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Dorna, Bistricioara, Bicaz. The Bistrița ( Romanian pronunciation: [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ; also called Bistrița Aurie or Bistrița Moldoveană; Hungarian: Aranyos-Beszterce) is a river in the Romanian regions of Maramureș, Bukovina and Moldavia (most of its length). It is a right tributary of the river Siret. [ 1][ 2][ 3] At Chetriș, near ...
Bistricioara (Siret) / 47.060; 25.938. The Bistricioara is a right tributary of the river Bistrița in Romania, [ 1][ 2][ 3] which it joins at the upper end of Lake Izvorul Muntelui, near the village Bistricioara. [ 4] It flows through the villages Bilbor, Capu Corbului, Corbu, Tulgheș, Bradu, Grințieș and Bistricioara.
Siret (river) The Siret or Sireth (Ukrainian: Сірет or Серет, Romanian: Siret pronounced [siˈret], Hungarian: Szeret, Russian: Сирет) is a river that rises from the Carpathians in the Northern Bukovina region of Ukraine, and flows southward into Romania before it joins the Danube. [1][2] It is 647 km (402 mi) long, [3]: 9 of ...
Bistrița (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ; German: Bistritz, archaic Nösen, [3] Transylvanian Saxon: Bästerts, Hungarian: Beszterce) is the capital ...
Bistrița (Someș) / 47.05861°N 24.42917°E / 47.05861; 24.42917. The Bistrița ( Romanian pronunciation: [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ; Hungarian: Beszterce) is a river in the Romanian region of Transylvania, Bistrița-Năsăud County. It is sometimes referred to as Bistrița ardeleană. [ 1] Near the city of Bistrița (at the village Sărata ...
Siret (Romanian pronunciation: [siˈret]; German: Sereth; Hungarian: Szeretvásár; Ukrainian: Серет, romanized: Seret; Yiddish: סערעט, romanized: Seret) is a town, municipality and former Latin bishopric in Suceava County, northeastern Romania. It is situated in the historical region of Bukovina. Siret is the 11th largest urban ...
Siret: 55.7 0 – – – Undergoing feasibility studies. Sign of expressway DEx8 in Romania: Dobruja: Brăila: Tulcea – Constanța: Mangalia: 269.9 22.2 8.23% – –
Antecedents. Since the 13th century, missionaries of the mendicant orders, Franciscans and Dominicans, created several Latin Catholic communities in present Romania, for whom the Holy See decided to created bishoprics, south and east of the Carpathians (in Walachia and Moldavia), generally short-lived, like the Diocese of Siret / Seret / Cereten(sis) (Latin adjective), established in 1371.