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Olt → Danube → Black Sea. Bistrița ( Romanian pronunciation: [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ; also known as Bistrița Vâlceană) is a right tributary of the river Olt in Romania. [1] [2] It discharges into the Olt near Băbeni. [3] It starts in the Căpățânii Mountains, forming one of the narrowest gorges in Romania in addition to some beautiful ...
Piatra-Olt is a town in Olt County, Oltenia, Romania. The town administers five villages: Bistrița Nouă, Criva de Jos, Criva de Sus, Enoșești and Piatra. The town is an important railway station and road intersection. It officially became a town in 1989, as a result of the Romanian rural systematization program .
GDP (nominal) US$ 2.158 billion ( 2015) GDP per capita. US$ 5,194 ( 2015) Website. County Council. Prefecture. Olt County ( Romanian pronunciation: [olt]) is a county ( județ) of Romania on the border with Bulgaria, in the historical regions of Oltenia and Muntenia (the regions are separated by the Olt river ). The capital city is Slatina .
The Bistrița Monastery ( Romanian: Mănăstirea Bistrița, pronounced [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ) is a Romanian Orthodox monastery located 8 km west of Piatra Neamț. It was dedicated in 1402, having as original ctitor the Moldavian Voivode Alexandru cel Bun whose remains are buried here. The church is historically and archaeologically valuable.
Optical line termination. An Alcatel-Lucent OLT used by the French operator CityPlay. OLT and ONU in fiber optic network. An optical line termination ( OLT ), also called an optical line terminal, is a device which serves as the service provider endpoint of a passive optical network. It provides two main functions:
Bistrița ( Romanian pronunciation: [ˈbistrit͡sa] ⓘ; German: Bistritz, archaic Nösen, [3] Transylvanian Saxon: Bästerts, Hungarian: Beszterce) is the capital city of Bistrița-Năsăud County, in northern Transylvania, Romania. It is situated on the Bistrița River. The city has a population of 78,877 inhabitants as of 2021 [4] and ...
In Hungarian, it is known as Beszterce-Naszód megye, and in German as Kreis Bistritz-Nassod. The name is identical with the county created in 1876, Beszterce-Naszód County ( Romanian: Comitatul Bistrița-Năsăud) in the Kingdom of Hungary (the county was recreated in 1940 after the Second Vienna Award, as it became part of Hungary again ...
Bistrița Nouă, a village administered by Piatra-Olt town, Olt County; Bistrița Monastery, Neamț County; Bistrița Mountains, mountain ranges in northern central Romania; rivers in Romania: Bistrița, a small tributary of the Iza in Maramureș County; Bistrița (Tismana), a tributary of the Tismana in Gorj County