair.”



    Two autumn events have just wrapped up in Bistrita, the Autumn Festival and Oktoberfest. In the year of the Centennial, however, the citys agenda is full, with lots of cultural events dedicated to music, poetry, and theater. There is no lack of such events in the rural area either, with mostly crafts fairs. Claudia Andron suggests we head to the mountainous area of the county. She recommends the first stop: “In Colibita, where the lake is, you can admire some of the most beautiful landscapes we have. The forest is changing colors these days, and seems more beautiful than ever. I highly recommend Rodna Mountains. You have to take a trip there, the view is breathtaking. Tourists should also visit Tihuta Pass, where we have increased lodging capacity recently. We have very good accommodation venues. In the last three years, the area has developed a great deal. You should also go visit the monastery there, which has a great story. It is built in antithesis to the castle of Count Dracula, erected in 1976. The monasterys role is to fend away evil spirits from the castle. You should listen to some of the stories the locals tell about this place.”



    Tihuta Pass lies at an altitude of 1,200 meters, between Transylvania and Moldavia. The scenery is extraordinary, especially for the people who are fascinated by the myth of Dracula, who come here to follow the sojourn made by Johanthan Harker in Bram Stokers novel, which took him to these parts in the book. Here you can find a mansion bearing the name of the count, with Bram Stokers statue in front of it. It was placed there 12 years ago in a ceremony attended by the Irish ambassador of the time.



    Claudia Andron, president of the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association for the promotion of tourism, told us that in the last four years the number of tourists coming to the area has increased a great deal: “This is a new tourist destination. We have only recently started recognizing the tourist potential of the area, and the Tourist in Bistrita Nasaud Association worked a lot to take advantage of that. First and foremost we wanted to raise awareness among the locals regarding the tourism potential we have. This can be seen reflected in the large number of tourists who have started arriving. We have an average of three nights accommodation per tourist now. At the tourism fairs we have taken part in, we saw that tourists seek destinations that offer them the local experience. They want to experience what the locals experience, in terms of food or scenery. If you like natural sights, you can find them right here. If you like traditions and the archaic, you can easily reach here villages where you can find ancient traditions. Some women in the area still sew by hand traditional garb. It is an unforgettable experience for people who want to see how Romanians lived in olden times.”


  • L’histoire de la ville de Bistrita

    L’histoire de la ville de Bistrita

    En effet, le nord de la Transylvanie, où se trouve aussi la ville de Bistrita, a été semble-t-il colonisé par des Allemands venus de la région du Luxembourg d’aujourd’hui, à compter du 13e siècle. C’est ce que témoignent les premiers documents attestant l’existence de la ville, nous fait savoir l’historien de l’art Vasile Duda. « Ce fut le 2 avril 1241, durant la grande invasion tartare qui avait détruit une grande partie de la Transylvanie et de toute l’Europe de l’Est, que cette localité est mentionnée avec le nom de Nosa. Et ce nom semble être lié à d’autres localités de la région du Luxembourg, renforçant ainsi l’hypothèse que les premiers colons avaient donné à leur agglomération un nom de leur région d’origine. Plus tard, le 16 juillet 1264, un autre document atteste le nom actuel de Bistrita, un nom emprunté probablement à la rivière qui traverse la région. L’origine de ce mot est slave, provenant de « bâstro » c’est-à-dire rapide. Le statut de ville, Bistrita l’obtient en 1330 lorsque le roi Charles Robert d’Anjou accorde aux habitants de la localité le droit d’élire librement leur juge et leurs jurés. Il s’agit de droits réservés aux villes. Sous la maison d’Anjou, en 1353, la ville reçoit aussi d’autres privilèges, parmi lesquels le droit d’organiser une grande foire qui commençait à la Saint Barthélemy, le 24 août, pour s’étendre le long de deux ou trois semaines. C’était la foire la plus importante de la région et c’est d’ailleurs elle qui assurait une grande partie de ses revenus jusqu’au début de l’époque moderne. »

    A compter de 1465, d’amples travaux de fortification commencent à Bistrita, qui est entourée d’une muraille, de tours et de trois portes dotées de pont-levis et défendues par des fossés. Bistrita est devenue ainsi une des puissantes citadelles fortifiées de Transylvanie, mais aussi une des villes les plus belles, fait savoir le même Vasile Duda. « Vers 1564, un voyageur italien en Transylvanie a essayé de présenter brièvement les villes et les fortifications qu’il avait visitées. Et il disait « Sibiu est la plus forte, Cluj est la plus populaire et Bistrita, la plus belle ». La ville a connu son apogée au XVIe siècle et cela signifie qu’il existe de nombreux monuments construits à la fin du XVe siècle et au début du XVIe. Parmi eux, mentionnons l’église de la place centrale, un ancien lieu de culte catholique de rite grec, devenue évangélique en 1543, ayant la tour la plus haute de Transylvanie. Je mentionnerais aussi l’ancienne église de l’abbaye franciscaine, une construction du XIIIe siècle, devenue au XIXe siècle église catholique de rite grec et qui est orthodoxe de nos jours. Il s’agit d’une des constructions les plus anciennes de la ville, érigée en 1290. J’ajouterais aussi le complexe Sugălete, la série la plus longue de maisons médiévales avec des arches au rez-de-chaussée, érigé en 1480. Il y a aussi la maison Ion Zidaru qui date de 1480 – 1520 et qui a une histoire particulièrement intéressante. »

    Et c’est également de cette période fleurissante pour Bistrita, à la fin du Moyen Âge et au début de la Renaissance que datent les armoiries de la ville : une autruche avec un fer à cheval dans son bec. Ce symbole a été offert à la ville par le roi Louis d’Anjou en 1366, et d’ailleurs il se retrouvait sur les armoiries privées de la famille d’Anjou. Détails avec l’historien de l’art Vasile Duda. « Quelle est l’histoire de ce symbole ? Eh bien, il parait qu’au Moyen Âge, soit aux XIIIe et XIVe siècles en Europe Occidentale, l’autruche était présentée comme l’oiseau le plus puissant, capable de digérer même le fer et d’avaler n’importe quoi. Cet oiseau a été utilisé par la famille d’Anjou lorsqu’elle a revendiqué le trône de la Hongrie pour entrer ainsi en conflit avec les nobles hongrois au sujet du contrôle du pays. C’est pourquoi l’autruche est devenue un symbole de la royauté en Transylvanie et en Hongrie, figurant sur les armoiries des villes. Grâce à cette capacité présumée de l’oiseau de digérer le fer, l’autruche a également été associée aux artisans qui transformaient le métal. »

    La présence de l’autruche sur les armoiries de la ville de Bistrita est donc étroitement liée à la guilde des forgerons, une des plus importantes associations de ce genre de toute la Transylvanie.

  • A history of the city of Bistrita

    A history of the city of Bistrita

    The northern part of Transylvania was seemingly colonized by Saxons from around the present-day Luxembourg starting in the 13th century.

    Art historian Vasile Duda has more on the citys first mention in documents: “On April 2nd 1241, during the great Tartar invasion, which destroyed a significant part of Transylvania and of Eastern Europe, this city was first documented under the name of Nosa. And this name was quite similar to other cities around Luxembourg, which made us think that the first settlers gave Bistrita a name inspired from their native regions. The citys current name, Bistrita, first appeared in documents on July 16th 1264 and was borrowed from the name of the river nearby. The name has a Slavic origin: ‘bistro or ‘bastro means fast, as Bistrita was a fast-flowing river. Bistrita got its city status back in 1330 after King Carol Robert of Anjou had granted its inhabitants the right to freely elect their judges and jury. These rights were only granted to cities. Bistrita was to enjoy more privileges under the rule of the Anjou family, such as the right to hold the largest fair in the region, on St. Bartholomew Day, (August 24th) which used to last for two or three weeks back in those days. The fair was Bistritas main source of income until modern days.



    The building of a fortress with strong walls, towers and three entrance gates to the city, enforced by mobile bridges and moats, started in Bistrita in 1465. This is how Bistrita became once again one of the strongest fortified cities in Transylvania, but also one of the most beautiful.



    Vasile Duda: “In 1564, an Italian traveler through Transylvania tried to make a brief presentation of the cities and fortifications that he saw there. He used to say: ‘Sibiu is the strongest, Cluj is the most popular and Bistrita is the most beautiful. The peak of the citys development was recorded in the 16th century, and that is why many monuments were built in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. Among them, the church in the Central Square, which used to be Roman – Catholic and turned Evangelical in 1543, and which has the highest tower in Transylvania. I would also like to mention the old church of the Franciscan monastery, built in the 13th century, which later became a Greek-Catholic church and which is now an Orthodox church. This is one of the oldest constructions in the city, erected in 1290. I would also like to add the Sugalete Ensemble, the longest string of medieval arched houses, built in 1480. Also worth mentioning are the Ion Zidaru House or the Andreas Beuchel House, from the 1480-1520 period.



    The citys traditional coat of arms dates back to the same flourishing period for Bistrita, namely the late Middle Ages and the early Renaissance. It represents an ostrich with a horseshoe in its beak. This coat of arms was offered to the city by Louis I, Duke of Anjou, in 1366. It was actually the private coat of arms of the Anjou family.



    Vasile Duda: “Why this coat of arms? It seems that in the Middle Ages, in the 13th century or the 14th century, the ostrich was considered by West Europeans as the most powerful bird able to digest iron and swallow anything. Thus, it was used by the Anjou family when they claimed the throne of Hungary and entered into conflict with the Hungarian noblemen. In this sense, it became a symbol of royalty in Transylvania and Hungary, being donated to the cities. The bird was appreciated for its capacity to digest iron, being associated with blacksmiths.



    Consequently, the donation of this coat of arms to Bistrita might be related to the citys blacksmiths guild, one of the most powerful associations of the kind.