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Orăștie

Orăștie (Romanian pronunciation: [orəʃˈti.e]; German: Broos, Hungarian: Szászváros, Latin: Saxopolis, Transylvanian Saxon: Brooss)[3] is a small town and municipality in Hunedoara County, south-western Transylvania, central Romania.

Orăștie
Broos
View from Lutheran Church tower
Location in Hunedoara County
Orăștie
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 45°51′N 23°12′E / 45.850°N 23.200°E / 45.850; 23.200
CountryRomania
CountyHunedoara
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2024) Ovidiu-Laurențiu Bălan[1] (PSD)
Area
38.62 km2 (14.91 sq mi)
Elevation
220 m (720 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-01)[2]
16,825
 • Density440/km2 (1,100/sq mi)
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Postal code
335700
Area code(+40) 02 54
Vehicle reg.HD
Websitewww.orastie.info.ro

History edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1309 1,600—    
1733 2,800+75.0%
1786 3,190+13.9%
1854 4,207+31.9%
1857 5,029+19.5%
1877 5,661+12.6%
1880 5,451−3.7%
1900 6,238+14.4%
1910 6,937+11.2%
1930 7,377+6.3%
1941 9,751+32.2%
1948 8,819−9.6%
1956 10,488+18.9%
1960 11,726+11.8%
1966 12,822+9.3%
1973 14,994+16.9%
1992 24,174+61.2%
2002 21,213−12.2%
2011 17,255−18.7%
2021 16,825−2.5%

7th–9th century – On the site of an old swamp was a human settlement, now the location of the old town center, whose remains can be traced into the 10th century when the first fortification was built with raised earth and wood stockades.

11th–12th century – The first Christian religious edifice was raised: The Orăștie Rotunda. It is a circular chapel, with an age estimated at 1000 years. Perhaps it was used only by aristocratic families that dominated the Orăștie area and surroundings in the 11th century. Nearby there is a similar construction from the same period – The Geoagiu Rotunda.

1105 – In the wake of the First Crusade Anselm von Braz ”liber de liberis genitus", châtelain of Logne, Walloon ministerial count settled here. The historian Karl Kurt Klein implies – though without proof – that he moved with his sons and descendants into the region where Orăștie City is located today.

1200 – According to Transylvanian chronicles, this is the year in which construction of the city walls began. Subsequently, this was abandoned because of unfavorable conditions.

1206 – The King of Hungary, Andrew II, mentioned Romos, a village near Orăștie, as one of the first three villages in Transylvania comprising Saxon colonists. The other two villages are Ighiu and Cricău.

1224 – Andrew II confirmed the privileges of the Saxon colonists and mentioned the existence of Romanian (Blachi) and Pecheneg (Bisseni) populations who lived in the forests surrounding the town. The settlement kept a number of privileges granted by the Hungarian royalty. The town was ruled by a royal judge (iudex regium), helped by 12 jurors chosen from local craftsmen and rich traders.

1239 – This is the probable founding year of the convent of the Orăștie Franciscan church.

1241 – Orăștie was devastated during the Mongol invasion. A Mongolian tumen under the leadership of Büri entered Transylvania via the Olt Valley, near Făgăraș, from the direction of Sibiu, which was conquered on 11 April. One after another were devastated the Seats of Miercurea Sibiului (Ruzmargt), Sebeș (Mühlbach) and Orăștie (Broos). The Mongolian army arrived at Cenad on 25 April. Orăștie was probably destroyed between 11 and 25 April. The Mongol devastation of the settlements and cities is vividly shown in the dramatic description of Alba Iulia written by the Franciscan friar Rogerius of Apulia:

“ ... I could not find anything except the bones and skulls of those who were killed, scattered and broken walls of churches and palaces that have been sprinkled by the blood of Christians".

In the future, King Béla IV would populate the region with new Saxon colonists and settlers.

1309 – Orăștie had about 1,600 inhabitants. The Franciscan Order had been established in the city, and they built a church on the site of the current Franciscan friary.

1324 – The Hungarian King Charles I Robert announced that the settlement would be awarded the rank of town.

1334 – The priest John ( Johannes Sacerdos ), the tax collector in the Orăștie region, performed a census by counting chimneys. Three hundred forty-four houses were numbered, a public bath, and four houses belonging to four nuns and the priest Nicholas (Nikolaus). This was the first time the presence of Saxons in the Pricaz village was mentioned. Also mentioned are two public schools belonging to the Saxons in the Orăștie area.

1344 – Earliest mention was made of the patron "Saint Nicholas" of the Catholic Church from Orăștie.

1349 – In a document issued at Sibiu, the Seat of Orăștie (de sede Waras) was noted for the first time.

1364 – Saxons were settled in a colony near Orăștie, in the Căstău village.

1367 – A letter sent to the comes Christian of Orăștie (de Warasyo)" from Archeacon Ladislau of Ugocsa is the oldest evidence for the functioning of a royal judge for the Seat of Orăștie.

1372 – Comes Stephanus of Warasyo (Ștefan de Orăștie) was named as representative of the Seven Saxon Seats in Transylvania.

1374 – Chronicles named Count Mihai de Orăștie (de Warasio) and the ruler of the region Mihai Blas de Orăștie (Michael Blas von Broos).

1376 – Nineteen guilds (fraternitas) were mentioned as active in the town.

1420 – The county was raided by the Ottomans. On 24 September 1420, a Turkish army invaded the south-east of Transylvania defeating, near Hațeg County, an armed militia under the command of Transylvanian voivode Miklós Csáki. After two days the Turkish army looted and burned Orăștie and its surroundings before retreating, taking several thousand prisoners as slaves.

1425 – Saxons from Orăștie became suppliers for the Turks. The town was referred to by its German name, Bros or Broos.

1433 – Registers of the Vatican listed a few pilgrims from Transylvania, Banat, and Wallachia. Among them was Petru, son of Blasius of Orăștie (de Orastiia). The register stated that Peter, previously of the Eastern Orthodox faith (grecorum), was baptized on the day of Holy Trinity into the Catholic Church of Saint Peter in Rome, in the presence of John Sigismund, King of Hungary. It was also noted that Peter, as a soldier of his king, took part in several military actions against the Turks and Bohemians.

1436 – Hungarians were mentioned as living in the center of the town.

1438 – A Turkish army led by sultan Murad II together with a Wallachian army under Vlad Dracula entered Transylvania, where they looted and spoiled Orăștie and the Romos village. On this occasion the Franciscan friary was burned. Later the Franciscan order rebuilt it.

1442 – Another Turkish invasion of Transylvania led to a battle at Sântimbru (18 March 1442), which ended with a Turkish victory under Mezid (Mezet) Bey of Vidin. The town was looted and burned.

1449 – Chronicles note the comes Bartholomew of Orăștie attending a meeting of the Seven Seats.

1479 – A Turkish army entered Transylvania near Câlnic on 9 October, led by Ali Kodsha and Skender, or, according to some sources, by Ali Michaloglu and Skander. Ottoman forces likely numbered 20000 soldiers, and 1000–2000 Wallachian infantrymen under Basarab cel Tânăr-Țepeluș. On 13 October Kodsha Bey set up camp in the Breadfield, a place between Șibot and Orăștie. The Hungarian army was led by Pál Kinizsi, István Báthory, Vuk Branković, and Basarab Laiotă cel Bătrân. All forces combined totaled 12 or 15,000 men. The Battle of Breadfield took place in a location between Orăștie and Șibot. Turkish casualties were high, with several thousand killed, including a thousand Wallachian allies. The few Turks who survived fled into the mountains, where the majority were killed by the local population. In memory of this victory, Stephen Báthory raised a chapel near the village Aurel Vlaicu. When the Turks looted the city, they destroyed a large part of cultivated land, and the church inside the castle was damaged. Later, the church was rebuilt and taken into possession by the Hungarians. This is why, although the city was a Saxon fortress, the church became the property of reforming Hungarians and Saxons received only a room beside the church. This room was used as a place of worship until 1823 when a new church was built by Saxons.

1486 – Because of disagreements between the Seat of Orăștie and Hunyad County, the Saxon University of Sibiu called in the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus to regulate the borders between the two territories.

1488 – A population census of the Saxon Seats recorded population, mills, devastated properties, Catholics and Orthodox priests, and sometimes impoverished households. In Orăștie (oppidi Brosz) were recorded: 158 Saxons, 2 poor inhabitants, 4 shepherds, 1 miller and 10 abandoned households.

1491 – Saxons and Hungarians worked out an agreement that the function of Royal Judge be held alternately, and that each of the two nations should be represented in the Senate by equal numbers.

1500 – The annual fair on Saint Nicholas Day was held for the first time in history.

1504 – Stephen Olahus, father of the great humanist Nicolaus Olahus, was appointed by the King as a judge of Orăștie.

1509 – The presence of gypsies is first noted in Orăștie: "The ledger of Sibiu city notes a payment made to two employees sent to Orăștie to escort some Gypsies who were held and accused of violent crimes in the market place in Orăștie." In this year, Voivode John Zápolya moved population from Banat to Orăștie and Turdaș to bolster the region's decreasing population growth.

1514 – During the war led by Gheorghe Doja, Zápolya's army passed through the region, and Zápolya noted that the town was not sufficiently protected or equipmed for war.

1520 – 25 April, at Buda, Louis II Hungary directed the Mayor of Sibiu to appoint the noble Matia Olah of Orăștie (de Zazwaras) as Royal Judge of the town, a position then held by Matia's elderly father Stefan. The sovereign conferred along with this all revenues from taxation, and also other customary benefits.

1529 – Orăștie was to make its oath of allegiance to the new King John Zápolya.

1533 – Following the expansion of Lutheranism in Orăștie, the Franciscan Order was expelled.

1536 – On 4 June 1536 Matthew Olah, brother of Nicolaus Olahus, archbishop of Strigoniu, died.

1544 – Orăștie fortress was mentioned in chronicles by Sebastian Münster.

“... and there is another strong fortress, below Sebeș, near the town Orăștie ...”

1550 – The name Saxopolis appeared for the first time. Georg Reicherstorffer in "Chorographia Transilvaniae", printed in Vienna in 1550, wrote:

"Orăștie city, which is called Broos by the Saxons, is located a mile away to the south of the grain fields. It is situated on the river Mureș. The soil is unusually fertile, liberally yielding wheat, wine, and many fruits; the people are very tractable and in clothing style and diet are closer to the Romanians, who live broadly scattered in the desolate plains around".

1560 – Orăștie Fortress is mentioned in chronicles by Giovanandrea Gromo. At about this time the ethnic Hungarian community converted to Protestantism and the Romanian Catholic Church became Reformed Calvinist.

1599 – Michael the Brave asked the town for a loan of 1,000 florins.

1582 – The Old Testament of Orăștie, one of the first Romanian-language translations of the Bible, was printed here with the help of the constable of Deva castle, Geszti Ferenc.

1602 – General Giorgio Basta garrisoned 400 Imperial soldiers in the town. Their conduct caused the townsfolk to flee or otherwise barricade themselves in the church's castle. Later in the same year, general Gabriel Bethlen, with an army of Tatars, Turks, Hungarians and Serbs besieged the town. The Imperial soldiers were denied access to the church's castle, and all but eleven were killed. In August, Basta retook Transylvania and hanged the Mayor of Orăștie and two other prominent burghers.

1604 – Fifteen hundred of Basta's soldiers were garrisoned in the town. Extreme famine gave rise to cannibalism.

1605 – A large part of the town was destroyed.

1661 – An Ottoman army in pursuit of John Kemény set fire to Orăștie and Sebeș.

1663 – The Reformed College was established by Michael I Apafi.

1697 – The first pharmacy of the town, "Graffius", was established.

1733 – The tax registry mentioned 2,800 inhabitants in 568 families: 240 Romanian families, 170 Hungarian, 100 Saxon, 50 Gypsy and 8 Greek.

1738 – plague caused the deaths of 156 people.

1749 – The Roman Catholic Church was built in its current form (a tower being added in 1880).

1752–1756 – One hundred forty-four colonists from Upper Austria settled in the town.

1757–1758 – Another 222 colonists arrived from the same region.

1784 – The peasants' rebellion of Horea, Cloșca and Crișan occurred.

1820–1823 – The Lutheran church was built (a tower being added in 1841).

1828 – A large fire destroyed 127 houses.

1848 – Fighting was seen between Hungarian Revolutionary forces under General Józef Bem and the Austrian armies.

1853 – Transylvania was reorganised into 10 counties. The third one was centered on Orăștie. The county had 134,77 square miles/348,90 square km and 214,165 inhabitants. By ethnicity, its population comprised: 192,995 Romanians, 7,809 Hungarians, 1,063 Germans (and 12,297 of other categories). By religion: 160,603 Eastern Orthodox, 38,550 Eastern Rite Catholics, 8,565 Lutherans, 4,283 Roman Catholic, 2,141 Calvinists and 23 of other religions.

1857 – The census counted 5,029 inhabitants: 1,850 Eastern Orthodox, 1,136 Roman Catholic, 884 Lutheran, 688 Calvinist, 486 Eastern Rite, 24 Jewish, 19 Unitarian and 5 Armenian.

1867 – The synagogue was built.

1869 – The first bank was established: "Brooser Vorschuss-verein".

1880 – Orăștie had 1,086 houses and 5,451 inhabitants: 2,312 Romanians, 1,427 Germans, 1,227 Hungarians, 16 Slovaks, 8 Serbs, 176 other nationalities, 138 foreigners and 147 of unknown maternal language (a category that included Roma (Gypsies)); 2,030 Eastern Orthodox, 1,002 Roman Catholic, 964 Lutheran, 769 Calvinist, 523 Eastern Rite, 163 Jewish.

1900 – Electrical street lighting was introduced.

1910 – 6,937 inhabitants (of which 3,276 Romanians).

1940–44 Persecution and eventual deportation of Jewish and Roma residents.[4][5]

2011 – The 2011 census counted 17,255 inhabitants: 92.01% Romanians, 5.59% Roma, 1.75% Hungarians, 0.41% Germans.

2021 – At the 2021 census, the city had a population of 16,825.[6]

Culture and recreation edit

 
Fortified church in Orăștie

A medieval fortified church in Orăștie was built around 1400 in the Gothic style on the foundations of the older Romanesque basilica. A new Lutheran church was built to the north of the old one between 1820 and 1823. Both churches are surrounded by a wall.[7]

The city no longer has an active Jewish population, but its historic synagogue has been renovated by the municipality and is used as House of Culture.[8]

Personalities edit

Image gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Results of the 2020 local elections". Central Electoral Bureau. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  2. ^ "Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (XLS). National Institute of Statistics.
  3. ^ "Broos". Verband der Siebenbürger Sachsen in Deutschland e.V. (in German). Retrieved 28 January 2023.
  4. ^ Carp, Matatias (1946). "The Black Book of the Sufferings of the Jews of Romania, 1940-1944" (PDF). Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  5. ^ "Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database -- Search for Lists". www.ushmm.org. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  6. ^ "Populația rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (in Romanian). INSSE. 31 May 2023.
  7. ^ Fabini, Hermann (2015). The Church-fortresses of the Transylvanan Saxons. Sibiu: MonuMenta. p. 111. ISBN 978-973-7969-19-4.
  8. ^ "Historic Synagogues". historicsynagogueseurope.org. Retrieved 30 June 2021.

References edit

  • Chronicles and documents about the history of Orăștie – vol. 1 1200–1541, Anton E. Dörner.
  • Orăștie – 750 years, Ion Iliescu, Tiberiu Istrate.
  • Orăștie – 775, dr. Anton E. Dörner, Vasile Ionaş, Ioachim Lazăr, Mihai Căstăian.
  • Orăștie – Encyclopedia, Petru Baciu.

External links edit

  • (in Romanian) www.orastieinfo.ro
  • Everything you want to know about Orăștie and the surrounding areas

orăștie, river, hunedoara, county, river, romanian, pronunciation, orəʃˈti, german, broos, hungarian, szászváros, latin, saxopolis, transylvanian, saxon, brooss, small, town, municipality, hunedoara, county, south, western, transylvania, central, romania, broo. For the river in Hunedoara County see Orăștie river Orăștie Romanian pronunciation oreʃˈti e German Broos Hungarian Szaszvaros Latin Saxopolis Transylvanian Saxon Brooss 3 is a small town and municipality in Hunedoara County south western Transylvania central Romania Orăștie BroosMunicipalityView from Lutheran Church towerCoat of armsLocation in Hunedoara CountyOrăștieLocation in RomaniaCoordinates 45 51 N 23 12 E 45 850 N 23 200 E 45 850 23 200CountryRomaniaCountyHunedoaraGovernment Mayor 2020 2024 Ovidiu Laurențiu Bălan 1 PSD Area38 62 km2 14 91 sq mi Elevation220 m 720 ft Population 2021 12 01 2 16 825 Density440 km2 1 100 sq mi Time zoneEET EEST UTC 2 3 Postal code335700Area code 40 02 54Vehicle reg HDWebsitewww wbr orastie wbr info wbr ro Contents 1 History 2 Culture and recreation 3 Personalities 4 Image gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThis article is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this article if appropriate Editing help is available February 2020 Historical populationYearPop 13091 600 17332 800 75 0 17863 190 13 9 18544 207 31 9 18575 029 19 5 18775 661 12 6 18805 451 3 7 19006 238 14 4 19106 937 11 2 19307 377 6 3 19419 751 32 2 19488 819 9 6 195610 488 18 9 196011 726 11 8 196612 822 9 3 197314 994 16 9 199224 174 61 2 200221 213 12 2 201117 255 18 7 202116 825 2 5 7th 9th century On the site of an old swamp was a human settlement now the location of the old town center whose remains can be traced into the 10th century when the first fortification was built with raised earth and wood stockades 11th 12th century The first Christian religious edifice was raised The Orăștie Rotunda It is a circular chapel with an age estimated at 1000 years Perhaps it was used only by aristocratic families that dominated the Orăștie area and surroundings in the 11th century Nearby there is a similar construction from the same period The Geoagiu Rotunda 1105 In the wake of the First Crusade Anselm von Braz liber de liberis genitus chatelain of Logne Walloon ministerial count settled here The historian Karl Kurt Klein implies though without proof that he moved with his sons and descendants into the region where Orăștie City is located today 1200 According to Transylvanian chronicles this is the year in which construction of the city walls began Subsequently this was abandoned because of unfavorable conditions 1206 The King of Hungary Andrew II mentioned Romos a village near Orăștie as one of the first three villages in Transylvania comprising Saxon colonists The other two villages are Ighiu and Cricău 1224 Andrew II confirmed the privileges of the Saxon colonists and mentioned the existence of Romanian Blachi and Pecheneg Bisseni populations who lived in the forests surrounding the town The settlement kept a number of privileges granted by the Hungarian royalty The town was ruled by a royal judge iudex regium helped by 12 jurors chosen from local craftsmen and rich traders 1239 This is the probable founding year of the convent of the Orăștie Franciscan church 1241 Orăștie was devastated during the Mongol invasion A Mongolian tumen under the leadership of Buri entered Transylvania via the Olt Valley near Făgăraș from the direction of Sibiu which was conquered on 11 April One after another were devastated the Seats of Miercurea Sibiului Ruzmargt Sebeș Muhlbach and Orăștie Broos The Mongolian army arrived at Cenad on 25 April Orăștie was probably destroyed between 11 and 25 April The Mongol devastation of the settlements and cities is vividly shown in the dramatic description of Alba Iulia written by the Franciscan friar Rogerius of Apulia I could not find anything except the bones and skulls of those who were killed scattered and broken walls of churches and palaces that have been sprinkled by the blood of Christians In the future King Bela IV would populate the region with new Saxon colonists and settlers 1309 Orăștie had about 1 600 inhabitants The Franciscan Order had been established in the city and they built a church on the site of the current Franciscan friary 1324 The Hungarian King Charles I Robert announced that the settlement would be awarded the rank of town 1334 The priest John Johannes Sacerdos the tax collector in the Orăștie region performed a census by counting chimneys Three hundred forty four houses were numbered a public bath and four houses belonging to four nuns and the priest Nicholas Nikolaus This was the first time the presence of Saxons in the Pricaz village was mentioned Also mentioned are two public schools belonging to the Saxons in the Orăștie area 1344 Earliest mention was made of the patron Saint Nicholas of the Catholic Church from Orăștie 1349 In a document issued at Sibiu the Seat of Orăștie de sede Waras was noted for the first time 1364 Saxons were settled in a colony near Orăștie in the Căstău village 1367 A letter sent to the comes Christian of Orăștie de Warasyo from Archeacon Ladislau of Ugocsa is the oldest evidence for the functioning of a royal judge for the Seat of Orăștie 1372 Comes Stephanus of Warasyo Ștefan de Orăștie was named as representative of the Seven Saxon Seats in Transylvania 1374 Chronicles named Count Mihai de Orăștie de Warasio and the ruler of the region Mihai Blas de Orăștie Michael Blas von Broos 1376 Nineteen guilds fraternitas were mentioned as active in the town 1420 The county was raided by the Ottomans On 24 September 1420 a Turkish army invaded the south east of Transylvania defeating near Hațeg County an armed militia under the command of Transylvanian voivode Miklos Csaki After two days the Turkish army looted and burned Orăștie and its surroundings before retreating taking several thousand prisoners as slaves 1425 Saxons from Orăștie became suppliers for the Turks The town was referred to by its German name Bros or Broos 1433 Registers of the Vatican listed a few pilgrims from Transylvania Banat and Wallachia Among them was Petru son of Blasius of Orăștie de Orastiia The register stated that Peter previously of the Eastern Orthodox faith grecorum was baptized on the day of Holy Trinity into the Catholic Church of Saint Peter in Rome in the presence of John Sigismund King of Hungary It was also noted that Peter as a soldier of his king took part in several military actions against the Turks and Bohemians 1436 Hungarians were mentioned as living in the center of the town 1438 A Turkish army led by sultan Murad II together with a Wallachian army under Vlad Dracula entered Transylvania where they looted and spoiled Orăștie and the Romos village On this occasion the Franciscan friary was burned Later the Franciscan order rebuilt it 1442 Another Turkish invasion of Transylvania led to a battle at Santimbru 18 March 1442 which ended with a Turkish victory under Mezid Mezet Bey of Vidin The town was looted and burned 1449 Chronicles note the comes Bartholomew of Orăștie attending a meeting of the Seven Seats 1479 A Turkish army entered Transylvania near Calnic on 9 October led by Ali Kodsha and Skender or according to some sources by Ali Michaloglu and Skander Ottoman forces likely numbered 20000 soldiers and 1000 2000 Wallachian infantrymen under Basarab cel Tanăr Țepeluș On 13 October Kodsha Bey set up camp in the Breadfield a place between Șibot and Orăștie The Hungarian army was led by Pal Kinizsi Istvan Bathory Vuk Brankovic and Basarab Laiotă cel Bătran All forces combined totaled 12 or 15 000 men The Battle of Breadfield took place in a location between Orăștie and Șibot Turkish casualties were high with several thousand killed including a thousand Wallachian allies The few Turks who survived fled into the mountains where the majority were killed by the local population In memory of this victory Stephen Bathory raised a chapel near the village Aurel Vlaicu When the Turks looted the city they destroyed a large part of cultivated land and the church inside the castle was damaged Later the church was rebuilt and taken into possession by the Hungarians This is why although the city was a Saxon fortress the church became the property of reforming Hungarians and Saxons received only a room beside the church This room was used as a place of worship until 1823 when a new church was built by Saxons 1486 Because of disagreements between the Seat of Orăștie and Hunyad County the Saxon University of Sibiu called in the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus to regulate the borders between the two territories 1488 A population census of the Saxon Seats recorded population mills devastated properties Catholics and Orthodox priests and sometimes impoverished households In Orăștie oppidi Brosz were recorded 158 Saxons 2 poor inhabitants 4 shepherds 1 miller and 10 abandoned households 1491 Saxons and Hungarians worked out an agreement that the function of Royal Judge be held alternately and that each of the two nations should be represented in the Senate by equal numbers 1500 The annual fair on Saint Nicholas Day was held for the first time in history 1504 Stephen Olahus father of the great humanist Nicolaus Olahus was appointed by the King as a judge of Orăștie 1509 The presence of gypsies is first noted in Orăștie The ledger of Sibiu city notes a payment made to two employees sent to Orăștie to escort some Gypsies who were held and accused of violent crimes in the market place in Orăștie In this year Voivode John Zapolya moved population from Banat to Orăștie and Turdaș to bolster the region s decreasing population growth 1514 During the war led by Gheorghe Doja Zapolya s army passed through the region and Zapolya noted that the town was not sufficiently protected or equipmed for war 1520 25 April at Buda Louis II Hungary directed the Mayor of Sibiu to appoint the noble Matia Olah of Orăștie de Zazwaras as Royal Judge of the town a position then held by Matia s elderly father Stefan The sovereign conferred along with this all revenues from taxation and also other customary benefits 1529 Orăștie was to make its oath of allegiance to the new King John Zapolya 1533 Following the expansion of Lutheranism in Orăștie the Franciscan Order was expelled 1536 On 4 June 1536 Matthew Olah brother of Nicolaus Olahus archbishop of Strigoniu died 1544 Orăștie fortress was mentioned in chronicles by Sebastian Munster and there is another strong fortress below Sebeș near the town Orăștie 1550 The name Saxopolis appeared for the first time Georg Reicherstorffer in Chorographia Transilvaniae printed in Vienna in 1550 wrote Orăștie city which is called Broos by the Saxons is located a mile away to the south of the grain fields It is situated on the river Mureș The soil is unusually fertile liberally yielding wheat wine and many fruits the people are very tractable and in clothing style and diet are closer to the Romanians who live broadly scattered in the desolate plains around 1560 Orăștie Fortress is mentioned in chronicles by Giovanandrea Gromo At about this time the ethnic Hungarian community converted to Protestantism and the Romanian Catholic Church became Reformed Calvinist 1599 Michael the Brave asked the town for a loan of 1 000 florins 1582 The Old Testament of Orăștie one of the first Romanian language translations of the Bible was printed here with the help of the constable of Deva castle Geszti Ferenc 1602 General Giorgio Basta garrisoned 400 Imperial soldiers in the town Their conduct caused the townsfolk to flee or otherwise barricade themselves in the church s castle Later in the same year general Gabriel Bethlen with an army of Tatars Turks Hungarians and Serbs besieged the town The Imperial soldiers were denied access to the church s castle and all but eleven were killed In August Basta retook Transylvania and hanged the Mayor of Orăștie and two other prominent burghers 1604 Fifteen hundred of Basta s soldiers were garrisoned in the town Extreme famine gave rise to cannibalism 1605 A large part of the town was destroyed 1661 An Ottoman army in pursuit of John Kemeny set fire to Orăștie and Sebeș 1663 The Reformed College was established by Michael I Apafi 1697 The first pharmacy of the town Graffius was established 1733 The tax registry mentioned 2 800 inhabitants in 568 families 240 Romanian families 170 Hungarian 100 Saxon 50 Gypsy and 8 Greek 1738 plague caused the deaths of 156 people 1749 The Roman Catholic Church was built in its current form a tower being added in 1880 1752 1756 One hundred forty four colonists from Upper Austria settled in the town 1757 1758 Another 222 colonists arrived from the same region 1784 The peasants rebellion of Horea Cloșca and Crișan occurred 1820 1823 The Lutheran church was built a tower being added in 1841 1828 A large fire destroyed 127 houses 1848 Fighting was seen between Hungarian Revolutionary forces under General Jozef Bem and the Austrian armies 1853 Transylvania was reorganised into 10 counties The third one was centered on Orăștie The county had 134 77 square miles 348 90 square km and 214 165 inhabitants By ethnicity its population comprised 192 995 Romanians 7 809 Hungarians 1 063 Germans and 12 297 of other categories By religion 160 603 Eastern Orthodox 38 550 Eastern Rite Catholics 8 565 Lutherans 4 283 Roman Catholic 2 141 Calvinists and 23 of other religions 1857 The census counted 5 029 inhabitants 1 850 Eastern Orthodox 1 136 Roman Catholic 884 Lutheran 688 Calvinist 486 Eastern Rite 24 Jewish 19 Unitarian and 5 Armenian 1867 The synagogue was built 1869 The first bank was established Brooser Vorschuss verein 1880 Orăștie had 1 086 houses and 5 451 inhabitants 2 312 Romanians 1 427 Germans 1 227 Hungarians 16 Slovaks 8 Serbs 176 other nationalities 138 foreigners and 147 of unknown maternal language a category that included Roma Gypsies 2 030 Eastern Orthodox 1 002 Roman Catholic 964 Lutheran 769 Calvinist 523 Eastern Rite 163 Jewish 1900 Electrical street lighting was introduced 1910 6 937 inhabitants of which 3 276 Romanians 1940 44 Persecution and eventual deportation of Jewish and Roma residents 4 5 2011 The 2011 census counted 17 255 inhabitants 92 01 Romanians 5 59 Roma 1 75 Hungarians 0 41 Germans 2021 At the 2021 census the city had a population of 16 825 6 Culture and recreation edit nbsp Fortified church in OrăștieA medieval fortified church in Orăștie was built around 1400 in the Gothic style on the foundations of the older Romanesque basilica A new Lutheran church was built to the north of the old one between 1820 and 1823 Both churches are surrounded by a wall 7 The city no longer has an active Jewish population but its historic synagogue has been renovated by the municipality and is used as House of Culture 8 Personalities editMihai Iacob 1933 2009 film director and screenwriter Erno Koch 1898 1970 graphic artist Elizabeth Roboz Einstein 1904 1995 biochemist and neuroscientist daughter in law to Albert EinsteinImage gallery edit nbsp View from Dealu Mic hill nbsp Cathedral plaza Romanian Piața Catedralei nbsp View from Dealu Mic hill nbsp Photo taken from Lutheran church tower nbsp Photo taken from Lutheran church tower nbsp Bronze Age cauldron wagon model Urnfield culture See also editDacian Fortresses of the Orăștie Mountains Orăștie River CSM Dacia Orăștie Stadionul Dacia Orăștie Notes edit Results of the 2020 local elections Central Electoral Bureau Retrieved 8 June 2021 Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de varstă pe județe și municipii orașe comune la 1 decembrie 2021 XLS National Institute of Statistics Broos Verband der Siebenburger Sachsen in Deutschland e V in German Retrieved 28 January 2023 Carp Matatias 1946 The Black Book of the Sufferings of the Jews of Romania 1940 1944 PDF Retrieved 30 June 2021 Holocaust Survivors and Victims Database Search for Lists www ushmm org Retrieved 30 June 2021 Populația rezidentă după grupa de varstă pe județe și municipii orașe comune la 1 decembrie 2021 in Romanian INSSE 31 May 2023 Fabini Hermann 2015 The Church fortresses of the Transylvanan Saxons Sibiu MonuMenta p 111 ISBN 978 973 7969 19 4 Historic Synagogues historicsynagogueseurope org Retrieved 30 June 2021 References editChronicles and documents about the history of Orăștie vol 1 1200 1541 Anton E Dorner Orăștie 750 years Ion Iliescu Tiberiu Istrate Orăștie 775 dr Anton E Dorner Vasile Ionas Ioachim Lazăr Mihai Căstăian Orăștie Encyclopedia Petru Baciu External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Orăștie nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orăștie in Romanian www orastieinfo ro Everything you want to know about Orăștie and the surrounding areas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orăștie amp oldid 1210712818, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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