Tag: Redont

  • The Romanescu Park in Craiova, southern Romania

    The Romanescu Park in Craiova, southern Romania

    The park’s history is intertwined with that of the Bibescu-Stirbey
    boyar family, which gave two rulers to Wallachia. In the 19th
    Century, the plot the park lies on today belonged to great chancellor Iancu
    Ioan Bibescu. He built a garden there, with banks and gazebos, allowing people
    to take a stroll through the park in their leisure time. So this public garden
    is dating back from mid-19th Century. In the following minutes
    researcher Toma Radulescu is telling us how this private garden, originally
    Iancu Bibescu’s promenade, turned into a public park.


    Toma Radulescu: The garden was very carefully looked after for from its early days. The
    lake it has dates back to that time and swans were living there. Later, back in
    the time of Barbu Stirbey, this plot was bought by the local authorities, which
    turned it into a public garden. Unfortunately, the administration’s sloppy
    management turned it into a squalid place. Waste from an army barracks nearby
    was dumped there and a group of nomad gypsies set up camp on the premises. This
    issue was first mentioned at the time of the independence war of 1877, when the
    Bibescu family was hosting a hospital for wounded soldiers. When the city got a
    stronger administration, under the lead of Nicolae Romanescu, a significant
    amount of money was allotted for clean-up and one of Europe’s best garden experts,
    Eduard Redont, was hired. He drew up the project of a Romantic park after a
    common French pattern.


    Eduard Redont, the French designer who worked
    on the Carol Park in Bucharest and drew the plans for the National Exhibition
    it hosted back in 1906, was granted the golden medal for the project of the
    future Romanescu Park at the International Exhibition in Paris. The project
    included a lake, a horse race track and even a fairy-tale castle up on a nearby
    hill. Suspension bridges and a bandstand were also built, and the premises also
    included a mini Zoo. Initiated towards the end of the 19th Century,
    construction works were completed in 1903, and on September the 29th
    of that year King Carol I and Queen Elizabeth, accompanied by crown princes
    Ferdinand and Marie, officially opened the park. Toma Radulescu tells us what
    it looked like back then, and how people used to spend their time here:


    Toma Radulescu: The park
    was very modern. It had a horse race track and it was the place where all sorts
    of competitions were held. The royal family would participate in the horseback
    riding contests organized there, and also in other important events, such as
    the National Day, on May 10th. The parade, which used to be held
    every May 10th until the communists came to power, would take place
    in front of the park and of the Independence Monument, one of the most majestic
    such monuments in Europe. When it was built, in front of the Romanescu Park, it
    was the second tallest. Also, during the winter, people would come and skate there,
    a tradition preserved for a long time. I still remember admiring, as a child,
    the elegance of the ladies who were skating. The park used to be host to
    athletics events, as well as re-enactments of major historical events.


    Along the years, the
    park has had several names. In the beginning it was called the ‘Bibescu
    Garden’, after the name of its original owner, then it became the ‘People’s
    Park’, during the short ruling of Marshal Averescu, at the end of the first
    world war. In the 1930s, after the death of the mayor of Craiova, Nicolae
    Romanescu, the park was named after him, but then the communists called it The
    People’s Park again. After 1990 it was given back the name of the most
    important mayor of Craiova, Nicolae Romanescu. These days the park is undergoing
    a large-scale rearrangement and modernization process.