Tag: City

  • The City of Sebeș

    The territory between the Mureș and Olt rivers and the Carpathian Mountains, started being inhabited, as of the 12th century, also by Germans colonized by the kings of Hungary. One of the seven seats or urban communities that had the right to be a judicial residence was the current city of Sebeș. Called Melnbach in local German or Mühlbach, Sebeș today has approximately 26,000 inhabitants, of whom almost 80% are Romanian. Traditionally, the city has always had more religious denominations, boasting Roman Catholic, Lutheran, Orthodox and Greek Catholic communities and churches.




    We asked museographer Radu Totoianu from the Ioan Raica Municipal Museum in Sebeș about the history of the place. He described the beginnings of the settlement: Sebeș is mentioned in documents in 1245, shortly after the Mongol invasion. Priest Theodoric of Malenbach, the Latinized German name, asks Pope Innocent IV for the right to collect taxes from other neighboring parishes as well, as his parish had been greatly affected by the Mongol invasion. The Pope allows his request. This is actually the birth certificate of our city. It is an important city, it is the city that preserves the oldest privilege of surrounding itself with stone walls, a privilege given in 1387. It is surrounded by a fortification with an enclosure wall totaling over 1,800 meters, several towers that are still preserved, of which perhaps the most famous are the Student’s Tower or the Tailors’ Tower.



    It is this fortification work that gives part of the town’s small reputation. The story of the monk Georg Captivus Septemcastrensis, who lived in the 15th -16th centuries and wrote the first treatise on the Turks, is important and it was summarized for us by Radu Totoianu: The tower was maintained and defended by the tailors’ guild and is related to the Turkish attack of 1438, when a Turkish army besiege the city. After resisting for several days, a truce is reached, the Turks are allowed to enter the city on condition that they did not cause any destruction. However, this did not happen. Capitulation was not something everyone liked, some citizens barricaded themselves in that Tailors Tower. Among them was a young student at the school within the Dominican monastery. The tower is set on fire, the vast majority of those in the tower die, but among the survivors is this young man, a 13-14-year-old child. He has the fate of many of the people of Sebeș. He is sold as a slave, and he is kept in captivity for 20 years. He is sold several times, eventually finding a more humane master who treats him more like a family member than a slave. The master frees him, he wanted very much to be freed, he told his master, to see his native places. He promised to come back, but he never did. He didn’t even go to Transylvania, he went to Cyprus, and then moved on to Italy. He arrives in Rome, joins the order of Dominican monks and writes a work considered the first European treatise on Orientalism which has seen over 25 editions. One of them, from 1511, was edited by the reformer of the German church, Martin Luther, who also prefaced it.

    We have asked Radu Totoianu which are the buildings most representative for the small town
    founded by the Transylvanian Germans.


    Radu Totoianu: The most
    important ecclesiastical building in the town is the Evangelical Church. The
    first construction stages in the Roman architectural style kicked off after
    1241. But after a while, the town, which enjoyed certain economic prosperity at
    that time, wanted something more sumptuous. The Gothic style had already
    appeared in Transylvania and parts of the church were built in this style.
    Experts believe that if the church had been finished in this style, it would
    have been the second largest in Transylvania after the Black Church in Brasov.
    However, as the town numbered only 500 families at that time, they didn’t have
    the financial strength to complete the church in the Gothic style. So, they
    resorted to a compromise, a mixture of two styles. It is very beautiful though
    as it also has elements of the Renaissance style.


    Another architectural
    landmark is the building housing the city museum.


    Radu Totoianu: The most
    important lay building in the Sebes town is the Zapolya House, which presently
    houses the museum. It is related to the name of the Transylvanian ruler Ioan
    Zapolya who eventually became king of Hungary after the death of Vladislav 2nd
    in battle. However, the move failed to satisfy everybody and a part of the
    Hungarians came with another candidate, Ferdinand of Habsburg, of the Austrian
    royal family. A civil war broke out and king Zapolya and his army withdrew to
    Transylvania, conquered Sebes and established his headquarters in this
    building, which is presently housing the museum. He even died in this building
    around 1540.


    Although small, the town
    of Sebes played a major role in the history of Transylvania. Its well defined
    personality has been preserved along the centuries.

    (LS, bill)

  • Scandal in the insurance sector

    Scandal in the insurance sector

    City Insurance, Romania’s leading issuer of civil liability insurance for
    car owners, went under the special administration of the Insurance Guarantee
    Fund in early June, and has failed to submit in due time the amount stipulated
    in the relevant minimum capital requirements. ASF has announced that without this amount, of over 150 million
    euro, the company, which has issued some 3 million car insurance policies, can no longer
    continue to operate in Romania. Dan Apostol, spokesman for the Financial Supervising Authority:




    Dan Apostol: The authority ordered the
    company to submit, by the deadline stipulated by law, a short-term financing
    plan-in other words, to prove it has the money to cover the minimum capital
    requirement. Then they were supposed to come up with a recovery plan to prove
    they meet the solvency capital requirement. Also, to ensure a prudential
    management of this company, the Financial Supervising Authority appointed the
    Insurance Guarantee Fund as a temporary administrator.




    The
    investigation into the company’s bankruptcy points to possible frauds and
    operations conducted in tax haven countries, says the head of the Insurance
    Division of the Financial Supervising Authority. According to Valentin Ionescu, City Insurance
    declared fictitious amounts in its accounts, and the reinsurance was conducted
    via offshore accounts difficult to verify:




    Valentin Ionescu: This company placed
    outwards reinsurance on 90% of its contracts, going to tax havens. We
    investigated with the authority in the Cayman and Barbados, the answers took a
    year to reach us, and we found there are also problems with respect to the
    insurance of this company.


    The Financial Supervising Authority cancelled City Insurance’s license,
    declared the company insolvent and initiated the bankruptcy procedure.




    At
    present, there are tens of thousands of cases involving damaged cars with City
    Insurance policies, and the claims will be taken over by the Insurance
    Guarantee Fund, which will cover the damages.




    Meanwhile,the government is
    working on 2 emergency orders on the insurance sector, which are currently
    pending approval by the Competition Council, PM Florin Cîţu announced. One of
    the orders concerns policy prices, and the other one provides for some form of
    protection for the clients of City Insurance, if necessary. The latter is aimed
    at stepping up the payment of claims for policy owners.




    Under the current legislation, car owners have to wait
    months and even years for the court to rule the company bankrupt, as it was the
    case with 2 other companies, Carpatica and Astra, which left the insurance
    market several years ago. (tr. A.M.
    Popescu)

  • The Ploiesti of Old

    The Ploiesti of Old

    Located 60 kilometers from Ploiesti, on the road to the Prahova Valley, the most popular mountain area in Romania, Ploiesti got its name, according to a local urban legend, from a shepherd called Mos Ploaie, ploaie being the Romanian word for “rain. Ploiesti was also the capital of the first Romanian republic. The city is known as the capital of black gold and also as “the most beautiful ugly city in Romania.



    This description is related to the title of a book published by the Association for Education and Urban Development “How Beautiful this Ugly City Can Be. The book comprises memories of several inhabitants of Ploiesti which tell of the particular charm of a city that was faced with many difficulties over the years. “Ploiesti might seem a city without history. In fact, its history was fatefully tied to oil and the oil industry. Oil was behind the citys boom in the early 20th century and it was again oil that brought its downfall, historian Lucian Vasile, one of the editors of the book, told us. Still, the early days of Ploiesti werent tied to the crude oil deposits the area was so abundant in. What had the city looked like before the oil industry flourished?



    Lucian Vasile: “The city was at the junction of several trade routes, which is why trade was an important source of income for the city dwellers in the 19th century. Then, with the development of infrastructure linking Bucharest to Transylvania, Ploiesti became an important postal and rail hub. The Southern Station was the main rail junction, as the tracks separated here, headed either to Transylvania or to Moldavia. It wasnt just one city, there were several cities in one. Each of its slums developed its own identity. Today the word preserves only its pejorative meaning, but I disagree. Each of the slums had a church at its center, which gave the name for that particular slum: the St. Friday slum, the St. Demetrius slum, the Princely slum, the St. Elijah slum and so on.



    In the mid-19th century, after the first oil refinery was set up in Ploiesti in 1857, the city saw an era of prosperity. It was around that time that an anti-monarchy movement declared Ploiesti the capital of the first Romanian Republic in August 1870. Although the city remained the de facto capital for just one day, that didnt stop the city from seeing the most flourishing chapter in its history in the early 20th century. This is transparent in the architecture of the city, as historian Lucian Vasile told us:



    Lucian Vasile: “There was a fairly peaceful competition between architecture in Neo-Romanian style and modernist architecture with an ArtDeco touch. However, the two trends coexisted and architecture in Ploiesti, just like in Bucharest, stood out through contrast and diversity. Next to a building in Neo-Romanian style, there was a smaller, modern block and farther on, a 19th century villa and next to it, another building in Neo-Romanian style. Ploiesti was not a unitary city, but that was actually its charm. It had crooked, twisted and narrow streets, which was quite unpleasant for the residents at that time. However, for us, today, that is picturesque and fascinating, stirring our nostalgia.



    Naturally, prosperity brought about demographic growth and diversification in Ploiesti. Historian Lucian Vasile explains:



    Lucian Vasile:“This architectural competition was also an outcome of demographic eclecticism. Jews made up the largest ethnic community in the city, which today is much smaller than in the interwar period. At that time, Jews accounted for about 5% of the citys population. There were also German, Italian, Dutch, British and French communities. In the 19th century in particular, there were not many experts in pharmaceuticals, architecture or constructions in Romania. That is why, a large number of ethnic Hungarians came from Transylvania, as well as many Saxons and Italians, who raised buildings in Prahova County and in Ploiesti.



    Badly damaged during the 1944 bombings, many historical buildings in Ploiesti were not restored and communists preferred to pull them down to modernize the city. That turned Ploiesti into the first planned city in communist Romania; its varied architecture was replaced by the stylistic uniformity of the new blocks of flats that made the city look ugly. However, the old spirit of the slums has been maintained: blocks of flats have coexisted with old houses that have survived along with certain traditions typical of the suburbs, with country and urban influences.


    (translated by: Vlad Palcu, Ana-Maria Palcu)