Tag: wall

  • The Fagaras Citadel, among the world’s most beautiful such edifices

    The Fagaras Citadel, among the world’s most beautiful such edifices

    Our stopover today is Brasov County, where we will get to know one of Romania’s best-preserved monuments. A great number of publications worldwide have written that it is one of the world’s most beautiful citadels. The Fagaras Citadel, for which construction works were completed in the 16th century, was besieged 26 times, but it was never conquered. Today, on the premises, inside the citadel, we can find the Valer Literat, Fagaras Country Museum, whose doors have been opened for us by the director, Elena Băjenaru.



    The Fagaras Citadel, the Fagaras Country area’s most important historical monument, is a historical monument built over 600 years ago by Wallachia’s ruling princes. It is a citadel for which, as we speak, the final stage is carried, of a restoration project implemented with European funding. In our citadel, the tourist has access crossing a wooden bridge, rebuilt as part of the project, just as it was in the 17th century. It is a citadel which, as we speak, is one of Romania’s best-preserved defense citadels, surrounded by a moat, also built sometime in mid-16th century. It is a citadel surrounded by two massive defense walls with four bastions. Actually, this citadel, which has a perfectly developed defense system, has never been conquered in an armed confrontation, yet it was looted several times.



    Before entering the museum and before visiting the castle, the tourists can take an outer circuit of the premises. With details on that, here is Elena Bajenaru once again.



    They can see the bastions, the two defense walls, they can take a walk along the sentry road, rebuilt and restored just as it was in the 17th century. In one of the bastions an exhibition is to be mounted, dedicated to the Fagaras Citadel’s guard. We have a citadel guard and we re-enact a ceremony for the opening and closing of the gates, just as it was in the 17th century, during the reign of one of the citadel’s princesses, Anna Bornemisza. Then they can enter a very beautiful inner courtyard, in the middle of which the 17th century fountain was restored. They can climb up the stairs and, beginning with the 1st floor, they can enter the museum. In the museum, we present one ne hand, the history of the Fagaras Country, an area with a very rich history. They can also have the chance to see period realignments as part of that exhibition circuit. We have restored the Hall of the Assembly, the Assembly of Transylvania, Transylvania’s Government and Parliament as it was at that time, we restored the bedroom of one of the Fagaras Citadel’s princesses, Anna Bornemisza and, of course, access is also provided to exhibitions of decorative art, fine arts, peasant crafts, or temporary exhibitions. On the second floor we have arranged four rooms. We call them the Throne Hall. In the 17th century record books, they were entered as The Great Palace, there where the Transylvanian princes received in audience the envoys of the European powers. Miron Costin, but also the king of Poland, Sobiesky, were accommodated in this room. Now these four rooms have a cultural purpose. We stage cultural events, classical and medieval music concerts, cultural activities in general, and they are spectacular.



    The citadel’s restoration project will be completed by the end of May, while as soon as that is achieved, beginning June 1st, the ceremony for the opening and closing of the gates will be resumed. Then you can see the citadel guard, made of 12 soldiers clad in the 17th century armour and there is also one of the citadel’s princesses who will show up, reading a document issued around the year 1678. In another move, the director of the Valer Literat, Fagaras Country Museum, Elena Bajenaru said, it is interesting we can establish a connection between torture and the citadel, for at least two reasons.



    In the citadel, after 1700, a torture mechanism was brought, known as the Iron Maid. It is a mechanism that was first documented in Spain, somewhere around 1515, when the one who was sentenced to death was sent to kiss, as a last homage, an image of the Virgin Mary hanging on the body of that mechanism. The culprit approached the mechanism and, as he was stepping on a manhole, a couple of knives darted from behind, penetrating the body of the one who was sentenced. The manhole snapped open and the body fell into a channel where several spears were placed, having the points upwards. The channel communicated with Olt river, flowing 700-800 away from the citadel. Then the Făgăraș Citadel has a Prison Cell Tower that used to be a pretty tough medieval prison, as well as a communist prison for a decade, between 1950 and 1960, with almost 5,000 political detainees being imprisoned here.



    During the summer season, which is drawing near, if you hit the Fagaras Citadel, you can take part in unforgettable events.



    Elena Bajenaru once again.



    Apart from the cultural projects, temporary exhibitions, book launches, we stage a medieval festival in the last weekend of August. It is a medieval festival with knightly orders participating, from Transylvania and elsewhere in Romania. We have medieval theatre performances, medieval music concerts, classical music concerts, medieval theatre, combat demonstrations, smithy workshops, everything that was and can still be associated with the activities revolving around this medieval citadel. Then, on our way out of the exhibition circuit, we have a very well-stocked souvenir shop. We also have citadel guides in English and Hungarian, we have books in English about Transylvania, about the most important monuments Romania has, apart from what we usually offer as souvenirs to go with the Fagaras Citadel.



    Nearby Fagaras Citadel there are two other monuments the director of the Valer Literat Fagaras Country Museum, Elena Bajenaru, strongly recommends the tourists to visit, should they spend more time in the area.



    First of all, I should send them to visit the church built by Brâncoveanu in late 17th century, somewhere around 1697, for two reasons, at least. The church is endowed with a very beautiful painting, made by Preda the Painter, also because the altar piece of that little church could be viewed as the most beautiful altar piece of the entire Brancoveanu-era art. It also lies very close to the citadel, so it is worth visiting it. I should also recommend tourists to visit the Roman-Catholic Church, a former Franciscan monastery, which also lies close by . It is known as one of Transylvania’s first churches with a Baroque-style painting.



    So here we have an interesting tourist destination. Beginning June the 1st, it waits for you with its doors wide open, but also with very many and extremely diverse events.




  • Romania and its breath-taking mountain scenery

    Romania and its breath-taking mountain scenery


    We’re heading, today, to one of Romania’s most spectacular
    mountain massifs, Piatra Craiului. It is the place where you can have the breath-taking
    glimpse of the chamois, officially declared nature monuments.The first step
    towards the protection of the area had officially been taken in 1938, when a
    nature reserve was founded in the region. Today we ‘re about to discover a wide
    range of tourist routes and natural attractions. All of them are accessible, since
    that mountain massif lies only 25 kilometers from the city of Brasov. Mircea Verghelet
    is the director of the park administration.

    Mircea Verghelet:

    It is one of Romania’s 13 national
    parks. In terms of surface area, the park straddles the counties of Brasov and
    Arges, lying in the vicinity of the Rucar-Bran pass, a road with a very special
    scenery. You can see the Bucegi Mountains on one side, while the Piatra Craiului
    Mountains can be seen on the other side. To the west, we have two valleys, Brasov
    County’s Barsa valley and the Dambovita river valley in Arges County. Practically,
    the Piatra Craiului National Park is surrounded
    by these two passes. The mountain is very spectacular. It is a limy ridge. It
    is Romania’s only limestone area lying at an altitude of more than 2,000 meters.
    It has a unique feature, meaning that the layers of limestone, a sedimental
    stone that was formed on the bottom of the sea, are vertically placed, as a
    result of the tectonic movements, mainly in the northern area. Normally, these
    limestone layers are found on a horizontal position. So, very spectacular forms
    of reliefs were thus formed, with steep areas, with vertical walls, with valleys
    and detritus areas.


    In
    Piatra Craiului, quite unlike other regions across the country, since hunting
    has been officially banned for almost all species, the chamois are very friendly
    with the tourists. They even take pictures of the chamois with their cellphones,
    with no strong zoom-in objectives needed. Sometimes, the chamois are four,
    maybe five meters close to the tourists. For those who can climb all the way up
    to the ridge areas, mainly in the summer, running into the chamois can be a
    great joy, and the pictures become memories they take home with them.

    The director of the Piatra Craiului National Park
    Administration, Mircea Verghelet:

    There are 44 tourists
    routes, marked and approved, with various degrees of difficulty. First, there
    are the routes surrounding the massif at its foot, in the forested areas,
    which are more accessible. Then I should like to mention the routes cutting
    across the gorges. We’ve got the limy canyons in the northern area, but also in
    the southern area. To the north we’ve got the Zarnesti precipice, an area
    famed because of its escalation opportunities as well. To the south, we’ve got
    the Dambovicioara Gorges, the Brusturet and the Dambovita Gorges. A forest road
    or public or communal roads cut across these gorges, just like in the southern
    area. The routes are more accessible down below. As we’re approaching the
    ridge, especially on the western slope, which is steeper, the routes become
    more difficult. For the summer, tourists need to have the equipment required
    for climbing: boots, raincoat, a cell phone so that they can announce the
    Mountain Rescue Services if unpredictable events occur. Then it is very important
    that they have water. In Piatra Craiului, there are no water sources in the
    ridge area. However, for the winter season, we recommend those who want to take
    the usual hiking itineraries and do not have the skills required for climbing,
    to follow only the routes at the foot of the mountain. The trails in the ridge areas
    are off-limits for the lay public.


    Before setting out on a hiking route, you should get
    info about the trail.

    Mircea Verghelet:


    You can visit our Internet
    page, at pcrai.ro, where you can search a map for the visiting itineraries. You
    can see them using Google Earth. Also, we have a printed copy of a tourist map
    you can purchase from us. Our visiting center is one of Romania’s most modern
    such centers. Its layout is that of a tourist itinerary, to be taken if you want
    to get acquainted with the Piatra Craiului massif. We’ve got lots of
    interactive gadgets as well as a map of the massif, on which various images are
    screened, that including a 3D version of the tourist routes.




    Also, all sorts of dioramas are available, structured according to various topics, flora, fauna, the history of the escalation in Piatra
    Craiului, other protected areas across Romania, insects, caves, detritus and
    suchlike. Every diorama is interactive as well and you can see a presentation and
    several photographs. Before the pandemic, we used to have roughly 7,000
    visitors a year. We hope that, after tis period, we can return to the initial
    figure. A great many of them come in the summer, from Romania but also from
    abroad. They come to get info, also seeking advice if they want to visit the
    park.


    At the moment, the Piatra
    Craiului National Park Administration has two projects, currently in their implementation
    stage, jointly carried with the other parks of the Carpathian arch belonging to
    the member countries of the Carpathian Convention.

    Mircea Verghelet:


    One of them has to do with
    the carnivores’ accessways between Piatra Craiului and Bucegi. As part of the project,
    we also had several monitoring cameras. We managed to film all species of
    carnivores, but also the other species in the park. All these takes can be
    accessed on our Facebook page, enjoying a great number of visitors. Also, right
    now we are going to initiate a project carried for the revision of the Piatra
    Craiului National Park’s management plan. This should be the third management
    plan we’ve had. We also intend to focus on birds, in the future, since the area
    has also been declared important in this respect. We invite all those who would
    like to visit a mountain region in Romania to come to Piatra Craiului, since it
    is a one-of-a-kind such area. Many people say it is the most beautiful mountain
    in the country, and beyond that. We believe that our facilities, our shelters,
    our trails, the visiting center, all that can provide a unique experience.


    We have extended out invitation to all of you. Please make
    sure you visit us next week as well, when we’re heading towards the
    south-western part of Romania. Our destination will be an area which is less
    promoted, but which is famous for its wild nature, the Jiu River Gorges National
    Park.

    (EN)