Cantacuzino Castle (photo: Ileana 2015) |
It is bordered on three sides by the Carpathian Mountains that
appear on maps like a natural boundary between Transylvania and Wallachia, the
province made famous by Vlad the Impaler, “Dracula,” Prince of Wallachia, who
made Bucharest its capital in 1459. The pristine and wild countryside of
Transylvania (Latin for “across the forest”) is sometimes impassable to humans.
Transylvania has a distinct Hungarian and German influence
which can be seen in its fairy tale Hansel and Gretel architecture, its cuisine,
the spotless streets, order and civility, in how successfully cities are run, and
the seriousness on the faces of its population. However, many ethnic Germans have
left in the 1970s when the communist Romanian state signed an agreement with
West Germany.Romanian settlements dating back to the Iron Age were found in the southwestern part of Transylvania. Because the area has been part of the Hungarian and later the Austro-Hungarian Empire for hundreds of years, there is a strong Hungarian and German influence everywhere. Schools, colleges, and theaters are still operating in Hungarian and German languages.
Hungarian kings had invited Saxons (from the province of
Sachsen) in the 12th and 13th centuries to settle in Transylvania.
Some of them were gifted goldsmiths, others were wood carvers and builders. Their presence is reflected in
the beautiful medieval citadel churches built in southern Transylvania.
Bran Castle in Brasov (photo: Ileana 2015) |
Hungarians and Germans left behind castles, imposing manors,
palaces, and churches in towns such as Cluj-Napoca, Alba Iulia, Sighisoara, and
in the old Saxon city of Sibiu (Hermannstadt) with its famous medieval houses
with rooftop “eyes,” roof vents that look like watchful eyes.
The miners and farmers in western Transylvania called “Moti”
trace their roots for thousands of years. The Apuseni Mountains are rich in
mineral reserves, rare metals, and gold, particularly in the contentious region
of Rosia Montana.
The archeological evidence found at Sarmizegetusa speaks
volumes of the rich civilization of the Dacians who were conquered by the
Romans in 106 A.D. and colonized into a Roman Empire province. The story of the
battles between the Romans and the Dacians is vividly told in the freezes of
Trajan’s Column in Rome.
According to National Geographic , the eastern part of
Transylvania has “the highest concentration of ethnic Hungarians.” Buildings
have a different style, ethnic costumes vary, and many inhabitants speak both
Romanian and Hungarian.
Cluj-Napoca is “the cultural and economic hub of
Transylvania.” Alba Iulia, the former Hungarian capital, has an interesting
Habsburg baroque citadel. It was the city where Romania and Transylvania became
one on the great Union Day, December 1, 1918.
Bistrita, in the northern part, is the location where Bram
Stoker set his novel “Dracula” in 1897. His fictional character, Jonathan
Harker, spends the night in Bistritz (Bistrita) on his way to Tihuta Pass (Borgo
Pass in Hungarian) where Voivode Vlad Tepes’ real castle ruins are located. Bram Stoker never traveled to Romania; he used
geographical information from his local library.
Sibiu house with "eyes" (photo: Ileana 2015)
Sibiu is the largest medieval town in Romania, built in the
12th century with three concentric fortified walls (a few have
survived), squares (a large and a small one), stairways, and strongholds built
and fortified between the 13th to the 18th centuries.
The two famous battles of Sibiu on March 18 and March 25
1442 were fought nearby between the army of the Hungarian Empire and the army
of the Ottoman Empire. Approximately 4,000 Hungarians and 15-20,000 Turks were
killed in the two battles which resulted in a defeat and push back of the Ottomans.
Tiny restaurant in Sibiu (photo: Ileana 2015)
The Large Square (Piata Mare) served as a grain market in
1411, medieval executions, and later used for carnivals, meetings, and now rock
concerts. The little restaurant called Butoiul de Aur (The Golden Barrel) has
been serving patrons since the 15th century. Houses dating back to
the 13th and 14th centuries are the oldest surviving
homes with colorful tiles, sometimes mosaic-ed in beautiful patterns and with
“eyes” on the roof for air venting.
17th century iron vial (photo: Ileana 2015) |
The tiny four-room pharmacy museum, that used to be a 17th
century apothecary, displays curious instruments and recipes for potions perhaps
made by Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843), the father of homeopathy.
Sibiu Church (photo: Ileana 2015)
The largest Catholic Church in Sibiu stands majestically
between Piata Mica (Little Square) and Piata Mare (Large Square). Interestingly,
on the day I visited, it was displaying a large banner at the back entrance
urging people to stop fracking for natural gas and to stop mining in Rosia
Montana. Since the Pope is now a climate
change expert and population control expert, why not turn the church into an
environmentalist NGO?
Brukenthal Museum courtyard (photo: Ileana 2015)
Brukenthal steam porcelain stove (photo: Ileana 2015)
Brukenthal Roman lapidarium (photo: Ileana 2015)
Medieval door (photo: Ileana 2015)
The National Brukenthal Museum is a treasure trove of art
collections which Baron Samuel Von Brukenthal, the former Governor of
Transylvania (1777-1787), housed in his Palace built in the Grand Square in
Sibiu. Showcased in the baroque and rococo interiors are famous masters like
Jan van Eyck from 1420, German and Austrian painters, Romanian painters,
personal favorites like Teodor Aman and Nicolae Grigorescu, gold and silver
coins, jewels, engravings, intricately carved furniture, books, weapons, silver
and gold drinking cups and goblets, medals displayed in his former library,
sculptures, costumes of the era, whimsical porcelain steam stoves
interconnected throughout the palace, a novelty for that period, a lapidarium with statues of Roman gods,
Roman roads mile markers, and votive altars from Apulum and Ulpia Traiana
Sarmizegetusa, dating to the 2nd and 3rd centuries A.D.
ASTRA barn with carriages (photo: Ileana 2015)
Interior of a floating mill at ASTRA (photo: Ileana 2015)
Four miles south of Sibiu, in the forest of Dumbrava, we
found the largest Museum of Popular Traditional Civilization ASTRA in the
country. Spread on 237 acres of rolling hills and lakes, it is the largest
museum in Europe that showcases homes from different parts of the country,
windmills, boats, barns with complete carriages, and many implements and tools
necessary for everyday living. Each home is surrounded by a typical yard with
ploughs, carts, barns, and interiors are decorated just like people were still
living there and have left for the day to tend to the gardens or crops. The
smell of old wood, mildew, wildflowers, and crushed fruits was overwhelming. A
slow-moving red fox, accustomed to human presence, crossed the nearby yard.
ASTRA home interior (photo: Ileana 2015)
ASTRA home interior (photo: Ileana 2015)
The outdoor ASTRA museum is so hugely popular that locals
use it for recreation, boating, and celebration of major life events. On the
day we visited, there were three weddings at the wooden chapel and brides and
their entourage were taking photos on the premises. I was fascinated by the various
windmills displayed, and particularly a floating mill that used hydropower to
grind grain.
All the workshops manufacturing silk and hemp, distilleries,
forges, wine presses, paddle-wheel ferry, the blacksmith’s shop, and other
machinery used by Romania’s country folk were actually in working order.
It is only fitting that this huge outdoor museum with its
well-preserved history is called ASTRA. ASTRA was a patriotic literary society
of the 18th century, located in Sibiu, which was instrumental in
Transylvania’s unification with Romania in 1918.
To the east of Transylvania is the famous Seckler Land. The Secklers
are Hungarian-speaking people which are called “secui” in Romanian. They use
their own language, have fascinating traditions, customs, delicious cuisine,
and schools. No industrial development has touched this plateau where old
farming methods are still used today to cultivate the land. It is a land where
Hungarians have migrated to in the 9th century from the Don River.
The Hungarians were given land in exchange for the promise that they would
protect the western Hungarian border against the invading hordes of Turkish
tribes. There is a Crusader’s cross decorating a church in Tusnad as evidence
of Christian support against the invading Muslims. Signs abound both in Magyar (the
Hungarian language) and Romanian language.
The Hungarian king Endre II brought in the Teutonic Knights
in 1211 to protect the southeast border of Transylvania from the Cumans, a
migratory Turkic tribe. It was these
knights who built stone castles all over the area surrounding Brasov. According to National Geographic, because the
Teutonic Knights liked this magnificent area called Barsa Land and were going
to claim it for the Pope, King Endre II forced them out in 1225 with Saxon
help.
Brasov (photo: Ileana 2015) |
The jewel of Transylvania is Brasov (Kronstadt). There are
so many significant places in Brasov and
its vicinity that it merits a story onto itself.
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