Greetings From Romania.pps - Southwest Florida · Alba Iulia, The Cathedral of Reunification Also...
Transcript of Greetings From Romania.pps - Southwest Florida · Alba Iulia, The Cathedral of Reunification Also...
Alba Iulia, The Cathedral of Reunification
Also known as the Cathedral of Coronation, this architectural structure is the artistic expression of the Romanian unity and was built by the act from 1918 in Alba Iulia
Sighişoara
Sighişoara is considered to be the most beautiful and well preserved inhabited citadel in Europe, with an authentic medieval architecture
BiertanFortified Church.
Biertan is one of the most important Saxon villages with fortified churches inTransylvania, having been on the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites since 1993
Saxon Fortified Church ofBiertan, Near Sighisoara,Transylvania, Romania.For a few hundred years, thecitadel of Biertan was theresidence of the Lutheranbishops
BiertanFortified Church.
The Hamangia culture is a Late Neolithic archaeological culture of Dobruja (Romania and Bulgaria) between the Danube and the Black Sea and Muntenia and in the south. It is named after the site of Baia-Hamangia, discovered in 1952 along Lake Golovita.
Constanţa
The National History and Archaeology Museum
Bran CastleIn the past it used to be customs frontierbetween Romanian country andTransylvania, also having a strategic rolein the supervision of the passage
The Peasant Fortress at RasnovBelonging to the larger family of fortified Saxon strongholds,Rasnov is a hilltop fort, the most representative of this kind inRomania.
Sarmisegetuza RegiaThe Dacians capital’s defensive system includes six Dacian fortresses —Sarmizegetusa, Costești-Blidaru, Piatra Roșie, Costeşti-Cetățuie, Căpâlna andBăniţa. All 6 have been named UNESCO World heritage sites.
Sarmisegetuza RegiaThe sanctuaries at Sarmizegetusa Regia,the capital of ancient Dacia (modernRomania)
The fortified church of Viscri, a World Heritage Site. Originally built around 1100, it was takenover by the Saxons in 1185 and enlarged and fortified in 1525 and again in the 17th century.