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Tâmpa (Brașov)

Tâmpa (German: Zinne, or Kapellenberg; Hungarian: Cenk; Latin: Mons Cinum) is a mountain, part of the Postăvarul Massif, located in the southern part of the Eastern Carpathians (alternatively categorized as in the Curvature Carpathians) and almost entirely surrounded by the city of Brașov. Its elevation is 960 m (955 m according to some sources), almost 400 m above the city.

Tâmpa
Highest point
Elevation960 m (3,150 ft)
Prominence~350 m
Coordinates45°38′N 25°35′E / 45.633°N 25.583°E / 45.633; 25.583
Geography
LocationBrașov, Romania
Parent rangeCurvature Carpathians, Eastern Carpathians

The mountain is mostly made up of limestone formations, having risen up gradually from the Earth's crust.

Most of the mountain (1.5 km²) is a declared nature reserve, due to the rare animal species (bears, birds, butterflies—35% of Romanian butterfly species) and plant species (a rare Liverleaf variety, Transylvanian Windgrass) that are found there. A number of routes to the summit exist: there are 25 winding paths cut in 1837 by Brașov's forest administration; Gabony's stairs; the Knights' road, dating to the days of the Brașovia citadel; and an auto road. A cable car makes the journey between the cabin/restaurant Casa Pădurarului at the base of the mountain to the Restaurantul Panoramic, on its crest, in under three minutes. The view from the summit is spectacular, offering a panoramic view of the city; on a clear day, the entire Burzenland is visible.

Tâmpa's flora and fauna Edit

Plants Edit

 
Lady's slipper
 
Acorns
 
Common raven
 
Lynx
Common name Latin name
Braveheart's cross Hepatica transsilvanica
Common dogwood Cornus sanguinea
Common elder Sambucus nigra
Common hazel Corylus avellana
Cowslip Primula officinalis
Dwarf almond Amigdalus nana
European ash Fraxinus excelsior
European beech Fagus sylvatica
European cornel Cornus mas
European hornbeam Carpinus betulus
European larch Larix decidua
Feather grass Stipa pennata
Forking larkspur Consolida regalis
Ground cherry Prunus fruticosa
Iris Iris germanica
Lady's slipper Cypripedium calceolus
Large-leaved linden Tilia platyphyllos
Limestone's crown Spiraea crenata
Mountain elm Ulmus montana
Norway spruce Picea abies
Pedunculate oak Quercus robur
Rabbit's tail Sesleria rigida
Scots pine Pinus sylvestris
Silver plantain Plantago argentea
Spotted tulip Fritillaria meleagroides
Transylvanian windgrass Bromus marcensis
Wild hyacinth Hyacinthus orientalis
Wolfsbane Aconitum
Wood anemone Anemone nemorosa

Animals Edit

 
Brown bear
 
Gray wolf
Common name Latin name
Brown bear Ursus arctos
Butterflies Papilionoidea
Common raven Corvus corax
Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx
European viper Vipera berus
Golden eagle Aquila chrysaetos
Gray wolf Canis lupus
Red squirrel Sciurus vulgaris
Other birds Aves
17 rare wasp species Apocrita

Etymology Edit

 
Big Tâmpa and Little Tâmpa

The etymology of the word Tâmpa, a name shared by several mountains, has been much discussed among Romanian linguists. Nicolae Drăganu started from the observation that Albanian and southern Italian dialects as well as Catalan have very similar words meaning "boulder", "hillock" or "rocky incline". He then proposed a pre-Roman, Thracian origin (*timpa), meaning "strait, mountain valley" and "mountain, rocky mountain". He was unclear as to whether the word entered Romanian directly or through Latin. Constantin Diculescu accepted the theory without important changes, pointing out that τὑμφα means "hillock" in Doric Greek.[1]

However, Drăganu's theory was contested. Ovid Densusianu raised phonetic objections as to the link between Tâmpa and the Catalan timpes. Gustav Weigand declared that the toponym simply derived from the adjective tâmp, a word of Old Bulgarian origin signifying "worn down, leveled". Somewhat earlier, Alexandru Philippide had expressed the same opinion ("In reality Tâmpa is probably the adjective tâmp). Drăganu published a new article defending his thesis, bringing in new facts.[1]

Iorgu Iordan was hesitant to embrace one hypothesis: he noted that the physical nature of the places called Tâmpa, which tend to be sharp mountains, favors Drăganu, as does the striking phonetic and semantic resemblance between the Romanian term and those in other languages. He notes, too, the existence of a noun, tâmpă, meaning "a very extensive mountainside, rocky and with a very abrupt descent"; also appearing as tâmp, it can mean "a hill or mountain abruptly rising to a great distance above flat land". However, he notes the difficulty of making assumptions about the obscure languages spoken prior to the Roman conquest of Dacia. He also points out that mountains are often named after particular characteristics, a fact that generally points to an origin in the adjective tâmp.[1]

History Edit

The oldest human traces on Tâmpa date to the time of the Dacians. On Tâmpa, archeologists have discovered a bone pit from that period, indicating that a pagan cult was practiced there.

Through the years, Tâmpa has been relatively safe from natural disasters like mudslides or earthquakes. The most severe damage has been caused by fires, particularly those of 1689, 1731, 1860, 1880 and 1946.

 
20th century drawing of Brașovia Citadel

Brașovia Citadel was one of the seven castles that provided the German name for Transylvania: Siebenbürgen. The building, located between the peak and the crest of Tâmpa, is presumed to have been raised in the time of the Teutonic Knights (1212–1218), or if not, was certainly fortified then. In 1241, several Brașov families were able to shelter themselves there from Tatar raids. In 1397, before the war against the Turks began, Mircea I of Wallachia placed his family safe in the citadel. In 1421, the people of Brașov took refuge in the citadel, threatened as they were by Sultan Murad II. That year, the citadel was given as surety to the sultan, as the Turks dominated the city from on high. Thus, the fortification became dangerous for Brașov's inhabitants and for the entire area. After succeeding in taking it back, with the help of John Hunyadi, the inhabitants decided to demolish it. Its stones were used to fortify the citadel in the valley, then just being built.

 
Ruins of the citadel

The citadel was made of stone, with a small polygonal tower on the west side, on Tâmpa's peak. Along the walls were found small towers for defence. Within the southern walls, traces of small rooms have been discovered. There was also a deep well and a chapel inside. As the fortification was surrounded by precipices on three sides and was well-defended on its fourth, it was one of the most difficult to capture in Transylvania (indeed in all of Europe), and was in fact never occupied by force, only being handed over through treaties. Provisions were brought to it by people from a narrow valley called Cutun, to which it was linked by Drumul Cavalerilor (the Knights' Road). Around 1910, Costantin Lacea wrote that "even today the Romanian populace, especially the Costeni (inhabitants of Coastei and Costiței Streets), led by Junii Curcani ("the Young Turkeys"), go out the day after Pentecost up to the Citadel on Tâmpa, near the Cross of Cutun, and celebrate there. The old people tell how when they were young they used to play up in the Citadel on Tâmpa".

 
Ruins of Turnul Cizmarilor, with a portion of the wall

In the 15th century, two watchtowers were built at the base of Tâmpa, linked to the citadel through a series of walls, which, taken together, extended from the towers to the peak of the mountain. Probably left to decay after the introduction of firearms, the two towers were demolished in the 18th century (two engravings from that century show Tâmpa first with, then without them). Turnul Cuțitarilor (the Knife-Makers' Tower), located to the right of Bastionul Ţesătorilor (the Weavers' Bastion), offered an open view toward the valley (Șchei). No trace of it exists today. Turnul Cizmarilor (the Boot-Makers' Tower), located above Bastionul Postăvarilor (the Drapers' Bastion), dominated Blumăna and Curmătura (the area between Tâmpa and Dealul Melcilor – "the Hill of Snails"). Today, the tower's platform, as well as a good part of the base of the linking wall built on the mountain, still remain.

On the map prepared by Giovanni Morando Visconti in 1699, one can see a cross above Brașov, on the peak of Tâmpa. The Saxon author Thomas Tartler confirms this; he wrote, "there was a cross as big as a crucifix, as the Papists have called Tâmpa the Hill of the Cross (Kreutzberg)". The cross belonged to the Romanians from Șchei, who would raise (with or without the citadel authorities' approval) crosses all through the valley, sometimes even at very short distances from the city walls. One chronicle states that the Tâmpa cross was built on August 2, 1696, attributing it to the carpenters of Emperor Hussein.[2]

 
The Chapel (upper left), as depicted in a 1750 engraving

Around 1714 (according to other sources 1696 or 1718), the Brașov senator Johann Draudt, having converted to Catholicism, raised a chapel on Tâmpa, dedicated to Saint Leonard. After this was built, in stages, thieves or Lutherans robbed or desecrated the house of worship. On June 10, 1737, the day after Pentecost, at three in the afternoon, "lightning struck the chapel, in front of the altar, hitting a Papist German tailor and his wife, who had taken shelter there... Their dog was also struck". In time, only ruins were left of the chapel. For a long time afterward, Tâmpa was called Chapel Hill (Kapellenberg in German). Often, the Romanians of Șchei were blamed for the chapel's destruction: one writer said that they broke its door, hurled it into the valley, and stole several objects from within.[2][3]

In 1849, after the Imperial Russian intervention in support of the Austrian Monarchy (see Hungarian Revolution of 1848), Tâmpa became home to a pyramid-shaped monument, raised on the initiative of Lieutenant General von Hassfort and bearing the inscription Rusia et Austria unitæ MDXXXIL ("Russia and Austria united 1849"). Heavily damaged by either natural causes or, according to George Bariţ, human intervention ("adverse hands"), the pyramid was ultimately removed by Austro-Hungarian authorities on April 7, 1869.[2]

 
Schützenhaus - beginning of the 20th century

After 1865, Tâmpa housed the Schützenhaus (the "Shooting range"), soon a favorite with the city's male population. Aside from fire practice, the location had a bowling lane and a restaurant; it was decorated with numerous hunting trophies and mannequins dressed in plate armors. The building was badly damaged by a 1916 fire, and for a long time remained derelict. Ultimately, the Dr. Nicolae Rucăreanu High School of Silviculture was raised on the location — the plot remains disputed between the Evangelical Church and the city of Brașov.

 
Árpád's statue, 19th century

In 1896, upon celebrating the 1000th anniversary of Magyar tribes settling in Pannonia under the leadership of Árpád (see Pannonian basin before Hungary), seven commemorative statues were raised throughout the Kingdom of Hungary. On this occasion, a monumental column topped by the statue of a Magyar archer — popularly identified with Árpád himself —, was erected on Tâmpa, causing controversy inside the Romanian community. Stone used for the monument had been transported up the slope by a funicular, and the completed monument featured a lightning rod; overall, it cost 22,585 florins to build.[3]

The new monument was first damaged by a bomb placed at its base, an attack carried out by two terrorists against Hungarian rule (Ilie Cătărău and Timofei Kirilov) in September, 1913. In December of the same year, the monument was heavily damaged by a thunderstorm: the "Árpád statue" fell from atop the column and shattered into pieces. In 1916, the remaining parts were detonated by the Romanian Army during its World War I advance into Transylvania (see Romanian Campaign). The statue's debris was removed by Communist Romanian authorities in 1966, and the head is preserved by the Parish House of the Reformed Church in Brașov. Tâmpa still houses the base of the monument.

 
Béthlen Restaurant, initial look
 
Béthlen Restaurant, after enlargement

Around 1890, the mountain became home to a restaurant and public house, owned by the patrons of the Schützenhaus and named Béthlen (or Béthlen Grotto) in 1891, in honour of a Hungarian minister who had visited the city during that year. Supplied every day by the tenant, who led his donkey up 25 serpentine windings, it became a regular spot for city residents who were attracted by the panoramic scenery of Brașov at nighttime; in 1905, it was equipped with a terrace reaching over the steep slope. The restaurant's name was changed to Cabana-restaurant "Tâmpa" ("The Tâmpa Cabin-Restaurant") in 1948. On March 23, 1977, the entire building burned down following an accident. The terrace and stone recipients for beer are still in place; in 2001, the Brașov County Council erected a marble cross on the perimeter; the lit sign bearing the name Brașov was restored in 2006.

 
Brașov Aqueduct

Also in 1891–1892, the Brașov Aqueduct was erected on the Tâmpa ridge, under the direction of engineer Christian Kertsch (best remembered for his Kertsch House in downtown Brașov). Water was carried through ceramic pipes over a great distance, from springs on the other side of Tâmpa. Pipe deterioration eventually forced Brașov authorities to provide the aqueduct with water from the city area (popular myth still has it that water running through the aqueduct is spring water, and, occasionally, people still supply themselves directly from that location). Shards of ceramic pipes and a memorial plaque to the engineer P. Bartusch are still visible on the way to Râpa Dracului (going around the mountain).

 
Casa Pǎdurarului

Casa Pădurarului ("the Woodman's House") is a rustic restaurant located at the base of Tâmpa, about halfway along the pedestrian road there. Built at the beginning of the 20th century, it served as a place of rest for the residents of Brașov who would walk along the promenade below Tâmpa. Near this restaurant, rebuilt in the 2000s after suffering a fire, the cable car starts its course, taking passengers in less than three minutes to the Panoramic restaurant, located atop the mountain.

In 1968–1969, a television tower as well as a restaurant and a cable car were built on Tâmpa's crest. Today, the tower receives a signal from Postăvaru and transmits it to the city below (initially with 10 kW, but today with just 2 kW), while the Panoramic restaurant, situated in a favourable location, offers excellent views of the city from its dining hall. The Aro-Palace society owns the restaurant. The cable car terminus is also located beneath the tower. Before 1989, when tourists exited the cable car, they were met by an enormous stuffed brown bear, standing menacingly on two feet. At the same time as this complex was built, a short distance away, a flagpole was built. In 2004, the Brașov County Council guaranteed festive lighting for it, installing a powerful laser reflector that lights up the sky a good part of every evening.

Stories Edit

The tunnels and the lake Edit

A story has it that there was a tunnel connecting Casa Sfatului with a cave under Șaua Tâmpei, in which German prisoners of war were held during World War I, with both ends of the tunnel blocked.

At the beginning on the 1940s, there was a proposal to dig a tunnel under Mount Tâmpa, to connect the Old City with Valea Cetății neighborhood. After Romania entered World War II, the project was abandoned. During the Communist period, when massive construction projects were undertaken in Răcădău, with over 10,000 apartments built, the plans for the tunnel were resurrected. One such plan, drafted in 1979, envisioned an east–west tunnel, with a length of 842 m, width of 9.8 m, and height of 7.65 m. The construction would have involved excavating 100,000 m³ of rock, at a cost (in 1984) of 163 million lei. Another estimate, done in 2003 by the Brașov County Council, put the cost of building the tunnel ar near 11 million euros.

A long-held belief is that there is a big lake inside the mountain. Drilling the tunnel may lead to flooding the city. Yet no concrete evidence of such a lake has ever been found.

What is known for sure is that there are three or four tunnels under Tâmpa, only one of which is usable at present. This tunnel connects Casa Sfatului with one of the towers of the old citadel (Turnul Cuțitarilor or Bastionul Postăvarilor). Due to the danger of cave-ins the tunnels pose, they are all shut with metal grates. It is said that during the bombing of Romania in World War II, one of the tunnels was blocked by debris, burying alive those people who had taken refuge in there.

The stone bench Edit

 
The stone bench from Tâmpa

At the foot of Tâmpa, along the southeast side of the old fortress walls, there is a tree-lined path—a favorite strolling spot for the inhabitants. Among the wooden benches lining the path, there lies a small bench carved from a rock. It is said that the rock fell from the mountain, burying two lovers that were embracing on that place. A document from 1817 mentions the story, giving the name of the woman killed by the rock as Ana Maria.

Orașul Stalin Edit

On August 19, 1946, there was a big fire on Tâmpa, that burned out parts of the forest covering the mountain. In the early 1950s, after Brașov was renamed Orașul Stalin (see List of places named after Stalin), the authorities started planting fir trees, so that the word "STALIN" would be clearly visible from the city. Over the years, vegetation has blurred the word made out by the trees. Yet, to this day (especially in the winter), one may still distinguish the marking "ALIN" when coming on the road from the Burzenland.[3]

In popular culture Edit

The soccer team FC Brașov is nicknamed Diavolii de sub Tâmpa (The Tâmpa Devils).

Image gallery Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ a b c Iorgu Iordan, Toponimia romînească, p. 133-34. Bucharest: Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Romîne, 1963
  2. ^ a b c Popovici.
  3. ^ a b c Oltean.

Bibliography Edit

  • Brașovul de altădată — Sextil Pușcariu, Ed. Dacia, Cluj-Napoca, 1977
  • Brașov • ghid turistic — Silviu Pop, Ștefan Princz, Ed. Pentru Turism, Bucharest, 1974
  • Zalmoxis - Tempus - Corona, Florin Olteanu, in Karpaten Rundschau, nr. 38-1587-/24.IX.1982

External links Edit

  • "Tâmpa Mountain and Tiberiu Brediceanu Alley", at brasovtravelguide.ro
  • (in Romanian) , by Bogdan Florin Popovici
  • (in Romanian) "Troiţe dispărute", by Vasile Oltean
  • (in Hungarian) About Tâmpa
  • (in Hungarian) Maps of Tâmpa

tâmpa, brașov, tâmpa, german, zinne, kapellenberg, hungarian, cenk, latin, mons, cinum, mountain, part, postăvarul, massif, located, southern, part, eastern, carpathians, alternatively, categorized, curvature, carpathians, almost, entirely, surrounded, city, b. Tampa German Zinne or Kapellenberg Hungarian Cenk Latin Mons Cinum is a mountain part of the Postăvarul Massif located in the southern part of the Eastern Carpathians alternatively categorized as in the Curvature Carpathians and almost entirely surrounded by the city of Brașov Its elevation is 960 m 955 m according to some sources almost 400 m above the city TampaHighest pointElevation960 m 3 150 ft Prominence 350 mCoordinates45 38 N 25 35 E 45 633 N 25 583 E 45 633 25 583GeographyLocationBrașov RomaniaParent rangeCurvature Carpathians Eastern CarpathiansThe mountain is mostly made up of limestone formations having risen up gradually from the Earth s crust Most of the mountain 1 5 km is a declared nature reserve due to the rare animal species bears birds butterflies 35 of Romanian butterfly species and plant species a rare Liverleaf variety Transylvanian Windgrass that are found there A number of routes to the summit exist there are 25 winding paths cut in 1837 by Brașov s forest administration Gabony s stairs the Knights road dating to the days of the Brașovia citadel and an auto road A cable car makes the journey between the cabin restaurant Casa Pădurarului at the base of the mountain to the Restaurantul Panoramic on its crest in under three minutes The view from the summit is spectacular offering a panoramic view of the city on a clear day the entire Burzenland is visible Contents 1 Tampa s flora and fauna 1 1 Plants 1 2 Animals 2 Etymology 3 History 4 Stories 4 1 The tunnels and the lake 4 2 The stone bench 4 3 Orașul Stalin 5 In popular culture 6 Image gallery 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 9 External linksTampa s flora and fauna EditPlants Edit nbsp Lady s slipper nbsp Acorns nbsp Common raven nbsp LynxCommon name Latin nameBraveheart s cross Hepatica transsilvanicaCommon dogwood Cornus sanguineaCommon elder Sambucus nigraCommon hazel Corylus avellanaCowslip Primula officinalisDwarf almond Amigdalus nanaEuropean ash Fraxinus excelsiorEuropean beech Fagus sylvaticaEuropean cornel Cornus masEuropean hornbeam Carpinus betulusEuropean larch Larix deciduaFeather grass Stipa pennataForking larkspur Consolida regalisGround cherry Prunus fruticosaIris Iris germanicaLady s slipper Cypripedium calceolusLarge leaved linden Tilia platyphyllosLimestone s crown Spiraea crenataMountain elm Ulmus montanaNorway spruce Picea abiesPedunculate oak Quercus roburRabbit s tail Sesleria rigidaScots pine Pinus sylvestrisSilver plantain Plantago argenteaSpotted tulip Fritillaria meleagroidesTransylvanian windgrass Bromus marcensisWild hyacinth Hyacinthus orientalisWolfsbane AconitumWood anemone Anemone nemorosaAnimals Edit nbsp Brown bear nbsp Gray wolfCommon name Latin nameBrown bear Ursus arctosButterflies PapilionoideaCommon raven Corvus coraxEurasian lynx Lynx lynxEuropean viper Vipera berusGolden eagle Aquila chrysaetosGray wolf Canis lupusRed squirrel Sciurus vulgarisOther birds Aves17 rare wasp species ApocritaEtymology Edit nbsp Big Tampa and Little TampaThe etymology of the word Tampa a name shared by several mountains has been much discussed among Romanian linguists Nicolae Drăganu started from the observation that Albanian and southern Italian dialects as well as Catalan have very similar words meaning boulder hillock or rocky incline He then proposed a pre Roman Thracian origin timpa meaning strait mountain valley and mountain rocky mountain He was unclear as to whether the word entered Romanian directly or through Latin Constantin Diculescu accepted the theory without important changes pointing out that tὑmfa means hillock in Doric Greek 1 However Drăganu s theory was contested Ovid Densusianu raised phonetic objections as to the link between Tampa and the Catalan timpes Gustav Weigand declared that the toponym simply derived from the adjective tamp a word of Old Bulgarian origin signifying worn down leveled Somewhat earlier Alexandru Philippide had expressed the same opinion In reality Tampa is probably the adjective tamp Drăganu published a new article defending his thesis bringing in new facts 1 Iorgu Iordan was hesitant to embrace one hypothesis he noted that the physical nature of the places called Tampa which tend to be sharp mountains favors Drăganu as does the striking phonetic and semantic resemblance between the Romanian term and those in other languages He notes too the existence of a noun tampă meaning a very extensive mountainside rocky and with a very abrupt descent also appearing as tamp it can mean a hill or mountain abruptly rising to a great distance above flat land However he notes the difficulty of making assumptions about the obscure languages spoken prior to the Roman conquest of Dacia He also points out that mountains are often named after particular characteristics a fact that generally points to an origin in the adjective tamp 1 History EditThe oldest human traces on Tampa date to the time of the Dacians On Tampa archeologists have discovered a bone pit from that period indicating that a pagan cult was practiced there Through the years Tampa has been relatively safe from natural disasters like mudslides or earthquakes The most severe damage has been caused by fires particularly those of 1689 1731 1860 1880 and 1946 nbsp 20th century drawing of Brașovia CitadelBrașovia Citadel was one of the seven castles that provided the German name for Transylvania Siebenburgen The building located between the peak and the crest of Tampa is presumed to have been raised in the time of the Teutonic Knights 1212 1218 or if not was certainly fortified then In 1241 several Brașov families were able to shelter themselves there from Tatar raids In 1397 before the war against the Turks began Mircea I of Wallachia placed his family safe in the citadel In 1421 the people of Brașov took refuge in the citadel threatened as they were by Sultan Murad II That year the citadel was given as surety to the sultan as the Turks dominated the city from on high Thus the fortification became dangerous for Brașov s inhabitants and for the entire area After succeeding in taking it back with the help of John Hunyadi the inhabitants decided to demolish it Its stones were used to fortify the citadel in the valley then just being built nbsp Ruins of the citadelThe citadel was made of stone with a small polygonal tower on the west side on Tampa s peak Along the walls were found small towers for defence Within the southern walls traces of small rooms have been discovered There was also a deep well and a chapel inside As the fortification was surrounded by precipices on three sides and was well defended on its fourth it was one of the most difficult to capture in Transylvania indeed in all of Europe and was in fact never occupied by force only being handed over through treaties Provisions were brought to it by people from a narrow valley called Cutun to which it was linked by Drumul Cavalerilor the Knights Road Around 1910 Costantin Lacea wrote that even today the Romanian populace especially the Costeni inhabitants of Coastei and Costiței Streets led by Junii Curcani the Young Turkeys go out the day after Pentecost up to the Citadel on Tampa near the Cross of Cutun and celebrate there The old people tell how when they were young they used to play up in the Citadel on Tampa nbsp Ruins of Turnul Cizmarilor with a portion of the wallIn the 15th century two watchtowers were built at the base of Tampa linked to the citadel through a series of walls which taken together extended from the towers to the peak of the mountain Probably left to decay after the introduction of firearms the two towers were demolished in the 18th century two engravings from that century show Tampa first with then without them Turnul Cuțitarilor the Knife Makers Tower located to the right of Bastionul Ţesătorilor the Weavers Bastion offered an open view toward the valley Șchei No trace of it exists today Turnul Cizmarilor the Boot Makers Tower located above Bastionul Postăvarilor the Drapers Bastion dominated Blumăna and Curmătura the area between Tampa and Dealul Melcilor the Hill of Snails Today the tower s platform as well as a good part of the base of the linking wall built on the mountain still remain On the map prepared by Giovanni Morando Visconti in 1699 one can see a cross above Brașov on the peak of Tampa The Saxon author Thomas Tartler confirms this he wrote there was a cross as big as a crucifix as the Papists have called Tampa the Hill of the Cross Kreutzberg The cross belonged to the Romanians from Șchei who would raise with or without the citadel authorities approval crosses all through the valley sometimes even at very short distances from the city walls One chronicle states that the Tampa cross was built on August 2 1696 attributing it to the carpenters of Emperor Hussein 2 nbsp The Chapel upper left as depicted in a 1750 engravingAround 1714 according to other sources 1696 or 1718 the Brașov senator Johann Draudt having converted to Catholicism raised a chapel on Tampa dedicated to Saint Leonard After this was built in stages thieves or Lutherans robbed or desecrated the house of worship On June 10 1737 the day after Pentecost at three in the afternoon lightning struck the chapel in front of the altar hitting a Papist German tailor and his wife who had taken shelter there Their dog was also struck In time only ruins were left of the chapel For a long time afterward Tampa was called Chapel Hill Kapellenberg in German Often the Romanians of Șchei were blamed for the chapel s destruction one writer said that they broke its door hurled it into the valley and stole several objects from within 2 3 In 1849 after the Imperial Russian intervention in support of the Austrian Monarchy see Hungarian Revolution of 1848 Tampa became home to a pyramid shaped monument raised on the initiative of Lieutenant General von Hassfort and bearing the inscription Rusia et Austria unitae MDXXXIL Russia and Austria united 1849 Heavily damaged by either natural causes or according to George Bariţ human intervention adverse hands the pyramid was ultimately removed by Austro Hungarian authorities on April 7 1869 2 nbsp Schutzenhaus beginning of the 20th centuryAfter 1865 Tampa housed the Schutzenhaus the Shooting range soon a favorite with the city s male population Aside from fire practice the location had a bowling lane and a restaurant it was decorated with numerous hunting trophies and mannequins dressed in plate armors The building was badly damaged by a 1916 fire and for a long time remained derelict Ultimately the Dr Nicolae Rucăreanu High School of Silviculture was raised on the location the plot remains disputed between the Evangelical Church and the city of Brașov nbsp Arpad s statue 19th centuryIn 1896 upon celebrating the 1000th anniversary of Magyar tribes settling in Pannonia under the leadership of Arpad see Pannonian basin before Hungary seven commemorative statues were raised throughout the Kingdom of Hungary On this occasion a monumental column topped by the statue of a Magyar archer popularly identified with Arpad himself was erected on Tampa causing controversy inside the Romanian community Stone used for the monument had been transported up the slope by a funicular and the completed monument featured a lightning rod overall it cost 22 585 florins to build 3 The new monument was first damaged by a bomb placed at its base an attack carried out by two terrorists against Hungarian rule Ilie Cătărău and Timofei Kirilov in September 1913 In December of the same year the monument was heavily damaged by a thunderstorm the Arpad statue fell from atop the column and shattered into pieces In 1916 the remaining parts were detonated by the Romanian Army during its World War I advance into Transylvania see Romanian Campaign The statue s debris was removed by Communist Romanian authorities in 1966 and the head is preserved by the Parish House of the Reformed Church in Brașov Tampa still houses the base of the monument nbsp Bethlen Restaurant initial look nbsp Bethlen Restaurant after enlargementAround 1890 the mountain became home to a restaurant and public house owned by the patrons of the Schutzenhaus and named Bethlen or Bethlen Grotto in 1891 in honour of a Hungarian minister who had visited the city during that year Supplied every day by the tenant who led his donkey up 25 serpentine windings it became a regular spot for city residents who were attracted by the panoramic scenery of Brașov at nighttime in 1905 it was equipped with a terrace reaching over the steep slope The restaurant s name was changed to Cabana restaurant Tampa The Tampa Cabin Restaurant in 1948 On March 23 1977 the entire building burned down following an accident The terrace and stone recipients for beer are still in place in 2001 the Brașov County Council erected a marble cross on the perimeter the lit sign bearing the name Brașov was restored in 2006 nbsp Brașov AqueductAlso in 1891 1892 the Brașov Aqueduct was erected on the Tampa ridge under the direction of engineer Christian Kertsch best remembered for his Kertsch House in downtown Brașov Water was carried through ceramic pipes over a great distance from springs on the other side of Tampa Pipe deterioration eventually forced Brașov authorities to provide the aqueduct with water from the city area popular myth still has it that water running through the aqueduct is spring water and occasionally people still supply themselves directly from that location Shards of ceramic pipes and a memorial plaque to the engineer P Bartusch are still visible on the way to Rapa Dracului going around the mountain nbsp Casa PǎduraruluiCasa Pădurarului the Woodman s House is a rustic restaurant located at the base of Tampa about halfway along the pedestrian road there Built at the beginning of the 20th century it served as a place of rest for the residents of Brașov who would walk along the promenade below Tampa Near this restaurant rebuilt in the 2000s after suffering a fire the cable car starts its course taking passengers in less than three minutes to the Panoramic restaurant located atop the mountain In 1968 1969 a television tower as well as a restaurant and a cable car were built on Tampa s crest Today the tower receives a signal from Postăvaru and transmits it to the city below initially with 10 kW but today with just 2 kW while the Panoramic restaurant situated in a favourable location offers excellent views of the city from its dining hall The Aro Palace society owns the restaurant The cable car terminus is also located beneath the tower Before 1989 when tourists exited the cable car they were met by an enormous stuffed brown bear standing menacingly on two feet At the same time as this complex was built a short distance away a flagpole was built In 2004 the Brașov County Council guaranteed festive lighting for it installing a powerful laser reflector that lights up the sky a good part of every evening Stories EditThe tunnels and the lake Edit A story has it that there was a tunnel connecting Casa Sfatului with a cave under Șaua Tampei in which German prisoners of war were held during World War I with both ends of the tunnel blocked At the beginning on the 1940s there was a proposal to dig a tunnel under Mount Tampa to connect the Old City with Valea Cetății neighborhood After Romania entered World War II the project was abandoned During the Communist period when massive construction projects were undertaken in Răcădău with over 10 000 apartments built the plans for the tunnel were resurrected One such plan drafted in 1979 envisioned an east west tunnel with a length of 842 m width of 9 8 m and height of 7 65 m The construction would have involved excavating 100 000 m of rock at a cost in 1984 of 163 million lei Another estimate done in 2003 by the Brașov County Council put the cost of building the tunnel ar near 11 million euros A long held belief is that there is a big lake inside the mountain Drilling the tunnel may lead to flooding the city Yet no concrete evidence of such a lake has ever been found What is known for sure is that there are three or four tunnels under Tampa only one of which is usable at present This tunnel connects Casa Sfatului with one of the towers of the old citadel Turnul Cuțitarilor or Bastionul Postăvarilor Due to the danger of cave ins the tunnels pose they are all shut with metal grates It is said that during the bombing of Romania in World War II one of the tunnels was blocked by debris burying alive those people who had taken refuge in there The stone bench Edit nbsp The stone bench from TampaAt the foot of Tampa along the southeast side of the old fortress walls there is a tree lined path a favorite strolling spot for the inhabitants Among the wooden benches lining the path there lies a small bench carved from a rock It is said that the rock fell from the mountain burying two lovers that were embracing on that place A document from 1817 mentions the story giving the name of the woman killed by the rock as Ana Maria Orașul Stalin Edit On August 19 1946 there was a big fire on Tampa that burned out parts of the forest covering the mountain In the early 1950s after Brașov was renamed Orașul Stalin see List of places named after Stalin the authorities started planting fir trees so that the word STALIN would be clearly visible from the city Over the years vegetation has blurred the word made out by the trees Yet to this day especially in the winter one may still distinguish the marking ALIN when coming on the road from the Burzenland 3 In popular culture EditThe soccer team FC Brașov is nicknamed Diavolii de sub Tampa The Tampa Devils Image gallery Edit nbsp Tampa by night panorama nbsp Tampa by night panorama 2 nbsp Tampa bathed in light during summer nbsp winter nbsp Brașov as seen from the summit of TampaNotes Edit a b c Iorgu Iordan Toponimia rominească p 133 34 Bucharest Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Romine 1963 a b c Popovici a b c Oltean Bibliography EditBrașovul de altădată Sextil Pușcariu Ed Dacia Cluj Napoca 1977 Brașov ghid turistic Silviu Pop Ștefan Princz Ed Pentru Turism Bucharest 1974 Zalmoxis Tempus Corona Florin Olteanu in Karpaten Rundschau nr 38 1587 24 IX 1982External links Edit Tampa Mountain and Tiberiu Brediceanu Alley at brasovtravelguide ro in Romanian Muntele Tampa și Simbolurile Sale by Bogdan Florin Popovici in Romanian Troiţe dispărute by Vasile Oltean in Hungarian About Tampa in Hungarian Maps of Tampa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tampa Brașov amp oldid 1150566056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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