fbpx
Wikipedia

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.

Ancient times edit

 
Napoca on the Roman Dacia fragment from Tabula Peutingeriana – 1–4th century AD (top upper center)[1][2]

Etymology and origin edit

About the origin of the settlement's name Napoca or Napuca several hypotheses have been advanced. The most important are the following:

  • Dacian name having the same root "nap" (cf. ancient Armenian root "nap") as that of the Dacian river Naparis attested by Herodotus, but with an augmentative suffix uk/ok i.e. over, great[3]
  • Name derived from that of the Dacianized Scythian tribe known as the Napae[4]
  • Name probably akin to an indigenous (Thracian) element in Romanian, the word năpârcă 'viper' cf. Albanian nepërkë, nepërtkë[5]
  • Name derived from the Ancient Greek term napos (νάπος), meaning "timbered valley"
  • Name derived from the Indo-European root *snā-p- (Pokorny 971-2), "to flow, to swim, damp".[6]

Independent of these hypotheses, scholars agree that the name of the settlement predates the Roman conquest (AD 106).[6]

Pre-Roman times edit

The oldest human settlement near Cluj, dating from the Neolithic Age, is at Gura Baciului, near Suceagu, in the valley of a tributary of the Nadăș river and nearby the Hoia Forest. The settlement dates back to 6000–5500 BCE, making it the oldest in Transylvania.[citation needed] Archaeologists have connected it with the Starčevo–Kőrös–Criş culture, and other similar settlements have been discovered since: a tomb from this same culture in the Mănăștur district, and another settlement on the Strada Memorandumului.

Traces of the Thracian-Dacians and Celts suggest that the region was occupied intermittently throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages. As economies centered around cattle-raising developed in the Pannonian plain, the importance of the salt trade with the Transylvanian Plain became ever more important. Two major routes, one running north–south and the other east–west, met on the right end of a ford under the promontory of a hill, today named Cetățuie. Presumably there was at one time a Dacian fortress controlling this central communication point, which would later have been destroyed in the early 18th century construction of Austrian fortifications.

Roman times edit

 
The fort of Roman city
 
Milliarium of Aiton, the oldest known epigraphical attestation of Napoca – a copy erected in June 1993 in front of the Turda Post Office

The Romans conquered Dacia between AD 101 and 106 under Trajan, and a Roman settlement of Napoca is first recorded on a milestone found in 1758 in the nearby Aiton commune.[7]

The Milliarium of Aiton is an ancient Roman milestone (milliarium) dating from 108 AD, shortly after the conquest, evidence of the construction of a road from Potaissa to Napoca. It indicates a distance of ten thousand feet (P.M.X.) to Potaissa. This is the first epigraphical attestation of the settlements of Potaissa and Napoca in Roman Dacia.

The complete inscription is: "Imp(erator)/ Caesar Nerva/ Traianus Aug(ustus)/ Germ(anicus) Dacicus/ pontif(ex) maxim(us)/ (sic) pot(estate) XII co(n)s(ul) V/ imp(erator) VI p(ater) p(atriae) fecit/ per coh(ortem) I Fl(aviam) Vlp(iam)/ Hisp(anam) mil(liariam) c(ivium) R(omanorum) eq(uitatam)/ a Potaissa Napo/cam / m(ilia) p(assuum) X". It was recorded in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, vol.III, the 1627, Berlin, 1863.

This milliarium is evidence of a road known to be built by Cohors I Hispanorum miliaria.[8]

Trajan's successor Hadrian granted the title and rank of municipium to the Roman settlement at Napoca[9] naming it municipium Aelium Hadrianum Napocenses. Later, in the 2nd century AD,[10] the city gained the status of a colonia as Colonia Aurelia Napoca, probably during the reign of Marcus Aurelius.

Napoca became a provincial capital of Dacia Porolissensis and thus the seat of a procurator. The colonia was abandoned in 274 by the Roman administration.[7]

During the Migrations Period Napoca was overrun and destroyed.[citation needed] There are no references to urban settlement on the site for the better part of a millennium thereafter.[citation needed] Villages did spring up on the nearby countryside which displayed continuation in culture from the Roman period, likely populated by settlers that had abandoned the city.[11]

Middle Ages edit

 
"Claudiopolis, Coloswar vulgo Clausenburg, Transilvaniæ civitas primaria". Gravure[a] of medieval Cluj by Georg Houfnagel (1617)

After the departure of the Romans to the southern banks of the Danube in the 3rd century, nothing is certain about the site's history as a settlement until the Hungarians (Magyars) arrived in Pannonia in the 9th Century. The modern city of Cluj-Napoca was founded by German settlers as Klausenburg in the 13th Century. The name "Napoca" was added to the traditional Romanian city name "Cluj" by dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1974 as a means of asserting Romanian claims to the region on the basis of the theory of Daco-Roman Continuity. Although the precise date of the conquest of Transylvania by the Hungarians is not known, the earliest Hungarian artifacts found in the region are dated to the first half of the 10th century.[12] After the conquest, the city became part of the Kingdom of Hungary.

King Stephen I made the city the seat of the castle county of Kolozs, and King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary founded the abbey of Cluj-Mănăştur (Kolozsmonostor), destroyed during the Tatar invasions in 1241 and 1285.[13] As for the civilian colony, a castle and a village were built to the northwest of the ancient Napoca no later than the late 12th century.[13] This new village was settled by large groups of Transylvanian Saxons, encouraged during the reign of Crown Prince Stephen, Duke of Transylvania.[14]

The first reliable mention of the settlement dates from 1275, in a document of King Ladislaus IV of Hungary, when the village (Villa Kulusvar) was granted to the Bishop of Transylvania.[15] On August 19, 1316, during the rule of the new king, Charles I of Hungary, Cluj was granted the status of a city (Latin: civitas), as a reward for the Saxons' contribution to the defeat of the rebellious Transylvanian voivode, Ladislaus Kán.[15] In memory of this event, the Saint Michael Church started to be built.[citation needed]

In 1331 the voivode of Transylvania lost his supremacy over Kuluzsvar. Kolozsvar-Klausenburg became a royal free city in 1405. By this time the number of Saxon and Hungarian inhabitants was equal, and King Matthias Corvinus (born in Klausenburg in 1440) ordered that the office of the chief judge should alternate between Hungarians and Saxons.[citation needed]

The lovers of Cluj-Napoca are believed to have lived between 1450 and 1550.

 
Matthias Corvinus heraldry as depicted in Johannes de Thurocz's manuscript (1490)

Principality of Transylvania edit

In 1541 Klausenburg became part of the autonomous Principality of Transylvania after the Ottoman Turks occupied the central part of the Hungarian Kingdom. Although Alba Iulia served as political capital for the Principality of Siebenbürgen (Transylvania), Klausenburg was the main cultural and religious center for the principality. In 1581, Stefan Batory, Governor of Transylvania, took the initiative in founding a Jesuit academy in Klausenburg.

Between 1545 and 1570, large numbers of Germans (Saxons) left the city due to the introduction of Unitarian doctrines. The remaining Germans were assimilated to Hungarians, and the city became a centre for Hungarian nobility and intellectuals. With the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699, Klausenburg became part of the Habsburg monarchy.

Austrian Empire and Grand Principality of Transylvania edit

 
The town in 1759

From 1790 to 1848 and again from 1861 to 1867, Klausenburg was the capital of the Grand Principality of Transylvania (Siebenbürgen) within the Austrian Empire; the city was also the seat of the Transylvanian diets. Beginning in 1830, the city became the centre of the Hungarian national movement within the principality. During the Revolutions of 1848, Klausenburg was taken and garrisoned in December by Hungarian troops under the command of the Polish general Józef Bem.

In 1776, Empress Maria Theresa of Austria founded a German university in Cluj. But this enterprise was not to survive long, Emperor Joseph II replacing the university with the famous Piarist Highschool, where the teaching was done in Latin. The first Hungarian-language newspaper was published in Klausenburg in 1791, and the first Hungarian theatrical company was established in 1792. In 1798, the city was heavily damaged by a fire.

For lighting, oil lamps were introduced in 1826, gas lamps in 1861 and electric lights in 1906.[16]

Austro-Hungarian Empire edit

 
Cluj-Napoca in the Grand Duchy of Transylvania maps, 1769–1773. Josephinische Landesaufnahme

After the Ausgleich (compromise) which created Austria-Hungary in 1867, Klausenburg and Transylvania were again integrated into the Kingdom of Hungary. During this time, Kolozsvar was among the largest and most important cities of the kingdom, and was the seat of Kolozs County. In 1897, the Hungarian government decided that only Hungarian place names should be used and therefore prohibited the use of the German or Romanian versions of the city's name in official government documents.[17]

In 1872, the authorities established a University in Cluj, with teaching exclusively in Hungarian, which caused discontent amongst the Romanian population. In 1881 the University was renamed Franz Joseph University after Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria.

Twentieth century edit

After World War I, Cluj became part of the Kingdom of Romania, along with the rest of Transylvania. The Romanian authorities took over the University of Cluj, transforming it into a Romanian institution. On May 12, 1919, the Romanian University of Cluj was set up, with King Ferdinand proclaiming the University open on February 1, 1920.

In 1940 Cluj was returned to Hungary through the Second Vienna Award, but Hungarian forces in the city were defeated by the Soviet and Romanian armies in October 1944. Cluj was restored to Romania by the Treaty of Paris in 1947. The Northern Transylvania People's Tribunal was set up in Cluj by the post-World War II government of Romania, overseen by the Allied Control Commission, to try suspected war criminals. The Cluj Tribunal passed a total of 100 death sentences, 163 sentences of life imprisonment, and a range of other sentences.

Cluj had 16,763 inhabitants of Jewish ancestry in 1941. After the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944, the city's Jews were forced into ghettos under conditions of intense overcrowding and practically no facilities. Liquidation of the ghetto occurred through six deportations to Auschwitz between May and June 1944. Despite facing severe sanctions from the Horthy administration, many Jews escaped across the border to Romania with the assistance of Romanian peasants of neighboring villages. They were then able to flee Europe from the Romanian Black Sea port of Constanţa. Other Jews originating from East European[which?] countries were helped to escape from Europe by an Anti-Nazi group led by the Jewish Joint and Romanian politicians in Cluj and Bucharest. The leader of this network, between 1943 and 1944, was Raoul Şorban. In July 2021 the Cluj Jewish Community 19th Century Burial register was among items seized from a Brooklyn Auction house by US Authorities.[18]

 
Babeş-Bolyai University

After World War II, the Romanian university (which had moved to Sibiu and Timișoara in the aftermath of the Second Vienna Award) returned to Cluj and took the name "Babeş", after the scientist Victor Babeş. Parts of the Hungarian university moved to Szeged and were later named University of Szeged, which became one of the most distinguished universities in Hungary and in Central Europe. The remaining parts formed the Hungarian University of Cluj and took the name "Bolyai", after the mathematician János Bolyai. The two universities, the Romanian Babeş University and the Hungarian Bolyai University, merged in 1959 forming the Babeş-Bolyai University, with teaching in both Romanian and Hungarian. Nowadays, this is the largest university in Romania.

Hungarians remained the majority of the city's population until the 1960s, when for the first time in its long history, Romanians outnumbered Hungarians. According to the 1966 census, the city's population of 185,663 was composed of 56% Romanians and 41% Hungarians. Until 1974 the official Romanian name of the city was Cluj. It was renamed to Cluj-Napoca by the Communist government to recognize it as the site of the Roman colony Napoca.

After the Romanian revolution edit

Following the Romanian Revolution of 1989, the nationalist politician Gheorghe Funar became mayor for 12 years. His tenure was marked by strong Romanian nationalistic and anti-Hungarian ideas. A number of public art projects were undertaken by the city with the aim of highlighting Romanian symbols of the city, most of them regarded by Hungarian ethnics as a way of obscuring the city's Hungarian ancestry. In June 2004 Gheorghe Funar was voted out of office. He was replaced by Emil Boc of the Democratic Party. The laws on municipal bilingualism have not been applied in administration as the 2002 city census showed less than 20% Hungarians.

In 1994 and 2000, Cluj-Napoca hosted the Central European Olympiad in Informatics (CEOI). It thus made Romania not only the first country to have hosted the CEOI, but also the first country to have hosted it a second time.

The city is known in Hasidic Jewish history for the founding of the Sanz-Klausenburg dynasty.[19]

In 2015 Cluj was awarded the "European Youth Capital" title.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

a.^ The engraving, dating back to 1617, was executed by Georg Houfnagel after the painting of Egidius van der Rye (the original was done in the workshop of Braun and Hagenberg).

Notes edit

  1. ^ Tabula Peutingeriana, Segmentum VIII.
  2. ^ Bunbury 1879, p. 516.
  3. ^ Tomaschek (1883) 406
  4. ^ Pârvan (1982) p.165 and p.82
  5. ^ Paliga (2006) 142
  6. ^ a b Lukács 2005, p. 14.
  7. ^ a b Lazarovici et al. 1997, pp. 202–3 (6.2 Cluj in the Old and Ancient Epochs)
  8. ^ ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPERTORY OF ROMANIA. Archive Of The Vasile Parvan Institute Of Archaeology – Site Location Index [1]
  9. ^ Bennett (2001) 170
  10. ^ Lazarovici et al. 1997, p. 17 (2.7 Napoca romană)
  11. ^ Diaconescu, A. “The towns of Roman Dacia: an overview of recent research.” ed. Hanson, W. S. and Haynes, I. P. Roman Dacia: the Making of a Provincial Society. Portsmouth, RI, USA : Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2004. p. 133
  12. ^ Madgearu, Alexandru (2001). Românii în opera Notarului Anonim. Cluj-Napoca: Centrul de Studii Transilvane, Fundația Culturală Română. ISBN 973-577-249-3.
  13. ^ a b Lazarovici et al. 1997, p.32 (3.1 De la Napoca romană la Clujul medieval)
  14. ^ (in Romanian). ClujNet.com. Archived from the original on January 30, 2008. Retrieved March 16, 2008.
  15. ^ a b Lazarovici et al. 1997, p. 204 (6.3 Medieval Cluj)
  16. ^ Lazarovici et al. 1997, p.73 (4.1 Centru al mişcării revoluţionare)
  17. ^ Georges Castellan, A history of the Romanians, Boulder, 1989, pp.148
  18. ^ us-authorities-seize-judaica-from-brooklyn-auction-house-in-probe-of-holocaust-loot
  19. ^ Rabinowicz, Tzvi M. (1996). The Encyclopedia of Hasidism. Jason Aronson, Inc. ISBN 1-56821-123-6.

References edit

Ancient edit

  • Anonymous. Tabula Peutingeriana (in Latin).

Modern edit

  • Bennett Julian (2001). Trajan: optimus princeps. Indiana University Press; 2nd edition. ISBN 0-253-21435-1. ISBN 978-0-253-21435-5.
  • Gheorghe Bodea (2002). Clujul vechi şi nou. ProfImage. ISBN 973-0-02539-8.
  • Gh. Lazarovici; D. Alicu; C. Pop; I. Hica; P. Iambor; Şt. Matei; E. Glodaru; I. Ciupea; Gh. Bodea (1997). Cluj-Napoca – Inima Transilvaniei. Cluj-Napoca: Editura Studia. ISBN 973-97555-0-X.
  • Bunbury, Edward Herbert (1879). A History of Ancient Geography among the Greeks and Romans. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street.
  • Lukács, József (2005). Povestea "orașului-comoară": Scurtă istorie a Clujului și a monumentelor sale (in Romanian). Apostrof. ISBN 973-9279-74-0.
  • Paliga Sorin (2006). Etymological Lexicon of the Indigenous (Thracian) Elements in Romanian" / "Lexicon etimologic al elementelor autohtone (traco-dace) ale limbii române". Editura Evenimentul.
  • Pârvan Vasile (1982). Getica. Meridiane.
  • Raoul Şorban (2003). Invazie de stafii. Însemnări şi mărturisiri despre o altă parte a vieţii. Meridiane. ISBN 973-33-0477-8.
  • Tomaschek Wilhelm (1883). "Les Restes de la langue dace" in "Le Muséon, Volume 2". "Société des lettres et des sciences" Louvain, Belgium.
  • Judeţul Cluj – trecut şi prezent. ProfImage. 2003. ISBN 973-7924-05-3.
  • "Cluj-Napoca, oraşul comoară al Transilvaniei, România". CLUJonline.com. Retrieved March 11, 2007.
  • . ReMARK ltd. Archived from the original on February 3, 2007. Retrieved March 11, 2007.
  • "Anuarul Institutului de Istorie "George Bariţ" din Cluj-Napoca". "George Bariţ" History Institute, Cluj-Napoca / Romanian Academy. Retrieved March 11, 2007.

External links edit

  • Dacian settlement of Napuca

history, cluj, napoca, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, marc. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of Cluj Napoca news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message 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 Contents 1 Ancient times 1 1 Etymology and origin 1 2 Pre Roman times 1 3 Roman times 2 Middle Ages 3 Principality of Transylvania 4 Austrian Empire and Grand Principality of Transylvania 5 Austro Hungarian Empire 6 Twentieth century 7 After the Romanian revolution 8 See also 9 Footnotes 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Ancient 11 2 Modern 12 External linksAncient times edit nbsp Napoca on the Roman Dacia fragment from Tabula Peutingeriana 1 4th century AD top upper center 1 2 Etymology and origin edit About the origin of the settlement s name Napoca or Napuca several hypotheses have been advanced The most important are the following Dacian name having the same root nap cf ancient Armenian root nap as that of the Dacian river Naparis attested by Herodotus but with an augmentative suffix uk ok i e over great 3 Name derived from that of the Dacianized Scythian tribe known as the Napae 4 Name probably akin to an indigenous Thracian element in Romanian the word năparcă viper cf Albanian neperke nepertke 5 Name derived from the Ancient Greek term napos napos meaning timbered valley Name derived from the Indo European root sna p Pokorny 971 2 to flow to swim damp 6 Independent of these hypotheses scholars agree that the name of the settlement predates the Roman conquest AD 106 6 Pre Roman times edit The oldest human settlement near Cluj dating from the Neolithic Age is at Gura Baciului near Suceagu in the valley of a tributary of the Nadăș river and nearby the Hoia Forest The settlement dates back to 6000 5500 BCE making it the oldest in Transylvania citation needed Archaeologists have connected it with the Starcevo Koros Cris culture and other similar settlements have been discovered since a tomb from this same culture in the Mănăștur district and another settlement on the Strada Memorandumului Traces of the Thracian Dacians and Celts suggest that the region was occupied intermittently throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages As economies centered around cattle raising developed in the Pannonian plain the importance of the salt trade with the Transylvanian Plain became ever more important Two major routes one running north south and the other east west met on the right end of a ford under the promontory of a hill today named Cetățuie Presumably there was at one time a Dacian fortress controlling this central communication point which would later have been destroyed in the early 18th century construction of Austrian fortifications Roman times edit nbsp The fort of Roman city nbsp Milliarium of Aiton the oldest known epigraphical attestation of Napoca a copy erected in June 1993 in front of the Turda Post OfficeThe Romans conquered Dacia between AD 101 and 106 under Trajan and a Roman settlement of Napoca is first recorded on a milestone found in 1758 in the nearby Aiton commune 7 The Milliarium of Aiton is an ancient Roman milestone milliarium dating from 108 AD shortly after the conquest evidence of the construction of a road from Potaissa to Napoca It indicates a distance of ten thousand feet P M X to Potaissa This is the first epigraphical attestation of the settlements of Potaissa and Napoca in Roman Dacia The complete inscription is Imp erator Caesar Nerva Traianus Aug ustus Germ anicus Dacicus pontif ex maxim us sic pot estate XII co n s ul V imp erator VI p ater p atriae fecit per coh ortem I Fl aviam Vlp iam Hisp anam mil liariam c ivium R omanorum eq uitatam a Potaissa Napo cam m ilia p assuum X It was recorded in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum vol III the 1627 Berlin 1863 This milliarium is evidence of a road known to be built by Cohors I Hispanorum miliaria 8 Trajan s successor Hadrian granted the title and rank of municipium to the Roman settlement at Napoca 9 naming it municipium Aelium Hadrianum Napocenses Later in the 2nd century AD 10 the city gained the status of a colonia as Colonia Aurelia Napoca probably during the reign of Marcus Aurelius Napoca became a provincial capital of Dacia Porolissensis and thus the seat of a procurator The colonia was abandoned in 274 by the Roman administration 7 During the Migrations Period Napoca was overrun and destroyed citation needed There are no references to urban settlement on the site for the better part of a millennium thereafter citation needed Villages did spring up on the nearby countryside which displayed continuation in culture from the Roman period likely populated by settlers that had abandoned the city 11 Middle Ages edit nbsp Claudiopolis Coloswar vulgo Clausenburg Transilvaniae civitas primaria Gravure a of medieval Cluj by Georg Houfnagel 1617 After the departure of the Romans to the southern banks of the Danube in the 3rd century nothing is certain about the site s history as a settlement until the Hungarians Magyars arrived in Pannonia in the 9th Century The modern city of Cluj Napoca was founded by German settlers as Klausenburg in the 13th Century The name Napoca was added to the traditional Romanian city name Cluj by dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu in 1974 as a means of asserting Romanian claims to the region on the basis of the theory of Daco Roman Continuity Although the precise date of the conquest of Transylvania by the Hungarians is not known the earliest Hungarian artifacts found in the region are dated to the first half of the 10th century 12 After the conquest the city became part of the Kingdom of Hungary King Stephen I made the city the seat of the castle county of Kolozs and King Saint Ladislaus I of Hungary founded the abbey of Cluj Mănăstur Kolozsmonostor destroyed during the Tatar invasions in 1241 and 1285 13 As for the civilian colony a castle and a village were built to the northwest of the ancient Napoca no later than the late 12th century 13 This new village was settled by large groups of Transylvanian Saxons encouraged during the reign of Crown Prince Stephen Duke of Transylvania 14 The first reliable mention of the settlement dates from 1275 in a document of King Ladislaus IV of Hungary when the village Villa Kulusvar was granted to the Bishop of Transylvania 15 On August 19 1316 during the rule of the new king Charles I of Hungary Cluj was granted the status of a city Latin civitas as a reward for the Saxons contribution to the defeat of the rebellious Transylvanian voivode Ladislaus Kan 15 In memory of this event the Saint Michael Church started to be built citation needed In 1331 the voivode of Transylvania lost his supremacy over Kuluzsvar Kolozsvar Klausenburg became a royal free city in 1405 By this time the number of Saxon and Hungarian inhabitants was equal and King Matthias Corvinus born in Klausenburg in 1440 ordered that the office of the chief judge should alternate between Hungarians and Saxons citation needed The lovers of Cluj Napoca are believed to have lived between 1450 and 1550 nbsp Matthias Corvinus heraldry as depicted in Johannes de Thurocz s manuscript 1490 Principality of Transylvania editMain article Principality of Transylvania 1571 1711 In 1541 Klausenburg became part of the autonomous Principality of Transylvania after the Ottoman Turks occupied the central part of the Hungarian Kingdom Although Alba Iulia served as political capital for the Principality of Siebenburgen Transylvania Klausenburg was the main cultural and religious center for the principality In 1581 Stefan Batory Governor of Transylvania took the initiative in founding a Jesuit academy in Klausenburg Between 1545 and 1570 large numbers of Germans Saxons left the city due to the introduction of Unitarian doctrines The remaining Germans were assimilated to Hungarians and the city became a centre for Hungarian nobility and intellectuals With the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699 Klausenburg became part of the Habsburg monarchy Austrian Empire and Grand Principality of Transylvania edit nbsp The town in 1759From 1790 to 1848 and again from 1861 to 1867 Klausenburg was the capital of the Grand Principality of Transylvania Siebenburgen within the Austrian Empire the city was also the seat of the Transylvanian diets Beginning in 1830 the city became the centre of the Hungarian national movement within the principality During the Revolutions of 1848 Klausenburg was taken and garrisoned in December by Hungarian troops under the command of the Polish general Jozef Bem In 1776 Empress Maria Theresa of Austria founded a German university in Cluj But this enterprise was not to survive long Emperor Joseph II replacing the university with the famous Piarist Highschool where the teaching was done in Latin The first Hungarian language newspaper was published in Klausenburg in 1791 and the first Hungarian theatrical company was established in 1792 In 1798 the city was heavily damaged by a fire For lighting oil lamps were introduced in 1826 gas lamps in 1861 and electric lights in 1906 16 Austro Hungarian Empire edit nbsp Cluj Napoca in the Grand Duchy of Transylvania maps 1769 1773 Josephinische LandesaufnahmeAfter the Ausgleich compromise which created Austria Hungary in 1867 Klausenburg and Transylvania were again integrated into the Kingdom of Hungary During this time Kolozsvar was among the largest and most important cities of the kingdom and was the seat of Kolozs County In 1897 the Hungarian government decided that only Hungarian place names should be used and therefore prohibited the use of the German or Romanian versions of the city s name in official government documents 17 In 1872 the authorities established a University in Cluj with teaching exclusively in Hungarian which caused discontent amongst the Romanian population In 1881 the University was renamed Franz Joseph University after Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria Twentieth century editAfter World War I Cluj became part of the Kingdom of Romania along with the rest of Transylvania The Romanian authorities took over the University of Cluj transforming it into a Romanian institution On May 12 1919 the Romanian University of Cluj was set up with King Ferdinand proclaiming the University open on February 1 1920 In 1940 Cluj was returned to Hungary through the Second Vienna Award but Hungarian forces in the city were defeated by the Soviet and Romanian armies in October 1944 Cluj was restored to Romania by the Treaty of Paris in 1947 The Northern Transylvania People s Tribunal was set up in Cluj by the post World War II government of Romania overseen by the Allied Control Commission to try suspected war criminals The Cluj Tribunal passed a total of 100 death sentences 163 sentences of life imprisonment and a range of other sentences Cluj had 16 763 inhabitants of Jewish ancestry in 1941 After the German occupation of Hungary in March 1944 the city s Jews were forced into ghettos under conditions of intense overcrowding and practically no facilities Liquidation of the ghetto occurred through six deportations to Auschwitz between May and June 1944 Despite facing severe sanctions from the Horthy administration many Jews escaped across the border to Romania with the assistance of Romanian peasants of neighboring villages They were then able to flee Europe from the Romanian Black Sea port of Constanţa Other Jews originating from East European which countries were helped to escape from Europe by an Anti Nazi group led by the Jewish Joint and Romanian politicians in Cluj and Bucharest The leader of this network between 1943 and 1944 was Raoul Sorban In July 2021 the Cluj Jewish Community 19th Century Burial register was among items seized from a Brooklyn Auction house by US Authorities 18 nbsp Babes Bolyai UniversityAfter World War II the Romanian university which had moved to Sibiu and Timișoara in the aftermath of the Second Vienna Award returned to Cluj and took the name Babes after the scientist Victor Babes Parts of the Hungarian university moved to Szeged and were later named University of Szeged which became one of the most distinguished universities in Hungary and in Central Europe The remaining parts formed the Hungarian University of Cluj and took the name Bolyai after the mathematician Janos Bolyai The two universities the Romanian Babes University and the Hungarian Bolyai University merged in 1959 forming the Babes Bolyai University with teaching in both Romanian and Hungarian Nowadays this is the largest university in Romania Hungarians remained the majority of the city s population until the 1960s when for the first time in its long history Romanians outnumbered Hungarians According to the 1966 census the city s population of 185 663 was composed of 56 Romanians and 41 Hungarians Until 1974 the official Romanian name of the city was Cluj It was renamed to Cluj Napoca by the Communist government to recognize it as the site of the Roman colony Napoca After the Romanian revolution editFollowing the Romanian Revolution of 1989 the nationalist politician Gheorghe Funar became mayor for 12 years His tenure was marked by strong Romanian nationalistic and anti Hungarian ideas A number of public art projects were undertaken by the city with the aim of highlighting Romanian symbols of the city most of them regarded by Hungarian ethnics as a way of obscuring the city s Hungarian ancestry In June 2004 Gheorghe Funar was voted out of office He was replaced by Emil Boc of the Democratic Party The laws on municipal bilingualism have not been applied in administration as the 2002 city census showed less than 20 Hungarians In 1994 and 2000 Cluj Napoca hosted the Central European Olympiad in Informatics CEOI It thus made Romania not only the first country to have hosted the CEOI but also the first country to have hosted it a second time The city is known in Hasidic Jewish history for the founding of the Sanz Klausenburg dynasty 19 In 2015 Cluj was awarded the European Youth Capital title See also editClus castra Prehistory of Transylvania Ancient history of Transylvania History of Transylvania Celts in Transylvania Dacia National Museum of Transylvanian History Timeline of Cluj Napoca Coat of arms of Cluj NapocaFootnotes edita The engraving dating back to 1617 was executed by Georg Houfnagel after the painting of Egidius van der Rye the original was done in the workshop of Braun and Hagenberg Notes edit Tabula Peutingeriana Segmentum VIII Bunbury 1879 p 516 Tomaschek 1883 406 Parvan 1982 p 165 and p 82 Paliga 2006 142 a b Lukacs 2005 p 14 a b Lazarovici et al 1997 pp 202 3 6 2 Cluj in the Old and Ancient Epochs ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPERTORY OF ROMANIA Archive Of The Vasile Parvan Institute Of Archaeology Site Location Index 1 Bennett 2001 170 Lazarovici et al 1997 p 17 2 7 Napoca romană Diaconescu A The towns of Roman Dacia an overview of recent research ed Hanson W S and Haynes I P Roman Dacia the Making of a Provincial Society Portsmouth RI USA Journal of Roman Archaeology 2004 p 133 Madgearu Alexandru 2001 Romanii in opera Notarului Anonim Cluj Napoca Centrul de Studii Transilvane Fundația Culturală Romană ISBN 973 577 249 3 a b Lazarovici et al 1997 p 32 3 1 De la Napoca romană la Clujul medieval O istorie inedită a Clujului Cetatea colonistilor sasi in Romanian ClujNet com Archived from the original on January 30 2008 Retrieved March 16 2008 a b Lazarovici et al 1997 p 204 6 3 Medieval Cluj Lazarovici et al 1997 p 73 4 1 Centru al miscării revoluţionare Georges Castellan A history of the Romanians Boulder 1989 pp 148 us authorities seize judaica from brooklyn auction house in probe of holocaust loot Rabinowicz Tzvi M 1996 The Encyclopedia of Hasidism Jason Aronson Inc ISBN 1 56821 123 6 References editSee also Timeline of Cluj Napoca Bibliography Ancient edit Anonymous Tabula Peutingeriana in Latin Modern edit Bennett Julian 2001 Trajan optimus princeps Indiana University Press 2nd edition ISBN 0 253 21435 1 ISBN 978 0 253 21435 5 Gheorghe Bodea 2002 Clujul vechi si nou ProfImage ISBN 973 0 02539 8 Gh Lazarovici D Alicu C Pop I Hica P Iambor St Matei E Glodaru I Ciupea Gh Bodea 1997 Cluj Napoca Inima Transilvaniei Cluj Napoca Editura Studia ISBN 973 97555 0 X Bunbury Edward Herbert 1879 A History of Ancient Geography among the Greeks and Romans London John Murray Albemarle Street Lukacs Jozsef 2005 Povestea orașului comoară Scurtă istorie a Clujului și a monumentelor sale in Romanian Apostrof ISBN 973 9279 74 0 Paliga Sorin 2006 Etymological Lexicon of the Indigenous Thracian Elements in Romanian Lexicon etimologic al elementelor autohtone traco dace ale limbii romane Editura Evenimentul Parvan Vasile 1982 Getica Meridiane Raoul Sorban 2003 Invazie de stafii Insemnări si mărturisiri despre o altă parte a vieţii Meridiane ISBN 973 33 0477 8 Tomaschek Wilhelm 1883 Les Restes de la langue dace in Le Museon Volume 2 Societe des lettres et des sciences Louvain Belgium Judeţul Cluj trecut si prezent ProfImage 2003 ISBN 973 7924 05 3 Cluj Napoca orasul comoară al Transilvaniei Romania CLUJonline com Retrieved March 11 2007 O istorie inedită a Clujului ReMARK ltd Archived from the original on February 3 2007 Retrieved March 11 2007 Anuarul Institutului de Istorie George Bariţ din Cluj Napoca George Bariţ History Institute Cluj Napoca Romanian Academy Retrieved March 11 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to History of Cluj Napoca Dacian settlement of Napuca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Cluj Napoca amp oldid 1184208793 Ancient times, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.