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Iron Gates

The Iron Gates (Romanian: Porțile de Fier; Serbian: Ђердапска клисура / Đerdapska klisura or Гвоздена капија / Gvozdena kapija; Hungarian: Vaskapu-szoros) is a gorge on the river Danube. It forms part of the boundary between Serbia (to the south) and Romania (north). In the broad sense it encompasses a route of 134 km (83 mi); in the narrow sense it only encompasses the last barrier on this route, just beyond the Romanian city of Orșova, that contains two hydroelectric dams, with two power stations, Iron Gate I Hydroelectric Power Station and Iron Gate II Hydroelectric Power Station.

The Iron Gates of the Danube
Location of the Iron Gates

At this point in the Danube, the river separates the southern Carpathian Mountains from the northwestern foothills of the Balkan Mountains. The Romanian side of the gorge constitutes the Iron Gates Natural Park, whereas the Serbian part constitutes the Đerdap National Park. A wider protected area on the Serbian side was declared the UNESCO global geopark in July 2020.[1][2]

Archaeologists have named the Iron Gates mesolithic culture, of the central Danube region circa 13,000 to 5,000 years ago, after the gorge. One of the most important archaeological sites in Serbia and Europe is Lepenski Vir, the oldest planned settlement in Europe, located on the banks of the Danube in the Iron Gate gorge.[3]

Toponymy edit

 
Kazan gorge at its narrowest point

In English, the gorge is known as Iron Gates or Iron Gate. An 1853 article about the Danube in The Times of London referred to it as "the Iron Gate, or the Gate of Trajan."[4]

In languages of the region including Romanian, Hungarian, Polish, Slovak, Czech, German, and Bulgarian, names literally meaning "Iron Gates" are used to name the entire range of gorges. These names are Romanian: Porțile de Fier (pronounced [ˈport͡sile de ˈfjer]), Hungarian: Vaskapu, Slovak: Železné vráta, Polish: Żelazne Wrota, German: Eisernes Tor, and Bulgarian: Железни врата Železni vrata. An alternative Romanian name for the last part of the route is Defileul Dunării, literally "Danube Gorge".

In Serbian, the gorge is known as Đerdap (Ђердап; [d͡ʑě̞rdaːp]), with the last part named Đerdapska klisura (Ђердапска клисура; [d͡ʑě̞rdaːpskaː klǐsura], meaning Đerdap Gorge) from the Byzantine Greek Κλεισούρα (kleisoura), standing for "enclosure" or "pass."

Both Đerdap and the former Serbian name, Demir-kapija, are Turkish in origin. Demir-kapija means "iron gate" (demirkapı) and a translation of it entered most of the other languages as the name of the gorge, while đerdap comes from girdap which means whirlpool, vortex.[5]

Natural physical features edit

Gorges edit

 
The Roman plaque "Tabula Traiana", Serbia

The first narrowing of the Danube lies beyond the Romanian isle of Moldova Veche and is known as the Golubac gorge. It is 14.5 km long and 230 m (755 ft) wide at the narrowest point. At its head, there is a medieval fort at Golubac, on the Serbian bank. Through the valley of Ljupovska lies the second gorge, Gospodjin Vir, which is 15 km long and narrows to 220 m (722 ft). The cliffs scale to 500 m and are the most difficult to reach here from land. The broader Donji Milanovac forms the connection with the Great and the Small Kazan gorge, which have a combined length of 19 km (12 mi). The Orșova valley is the last broad section before the river reaches the plains of Wallachia at the last gorge, the Sip gorge.

 

The Great Kazan (kazan meaning "cauldron" or "reservoir") is the most famous and the most narrow gorge of the whole route: the river here narrows to 150 m and reaches a depth of up to 53 m (174 ft).

Navigation and channels edit

 

The riverbed rocks and the associated rapids made the gorge valley an infamous passage for shipping, even for the most seasoned boatmen. During the period of the Ottoman rule, the ships were guided through by the local navigators, familiar with the routes, called kalauz (from Turkish kalavuz, meaning guide, travel leader). During the rule of prince Miloš Obrenović, local Serbs gradually took over from the Ottomans, being officially appointed by the prince. In order not to aggravate the Ottomans further, the prince named Serbian navigators by a Turkish name, dumendžibaša, from dümen (rudder) and baş (head, chief, master). The navigation fee was divided among dumendžibaša, loc (river pilots) and regional municipalities.[6]

In German, the passage is still known as the Kataraktenstrecke, even though the cataracts are gone. Near the actual "Iron Gates" strait the Prigrada rock was the most important obstacle (until 1896): the river widened considerably here and the water level was consequently low. Upstream, the Greben rock near the "Kazan" gorge was notorious.[citation needed]

Some of the channels created included:[7]

  • Stenka, 1,900 m (6,200 ft) long, with 10 navigational signals (originally, the balloons were used)
  • Izlaz-Tahatlija, 2,351 m (7,713 ft), with 7 signals
  • Svinița, 1,200 m (3,900 ft), with 4 signals
  • Juc, 1,260 m (4,130 ft), with 5 signals
  • Sip, 4,375 m (14,354 ft)
  • Mali Đerdap, 1,050 m (3,440 ft), as an extension of Sip Channel

In total, 15,465 m (50,738 ft) of navigable channels was created.[7] They were flooded when the artificial Lake Đerdap was created (early 1970s). The results of these efforts were slightly disappointing. The currents in the Sip Channel were so strong at 15kts (8 m/s) that until 1973, ships had to be dragged upstream along the canal by locomotive. The Iron Gates thus remained an obstacle of note.[7][8][9]

Dams edit

 
Iron Gate I dam
 
Hydropower site Iron Gates (1970)

The construction of the joint Romanian-Yugoslavian mega project commenced in 1964. In 1972 the Iron Gate I Dam was opened, followed by Iron Gate II Dam, in 1984, along with two hydroelectric power stations, two sluices and navigation locks for shipping.

The construction of these dams gave the valley of the Danube below Belgrade the nature of a reservoir, and additionally caused a 35 m rise in the water level of the river near the dam. The old Orșova, the Danube island of Ada Kaleh (below) and at least five other villages, totaling a population of 17,000, had to make way. People were relocated and the settlements have been lost forever to the Danube.

When designed and built without adequate attention to the natural functioning of a river, dams have the effect of cutting a river into ecologically isolated compartments, which do not allow free movement and migration of species.[10] Migratory fish are particularly badly hit, being rendered unable to move upstream or downstream between their spawning grounds and areas used at other times in their life cycle. The construction of the Iron Gates had a major impact on the local fauna and flora as well—for example, the spawning routes of several species of sturgeon were permanently interrupted. Beluga sturgeon was the largest, and the largest specimen was recorded in 1793, at 500 kg (1,100 lb).[11] There have also been significant regional economic impacts – notably on the productivity of Danube fisheries.[12] The status of the Danube's migratory fish species is a strong indicator of the ecological health of the entire Danube River Basin, which in turn has wider economic and strategic consequences.

The flora and fauna, as well as the geomorphological, archaeological and cultural historical artifacts of the Iron Gates have been under the protection of both nations since the construction of the dam. In Serbia this was done with the Đerdap National Park (since 1974, 636.08 km2 (245.59 sq mi)) and in Romania by the Porțile de Fier National Park (since 2001, 1,156.55 km2 (446.55 sq mi)).

History edit

Prehistoric and Roman era edit

Sandstone statues dated to the early Neolithic era indicate that the area has been inhabited for a very long time. Even more significant are the Iron Gates Mesolithic (c. 13,000 to 5,000 BP) sites – in particular, the gorge of Gospodjin Vir, which contains the major archaeological site of Lepenski Vir (unearthed in the 1960s). Lepenski Vir is often regarded as the most important Mesolithic site in south-east Europe.

East of the Great Kazan the Roman emperor Trajan built the legendary bridge erected by Apollodorus of Damascus. Construction of the bridge ran from 103 through 105, preceding Trajan's final conquest of Dacia. (On the right (Serbian) bank a Roman plaque commemorates him. On the Romanian bank, at the Small Kazan, a likeness of Decebalus, Trajan's Dacian opponent, was carved in rock in 1994–2004.)

John Hunyadi and his 15,000 men defeated the 80,000-strong army of Beylerbey Şehabeddin at Zajkány (today's Zeicani), near the Iron Gate of the Danube river in 1442.[13]

Ada Kaleh edit

 
Ada Kaleh in the 19th century

Perhaps the most evocative consequence of the Đerdap dam's construction was the flooding of an islet named Ada Kaleh. A former Turkish exclave, it had a mosque and a thousand twisting alleys, and was known as a free port and smuggler's nest. Many other ethnic groups lived there beside Turks.

The island was about 3 km (1.9 mi) downstream from Orșova and measured 1.7 by 0.4–0.5 km. It was walled; the Austrians built a fort there in 1669 to defend it from the Turks, and that fort would remain a bone of contention for the two empires. In 1699 the island came under Turkish control, from 1716 to 1718 it was Austrian, after a four-month siege in 1738 it was Turkish again, followed by the Austrians reconquering it in 1789, only to have to yield it to the Turks in the following peace treaty.

 
Ada Kaleh in 1912

Thereafter, the island lost its military importance. The 1878 Congress of Berlin forced the Ottoman Empire to retreat far into the south, but the island remained the property of the Turkish sultan, allegedly because the treaty neglected to mention it. The inhabitants enjoyed exemption from taxes and customs and were not conscripted. In 1923, when the Ottoman monarchy had disappeared, the island was given to Romania in the Treaty of Lausanne.

The Ada Kaleh mosque dated from 1903 and was built on the site of an earlier Franciscan monastery. The mosque's carpet, a gift from the Turkish sultan Abdülhamid II, has been located in the Constanța mosque since 1965.

Most Ada Kaleh inhabitants emigrated to Turkey after the evacuation of the island. A smaller part went to Northern Dobruja, another Romanian territory with a Turkish minority.

19th century's Hungarian initiatives edit

By the early 19th century, freedom of navigation on the Danube was regarded as important by many different states in the region and beyond. Allowing passage through the Iron Gates by larger vessels had become a priority. By 1831 a plan had been drafted to make the passage navigable, at the initiative of Hungarian politician István Széchenyi. Not being satisfied with the solutions compiled by the Austrio-Hungarian government and the Austro-Turkish commission, the government of Hungary formed its own commission for the organization of the navigation through the Iron Gates. The project was finished in 1883.[citation needed] Appointed in 1883 and again in 1886, Minister of Trade and Transportation Gábor Baross, Hungary's "Iron Minister", presided over modernization projects at Hungary's sea port in Fiume (Rijeka), and regulation of the Upper Danube and Iron Gate.[14]

Works on the gorge section were done by the Hungarian Technical Administration over 11 years from 1889. The works were divided in two sectors, the upper and the lower Iron Gates. The channels in the upper section, at the town of Orșova (the tripoint between Austria-Hungary, Romania and Serbia at the time) were up to 60 m (197 ft) wide and 2 m (7 ft) deep, at the zero water level in Orșova. In the southern section, the channels were 60 m (197 ft) wide and 3 m (10 ft) deep, except for the Sip Channel, which was 73 m (240 ft) wide.[7] In 1890, near Orșova, the last border town of Hungary, rocks were cleared by explosion over a 2 km (1.2 mi) stretch in order to create channels. A spur of the Greben Ridge was removed across a length of over 2 km (1.2 mi). Here, a depth of 2 m (7 ft) sufficed. On 17 September 1896, the Sip Channel thus created (named after the Serbian Sip village on the right bank) was inaugurated by the Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz Joseph, the Romanian king Carol I, and the Serbian king Alexander Obrenovich.[7][8][9]

Cultural references to the Iron Gates edit

Literature edit

  • A plan to blow up the Iron Gates gorge and thereby block the Danube grain trade is included in the proposed acts of sabotage in the Balkan Trilogy section of the Fortunes of War novels (1960–1980) by Olivia Manning. A similar plot device, to prevent oil barges reaching Nazi Germany, is used by Dennis Wheatley in his 1946 Duke de Richleau novel, Codeword: Golden Fleece.
  • Two novels – The Valley of Horses (1982) and The Plains of Passage (1990) – in Jean M. Auel's series Earth's Children focus on the difficulties of prehistoric people traveling through or around the Iron Gates in both during scene sequences detailing travel adventures whilst the protagonists navigate between the upper and lower Danube valleys.
  • The 1986 book Between the Woods and the Water, by travel writer Patrick Leigh Fermor, describes a night on the now submerged island Ada Kaleh and a trip by ferry through the Iron Gates, in August, 1934.
  • The 2016 book Threads, The Fabric of Family Lives Pulled Apart By War, by D. W. Hoffman (2016) describes a daring escape attempt by Czech refugees hoping to reach Palestine in August of 1940 aboard a derelict paddlewheel steamer. They were detained at Donji by the Serbs and later the Bulgarians and Romanians, all of whom were afraid to allow the craft to pass, fearing it would sink in the Iron Gates and block critical wartime traffic.
  • Mór Jókai's 1872 novel The Man with the Golden Touch starts with a lengthy description of the gorge. Many of the main characters are introduced during a voyage through the Iron Gates on a merchant vessel towed up the river.

Film edit

  • The 2003 film Donau, Duna, Dunaj, Dunav, Dunarea contains several minutes of film of the Iron Gates.

Music edit

  • The Iron Gates are mentioned in the second verse of the Zvonko Bogdan song Rastao sam pored Dunava.
  • The folk song Jugoslavijo by Milutin Popović, commonly called Od Vardara pa do Triglava, includes a mention of the Iron Gates in the beginning.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "UNESCO designates 15 new Geoparks in Asia, Europe, and Latin America". UNESCO. 2020-07-10. Retrieved 2020-07-13.
  2. ^ Dimitrije Bukvić (19 July 2020). "Đerdap – prvi srpski geopark" [Đerdap – first Serbian geopark]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 9.
  3. ^ Sormaz, Andela (5 May 2020). "Lepenski Vir". World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved 29 July 2020. The overall architecture at Lepenski Vir is of a specific shape with all the houses built according to a plan.
  4. ^ "The Seat of War on the Danube," The Times, December 29, page 8
  5. ^ Dimitrije Bukvić (3 July 2017), "Mitovi i legende iza gvozdenih vrata" [Myths and legends from behind the iron doors], Politika (in Serbian), p. 08
  6. ^ "Да ли знате: Како су некада звали спроводнике лађа на Ђердапу?" [Do you know: how the Đerdap navigators were used to be called?]. Politika (in Serbian). 31 January 2018. p. 32.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Da li znate? – Kada je regulisana plovidba kroz đerdapski sektor?" [Do you know? – When was the navigation through the Iron Gates sector regulated?], Politika (in Serbian), p. 30, 8 October 2017
  8. ^ a b "Sipska lokomotiva i locovi na Dunavu" [Sip locomotive and locs on the Danube] (in Serbian). Biblioteka Centar za Kulturu Kladovo. 4 December 2015.
  9. ^ a b Miroslav Stefanović (14 January 2018). "Политикин времеплов: Како је Сипским каналом укроћен Дунав" [Politika's chronicle: How the Sip Canal tamed the Danube]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1059 (in Serbian). pp. 28–29.
  10. ^ Claudio Comoglio (2011). "FAO Scoping mission at Iron Gates I and II dams (Romania and Serbia). Preliminary assessment of the feasibility for providing free passage to migratory fish species" (PDF).
  11. ^ Miroslav Stefanović (22 April 2018). "Мегдани аласа и риба грдосија" [Fights between the fishermen and the giant fishes]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1073 (in Serbian). pp. 28–29.
  12. ^ Holcik, Juraj (1989). The freshwater fishes of Europe Vol.I Part II General introduction to fishes. Wiesbaden: Aula Verlag.
  13. ^ Bánlaky, József. "A vaskapui diadal 1442 július havában" [The Triumph of the Iron Gate in July 1442]. A magyar nemzet hadtörténelme [The Military History of the Hungarian Nation] (in Hungarian). Budapest.
  14. ^ "THE HISTORY OF PASSENGER NAVIGATION IN HUNGARY MFTR (1895) – MAHART (1955) – MAHART PassNave (1994)". MAHART PassNave. Retrieved 8 June 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Bonsall, Clive; Lennon, Rosemary; McSweeney, Kathleen; Stewart, Catriona; Harkness, Douglas; Boronean, Vasile; Bartosiewicz, László; Payton, Robert; Chapman, John (1997). "Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in the Iron Gates: A Paiaeodietary Perspective". Journal of European Archaeology. 5 (1): 50–92. doi:10.1179/096576697800703575. Archived from the original on 2013-01-26.
  • Bonsall, C; Cook, G T; Hedges, R E M; Higham, T F G; Pickard, C; Radovanović, I (2004). "Radiocarbon and stable isotope evidence of dietary change from the Mesolithic to the Middle Ages in the iron gates: New results from Lepenski Vir". Radiocarbon. 46 (1): 293–300. doi:10.1017/S0033822200039606. hdl:1808/16275.
  • Teodoru, Cristian; Wehrli, Bernhard (2005). "Retention of Sediments and Nutrients in the Iron Gate I Reservoir on the Danube River". Biogeochemistry. 76 (3): 539–65. doi:10.1007/s10533-005-0230-6. hdl:20.500.11850/57912.
  • Micić, Vesna; Kruge, Michael; Körner, Petra; Bujalski, Nicole; Hofmann, Thilo (2010). "Organic geochemistry of Danube River sediments from Pančevo (Serbia) to the Iron Gate dam (Serbia–Romania)". Organic Geochemistry. 41 (9): 971–4. doi:10.1016/j.orggeochem.2010.05.008.
  • Roksandic, Mirjana; Djurić, Marija; Rakočević, Zoran; Seguin, Kimberly (2006). "Interpersonal violence at Lepenski Vir Mesolithic/Neolithic complex of the Iron Gates Gorge (Serbia-Romania)". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 129 (3): 339–48. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20286. PMID 16323188.
  • Boric, Dusan; Miracle, Preston (2004). "Mesolithic and Neolithic (Dis)Continuities in the Danube Gorges: New Ams Dates from Padina and Hajducka Vodenica (Serbia)". Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 23 (4): 341–71. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0092.2004.00215.x.
  • Bonsall, Clive (2008). "The Mesolithic of the Iron Gates". In Bailey, Geoff; Spikins, Penny (eds.). Mesolithic Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 238–79. ISBN 978-0-521-85503-7.

External links edit

  • (in Romanian) Porțile de Fier National Park
  • (in Serbian) Iron Gates in 1965 on YouTube
  • (in Serbian) Lepenski Vir
  • (in German) , also the source of the Ada Kaleh section in this article

44°40′16″N 22°31′47″E / 44.67111°N 22.52972°E / 44.67111; 22.52972


iron, gates, this, article, about, danube, gorge, pass, bibans, mountains, algeria, algeria, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, arti. This article is about the Danube gorge For the pass in the Bibans mountains in Algeria see Iron Gates Algeria For other uses see Iron Gates disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations February 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message The Iron Gates Romanian Porțile de Fier Serbian Ђerdapska klisura Đerdapska klisura or Gvozdena kapiјa Gvozdena kapija Hungarian Vaskapu szoros is a gorge on the river Danube It forms part of the boundary between Serbia to the south and Romania north In the broad sense it encompasses a route of 134 km 83 mi in the narrow sense it only encompasses the last barrier on this route just beyond the Romanian city of Orșova that contains two hydroelectric dams with two power stations Iron Gate I Hydroelectric Power Station and Iron Gate II Hydroelectric Power Station The Iron Gates of the Danube Location of the Iron Gates At this point in the Danube the river separates the southern Carpathian Mountains from the northwestern foothills of the Balkan Mountains The Romanian side of the gorge constitutes the Iron Gates Natural Park whereas the Serbian part constitutes the Đerdap National Park A wider protected area on the Serbian side was declared the UNESCO global geopark in July 2020 1 2 Archaeologists have named the Iron Gates mesolithic culture of the central Danube region circa 13 000 to 5 000 years ago after the gorge One of the most important archaeological sites in Serbia and Europe is Lepenski Vir the oldest planned settlement in Europe located on the banks of the Danube in the Iron Gate gorge 3 Contents 1 Toponymy 2 Natural physical features 2 1 Gorges 2 2 Navigation and channels 2 3 Dams 3 History 3 1 Prehistoric and Roman era 3 2 Ada Kaleh 3 3 19th century s Hungarian initiatives 4 Cultural references to the Iron Gates 4 1 Literature 4 2 Film 4 3 Music 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksToponymy editThis section relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Iron Gates news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2018 nbsp Kazan gorge at its narrowest point In English the gorge is known as Iron Gates or Iron Gate An 1853 article about the Danube in The Times of London referred to it as the Iron Gate or the Gate of Trajan 4 In languages of the region including Romanian Hungarian Polish Slovak Czech German and Bulgarian names literally meaning Iron Gates are used to name the entire range of gorges These names are Romanian Porțile de Fier pronounced ˈport sile de ˈfjer Hungarian Vaskapu Slovak Zelezne vrata Polish Zelazne Wrota German Eisernes Tor and Bulgarian Zhelezni vrata Zelezni vrata An alternative Romanian name for the last part of the route is Defileul Dunării literally Danube Gorge In Serbian the gorge is known as Đerdap Ђerdap d ʑe rdaːp with the last part named Đerdapska klisura Ђerdapska klisura d ʑe rdaːpskaː klǐsura meaning Đerdap Gorge from the Byzantine Greek Kleisoyra kleisoura standing for enclosure or pass Both Đerdap and the former Serbian name Demir kapija are Turkish in origin Demir kapija means iron gate demirkapi and a translation of it entered most of the other languages as the name of the gorge while đerdap comes from girdap which means whirlpool vortex 5 Natural physical features editGorges edit nbsp The Roman plaque Tabula Traiana Serbia The first narrowing of the Danube lies beyond the Romanian isle of Moldova Veche and is known as the Golubac gorge It is 14 5 km long and 230 m 755 ft wide at the narrowest point At its head there is a medieval fort at Golubac on the Serbian bank Through the valley of Ljupovska lies the second gorge Gospodjin Vir which is 15 km long and narrows to 220 m 722 ft The cliffs scale to 500 m and are the most difficult to reach here from land The broader Donji Milanovac forms the connection with the Great and the Small Kazan gorge which have a combined length of 19 km 12 mi The Orșova valley is the last broad section before the river reaches the plains of Wallachia at the last gorge the Sip gorge nbsp The Great Kazan kazan meaning cauldron or reservoir is the most famous and the most narrow gorge of the whole route the river here narrows to 150 m and reaches a depth of up to 53 m 174 ft Navigation and channels edit nbsp The riverbed rocks and the associated rapids made the gorge valley an infamous passage for shipping even for the most seasoned boatmen During the period of the Ottoman rule the ships were guided through by the local navigators familiar with the routes called kalauz from Turkish kalavuz meaning guide travel leader During the rule of prince Milos Obrenovic local Serbs gradually took over from the Ottomans being officially appointed by the prince In order not to aggravate the Ottomans further the prince named Serbian navigators by a Turkish name dumendzibasa from dumen rudder and bas head chief master The navigation fee was divided among dumendzibasa loc river pilots and regional municipalities 6 In German the passage is still known as the Kataraktenstrecke even though the cataracts are gone Near the actual Iron Gates strait the Prigrada rock was the most important obstacle until 1896 the river widened considerably here and the water level was consequently low Upstream the Greben rock near the Kazan gorge was notorious citation needed Some of the channels created included 7 Stenka 1 900 m 6 200 ft long with 10 navigational signals originally the balloons were used Izlaz Tahatlija 2 351 m 7 713 ft with 7 signals Svinița 1 200 m 3 900 ft with 4 signals Juc 1 260 m 4 130 ft with 5 signals Sip 4 375 m 14 354 ft Mali Đerdap 1 050 m 3 440 ft as an extension of Sip Channel In total 15 465 m 50 738 ft of navigable channels was created 7 They were flooded when the artificial Lake Đerdap was created early 1970s The results of these efforts were slightly disappointing The currents in the Sip Channel were so strong at 15kts 8 m s that until 1973 ships had to be dragged upstream along the canal by locomotive The Iron Gates thus remained an obstacle of note 7 8 9 Dams edit nbsp Iron Gate I dam nbsp Hydropower site Iron Gates 1970 The construction of the joint Romanian Yugoslavian mega project commenced in 1964 In 1972 the Iron Gate I Dam was opened followed by Iron Gate II Dam in 1984 along with two hydroelectric power stations two sluices and navigation locks for shipping The construction of these dams gave the valley of the Danube below Belgrade the nature of a reservoir and additionally caused a 35 m rise in the water level of the river near the dam The old Orșova the Danube island of Ada Kaleh below and at least five other villages totaling a population of 17 000 had to make way People were relocated and the settlements have been lost forever to the Danube When designed and built without adequate attention to the natural functioning of a river dams have the effect of cutting a river into ecologically isolated compartments which do not allow free movement and migration of species 10 Migratory fish are particularly badly hit being rendered unable to move upstream or downstream between their spawning grounds and areas used at other times in their life cycle The construction of the Iron Gates had a major impact on the local fauna and flora as well for example the spawning routes of several species of sturgeon were permanently interrupted Beluga sturgeon was the largest and the largest specimen was recorded in 1793 at 500 kg 1 100 lb 11 There have also been significant regional economic impacts notably on the productivity of Danube fisheries 12 The status of the Danube s migratory fish species is a strong indicator of the ecological health of the entire Danube River Basin which in turn has wider economic and strategic consequences The flora and fauna as well as the geomorphological archaeological and cultural historical artifacts of the Iron Gates have been under the protection of both nations since the construction of the dam In Serbia this was done with the Đerdap National Park since 1974 636 08 km2 245 59 sq mi and in Romania by the Porțile de Fier National Park since 2001 1 156 55 km2 446 55 sq mi History editPrehistoric and Roman era edit Sandstone statues dated to the early Neolithic era indicate that the area has been inhabited for a very long time Even more significant are the Iron Gates Mesolithic c 13 000 to 5 000 BP sites in particular the gorge of Gospodjin Vir which contains the major archaeological site of Lepenski Vir unearthed in the 1960s Lepenski Vir is often regarded as the most important Mesolithic site in south east Europe East of the Great Kazan the Roman emperor Trajan built the legendary bridge erected by Apollodorus of Damascus Construction of the bridge ran from 103 through 105 preceding Trajan s final conquest of Dacia On the right Serbian bank a Roman plaque commemorates him On the Romanian bank at the Small Kazan a likeness of Decebalus Trajan s Dacian opponent was carved in rock in 1994 2004 John Hunyadi and his 15 000 men defeated the 80 000 strong army of Beylerbey Sehabeddin at Zajkany today s Zeicani near the Iron Gate of the Danube river in 1442 13 Ada Kaleh edit Main article Ada Kaleh nbsp Ada Kaleh in the 19th century Perhaps the most evocative consequence of the Đerdap dam s construction was the flooding of an islet named Ada Kaleh A former Turkish exclave it had a mosque and a thousand twisting alleys and was known as a free port and smuggler s nest Many other ethnic groups lived there beside Turks The island was about 3 km 1 9 mi downstream from Orșova and measured 1 7 by 0 4 0 5 km It was walled the Austrians built a fort there in 1669 to defend it from the Turks and that fort would remain a bone of contention for the two empires In 1699 the island came under Turkish control from 1716 to 1718 it was Austrian after a four month siege in 1738 it was Turkish again followed by the Austrians reconquering it in 1789 only to have to yield it to the Turks in the following peace treaty nbsp Ada Kaleh in 1912 Thereafter the island lost its military importance The 1878 Congress of Berlin forced the Ottoman Empire to retreat far into the south but the island remained the property of the Turkish sultan allegedly because the treaty neglected to mention it The inhabitants enjoyed exemption from taxes and customs and were not conscripted In 1923 when the Ottoman monarchy had disappeared the island was given to Romania in the Treaty of Lausanne The Ada Kaleh mosque dated from 1903 and was built on the site of an earlier Franciscan monastery The mosque s carpet a gift from the Turkish sultan Abdulhamid II has been located in the Constanța mosque since 1965 Most Ada Kaleh inhabitants emigrated to Turkey after the evacuation of the island A smaller part went to Northern Dobruja another Romanian territory with a Turkish minority 19th century s Hungarian initiatives edit By the early 19th century freedom of navigation on the Danube was regarded as important by many different states in the region and beyond Allowing passage through the Iron Gates by larger vessels had become a priority By 1831 a plan had been drafted to make the passage navigable at the initiative of Hungarian politician Istvan Szechenyi Not being satisfied with the solutions compiled by the Austrio Hungarian government and the Austro Turkish commission the government of Hungary formed its own commission for the organization of the navigation through the Iron Gates The project was finished in 1883 citation needed Appointed in 1883 and again in 1886 Minister of Trade and Transportation Gabor Baross Hungary s Iron Minister presided over modernization projects at Hungary s sea port in Fiume Rijeka and regulation of the Upper Danube and Iron Gate 14 Works on the gorge section were done by the Hungarian Technical Administration over 11 years from 1889 The works were divided in two sectors the upper and the lower Iron Gates The channels in the upper section at the town of Orșova the tripoint between Austria Hungary Romania and Serbia at the time were up to 60 m 197 ft wide and 2 m 7 ft deep at the zero water level in Orșova In the southern section the channels were 60 m 197 ft wide and 3 m 10 ft deep except for the Sip Channel which was 73 m 240 ft wide 7 In 1890 near Orșova the last border town of Hungary rocks were cleared by explosion over a 2 km 1 2 mi stretch in order to create channels A spur of the Greben Ridge was removed across a length of over 2 km 1 2 mi Here a depth of 2 m 7 ft sufficed On 17 September 1896 the Sip Channel thus created named after the Serbian Sip village on the right bank was inaugurated by the Austro Hungarian emperor Franz Joseph the Romanian king Carol I and the Serbian king Alexander Obrenovich 7 8 9 Cultural references to the Iron Gates editLiterature edit A plan to blow up the Iron Gates gorge and thereby block the Danube grain trade is included in the proposed acts of sabotage in the Balkan Trilogy section of the Fortunes of War novels 1960 1980 by Olivia Manning A similar plot device to prevent oil barges reaching Nazi Germany is used by Dennis Wheatley in his 1946 Duke de Richleau novel Codeword Golden Fleece Two novels The Valley of Horses 1982 and The Plains of Passage 1990 in Jean M Auel s series Earth s Children focus on the difficulties of prehistoric people traveling through or around the Iron Gates in both during scene sequences detailing travel adventures whilst the protagonists navigate between the upper and lower Danube valleys The 1986 book Between the Woods and the Water by travel writer Patrick Leigh Fermor describes a night on the now submerged island Ada Kaleh and a trip by ferry through the Iron Gates in August 1934 The 2016 book Threads The Fabric of Family Lives Pulled Apart By War by D W Hoffman 2016 describes a daring escape attempt by Czech refugees hoping to reach Palestine in August of 1940 aboard a derelict paddlewheel steamer They were detained at Donji by the Serbs and later the Bulgarians and Romanians all of whom were afraid to allow the craft to pass fearing it would sink in the Iron Gates and block critical wartime traffic Mor Jokai s 1872 novel The Man with the Golden Touch starts with a lengthy description of the gorge Many of the main characters are introduced during a voyage through the Iron Gates on a merchant vessel towed up the river Film edit The 2003 film Donau Duna Dunaj Dunav Dunarea contains several minutes of film of the Iron Gates Music edit The Iron Gates are mentioned in the second verse of the Zvonko Bogdan song Rastao sam pored Dunava The folk song Jugoslavijo by Milutin Popovic commonly called Od Vardara pa do Triglava includes a mention of the Iron Gates in the beginning Gallery edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Ponicova cave nbsp Mraconia Monastery nbsp nbsp Iron Gates Museum nbsp Iron Gate on the Danube painting by Laszlo Mednyanszky in 1890 s See also editThree Gorges similar gorges on the Yangtze River also affected by large dams Tourism in Romania Seven Wonders of Romania Commissions of the Danube River International river management bodies Danube River Conference of 1948 International diplomatic meeting Defile geography Narrow pass or gorge between mountains or hills Energy in RomaniaReferences edit UNESCO designates 15 new Geoparks in Asia Europe and Latin America UNESCO 2020 07 10 Retrieved 2020 07 13 Dimitrije Bukvic 19 July 2020 Đerdap prvi srpski geopark Đerdap first Serbian geopark Politika in Serbian p 9 Sormaz Andela 5 May 2020 Lepenski Vir World History Encyclopedia Retrieved 29 July 2020 The overall architecture at Lepenski Vir is of a specific shape with all the houses built according to a plan The Seat of War on the Danube The Times December 29 page 8 Dimitrije Bukvic 3 July 2017 Mitovi i legende iza gvozdenih vrata Myths and legends from behind the iron doors Politika in Serbian p 08 Da li znate Kako su nekada zvali sprovodnike laђa na Ђerdapu Do you know how the Đerdap navigators were used to be called Politika in Serbian 31 January 2018 p 32 a b c d e Da li znate Kada je regulisana plovidba kroz đerdapski sektor Do you know When was the navigation through the Iron Gates sector regulated Politika in Serbian p 30 8 October 2017 a b Sipska lokomotiva i locovi na Dunavu Sip locomotive and locs on the Danube in Serbian Biblioteka Centar za Kulturu Kladovo 4 December 2015 a b Miroslav Stefanovic 14 January 2018 Politikin vremeplov Kako јe Sipskim kanalom ukroћen Dunav Politika s chronicle How the Sip Canal tamed the Danube Politika Magazin No 1059 in Serbian pp 28 29 Claudio Comoglio 2011 FAO Scoping mission at Iron Gates I and II dams Romania and Serbia Preliminary assessment of the feasibility for providing free passage to migratory fish species PDF Miroslav Stefanovic 22 April 2018 Megdani alasa i riba grdosiјa Fights between the fishermen and the giant fishes Politika Magazin No 1073 in Serbian pp 28 29 Holcik Juraj 1989 The freshwater fishes of Europe Vol I Part II General introduction to fishes Wiesbaden Aula Verlag Banlaky Jozsef A vaskapui diadal 1442 julius havaban The Triumph of the Iron Gate in July 1442 A magyar nemzet hadtortenelme The Military History of the Hungarian Nation in Hungarian Budapest THE HISTORY OF PASSENGER NAVIGATION IN HUNGARY MFTR 1895 MAHART 1955 MAHART PassNave 1994 MAHART PassNave Retrieved 8 June 2019 Further reading editBonsall Clive Lennon Rosemary McSweeney Kathleen Stewart Catriona Harkness Douglas Boronean Vasile Bartosiewicz Laszlo Payton Robert Chapman John 1997 Mesolithic and Early Neolithic in the Iron Gates A Paiaeodietary Perspective Journal of European Archaeology 5 1 50 92 doi 10 1179 096576697800703575 Archived from the original on 2013 01 26 Bonsall C Cook G T Hedges R E M Higham T F G Pickard C Radovanovic I 2004 Radiocarbon and stable isotope evidence of dietary change from the Mesolithic to the Middle Ages in the iron gates New results from Lepenski Vir Radiocarbon 46 1 293 300 doi 10 1017 S0033822200039606 hdl 1808 16275 Teodoru Cristian Wehrli Bernhard 2005 Retention of Sediments and Nutrients in the Iron Gate I Reservoir on the Danube River Biogeochemistry 76 3 539 65 doi 10 1007 s10533 005 0230 6 hdl 20 500 11850 57912 Micic Vesna Kruge Michael Korner Petra Bujalski Nicole Hofmann Thilo 2010 Organic geochemistry of Danube River sediments from Pancevo Serbia to the Iron Gate dam Serbia Romania Organic Geochemistry 41 9 971 4 doi 10 1016 j orggeochem 2010 05 008 Roksandic Mirjana Djuric Marija Rakocevic Zoran Seguin Kimberly 2006 Interpersonal violence at Lepenski Vir Mesolithic Neolithic complex of the Iron Gates Gorge Serbia Romania American Journal of Physical Anthropology 129 3 339 48 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20286 PMID 16323188 Boric Dusan Miracle Preston 2004 Mesolithic and Neolithic Dis Continuities in the Danube Gorges New Ams Dates from Padina and Hajducka Vodenica Serbia Oxford Journal of Archaeology 23 4 341 71 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0092 2004 00215 x Bonsall Clive 2008 The Mesolithic of the Iron Gates In Bailey Geoff Spikins Penny eds Mesolithic Europe Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 238 79 ISBN 978 0 521 85503 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iron Gate Danube in Romanian Porțile de Fier National Park in Serbian Iron Gates in 1965 on YouTube in Serbian Lepenski Vir in German Ada Kaleh die Inselfestung also the source of the Ada Kaleh section in this article 44 40 16 N 22 31 47 E 44 67111 N 22 52972 E 44 67111 22 52972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron Gates amp oldid 1219461775, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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