Tag: Bucharest

  • Franz Liszt Touring the Romanian Principalities

    Franz Liszt Touring the Romanian Principalities

    In 1846, pianist and composer Franz Liszt, already a world celebrity at that point, started his last grand European tour in the southeast of the continent. He held recitals in many cities, among them Vienna, Sibiu, Bucharest, Iasi, Cernauti, Istanbul, and finally Odessa, wrapping up his tour in Czarist Russia.

    In December 1846, he landed in Bucharest, the capital of Wallachia, where he was hosted by the grand boyar Mihai Ghica. In January 1847 he held a recital in the palace of Prince Gheorghe Bibescu. In Bucharest, the cosmopolitan musician found a special kind of society, hospitable and curious, which was still navigating the dividing line between the Orient that had been the basis of local culture, and the West, whose ways the local elites were starting to adopt.

    The elites, meaning the old nobility and the nascent bourgeoisie, had started to modernize, and their children were already Western educated, and were starting to be seen as individuals, not simply miniature inheritors of their parents’ traditions.

    Nicoleta Roman, a historian specializing in the 19th century, spoke to us about the ways in which artistic tastes and education of children in the Romanian Principalities in the early 19th century:

    Nicoleta Roman: In the 18th century we see these kids in votive paintings wearing pretty much the same clothing as their parents, just at a smaller scale. Which is why votive paintings are a great source for studying the appearance of elite children. Then there is the way in which they were educated, mostly at home. In late 18th century, these were mostly of Greek extraction, due to the presence of the Phanariote rule, but, as we transition into the 19th century, the teachers are mostly French, and some were German, even English. These teachers bring in Western culture to Eastern Europe and the Romanian Principalities, and the parents seek to strike a balance between these influences. Then there is the bourgeoisie taking shape at the time, mainly traders, who are striving to imitate what they see in noble families. Which means they invest in their children, in their education, or veneer of education. This is what differentiates the offspring of noble and bourgeois families from peasant children.

    The change of the education paradigm also reflects in artistic tastes. Which is why such and excellent representative of Western music as Franz Liszt enjoyed such huge success in Bucharest and in Iasi, the capital of Moldavia. He went there in January 1847, staying in the home of treasury keeper Alecu Bals. There he held a recital, and for that he was brought from Paris an Erard piano. This type of professional instruments were not available in the Principalities at the time. Publications of the time, with articles written by young intellectuals that were about to take part in the 1848 revolution, fighting for the modernization of the country, featured many enthusiastic articles about Liszt.

    At the same time, the great artist took full advantage of his tour, learning about Romanian folk music and meeting local composers, such as the one who wrote the anthem for the union of the Principalities in 1859.

    Nicoleta Roman:

    I loved Liszt because he went all over Southeast Europe, and had the resilience to get through a very busy concert schedule. This was admirable for that time, because he was almost 40 years old. This series of concerts in Southeast Europe was the last of his grand tours, and I see him as the artist who best embodies this meeting between West and East. He was a true product of Western culture, but his origins helped understand Southeast Europe. He did not exclude the local element in his concerts, and we see him collaborating with composer Alexandru Flecthenmacher, and other personalities over here.

    As a great collector of Southeast European folklore, which he used in his compositions, Franz Liszt had the opportunity to listen to famous traditional composers and interpreters, such as Barbu Lautaru, whose last name is actually a nickname, meaning ‘traditional urban player’. In fact, Liszt, as he was unconcerned with making money, knew how to draw in both rich and poor audiences.

    Nicoleta Roman:

    We could say he had stage star behavior. He knew who he was, and what he needed to be successful. His style and his way of playing could pull at the heartstrings of every nobleman, and even the Sultan, because he also played in Constantinople. He could also touch the hearts of less wealthy people. That is the reason he was in such high demand, because by the time he came here, in 1846-1847, he knew how to put on a great show. He had resounding fame everywhere, and he could fill any room. He played for the elites, but he also held free concerts, for the less wealthy.





    When he left Iasi, he made a short stopover in the Danube port of Galati, then went on to go to Istanbul, ending the tour in Odessa.

  • Radio Romania Culture Awards

    Radio Romania Culture Awards

    The 21st edition of Radio Romania Culture (RRC) Awards Gala was recently held on the stage of the Odeon Theatre in Bucharest, after two years of absence caused by the Covid 19 pandemic. Radio Romania Culture Awards Gala is the only event that grants awards in all areas of culture in Romania. During this anniversary edition awards were granted for the most important achievements of the Romanian culture in 2021. The Radio Romania Culture Excellence Award went to medical doctor Cătălin Denciu and the Intensive Care Unit team of the Piatra-Neamt County Hospital, as these people put their lives in danger to save their patients during a tragic fire in 2020. The special award for education went to the mathematics training platform MateX.xyz. The platform was created by 8 Olympiad participants with the aim of preparing poor 8th graders, online, for the National Assessment.



    The special prize for science was awarded to the founder of Graphs.ro, Dragoș Vana. His platform presented data on the evolution of the coronavirus pandemic in Romania, on a daily basis, as well as information about the anti-COVID vaccination campaign. Started as a personal project, with personal resources, in April 2020, Graphs.ro has become a reference source and an indispensable tool for tracking the evolution of the pandemic in Romania. The special prize for literature was awarded to the bookshop ‘La Două bufnițe – ‘At Two Owls from Timisoara, a large-scale cultural project, an example of cultural survival in the difficult days of lockdown.



    Here are Raluca Selejan and Oana Doboşi, the founders of the bookshop At Two Owls, upon receiving the Special Prize for Literature awarded by RRC: We thank RRC and the jury who nominated us for this award. It is an award that comes at a time when we were almost ready to put down our weapons after two very difficult years, but the award reminds us that a beautiful community was formed around our bookshop, that supports us when it is very difficult for us, without knowing that it is very difficult for us. We want to thank our parents who have always supported us and thanks to whom our bookshop has survived and all our friends. The pandemic has been a difficult time because in our country, as you know, books are not essential, bookshops are not protected by law, we do not have a law on a single book price, so the only ones who can protect this market and the books are the readers. We also want to thank the teacher and writer Daniel Vighi, who believed in us as few people believed in us when we were very young, who encouraged us to become what we are today and from whom we learned that in literature there is no weekend, vacation or holidays. Its from Daniel Vighi that we also learned that the greatest joy which literature brings is that moment of solitude when the reader meets the text, and that is why we hope to bring as many books as possible as close as possible to the readers. We are urging you to support physical bookshops because booksellers are very fondly waiting for you.



    Simona Popescu received a prize at Radio Romania Culture Awards Gala for her book ‘Cartea plantelor și animalelor – ‘The Book of Plants and Animals (Nemira Publishing House). Simona Popescu is the author of the poetry volumes ‘Xilofonul şi alte poeme – ‘Xylophone and other poems (1990), ‘Pauză de respir – ‘Pause for breath (together with Andrei Bodiu, Caius Dobrescu and Marius Oprea, (1991), Juventus, (1994), reprinted entirely in the collection Opera poetica (2021), and ‘Lucrări în verde. Pledoaria mea pentru poezie – ‘Works in green. My Plea for Poetry (2006). She wrote the novel Exuvii (1997; seven editions until 2021), a volume of essays, Volubilis (1998), and books of critifiction about the surrealist poet Gellu Naum, ‘Salvarea speciei. Despre suprarealism și Gellu Naum – ‘Saving the Species. On Surrealism and Gellu Naum (2000) and ‘Clava. Critificțiune cu Gellu Naum – ‘Clava. Critifiction with Gellu Naum (2004).



    Here is Simona Popescu: I thank the jury and I feel honored to receive an award granted by RRC. Thank you for stopping in my garden with an opening to the sea and to the ocean, the garden being a metaphor for my book. It is a book of over 300 pages, with dozens of plants and animals, which are, in fact, pretexts to talk about the wide world, about the human species, not just about plants and animals, and to touch upon several themes of literature, be they great, small or average. My good thoughts go to my good friends who were also nominated, Ștefania Mihalache and Miruna Vlada, and of course to all those who wrote good and very good poetry books, and also other books, in 2021.



    In the Prose category, Alina Nelega received an award for the novel ‘un nor în formă de cămilă – ‘a cloud in the shape of a camel (Polirom Publishing House) and in the Theatre category, Andrei Mureșanu Theatre in Sfântu Gheorghe received an award for the show ‘Consimțământ – ‚Consent by Evan Placey, directed by Radu Afrim. The film ‘Otto Barbarul – ‘Otto the Barbarian, directed by Ruxandra Ghițescu, received the RRC Award in the Film category, and the four solo exhibitions by Mircia Dumitrescu were awarded in the Visual Arts category. The prize in the Science category went to Răzvan Cherecheș, Director of the Department of Public Health of the Faculty of Political, Administrative and Communication Sciences, of the Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj-Napoca, for the campaign to promote the anti-COVID public health measures in Romania. In the Music category, Nicu Alifantis & Zan received an award for the album Dimov • Leoneed is love, and in the Education category, the Narada Association received an award for their projects that bring the technology of the 21st century closer to education. (LS)

  • The Bucharest Bookshops Center and its recent projects

    The Bucharest Bookshops Center and its recent projects



    Super stories from Bucharest is the title of an anthology that has been launched recently. It is the first book written by children and adolescents of Bucharest. It brings together stories that re-enliven the legends and the tales from the history of the city. The collection includes stories authored by the winners of the contest also dubbed Super stories from Bucharest. The contest was launched in early 2021.



    With the support of Bucharest Municipality and ARCUB, Romania’s longest-lasting chain of bookshops, the Bucharest Bookshops Company, printed a few thousand copies of the anthology titled Super stories from Bucharest. The book is given out for free in all 40 bookshops as part of the Bucharest Bookshops Company. The initiators of Super stories from Bucharest are the Bucharest Bookshops Company jointly with Headsome Communication. The initiator and the coordinator of the project, Oana Boca Stănescu, is the president of Headsome Communication.



    Oana Boca Stanescu:



    This book was born as part of an event staged by the Bucharest Bookshops Company. As far as I’m concerned, I have been and still am inspired by the activities staged by the Bucharest Bookshops Company, an outlet that has been on the book market for more than 71 years now, I am impressed by their success, the Bucharest Bookshops Company has succeeded to stay close to all book lovers from around the capital city. In 2020, the Bucharest Bookshops Company was getting ready to celebrate 70 years since their foundation and, since we have been jointly carrying cultural projects for quite some time now, we were planning a rather ambitious schedule. However, the pandemic broke out and all the planned events were no longer possible, but still, we succeeded to carry some of the events through. One such event was an initiative to plant trees in Bucharest, as a sign of the fact that the Bucharest Bookshops Company has been close to the readers in the capital city for almost three generations and the company holds dear the future generation as well. The event I’m speaking about was staged in the Youth Park, there we organized that action of planting trees. And that’s how I got to hear stories about the Vale of Tears, about a submerged church, about the Cocioc Lake in the Youth Park, while me and other people younger than myself realized we didn’t know much about those places. And we realized that, perhaps, the younger generations are not very familiar with the stories and legends of Bucharest either. And that’s how we thought to initiate this project, by means of which we sought to re-enliven the legends and the stories of Bucharest. And, without the support and the enthusiasm of the Bucharest Bookshops Company, as the project running as Super stories from Bucharest is Bucharest Bookshops Brand, we would not have been able to carry it through, to materialize it. Fortunately, for quite a few years now we have been witnessing a revival of the literature for children, we’ve got quite a few living authors who write literature for children. I think it is the most marvelous thing that can happen on a book market, which is rather poor, as if you want to train new generations of readers, you need to draw them to reading in due time



    Marieta Seba, the general manager of the Bucharest Bookshops Company, tells us how the project came into being.



    This project, just as Oana Boca Stănescu said, was born as part of the tree-planting event we organized, jointly with the Bucharest Bookshops Company. In 2020 we had set for ourselves the task of celebrating the Bucharest Bookshops Company’s 70 anniversary in a rather festive way, staging a couple of events and being more public and communication-centered. Because of the pandemic, it was no longer possible for us to implement our ideas, so our collaborators came up with this idea, that of planting trees in the Youth Park. It was an event that also drew children, who turned up in large numbers. We saw children were brimming with joy as they were taking part in the event, so we thought of marking the Bucharest Bookshops Company’s 70th anniversary staging more than one event for that. So, we also thought of getting a booklet brought out. And we do hope for all that to be just the beginning of a project, to be run along many years from now and to develop into a wider-scope project, capable of getting as many schoolchildren as possible involved. In everything we have achieved so far it was about a lot of passion, a lot of heart we put into it, as that is also our slogan. Out of love for the book. For us, those with the Bucharest Bookshops Company, the financial aspect has never been a priority, every time we tried to do interesting and creative things, capable of representing us, even though there wasn’t enough funding for that.



    Ioana-Alexandra Anastasiu, a pupil of Middle School number 280 in Bucharest, is one of the winners of the contest launched as Super Stories from Bucharest. Her story about the Capsa House has been included in the anthology that has recently been launched by the the Bucharest Bookshops Company with a similar title, Super Stories from Bucharest.



    Ioana-Alexandra Anastasiu:



    I registered, jointly with my Religion teacher, for an optional course themed Travelers through Bucharest. And during each class we were discussing the legends and the history of the buildings of Bucharest, so much so that, as soon as I’ve learned about this contest, Super Stories from Bucharest, I made my mind up to participate straight away, as I am passionate about the Romanian Language and History and I saw that as a fine opportunity for me to express my passions. I opted for writing about the Capsa House as it is one of Bucharest’s most elegant and most sumptuous buildings, it is a building that, in time, was visited by many personalities, especially at the time of La Belle Epoque. I have always admired this building and I really got my kicks out of being given the opportunity to write about it.



    The project was successful and managed to arouse the interest of children and adolescents, so the organizers sought to strengthen the initiative and, in early 2022, they initiated the second edition of the story-writing contest.


    (EN)




  • Life as an exhibition and exhibition as life

    Life as an exhibition and exhibition as life

    They are artists from Romania and
    Germany and decided to spend some time together during the pandemic as an alternative
    to the searching of an artist confined to an isolated space. And when 12
    artists spend time together speaking, cooking and working the result cannot be
    but an exhibition.




    Born out of life
    the exhibition itself is an illustration of life as it was felt by the group:
    private versus collective, general versus individual, spare time versus working
    hours. Curators Catinca Tabacaru and Daniela Palimariu talked to us about the project
    and the Staycation exhibition.




    Catinca Tăbăcaru: Staycation has been born out of the present pandemic, because we artists,
    like everyone else, had to find our own space to relax and be ourselves. We
    thought it as a meeting space and didn’t see it as an exhibition at first. It all
    started with a symposium we staged in July when six artists from Berlin and six
    from Romania got together and jointly with Daniela Palimariu from Sandwich and
    Rachel Monosov from CTG Collective we created a situation in which we stayed
    together for one week. 12 creative artists, one week together; we lived
    together, cooked bread and walked through the Vacaresti delta. We talked and
    talked, about the world and what is happening to the environment, about the
    pandemic and all.




    Daniela
    Pălimariu told us how the team involved with the aforementioned project got
    together.




    Daniela Palimariu: Each of the three partners in this project, I, Catinca and Rachel proposed
    a number of young emerging artists, some from Bucharest, some from Berlin. Some
    of them I knew pretty well, about the others I was just curious. Anyway, the
    group eventually started to take shape and some bonds were created. The
    relationship between us grew steadily because we had this time between the
    symposium in July and the exhibition that we have now. We wanted to bring
    together artists from various environments, with different approaches,
    committed artists, who want to get involved in this on a long term. Their
    commitment is visible in the way they work, they communicate, their
    professionalism. Those very young are highly educated and we can continue to
    develop this relationship on a long term.




    The
    aforementioned artists found the best ways to cooperate and communicate as Catinca
    Tăbăcaru told us:




    Catinca Tabacaru: I have participated in similar projects of this kind, which most of
    the time ended up in some frustration or tension of one kind or the other. However,
    this time because we were able to choose the artists ourselves and we wanted
    them to be smart, ambitious but with a good heart, we relied very much on this
    idea of slowing down a bit. We all had the feeling that life is hectic nowadays
    so we decided to take things easily for a while. We went together to the
    market, bought organic food from farmers, cooked some meals and tackled various
    issues, from private to general. We went for a stroll in the Vacaresti park,
    which was quite a slice. One of the artists who was from Taiwan got us together
    in a special kind of meditation, where we tried to experience some sort of collective
    rest and even collective dreaming if possible. It was an interesting experience
    one cannot quite often have as an adult. Children often sleep together, but we
    as adults not very often, you know. So we created an atmosphere where we can
    feel and listen more than we can talk or do, although it turned out to be a lot
    of talking eventually.




    Yen Chun Lin,
    Isabella Fürnkäs, Lexia Hachtmann, Bethan Hughes, Lera Kelemen, Barbara Lüdde,
    Catinca Mălaimare, Rachel Monosov, Daniela Pălimariu, Ana Pascu, Ioana Stanca,
    Ana-Maria Ștefan are the other artists involved with the project. The outcomes
    of their meetings will be on view by February 12th at the Catinca
    Tăbăcaru and Sandwich Malmaison Gallery. But what is the public going to see
    there? Here is Daniela Pălimariu again:




    Daniela Palimariu: The other space is Sandwich of Space, an extension of the Sandwich gallery
    opened in 2016 and the works on view here are various in both spaces. These two
    galleries have been fitted with size-specific installations but they also have
    on view paintings, sculptures, ceramics, video installations and a performance offered
    by Catinca Malaimare. There is only one
    exhibition but with two locations, which I might say aren’t different
    conceptually. Of course most of the works stemmed out of our summer experience as
    well as the relationship created back then. Many have specifically hinted at
    our group and the experience we enjoyed together, as the number 12 recurrently
    appears in some works and so do various images we shared back then. However,
    these aren’t very clear, very specific as every artist was left the freedom to
    interpret that experience as they wanted and that became visible in the works.




    The exhibition
    is the most visible part of the project and comes as a conclusion of the
    symposium held in the summer of last year, where the participants met and were
    introduced to the host-city Bucharest. However, the most important thing is that
    these young artists managed to find a functional way of surviving during a
    pandemic without losing themselves.


    (bill)

  • Sports Flash

    Sports Flash


    The Romanian forward Denis Drăguş scored for his team, Standard Liège, in the 24th leg of Belgiums top football league. His club defeated Eupen 2-0 away from home on Wednesday night. In the current season, in the 17 matches played for the Walloon side, Drăguş has scored 5 times.



    The football side Dinamo Bucharest was defeated on Wednesday in a friendly match by 3rd-leaguer CS Popeşti-Leordeni, 2-1. The game was played on Dinamos turf. This is also where this coming Sunday Dinamo will play the derby match of the Romanian football championship against FCSB, formerly Steaua Bucharest. According to mass media, this will be the last derby match on Dinamo stadium, which is scheduled to be bulldozed this spring to be replaced by a modern arena. Dinamo stadium was built in 1951 and is owned by the Romanian Interior Ministry.



    In another derby, in mens volleyball this time, Steaua won with flying colours, 3-0, against Dinamo Bucharest in the 14th leg of the national Division A1. Defending champions Arcada Galaţi scored an equally clear victory, 3-0, against Rapid Bucharest. Arcada top the current standings with 39 points, followed by Steaua, with 35. SCM U Craiova went up to the 3rd place with 34 points after beating U Cluj 3-0, and 4th come Dinamo, with 33 points.



    The Romanian tennis player Ana Bogdan qualified in the round of 16 of the ITF tournament in Andrezieux-Boutheon, France, with 60,000 USD in total prize money. In the first round, on Wednesday, she defeated Leolia Jeanjean of France, 6-3, 6-3. Bogdan, 116 WTA and seed no 3, needed 1 hour and 33 minutes to defeat an opponent ranking 373 in the world standings. Last year in the Andrezieux-Boutheon tournament, the Romanian player Jaqueline Cristian reached the final. (A.M.P.)


  • Sports Flash

    Sports Flash


    The Romanian forward Denis Drăguş scored for his team, Standard Liège, in the 24th leg of Belgiums top football league. His club defeated Eupen 2-0 away from home on Wednesday night. In the current season, in the 17 matches played for the Walloon side, Drăguş has scored 5 times.



    The football side Dinamo Bucharest was defeated on Wednesday in a friendly match by 3rd-leaguer CS Popeşti-Leordeni, 2-1. The game was played on Dinamos turf. This is also where this coming Sunday Dinamo will play the derby match of the Romanian football championship against FCSB, formerly Steaua Bucharest. According to mass media, this will be the last derby match on Dinamo stadium, which is scheduled to be bulldozed this spring to be replaced by a modern arena. Dinamo stadium was built in 1951 and is owned by the Romanian Interior Ministry.



    In another derby, in mens volleyball this time, Steaua won with flying colours, 3-0, against Dinamo Bucharest in the 14th leg of the national Division A1. Defending champions Arcada Galaţi scored an equally clear victory, 3-0, against Rapid Bucharest. Arcada top the current standings with 39 points, followed by Steaua, with 35. SCM U Craiova went up to the 3rd place with 34 points after beating U Cluj 3-0, and 4th come Dinamo, with 33 points.



    The Romanian tennis player Ana Bogdan qualified in the round of 16 of the ITF tournament in Andrezieux-Boutheon, France, with 60,000 USD in total prize money. In the first round, on Wednesday, she defeated Leolia Jeanjean of France, 6-3, 6-3. Bogdan, 116 WTA and seed no 3, needed 1 hour and 33 minutes to defeat an opponent ranking 373 in the world standings. Last year in the Andrezieux-Boutheon tournament, the Romanian player Jaqueline Cristian reached the final. (A.M.P.)


  • Big cities in the red scenario

    Big cities in the red scenario

    The incidence of COVID-19 cases in Bucharest, calculated at 14 days, has exceeded 3 cases per thousand inhabitants, which means that the capital has entered the red scenario. Consequently, restaurants and cafes can now operate at only up to 30% of their capacity, according to a decision adopted by the Local Committee for Emergency Situations. They will be open between 5 a.m. and 10 p.m. Only the persons who are vaccinated against SARS-CoV-2, for whom 10 days have elapsed since their full vaccination, those who present a negative result of an RT-PCR test not older than 72 hours or a certified negative result of a rapid antigen test not older than 48 hours are allowed in cafes and restaurants. The people between the 15th and 180th day after confirmation of infection with the novel coronavirus are also accepted in restaurants and cafes. Both the cities of Constanţa and Eforie, on the Romanian Black Sea Coast, have entered the same red scenario, with the same anti-epidemic measures being enforced for a period of 14 days.



    The city of Deva and another 12 localities in Hunedoara County (west) are also in the red scenario due to the increase in the number of contaminations with the Omicron variant, which is already being transmitted at community level in Romania.



    The head of the Arad Public Health Directorate, Dr. Horea Timiş, points out that the situation in Romania may be different from that in other countries: “The good news about the Omicron variant and the clinical phases is based on a mostly vaccinated population. Imagine that, in Romania, Omicron, whose incidence rate registers an exponential growth, which is already much faster than in any other EU country, is spreading to a mostly unvaccinated population. Therefore, the situation will not be as easy as in other countries. We are expecting the emergency call service 112 and the ambulance service to have a hard time trying to cope with the big number of cases. Indeed, many easy and moderate cases will be treated at home, and patients will be monitored by family doctors, but there’s the other side of the coin, namely the fact that there are not enough family doctors, which means that many patients will not be properly monitored. We have these assessment centers that will have to cope with a record number of patients in the future.”



    The mayor of Cluj-Napoca (northwest) Emil Boc has launched an appeal to the population to get vaccinated and to respect the rules imposed by the authorities, the locality being already in the red scenario for two days. Similarly, Rădăuți (northeast) and the mountain resorts on the Prahova Valley (south) – Predeal, Sinaia and Azuga are also in the red scenario. (LS)


  • On democracy and NATO’s eastern flank

    On democracy and NATO’s eastern flank

    At the Bucharest Forum of the Aspen Institute, the
    NATO secretary general, Jens Stoltenberg, called on Allies to invest in
    critical infrastructure and to reduce reliance on resources from states that
    are potential adversaries.


    Jens Stoltenberg nominated Russia and China as
    the main global actors that undermine a world order based on rules and that
    operate in areas that have become essential for the security of democracies.


    Our potential adversaries are using our
    vulnerabilities to advance their interests, investing in our critical infrastructure
    as a way to interfere in our societies, and trying to exploit our dependencies
    on essential supplies – like gas, oil and rare earth minerals, Jens
    Stoltenberg pointed out.


    Hementioned several times Russia’s aggressive
    conduct, and at the same forum the Romanian defence minister Vasile Dîncu said Russia
    should be included in NATO’s new strategic concept as a potential serious
    military threat. Russia has a comprehensive plan to destabilise the Alliance,
    including through a possible attack on Ukraine, Vasile Dâncu emphasized:


    Vasile Dâncu: Russia should be
    featured as a potential serious threat to NATO in military terms. Obviously,
    dialogue must remain the main form of engagement and it must be strengthened,
    but although NATO has followed this path for a decade, we can see now that this
    approach has failed, at least in the medium run; perhaps only in the beginning.


    At the same forum in Bucharest, the US Department
    of State issued a warning and an assessment. As the deputy assistant secretary
    of state for Europe, Douglas Jones, put it, Russia’s recent military build-up
    and the threat of repeating aggression on Ukraine clearly indicate that Russia
    is the most immediate threat to collective security. We need to maintain strong defence and deterrence against Russia and,
    united, to make it clear that Russia will have to pay if it keeps this aggressive
    stance.


    The Russian-Ukrainian crisis was once again tackled
    on Thursday by the US president Joe Biden, this time in talks with the leaders
    of the Bucharest Nine countries. On this occasion, president Klaus Iohannis pleaded
    for strengthening NATO’s presence in the eastern flank and for fully equipping
    the Alliance to meet Russia’s challenges.


    The White House leader promised NATO states in
    Central Europe to earmark additional military capabilities, and reiterated the
    US commitment to Article 5 in the NATO Treaty, under which an attack against one
    Ally is an attack against all.


    Previously, president Biden assured his Ukrainian
    counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky that the US unwaveringly supports Ukraine’s
    sovereignty and territorial integrity. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Decaying landscape

    The place
    is an anthropic lake in the Văcărești neighbourhood, in the south-west of the
    city. Spreading nearly 200 hectares, the lake was originally designed as part
    of the complex engineering works on the river crossing Bucharest, Dâmbovița, and
    was supposed to be part of the flooding defence system designed in the
    communist years.


    Its construction
    required the demolition of one of Bucharest’s most beautiful religious
    buildings, the Văcărești Monastery. The original project went unfinished after
    the fall of the communist regime in Romania in 1989. In the years that
    followed, the area was reclaimed by nature, and turned into a genuine delta-with
    diverse vegetation and animals ranging from birds to fish to foxes, rabbits,
    otters and so on. The Văcărești Delta grew into a stable ecosystem, and a habitat
    for protected species. In 2015, the Văcărești Delta was declared a nature park
    (Văcărești Nature Park)-a protected nature area and the first urban nature park
    in Romania.


    This October
    the Văcărești Nature Park played host to a project entitled Decaying Landscape,
    designed to bring people, nature and art closer together. We talked to the
    project manager and curator Gabriela Mateescu about the organisation of the
    event and the ideas on which it was based:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: Placed in the urban nature scenery of the Văcărești Delta, this
    project called Decaying landscape is a cross-disciplinary artistic
    cooperation and at the same time a research effort resulting in performances, land
    art works and site-specific installations. The event was organised by Nucleus
    0000 Association and co-financed by the Bucharest City Hall via ARCUB, as part
    of a programme entitled Bucharest: open city 2021. Bucharest is a city
    suffocated by concrete. But among the heavy slabs outlining the city, nature
    claims its place. On the site of the long abandoned, communist-era artificial
    lake of Văcărești, an ecosystem has formed over the past 30 years, with no
    human intervention whatsoever, right at the heart of the country’s largest
    urban settlement. Grown into a true delta, an autonomous ecosystem in the
    middle of Bucharest, the Văcărești Park is the right place to contemplate the state
    of nature and the effects of human intervention.


    Condensing an
    entire universe into a micro-space, artists from various fields have deconstructed
    post- and trans-humanist theories in the language of contemporary art. Gabriela
    Mateescu told us more about the participants in the Decaying Landscape
    project:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: On the 24th October, people were invited to walk
    around and discover the works of female artists Roberta Curcă, Mălina Ionescu,
    Gabriela Mateescu, Andreea Medar, Kiki Mihuță, Marina Oprea. Lost in the
    landscape were also the students of a performance workshop called microRave -
    attempts at becoming a landscape, coordinated by Andreea David, Maria
    Baroncea, on music written by Chlorys. A week before the event, we invited
    youth from Bucharest interested in art to come to the Delta for a dance
    performance workshop, taking advantage of the last sunny days of autumn. To help
    the visitors in their search, we put together a map with the GPS coordinates of
    the works, and mounted them at the Delta entrances and among the works. We also
    had 3 guided tours where the public walked the arts route together with the
    artists and the organisers. The installations were collected the next day, to
    keep the area unaltered.


    The artistic
    concept involved a hybrid space-brought to life by both the daily urban excitement
    and by the noises of the delta in the heart of the city. This area was
    temporarily revived in order to plead its own cause-a cultural function, to be
    precise-as the most appropriate place for contemplation, a means to reconnect
    with nature, a possible meditation on the harmful effects of improper human
    intervention on nature. Gabriela Mateescu also gave us some details on the public
    and their responses to the project in the Văcărești Delta:


    Gabriela Mateescu:
    Apart from the regular public of artistic events, we had people simply going
    out for a walk on a sunny day, who thus had an opportunity to see random works
    of art, which they were amazed with and interested in. And their curiosity was met
    by the explanations given by the artists and the project team. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Decaying landscape

    The place
    is an anthropic lake in the Văcărești neighbourhood, in the south-west of the
    city. Spreading nearly 200 hectares, the lake was originally designed as part
    of the complex engineering works on the river crossing Bucharest, Dâmbovița, and
    was supposed to be part of the flooding defence system designed in the
    communist years.


    Its construction
    required the demolition of one of Bucharest’s most beautiful religious
    buildings, the Văcărești Monastery. The original project went unfinished after
    the fall of the communist regime in Romania in 1989. In the years that
    followed, the area was reclaimed by nature, and turned into a genuine delta-with
    diverse vegetation and animals ranging from birds to fish to foxes, rabbits,
    otters and so on. The Văcărești Delta grew into a stable ecosystem, and a habitat
    for protected species. In 2015, the Văcărești Delta was declared a nature park
    (Văcărești Nature Park)-a protected nature area and the first urban nature park
    in Romania.


    This October
    the Văcărești Nature Park played host to a project entitled Decaying Landscape,
    designed to bring people, nature and art closer together. We talked to the
    project manager and curator Gabriela Mateescu about the organisation of the
    event and the ideas on which it was based:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: Placed in the urban nature scenery of the Văcărești Delta, this
    project called Decaying landscape is a cross-disciplinary artistic
    cooperation and at the same time a research effort resulting in performances, land
    art works and site-specific installations. The event was organised by Nucleus
    0000 Association and co-financed by the Bucharest City Hall via ARCUB, as part
    of a programme entitled Bucharest: open city 2021. Bucharest is a city
    suffocated by concrete. But among the heavy slabs outlining the city, nature
    claims its place. On the site of the long abandoned, communist-era artificial
    lake of Văcărești, an ecosystem has formed over the past 30 years, with no
    human intervention whatsoever, right at the heart of the country’s largest
    urban settlement. Grown into a true delta, an autonomous ecosystem in the
    middle of Bucharest, the Văcărești Park is the right place to contemplate the state
    of nature and the effects of human intervention.


    Condensing an
    entire universe into a micro-space, artists from various fields have deconstructed
    post- and trans-humanist theories in the language of contemporary art. Gabriela
    Mateescu told us more about the participants in the Decaying Landscape
    project:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: On the 24th October, people were invited to walk
    around and discover the works of female artists Roberta Curcă, Mălina Ionescu,
    Gabriela Mateescu, Andreea Medar, Kiki Mihuță, Marina Oprea. Lost in the
    landscape were also the students of a performance workshop called microRave -
    attempts at becoming a landscape, coordinated by Andreea David, Maria
    Baroncea, on music written by Chlorys. A week before the event, we invited
    youth from Bucharest interested in art to come to the Delta for a dance
    performance workshop, taking advantage of the last sunny days of autumn. To help
    the visitors in their search, we put together a map with the GPS coordinates of
    the works, and mounted them at the Delta entrances and among the works. We also
    had 3 guided tours where the public walked the arts route together with the
    artists and the organisers. The installations were collected the next day, to
    keep the area unaltered.


    The artistic
    concept involved a hybrid space-brought to life by both the daily urban excitement
    and by the noises of the delta in the heart of the city. This area was
    temporarily revived in order to plead its own cause-a cultural function, to be
    precise-as the most appropriate place for contemplation, a means to reconnect
    with nature, a possible meditation on the harmful effects of improper human
    intervention on nature. Gabriela Mateescu also gave us some details on the public
    and their responses to the project in the Văcărești Delta:


    Gabriela Mateescu:
    Apart from the regular public of artistic events, we had people simply going
    out for a walk on a sunny day, who thus had an opportunity to see random works
    of art, which they were amazed with and interested in. And their curiosity was met
    by the explanations given by the artists and the project team. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Decaying landscape

    The place
    is an anthropic lake in the Văcărești neighbourhood, in the south-west of the
    city. Spreading nearly 200 hectares, the lake was originally designed as part
    of the complex engineering works on the river crossing Bucharest, Dâmbovița, and
    was supposed to be part of the flooding defence system designed in the
    communist years.


    Its construction
    required the demolition of one of Bucharest’s most beautiful religious
    buildings, the Văcărești Monastery. The original project went unfinished after
    the fall of the communist regime in Romania in 1989. In the years that
    followed, the area was reclaimed by nature, and turned into a genuine delta-with
    diverse vegetation and animals ranging from birds to fish to foxes, rabbits,
    otters and so on. The Văcărești Delta grew into a stable ecosystem, and a habitat
    for protected species. In 2015, the Văcărești Delta was declared a nature park
    (Văcărești Nature Park)-a protected nature area and the first urban nature park
    in Romania.


    This October
    the Văcărești Nature Park played host to a project entitled Decaying Landscape,
    designed to bring people, nature and art closer together. We talked to the
    project manager and curator Gabriela Mateescu about the organisation of the
    event and the ideas on which it was based:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: Placed in the urban nature scenery of the Văcărești Delta, this
    project called Decaying landscape is a cross-disciplinary artistic
    cooperation and at the same time a research effort resulting in performances, land
    art works and site-specific installations. The event was organised by Nucleus
    0000 Association and co-financed by the Bucharest City Hall via ARCUB, as part
    of a programme entitled Bucharest: open city 2021. Bucharest is a city
    suffocated by concrete. But among the heavy slabs outlining the city, nature
    claims its place. On the site of the long abandoned, communist-era artificial
    lake of Văcărești, an ecosystem has formed over the past 30 years, with no
    human intervention whatsoever, right at the heart of the country’s largest
    urban settlement. Grown into a true delta, an autonomous ecosystem in the
    middle of Bucharest, the Văcărești Park is the right place to contemplate the state
    of nature and the effects of human intervention.


    Condensing an
    entire universe into a micro-space, artists from various fields have deconstructed
    post- and trans-humanist theories in the language of contemporary art. Gabriela
    Mateescu told us more about the participants in the Decaying Landscape
    project:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: On the 24th October, people were invited to walk
    around and discover the works of female artists Roberta Curcă, Mălina Ionescu,
    Gabriela Mateescu, Andreea Medar, Kiki Mihuță, Marina Oprea. Lost in the
    landscape were also the students of a performance workshop called microRave -
    attempts at becoming a landscape, coordinated by Andreea David, Maria
    Baroncea, on music written by Chlorys. A week before the event, we invited
    youth from Bucharest interested in art to come to the Delta for a dance
    performance workshop, taking advantage of the last sunny days of autumn. To help
    the visitors in their search, we put together a map with the GPS coordinates of
    the works, and mounted them at the Delta entrances and among the works. We also
    had 3 guided tours where the public walked the arts route together with the
    artists and the organisers. The installations were collected the next day, to
    keep the area unaltered.


    The artistic
    concept involved a hybrid space-brought to life by both the daily urban excitement
    and by the noises of the delta in the heart of the city. This area was
    temporarily revived in order to plead its own cause-a cultural function, to be
    precise-as the most appropriate place for contemplation, a means to reconnect
    with nature, a possible meditation on the harmful effects of improper human
    intervention on nature. Gabriela Mateescu also gave us some details on the public
    and their responses to the project in the Văcărești Delta:


    Gabriela Mateescu:
    Apart from the regular public of artistic events, we had people simply going
    out for a walk on a sunny day, who thus had an opportunity to see random works
    of art, which they were amazed with and interested in. And their curiosity was met
    by the explanations given by the artists and the project team. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Decaying Landscape

    Decaying Landscape

    The place
    is an anthropic lake in the Văcărești neighbourhood, in the south-west of the
    city. Spreading nearly 200 hectares, the lake was originally designed as part
    of the complex engineering works on the river crossing Bucharest, Dâmbovița, and
    was supposed to be part of the flooding defence system designed in the
    communist years.


    Its construction
    required the demolition of one of Bucharest’s most beautiful religious
    buildings, the Văcărești Monastery. The original project went unfinished after
    the fall of the communist regime in Romania in 1989. In the years that
    followed, the area was reclaimed by nature, and turned into a genuine delta-with
    diverse vegetation and animals ranging from birds to fish to foxes, rabbits,
    otters and so on. The Văcărești Delta grew into a stable ecosystem, and a habitat
    for protected species. In 2015, the Văcărești Delta was declared a nature park
    (Văcărești Nature Park)-a protected nature area and the first urban nature park
    in Romania.


    This October
    the Văcărești Nature Park played host to a project entitled Decaying Landscape,
    designed to bring people, nature and art closer together. We talked to the
    project manager and curator Gabriela Mateescu about the organisation of the
    event and the ideas on which it was based:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: Placed in the urban nature scenery of the Văcărești Delta, this
    project called Decaying landscape is a cross-disciplinary artistic
    cooperation and at the same time a research effort resulting in performances, land
    art works and site-specific installations. The event was organised by Nucleus
    0000 Association and co-financed by the Bucharest City Hall via ARCUB, as part
    of a programme entitled Bucharest: open city 2021. Bucharest is a city
    suffocated by concrete. But among the heavy slabs outlining the city, nature
    claims its place. On the site of the long abandoned, communist-era artificial
    lake of Văcărești, an ecosystem has formed over the past 30 years, with no
    human intervention whatsoever, right at the heart of the country’s largest
    urban settlement. Grown into a true delta, an autonomous ecosystem in the
    middle of Bucharest, the Văcărești Park is the right place to contemplate the state
    of nature and the effects of human intervention.


    Condensing an
    entire universe into a micro-space, artists from various fields have deconstructed
    post- and trans-humanist theories in the language of contemporary art. Gabriela
    Mateescu told us more about the participants in the Decaying Landscape
    project:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: On the 24th October, people were invited to walk
    around and discover the works of female artists Roberta Curcă, Mălina Ionescu,
    Gabriela Mateescu, Andreea Medar, Kiki Mihuță, Marina Oprea. Lost in the
    landscape were also the students of a performance workshop called microRave -
    attempts at becoming a landscape, coordinated by Andreea David, Maria
    Baroncea, on music written by Chlorys. A week before the event, we invited
    youth from Bucharest interested in art to come to the Delta for a dance
    performance workshop, taking advantage of the last sunny days of autumn. To help
    the visitors in their search, we put together a map with the GPS coordinates of
    the works, and mounted them at the Delta entrances and among the works. We also
    had 3 guided tours where the public walked the arts route together with the
    artists and the organisers. The installations were collected the next day, to
    keep the area unaltered.


    The artistic
    concept involved a hybrid space-brought to life by both the daily urban excitement
    and by the noises of the delta in the heart of the city. This area was
    temporarily revived in order to plead its own cause-a cultural function, to be
    precise-as the most appropriate place for contemplation, a means to reconnect
    with nature, a possible meditation on the harmful effects of improper human
    intervention on nature. Gabriela Mateescu also gave us some details on the public
    and their responses to the project in the Văcărești Delta:


    Gabriela Mateescu:
    Apart from the regular public of artistic events, we had people simply going
    out for a walk on a sunny day, who thus had an opportunity to see random works
    of art, which they were amazed with and interested in. And their curiosity was met
    by the explanations given by the artists and the project team. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Decaying Landscape

    Decaying Landscape

    The place
    is an anthropic lake in the Văcărești neighbourhood, in the south-west of the
    city. Spreading nearly 200 hectares, the lake was originally designed as part
    of the complex engineering works on the river crossing Bucharest, Dâmbovița, and
    was supposed to be part of the flooding defence system designed in the
    communist years.


    Its construction
    required the demolition of one of Bucharest’s most beautiful religious
    buildings, the Văcărești Monastery. The original project went unfinished after
    the fall of the communist regime in Romania in 1989. In the years that
    followed, the area was reclaimed by nature, and turned into a genuine delta-with
    diverse vegetation and animals ranging from birds to fish to foxes, rabbits,
    otters and so on. The Văcărești Delta grew into a stable ecosystem, and a habitat
    for protected species. In 2015, the Văcărești Delta was declared a nature park
    (Văcărești Nature Park)-a protected nature area and the first urban nature park
    in Romania.


    This October
    the Văcărești Nature Park played host to a project entitled Decaying Landscape,
    designed to bring people, nature and art closer together. We talked to the
    project manager and curator Gabriela Mateescu about the organisation of the
    event and the ideas on which it was based:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: Placed in the urban nature scenery of the Văcărești Delta, this
    project called Decaying landscape is a cross-disciplinary artistic
    cooperation and at the same time a research effort resulting in performances, land
    art works and site-specific installations. The event was organised by Nucleus
    0000 Association and co-financed by the Bucharest City Hall via ARCUB, as part
    of a programme entitled Bucharest: open city 2021. Bucharest is a city
    suffocated by concrete. But among the heavy slabs outlining the city, nature
    claims its place. On the site of the long abandoned, communist-era artificial
    lake of Văcărești, an ecosystem has formed over the past 30 years, with no
    human intervention whatsoever, right at the heart of the country’s largest
    urban settlement. Grown into a true delta, an autonomous ecosystem in the
    middle of Bucharest, the Văcărești Park is the right place to contemplate the state
    of nature and the effects of human intervention.


    Condensing an
    entire universe into a micro-space, artists from various fields have deconstructed
    post- and trans-humanist theories in the language of contemporary art. Gabriela
    Mateescu told us more about the participants in the Decaying Landscape
    project:


    Gabriela
    Mateescu: On the 24th October, people were invited to walk
    around and discover the works of female artists Roberta Curcă, Mălina Ionescu,
    Gabriela Mateescu, Andreea Medar, Kiki Mihuță, Marina Oprea. Lost in the
    landscape were also the students of a performance workshop called microRave -
    attempts at becoming a landscape, coordinated by Andreea David, Maria
    Baroncea, on music written by Chlorys. A week before the event, we invited
    youth from Bucharest interested in art to come to the Delta for a dance
    performance workshop, taking advantage of the last sunny days of autumn. To help
    the visitors in their search, we put together a map with the GPS coordinates of
    the works, and mounted them at the Delta entrances and among the works. We also
    had 3 guided tours where the public walked the arts route together with the
    artists and the organisers. The installations were collected the next day, to
    keep the area unaltered.


    The artistic
    concept involved a hybrid space-brought to life by both the daily urban excitement
    and by the noises of the delta in the heart of the city. This area was
    temporarily revived in order to plead its own cause-a cultural function, to be
    precise-as the most appropriate place for contemplation, a means to reconnect
    with nature, a possible meditation on the harmful effects of improper human
    intervention on nature. Gabriela Mateescu also gave us some details on the public
    and their responses to the project in the Văcărești Delta:


    Gabriela Mateescu:
    Apart from the regular public of artistic events, we had people simply going
    out for a walk on a sunny day, who thus had an opportunity to see random works
    of art, which they were amazed with and interested in. And their curiosity was met
    by the explanations given by the artists and the project team. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • September 17, 2021 UPDATE

    September 17, 2021 UPDATE

    CORONAVIRUS The government Friday passed a resolution making
    the green certificate, attesting vaccination, negative testing or recovery from
    COVID-19, compulsory upon entering
    restaurants, gyms, or attending public and private events in areas where the infection rate is over 3 per
    thousand. This is the same digital certificate required this summer for travel
    within the EU. On Friday, authorities announced 4,478 new cases of COVID-19
    infection in 24 hours, from over 46,000 tests.
    In the same interval, 73 related fatalities were also reported and 762
    patients treated in intensive care. Bucharest exceeded, on Friday, the
    threshold of 2 per thousand inhabitants cumulated in 14 days, which brings the
    capital city in the yellow zone. Meanwhile, on Thursday the National Committee
    on Emergency Situations approved a new list of high-risk countries, valid as of
    September 19. Bulgaria and France are now back in the yellow zone, and Spain is
    listed as a green-zone country.






    CONNECTING EUROPE Romania needs to step up investments in the rail
    infrastructure, the European Commissioner for Transport Adina Vălean said on
    Friday. Attending the arrival in Bucharest’s main railway station of Connecting
    Europe Express, a special train designed in the European Year of Rail, she
    explained that Romania must plan its investments well, come up to solid
    projects and manage these investments as efficiently as possible. I am aware of
    the situation of railways in Romania and I undertake to do everything in my
    power to help finance and develop it, the interim transport minister Dan Vîlceanu
    said in his turn. Connecting Europe Express will stop in stations in 26
    countries during its five-week, 20,000-km journey, before arriving in Paris on
    October 7. The train departed from Lisbon and, before reaching Paris, it will
    stop in Ljubljana, connecting the Portuguese, Slovenian and French presidencies
    of the Council of the EU.






    VISIT The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, will be in
    Bucharest on September 27, the EC deputy spokesperson Dana Spinant announced on
    Friday. She added that in the coming days the Commission will complete its
    assessment of Romania’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan. Under the Plan,
    Bucharest is set to receive over 29 billion euro, half of it in grants and half
    in loans. Romania plans reforms and investments in transports, environment,
    agriculture, healthcare, education, business environment, research, innovation,
    digitisation as well as resilience in crisis situations. According to the
    Commission, 18 states have already seen their national recovery plans approved,
    and 12 of them have already received the first instalments of the funds for
    investment projects.




    COURT Romania’s Constitutional Court will discuss on September 28 the notification filed by the Liberal Prime
    Minister Florin Cîţu’s Cabinet, in connection with an alleged constitutional
    conflict with Parliament concerning the no-confidence motion filed by the
    USR-PLUS alliance, a former junior coalition partner, and AUR, a nationalist
    party, in the opposition. The Government denounced Parliament’s alleged
    unconstitutional, disloyal and abusive behaviour towards the Government, as the
    no-confidence motion tabled by the latter had allegedly been initiated, tabled
    and communicated in terms that are against the Constitution. Pending the Court’s ruling, the debate and
    vote on the motion are in standby, Parliament decided.






    NEW
    MEDIA ART The
    biggest new media art event in Romania will be held on Saturday. iMapp
    Bucharest – Winners league is also among the top three international video
    mapping competitions. The works of teams from the US, Germany, Ukraine, Japan
    and Hungary will be presented on the world’s biggest screening area, namely,
    the façade of the Parliament Palace in Bucharest, of 23,000 sqm. The theme of
    this year’s edition is The Show Must Go On and celebrates through works that
    blend light, technology and music, the way in which people have been returning
    to normal life.








    NATO Chief of General Staff, Lieutenant-General Daniel
    Petrescu is taking part over September 17-19 in the conference of the NATO
    Military Committee, which brings together in Athens, Greece heads of military
    from Allied countries. Talks will tackle NATO operations, missions and
    activities. Additionally, the conference will also address means of
    implementing the Deterrence and Defence of the Euro-Atlantic Area, and NATO’s
    Warfighting Capstone Concept. According to the Romanian Defence Ministry, the
    Military Committee will analyze the NATO 2030 initiative and all its military
    implications and opportunities. (tr. A.M. Popescu)

  • Social life in Phanariote Bucharest

    Social life in Phanariote Bucharest

    Lasting for more than a century,
    the so-called Phanariote era is widely considered not to have been the most
    glorious period in Romanian history. The word Phanariote derives from the
    name of the Phanar district in Istanbul, which was mostly inhabited by an ethnic
    Greek community. And it was from among the members of the most prominent Greek
    families from Phanar that the Ottoman sultans appointed the rulers of Bucharest
    and Iași at a time when the Romanian countries of Wallachia and Moldavia were
    under Ottoman control. Phanariote rule began in 1714 in Moldavia and 1716 in
    Wallachia, and came to an end in 1821, and would involve the Orientalisation of
    the Danube principalities, something viewed by some commentators as a step
    backwards.




    Despite this, the Phanariote era
    was not without its merits, and some historians believe it has not been studied
    enough and that existing research sometimes misrepresents it. This is a view
    shared by Tudor Dinu, the author of an extensive work in three volumes entitled
    Bucureștiul fanariot (Phanariote Bucharest). He explains:




    It’s a highly complex issue and a
    more nuanced approach is needed. At the time, Bucharest played host to many
    battles as part of the Russo-Austrian-Turkish wars, so these were already challenging
    times. On the other hand, it was also a period of extensive development for the
    city, thanks to the actions of the Phanariote rulers. Indeed, it was during
    this time that almost the entire city was paved in wood; the first network of
    fountains was installed, providing the residents of Bucharest with fresh drinking
    water; and street lighting was introduced, starting with Podul Mogoșoaiei,
    today’s Calea Victoriei. What’s more, during this time Bucharest would also become
    the most important learning centre in all of south-eastern Europe thanks to the
    establishment of the princely academy of St. Sava.




    Although the Phanariote century marked
    the Orientalisation of Romanian culture, an influence rarely seen in the
    Romanian lands before then, this period would also be characterised by a
    process of Westernisation. This phenomenon can be explained by the fact that
    the Phanariote rulers – all of whom, as mentioned earlier, were of Greek descent
    – would act as conduits of Italian and, later, French culture in these parts,
    especially in Bucharest. The historian Tudor Dinu, the author of a book about Bucharest
    during the Phanariote era, tells us more:




    Among other things, in my research
    I discovered that it wasn’t true that the process of westernisation of the Romanian
    countries began only after 1821, when Phanariote rule came to an end. In fact, the
    process began with the first Austrian occupation after 1789 and intensified
    with the arrival of the Russian troops in Bucharest, who were stationed here between
    1806 and 1812. The Phanariotes allowed western culture to infiltrate these
    parts because their role was also to inform the Ottoman Porte of the intentions
    of the western powers. Westerners also began to settle in Bucharest in the 18th
    century, especially Germans, who came not only from Transylvania but also further
    afield. They made a fundamental contribution to the development of the city, in
    particular as building entrepreneurs, engineers and architects. It is to them
    that we owe the construction of Bucharest’s first breweries and the city’s first
    hotel. French and Italian people also came to live here at this time, as every distinguished
    family, every boyar, wanted a French tutor for their children or as a private
    secretary.




    On the subject of breweries and the
    likes, the historian Tudor Dinu describes in detail in his book what the people
    of Bucharest would do for entertainment during the 18th century:




    Every
    day, the people of Bucharest would go to taverns, where they’d see fiddlers
    perform. Some preferred cafes, where they’d smoke and play billiards, chess or checkers,
    or watch performances and acrobatics shows.Above all, they would
    indulge in political gossip. Others went to fairs, where the main entertainment
    were the swings, which were enjoyed by all the people of Bucharest, both young
    and old, even the boyars. But perhaps the most popular form of entertainment
    was a kind of sport that has since completely disappeared and is unknown today.
    The name of this sport came from the Ottoman term for ‘reed’. It involved a
    kind of face-off between two men on horseback armed with spears, which they
    would throw at their opponent, who would try to dodge them. It was by no means
    a gentle sport, being a kind of Ottoman jousting tournament. And, of course, gambling
    would also become a popular pastime and something against which the Phanariote
    rulers would fight fiercely, trying to stamp out the practice as it led to the impoverishment
    of the population.




    That
    said, the authorities did permit some forms of gambling, such as an early form
    of lottery tickets.