WOW.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Cluj County - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluj_County

    Cluj-Napoca, Cluj County seat, is the second largest city in Romania. With a population of more than 47,000 inhabitants, Turda is the second largest city in Cluj County. Dej Gherla Huedin. Cluj County has 5 municipalities, 1 town and 75 communes. Municipalities: Câmpia Turzii; pop. 22,223 (as of 2011) Cluj-Napoca – county seat; pop. 324,576

  3. History of Cluj-Napoca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Cluj-Napoca

    The history of Cluj-Napoca covers the time from the Roman conquest of Dacia, when a Roman settlement named Napoca existed on the location of the later city, through the founding of Cluj and its flourishing as the main cultural and religious center in the historical province of Transylvania, until its modern existence as a city, the seat of Cluj County in north-western Romania.

  4. Țara Moților - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Țara_Moților

    Țara Moților. ( German: Motzenland ), also known as Țara de Piatră ("The Stone Land") is an ethnogeographical region of Romania in the Apuseni Mountains, on the upper basin of the Arieș and Crișul Alb River rivers. It covers parts of the Alba, Arad, Bihor, Cluj, and Hunedoara counties of Romania and a section of it forms the Apuseni ...

  5. Cluj-Napoca Botanical Garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluj-Napoca_Botanical_Garden

    The Cluj-Napoca Botanical Garden, officially Alexandru Borza Cluj-Napoca University Botanic Garden ( Romanian: Grădina Botanică Alexandru Borza a Universităţii Cluj-Napoca ), is a botanical garden located in the south part of Cluj-Napoca, Romania. It was founded in 1872 by Hungarian linguist Sámuel Brassai, known as the "Last Transylvanian ...

  6. Cluj-Napoca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluj-Napoca

    Cluj-Napoca ( Romanian: [ˈkluʒ naˈpoka] ⓘ ), or simply Cluj ( Hungarian: Kolozsvár [ˈkoloʒvaːr] ⓘ, German: Klausenburg ), is the second-most populous city in Romania [5] and the seat of Cluj County in the northwestern part of the country. Geographically, it is roughly equidistant from Bucharest (445 kilometres (277 miles)), Budapest ...

  7. Disappearance of Tara Calico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disappearance_of_Tara_Calico

    Tod Calico (brother) Tara Leigh Calico (born February 28, 1969) [1] is an American woman who disappeared near her home in Belen, New Mexico, on September 20, 1988. She is widely believed to have been kidnapped. In July 1989, a Polaroid photo of an unidentified young woman and boy, gagged and seemingly bound, was televised to the public after it ...

  8. Cluj-Napoca Tailors' Bastion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cluj-Napoca_Tailors'_Bastion

    15th century. The Cluj-Napoca Tailors' Tower ( Romanian: Bastionul Croitorilor din Cluj-Napoca, Hungarian: Szabók bástyája) is located at the southeast corner of the old Cluj-Napoca citadel. It was built in the 15th century and rebuilt between 1627 and 1629, assuming its present form. It was named after the Tailors' Guild, who took care of ...

  9. Central University Library of Cluj-Napoca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_University_Library...

    After World War I, when Austria-Hungary broke up and Transylvania (including Cluj) joined Romania, a Romanian university was founded in 1920; it used the existing Central University Library (dedicated in the presence of the royal family and renamed the Library of King Ferdinand I University) and the Library of the Transylvanian Museum, still ...