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Tulcea

Tulcea (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈtult͡ʃe̯a]; also known by other alternative names) is a city in Northern Dobruja, Romania. It is the administrative center of Tulcea County, and had a population of 65,624 as of 2021. One village, Tudor Vladimirescu, is administered by the city.

Tulcea
Location in Tulcea County
Tulcea
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 45°11′24″N 28°48′0″E / 45.19000°N 28.80000°E / 45.19000; 28.80000
CountryRomania
CountyTulcea
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2024) Ștefan Ilie[1] (PNL)
Area
177.24 km2 (68.43 sq mi)
Elevation
30 m (100 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-01)[2]
65,624
 • Density370/km2 (960/sq mi)
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Postal code
820002–820249
Area code(+40) 02 40
Vehicle reg.TL
Websitewww.primaria-tulcea.ro

Names edit

The city is known in Bulgarian, Russian and Ukrainian as Тулча, romanized: Tulcha; in Greek as Αιγισσός, romanized: Aigissós; in Hungarian as Tulcsa;[3] and in Turkish as Tulça.

History edit

 
Ruins of Aegyssus

Tulcea was founded in the 7th century B.C.[citation needed] under the name of Aegyssus, mentioned in the documents of Procopius[4] and Diodorus of Sicily (3rd century BC). In his Ex Ponto, Ovid recorded a local tradition that ascribed its name to a mythical founder, Aegisos the Caspian.

After the fighting from 12–15 AD the Romans conquered the town. They rebuilt it after their plans, their technique and architectural vision, reorganizing it. The fortified town was mentioned as late as the 10th century, in documents such as Notitia Episcopatuum or De Thematibus.

Under Byzantine rule beginning with the 5th century AD the town was abandoned by the first half of the 7th century due to the Barbarian invasions.[5] The former settlement's territory fell under the rule of the Bulgarian Empire (681-c.1000; 1185-14th century).[6][7][8][9] Inhabitation was restored in the second half of the 10th century, as the Byzantines built a fortress on the spot after reconquering the region. The fortress was soon destroyed in 1064 by an attack of the Uzes, however some inhabitation continued.[5] A settlement, larger than the one in the 11th century, is archaeologically attested beginning with the 14th century. The Ottoman rule was imposed around 1420, and would last for the following four centuries.[5]

The town was first documented under its modern name in 1506, in the Ottoman customs records. On that occasion it was described as an "important centre for the transit trade".[5]

Around 1848, it was still a small shipyard city, being awarded city status in 1860, when it became a province capital. It became a sanjak centre in Silistre Eyaleti in 1860 and Tuna Vilayeti in 1864.

In 1853, The Times of London noted that "Toultcha" was "the last fortified place held by the Turks on the Danube, and which has a garrison of 1,200 men."[10]

During the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, Northern Dobruja and specially Tulcea would be the sites of massacres and conflicts between Muslim Circassians and Christian Bulgarians, Russians, and Ukrainians. The Circassians of Dobruja had settled there in 1864 after the Circassian genocide, and through their raids to other peoples of the region and handing over part of their gains to the Ottoman authorities, they would end up indirectly financing the construction of buildings that still stand in Tulcea today: the modern Tulcea Art Museum and the Azizyie Mosque. The Dobrujan Circassians were expelled from the region after the end of the war.[11]

In 1878, after the end of the war, Tulcea was awarded to Romania, together with the rest of Northern Dobruja (see Congress of Berlin). Tulcea was occupied by the Central Powers between 1916–1918 during World War I, and became part of their condominium following the Treaty of Bucharest in May 1918 (until November 1918). During that time, the statue of Mircea the Elder was taken down by Bulgarian troops, since during his reign Dobruja was incorporated into Wallachia.[12]

Demographics edit

According to the 2021 census, Tulcea has a population of 65,624. At the 2011 census it had 73,707 inhabitants, 93.2% of which were ethnic Romanian. Significant minority groups included Lipovans (2.6%), Roma (1.4%), and Turks (1.2%). Most of the indigenous Bulgarians left the town in 1941 in accordance with the Treaty of Craiova.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1912 21,727—    
1930 20,403−6.1%
1948 21,642+6.1%
1956 24,639+13.8%
1966 35,561+44.3%
1977 61,729+73.6%
1992 97,904+58.6%
2002 92,762−5.3%
2011 73,707−20.5%
2021 65,624−11.0%
Source: Census data
Ethnicity 2011
Total known 65,945
Romanian 61,451 (93.2%)
Lipovan Russians 1,738 (2.6%)
Roma/Gypsy 953 (1.4%)
Turks 819 (1.2%)
Ukrainians 376 (0.5%)
Greeks 208 (0.3%)
Others 400 (0.6%)
Unknown 7762

Culture edit

Tulcea is the site of the "George Georgescu Contest", a music competition created by teachers at the Tulcea Arts High School and held annually since 1992. Named in honor of the conductor George Georgescu (1887–1964), an important figure in the development of Romanian classical music who was born in the Tulcea county, the contest was at first open only to Romanian music school and high school students but began admitting international students in 1995. Organizers include the Romanian Ministry of Education and Youth, the Education Board of Tulcea County, the Tulcea County Council, the Tulcea Mayoralty, and surviving members of Georgescu's family.[13]

 
Port of Tulcea (2016)
 
Tulcea at the end of the 19th century

The Monument of Independence represents one of the main attractions of the city, because of its placement and of the panoramic view that it offers. It is located on the same hill as the ruins of Aegyssus and the history museum. The monument itself is represented by an obelisk with a statue of an eagle on one side and the statue of a soldier on the other. The monument was erected to commemorate the War of Independence that made Dobruja part of Romania. Construction began on 17 October 1879, in the presence of Prince Carol I of Romania.[14]

 
The Monument of independence - Tulcea
 
The city viewed from the top of the monument hill at night

The main high school is the Spiru Haret Dobrujan College.

Notable people edit

Twin towns – sister cities edit

Tulcea is twinned with:[15]

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Results of the 2020 local elections". Central Electoral Bureau. Retrieved 14 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. ^ Alexe, Virginia; Bărbulescu, Gabriela; Dascălu, Violeta; Ioniță, Daniela (2021). Földrajz: Tankönyv a IV. osztály számára [Geography: Textbook for grade four] (PDF) (in Hungarian). Translated by Opra, Zsuzsanna-Maria; Albert, Andreea; Deregan, Sidonia. Bucharest: Litera. ISBN 978-606-33-8271-0. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  4. ^ Procopius, On Buildings, §4.7.1
  5. ^ a b c d Stănică, Aurel (2004). "Tulcea. Un centru economic la Dunărea de Jos în secolul al XVI-lea". Peuce. S.N. Tulcea: Institutul de Cercetări Eco-Muzeale. II(XV): 199. ISSN 0258-8102.
  6. ^ Theophanes, ibid., p.357-358
  7. ^ Nicephorus, ibid., p.34
  8. ^ Laiou, A. E. Constantinople and the Latins (Foreign Policy of Andronicus II, 1282-1328). Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1972.
  9. ^ Brătianu, G. I., Les Bulgares à Cetatea Albă (Akkerman) au debut du XIVeme siècle-Byz, 2, 1926, 153-168
  10. ^ "The Seat of War on the Danube", The Times, December 29, page 8
  11. ^ Tița, Diana (16 September 2018). "Povestea dramatică a cerchezilor din Dobrogea". Historia (in Romanian).
  12. ^ Fati, Sabina (11 June 2020). "Ștergerea memoriei sau rescrierea istoriei. Când a dărâmat România prima statuie". Europa Liberă România (in Romanian). Radio Free Europe. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  13. ^ Historical notes of Concursul George Georgescu 2008 International Contest for Performing Artists, Tulcea, Romania accessed March 29, 2009 October 6, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ "Monumentul Independenței – Tulcea" (in Romanian). 3 November 2008. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  15. ^ "Strategia de dezvoltare a municipiului Tulcea 2014–2020" (PDF). primariatulcea.ro (in Romanian). Tulcea. p. 89. Retrieved 2020-11-05.

Bibliography

  • Brătianu, G. I., Les Bulgares à Cetatea Albă (Akkerman) au debut du XIVeme siècle-Byz, 2, 1926, 153-168
  • Laiou, A. E., Constantinople and the Latins (Foreign Policy of Andronicus II, 1282–1328). Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1972.
  • Nicephorus, p. 34
  • Theophanes, p. 357-358

External links edit

  • Tulcea City Hall


tulcea, administrative, subdivision, county, romanian, pronunciation, ˈtult, also, known, other, alternative, names, city, northern, dobruja, romania, administrative, center, county, population, 2021, update, village, tudor, vladimirescu, administered, city, m. For the administrative subdivision see Tulcea County Tulcea Romanian pronunciation ˈtult ʃe a also known by other alternative names is a city in Northern Dobruja Romania It is the administrative center of Tulcea County and had a population of 65 624 as of 2021 update One village Tudor Vladimirescu is administered by the city TulceaMunicipalityCoat of armsLocation in Tulcea CountyTulceaLocation in RomaniaCoordinates 45 11 24 N 28 48 0 E 45 19000 N 28 80000 E 45 19000 28 80000CountryRomaniaCountyTulceaGovernment Mayor 2020 2024 Ștefan Ilie 1 PNL Area177 24 km2 68 43 sq mi Elevation30 m 100 ft Population 2021 12 01 2 65 624 Density370 km2 960 sq mi Time zoneEET EEST UTC 2 3 Postal code820002 820249Area code 40 02 40Vehicle reg TLWebsitewww wbr primaria tulcea wbr ro Contents 1 Names 2 History 3 Demographics 4 Culture 5 Notable people 6 Twin towns sister cities 7 References 8 External linksNames editThe city is known in Bulgarian Russian and Ukrainian as Tulcha romanized Tulcha in Greek as Aigissos romanized Aigissos in Hungarian as Tulcsa 3 and in Turkish as Tulca History edit nbsp Ruins of AegyssusTulcea was founded in the 7th century B C citation needed under the name of Aegyssus mentioned in the documents of Procopius 4 and Diodorus of Sicily 3rd century BC In his Ex Ponto Ovid recorded a local tradition that ascribed its name to a mythical founder Aegisos the Caspian After the fighting from 12 15 AD the Romans conquered the town They rebuilt it after their plans their technique and architectural vision reorganizing it The fortified town was mentioned as late as the 10th century in documents such as Notitia Episcopatuum or De Thematibus Under Byzantine rule beginning with the 5th century AD the town was abandoned by the first half of the 7th century due to the Barbarian invasions 5 The former settlement s territory fell under the rule of the Bulgarian Empire 681 c 1000 1185 14th century 6 7 8 9 Inhabitation was restored in the second half of the 10th century as the Byzantines built a fortress on the spot after reconquering the region The fortress was soon destroyed in 1064 by an attack of the Uzes however some inhabitation continued 5 A settlement larger than the one in the 11th century is archaeologically attested beginning with the 14th century The Ottoman rule was imposed around 1420 and would last for the following four centuries 5 The town was first documented under its modern name in 1506 in the Ottoman customs records On that occasion it was described as an important centre for the transit trade 5 Around 1848 it was still a small shipyard city being awarded city status in 1860 when it became a province capital It became a sanjak centre in Silistre Eyaleti in 1860 and Tuna Vilayeti in 1864 In 1853 The Times of London noted that Toultcha was the last fortified place held by the Turks on the Danube and which has a garrison of 1 200 men 10 During the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 Northern Dobruja and specially Tulcea would be the sites of massacres and conflicts between Muslim Circassians and Christian Bulgarians Russians and Ukrainians The Circassians of Dobruja had settled there in 1864 after the Circassian genocide and through their raids to other peoples of the region and handing over part of their gains to the Ottoman authorities they would end up indirectly financing the construction of buildings that still stand in Tulcea today the modern Tulcea Art Museum and the Azizyie Mosque The Dobrujan Circassians were expelled from the region after the end of the war 11 In 1878 after the end of the war Tulcea was awarded to Romania together with the rest of Northern Dobruja see Congress of Berlin Tulcea was occupied by the Central Powers between 1916 1918 during World War I and became part of their condominium following the Treaty of Bucharest in May 1918 until November 1918 During that time the statue of Mircea the Elder was taken down by Bulgarian troops since during his reign Dobruja was incorporated into Wallachia 12 Demographics editAccording to the 2021 census Tulcea has a population of 65 624 At the 2011 census it had 73 707 inhabitants 93 2 of which were ethnic Romanian Significant minority groups included Lipovans 2 6 Roma 1 4 and Turks 1 2 Most of the indigenous Bulgarians left the town in 1941 in accordance with the Treaty of Craiova Historical populationYearPop 191221 727 193020 403 6 1 194821 642 6 1 195624 639 13 8 196635 561 44 3 197761 729 73 6 199297 904 58 6 200292 762 5 3 201173 707 20 5 202165 624 11 0 Source Census dataEthnicity 2011Total known 65 945Romanian 61 451 93 2 Lipovan Russians 1 738 2 6 Roma Gypsy 953 1 4 Turks 819 1 2 Ukrainians 376 0 5 Greeks 208 0 3 Others 400 0 6 Unknown 7762Culture editTulcea is the site of the George Georgescu Contest a music competition created by teachers at the Tulcea Arts High School and held annually since 1992 Named in honor of the conductor George Georgescu 1887 1964 an important figure in the development of Romanian classical music who was born in the Tulcea county the contest was at first open only to Romanian music school and high school students but began admitting international students in 1995 Organizers include the Romanian Ministry of Education and Youth the Education Board of Tulcea County the Tulcea County Council the Tulcea Mayoralty and surviving members of Georgescu s family 13 nbsp Port of Tulcea 2016 nbsp Tulcea at the end of the 19th centuryThe Monument of Independence represents one of the main attractions of the city because of its placement and of the panoramic view that it offers It is located on the same hill as the ruins of Aegyssus and the history museum The monument itself is represented by an obelisk with a statue of an eagle on one side and the statue of a soldier on the other The monument was erected to commemorate the War of Independence that made Dobruja part of Romania Construction began on 17 October 1879 in the presence of Prince Carol I of Romania 14 nbsp The Monument of independence Tulcea nbsp The city viewed from the top of the monument hill at nightThe main high school is the Spiru Haret Dobrujan College Notable people editCrin Antonescu born 1959 former President of the Senate of Romania and acting President of Romania in 2012 Georges Boulanger 1893 1958 violinist Alexandru Ciucurencu 1903 1977 painter Stefan Karadzha 1840 1868 Bulgarian revolutionary studied in Tulcea and is associated with the town Grigore Moisil 1906 1973 mathematician Dimitar Petkov 1858 1907 Bulgarian Prime Minister Mirela Roznoveanu born 1947 literary critic writer and journalist Valentin Serbu 1934 1994 writer Tora Vasilescu born 1951 actressTwin towns sister cities editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Romania Tulcea is twinned with 15 nbsp Aalborg Denmark nbsp Altena Netherlands nbsp Amasya Turkey nbsp Aprilia Italy nbsp Fratta Polesine Italy nbsp Ilion Greece nbsp Izmail Ukraine nbsp Larnaca Cyprus nbsp Mudanya Turkey nbsp Rovigo Italy nbsp Shumen BulgariaReferences editNotes Results of the 2020 local elections Central Electoral Bureau Retrieved 14 June 2021 Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de varstă pe județe și municipii orașe comune la 1 decembrie 2021 XLS National Institute of Statistics Alexe Virginia Bărbulescu Gabriela Dascălu Violeta Ioniță Daniela 2021 Foldrajz Tankonyv a IV osztaly szamara Geography Textbook for grade four PDF in Hungarian Translated by Opra Zsuzsanna Maria Albert Andreea Deregan Sidonia Bucharest Litera ISBN 978 606 33 8271 0 Retrieved 7 August 2022 Procopius On Buildings 4 7 1 a b c d Stănică Aurel 2004 Tulcea Un centru economic la Dunărea de Jos in secolul al XVI lea Peuce S N Tulcea Institutul de Cercetări Eco Muzeale II XV 199 ISSN 0258 8102 Theophanes ibid p 357 358 Nicephorus ibid p 34 Laiou A E Constantinople and the Latins Foreign Policy of Andronicus II 1282 1328 Cambridge Massachusetts 1972 Brătianu G I Les Bulgares a Cetatea Albă Akkerman au debut du XIVeme siecle Byz 2 1926 153 168 The Seat of War on the Danube The Times December 29 page 8 Tița Diana 16 September 2018 Povestea dramatică a cerchezilor din Dobrogea Historia in Romanian Fati Sabina 11 June 2020 Ștergerea memoriei sau rescrierea istoriei Cand a dăramat Romania prima statuie Europa Liberă Romania in Romanian Radio Free Europe Retrieved 3 July 2020 Historical notes of Concursul George Georgescu 2008 International Contest for Performing Artists Tulcea Romania accessed March 29 2009 Archived October 6 2011 at the Wayback Machine Monumentul Independenței Tulcea in Romanian 3 November 2008 Retrieved 31 May 2020 Strategia de dezvoltare a municipiului Tulcea 2014 2020 PDF primariatulcea ro in Romanian Tulcea p 89 Retrieved 2020 11 05 Bibliography Brătianu G I Les Bulgares a Cetatea Albă Akkerman au debut du XIVeme siecle Byz 2 1926 153 168 Laiou A E Constantinople and the Latins Foreign Policy of Andronicus II 1282 1328 Cambridge Massachusetts 1972 Nicephorus p 34 Theophanes p 357 358External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tulcea Tulcea City Hall Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tulcea amp oldid 1175923963, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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