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Get a Quick Overview of Romania, it's Regions, Culture, History, Accommodation, Travel Options and More!
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Romania's Rich Regions

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 To understand the Regions of Romania, you must first understand how Romania's river and mountains form their natural barriers and byways.

Ever since the Dacian and Roman days, the great scythe-shaped swath of the mighty Carpathian mountain range has split Transilvania from the fertile alluvial Wallachian and Moldovan plains.
Romania was naturally bordered by the Danube and Prut Rivers in the south and east, and for much of history, the Tisa river in the west on the Pannonian plains.

Wallachia is divided by the Olt River into  Oltenia and Muntenia, formerly known as "Little Wallachia" and "Big Wallachia". 

This is the Romanian homeland, with the people from this region long considered the "true Romanians".   The Romans never had a convincing hold on the Muntenia portion, staying south of the Danube and mostly west of the Olt River during their brief centuries in the region.
 
Muntenia:  Europe's Biggest Cliffs
Rivalling the Alps of western Europe, Romania's Carpathian Alps offer stunning and dramatic vistas at every turn!
The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMĀNIA

Bucharest is the great magnet in the middle of Muntenia, halfway between the mountains and the Danube, along one of dozens of rivers flowing across the rich soil of the plains which make up most of this region.

Along the northern region of Muntenia nestle the winter holiday towns under the greatest cliff system in Europe.  The foothills protect now as they have for generations the important medieval monasteries, fortified towns and castles which make such intriguing tourist destinations today, including the Bran castle of Dracula fame.
 

This gentle region of Oltenia was once it's own principality, extending down from the Retezat mountains to the most scenic sections of the Danube River at the Iron Gates, where the quintessentially European river enters Romania for it's final run to the sea.

The works of famous Oltenian sculptor Brāncuşi, including his Endless Column are laid out in his home town of Tārgu Jiu.   Romanians often dismiss this beautiful region of hardworking miners and farmers as unimportant, but for the traveller, it is an unspoilt land at the core of the Romanian psyche and soul.
The Counties of Historical Banat
Today's Hungary, Romania and Serbia, with the 1918 Banat Republic border shown in the dark blue line, with the six counties of Banat.

Image: © REST ROMĀNIA

The Banat was it's own republic (for two weeks in 1918), and it's vibrant capital Timişoara serves as a fine monument of progressive Romanian Western culture. Today bordering both Serbia and Hungary, the Banat region showcases it's Habsburg and Ottoman heritage with finesse.

The Roman baths at Băile Herculane are the focus of this idyllic mountain resort town surrounded by forest reserves, with the "Holy Waters of Hercules" favoured by Austrian emperor Franz Josef. 
 

The Apuseni mountains lift majestically to end the long run of the Pannonian plains down to the Tisa river, now in Hungary. The Bihor massif offers fantastic ice caves featuring fascinating stalactites, with hiking and skiing in some charming little mountain towns.

The vestiges of Habsburg rule are apparent in the architecture of Oradea, and you can enjoy cosmopolitan Arad along the Mureş river with it's beautiful old buildings from it's days in the Austro-Hungarian empire.
 
The Wooden Churches of Maramureş
A strong vessel of true Romanian architecture, the wooden churches are preserved under the UN's World Heritage mandate

The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMĀNIA

Eight of the medieval wooden churches are listed on the UNESCO World Heritage sites list, and with good reason.  These inspired creations are the heart of a culture and society which seems ageless, surviving the tides and turns of time.

Bordering Hungary and the Ukraine, Maramureş nonetheless remains a crucible of northern Romanian culture, with it's own customs, music and myths across villages in quiet verdant valleys.
 

Including part of the old Austro-Hungarian province of Bukovina, yet more World Heritage sites abound in the Painted Churches of Bukovina.  On a hilly plain running from the Eastern Carpathians and the Rarău Massif down to the River Prut, the Bucovina region was known as the "upper country" for centuries.

From here comes the sparkling Dorna mineral water at the spa town of Vatra-Dornei, nestled in wide hollow below the most dramatic mountain passes in all of Europe, immortalised in Bram Stoker's Dracula novel.   Old fair towns now cater to ski tourists and pilgrams to the great old monasteries.
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With as much claim to being truly Romanian as the Wallachian Region, this glorious fertile land features some of the best wine-growing regions at Cotnari, the Bicaz Gorges, yet more fabulous old monasteries, and more.

Ottoman Influences in Dobrogea
Held by the Turks until the 20th Century, Romania's Dobrogea region and the seaport city of Constanţa holds wondrous surprises from it's days as a Greek outpost and a Roman trade port.

The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMĀNIA
Traipse merrily through an old village church yard and marvel at the carved wooden features, view an old princely court and castle from the 1600s, and view the long tendrils and countless bays of the Mountain Spring Lake.  And all this from a single village in the Moldovan foothills!
 

Sunny Dobrogea offers a happy palette of interesting features, from the truly delightful Black Sea beaches, to Europe's newest land in the extensive Danube Delta with it's endless bird life.

Constanţa's old Mosques and old seaport feel will transport you into a 1950s movie, while the fun-strip of resort zone Mamaia will delight the kids with it's rides and water park.  Quieter little beach towns abound along the coast, leading to significant old Greek and Roman towns rivalling those in the Mediterranean.
 
 

The largest and best known of the Romanian regions is surrounded by the other 8 regions of Romania.  Yes, here you will find enough Dracula lore to keep the most ardent fan amused.

Saxon settlers made their indelible mark on old market towns like Sibiu and Sighişoara, the architecture harkening to locations further up the Danube.  The Turks were prevented from fully taking Transilvania, although it was a vassal state for a while, and it remained part of the a series of empires in Austria and Hungary for centuries until 1920.
A Typical Transilvanian Market Town
In the long fertile Făgăras Valley on the Olt River between Braşov and Sibiu

The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMĀNIA
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Feature

Odd Borders

The confluence of three major empires -- the Ottoman, Hapsburg and Russian -- has meant some interesting borders for Romania!

Wallachia in the 1300s

Northern Transilvania, 1941-1947
After the Vienna Awards of 1940, Cluj and Brasov became border towns with Nazi Hungary
Romania United, 1858
Moldova and Wallachia together forever since. 
 

Romania, Europe's Airbag

The great Carpathian mountain range which curves through Romania like a scythe has long been the rampart insulating East and West in Europe.

 

All of what is now Romania was made up of small buffer states as principalities administered by a minor prince or official under the rule of the Ottoman empire, the Hapsburgs, the Russians or Slavs. 

 

Historical Regions

Romania's regions feature some very different histories as principalities of the Turkish Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian Hapsburg and Russian Empires, as well as Tatar, Polish and Slavic influences. 

 

Ottoman Regions

At the height of its power, the Ottoman Empire contained 29 provinces, with Moldova, Transylvania, and Wallachia being tributary principalities all or partly under Istanbul's control, but, with the exception of Dobrogea, never really true Ottoman provinces as in Bulgaria.

 

Alexandru Ioan Cuza

United Wallachia with Moldova, 1859

 

Wallachia, the Romanian Heartland

The historic region known as Wallachia is given the nostalgic term "Ţara Romānească" (Romanian Country, more like "Heartland" in this sense) and includes what is now Muntenia, Dobrogea, most of Oltenia , and parts of Moldova. 
Wallachia since the middle ages has been inhabited by the people who became today's modern Romanians, termed "Vlachs" by their Slavic and Saxon neighbours. 
About 80% of this traditional Romanian region which at least those living there consider to be the "real" Romanian territory, is still within Romania's national borders.  Wallachia today is represented by an eagle in Romania's coat of arms. 
The Wallachian people generally were bounded by the Carpathian mountains in the north and inhabited mainly the great sweep of alluvial plains going from the mountains down to the Danube. 
Influenced heavily by Pecheneg and Cuman cultures (early Romanian rulers were of Cuman origins to the north-east of today's Romania), the Romanian identity developed using the strongest influences of it's roots, from it's Thracian or Geto-Dacian ancestry to picking out the best of Roman, Byzantine, Ottoman, and now European Union cultures.

 

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