Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Romania -- Part 2


 Our hotel in Maramures is a very quaint and rustic family run guesthouse in the little town of Vadu Izei.  At this point we are only about 2-3 miles from the Ukrainian border.  We are staying in the building at the top of the hill just past the garden with its large cabbage patch.  Our guide said that many times the wild boars come down from the hills and feed on the cabbage, but we were not lucky enough to see one.  There is no wi-fi, but Val gave us his from the car so we were at least able to check e-mails.  At this guesthouse we were served both a breakfast and a dinner.  We arrived at the guesthouse about 6 PM and had enough time to get settled in before dinner.  We will spend two nights here.  Dinner was served at 7 PM and consisted of a potato and leek soup (very delicious), a salad plate with cucumbers, pickles, pickled cauliflower, and tomatoes,  and a main meal of pork and potatoes.  Before the meal, Val poured us each a small glass of plum brandy – it is considered a tradition to begin each meal with this drink, and the tradition continues that if you have an empty glass, the host will continue to fill it.  We had been forewarned about plum brandy so we made sure to always leave a little in our glass.  It was like drinking moonshine.  Our host was a very good cook – the meal was simple but delicious.


The next morning the weather was cold and rainy but that did not stop us from our first stop – the unique Sapanta Merry Cemetery.  It is a church graveyard famous for its colorfully painted wooden crosses that adorn each gravesite.  Each cross is unique – the artist who created them is free to write whatever he wants about the deceased on the cross.  Some are humorous (like the one supposedly written by the son-in-law about his deceased mother-in-law – no love there), while some are very sad (especially the ones about children who died too young).  This cemetery was the creation of Stan Patras, a simple wood sculptor, who started creating these wooden crosses in 1935.  Each cross is painted in blue (the traditional color of hope and freedom) and on the top of each is inscribed a witty epitaph to the deceased.  Each cross contains a different story, and the painted pictures and inscriptions illustrate a wealth of traditional occupations:  shepherds tending their sheep, mothers cooking for their family, barbers cutting hair, and weavers bent over looms.  Patras even built and designed his own cross.  After his death, his apprentice Dumitru Pop took over his workshop.  After visiting the cemetery, Val took us to the workshop where we met Pop and had a nice conversation with him.  It takes him about 3 weeks to complete a cross and they cost about 1500 Euros.
Grave Marker in Merry Cemetery

Grave Markers
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Grave Marker of Patras
 
 
 
After the cemetery, we drove to the Memorial Museum to the Victims of Communism in Sighetu.  Sighetu was an important Jewish settlement until the spring of 1944, when most of the Jews were transported to Auschwitz.  After WWII, the Communists established one of the most notorious prisons here for dissidents, intellectuals, and anyone else who would question the regime.  Between 1948 and 1952, about 180 Romanian intellectuals and government elite were imprisoned here and 51 died in the prison.  The prison was finally closed in 1974 and reopened in the early 90’s as the Memorial Museum.

Dinner this evening was another delicious home-cooked meal of chicken and dumpling soup, fried chicken and pork, and cabbage.  Dessert was a home-made donut that you filled with a choice of jams.  After the dinner, we had a private folk show with music and dancers from Maramures.  There were 3 teenage girls, 2 teenage boys, a violinist, drummer, and a guitarist.  They were very good, and had us up dancing to one of the songs.
Folk Dancers

Trying to keep up with the dancers
 

 
 
 
 
As we drove away from Vadu Izei, Val stopped at a village market that is only open on Thursday.  Here the townspeople can buy shoes, clothing, tools, produce, and livestock.  They had a lot of piglets for sale as well as a few sheep and cows.  Bill even found a sanding disc that he bought.

Village Market - shoes anyone?

Typical dress for women
 
 
 
 
 
 
Pigs for sale

Wool anyone?
 
 
 
 
 
 
Notice the little basket hats on the men

Farmer's mode of travel
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Leaving Maramures, we stopped at the Greco-Catholic wooden church of the Holy Archangels in Surdesti.  It was built in 1721.  Val had to walk around the homes in the area to find the woman caretaker who had a key to open the church.  These churches are still in use today.

Church of the Holy Archangels

Woman returning from market




 
 
 
After lunch, we drove to the old salt mines in Turda.  It has been documented that salt was being mined in this area from as early as 1075.  There were three bell shaped mines at this location.  Mining was stopped in 1932 because of the small amount and the outdated technical equipment.  Today it is a tourist attraction and center for halo therapy for people with lung problems.  We walked through the top tunnels of the mine and stopped at the top of the Iosif Mine.  It is a conical chamber 400’ dep and 140’ wide at the base. Because its shape and lack of communications with the other major mining points this mine has a powerful sound echo.  When Val clapped his hands, the echo reverberated about 15 times.  At this point, Val and I descended (by elevator) to the ground level of one of the mines that has been turned into a halo therapy location.  (Bill decided not to go.)   It is about 400’ below the ground level.  People using this mine for curative purposes must stay on the ground level for about 6-8 hours.  Therefore, this ground floor contains a series of recreational attractions:  an amphitheater, Ferris wheel, mini golf course, and bowling lanes.   It was really unique.  I wanted to go on the Ferris wheel, but it was closed for painting.  We then took another elevator down about 2 stories to the lowest point of the mine where there is lake with an island in the middle.  You could rent rowboats so Val took me on a trip around the island.  It was so much fun and such a unique activity!
Inside the Turda salt mine

Miniature Golf in bottom of mine
 

 
 
Ferris Wheel

Hanging Salt Crystals
 
 
 
 
Looking down at the salt lake

A rowboat ride on the lake
 
 
 
 
After leaving the salt mines, we drove to Alba Iulia, one of the oldest cities in Romania and the spiritual capital of the country.   From 1599 to 1601, Alba Iulia was the capital of the united principalities of Walachia, Transylvania and Moldavia. It was the site of the proclamation of Transylvania's unification with Romania on 1 December 1918 and of the coronation of King Ferdinand in 1922.  In the center of the city sits the Alba Carolina Fortress, built between 1714 and 1738. The fortification has seven bastions (Eugene of Savoia, St. Stefan, The Trinity, St. Michael, St. Carol, St. Capistrano and St. Elisabeth) that make it into a star-shaped, Vauban-style fortress. Inside the fortress are most of the important civic buildings of Alba Iulia – the Reunification Cathedral (Greek Orthodox church), a Roman Catholic church, the university and the remains of the Roman legionary camp.
Alba Iulia

Greek Orthodox church
 

 
 
 
The Reunification Cathedral was built between 1921 and 1923 in the shape of a Greek cross with an open porch.  It was here on 15 October 1922 that the Romanian monarchs King Ferdinand and Queen Mary were crowned.
We walked around the fortress and into the Roman Catholic Church (there were services going on in the Reunification Cathedral so we could not see it).  Outside he Cathedral were over a 1000 crows sitting on the roof.  As evening approached, the buildings were lit up with revolving colored lights.

Crows on the church

Third Gate of the Fortress


 
 
 
 
Building lit up atnight
 
We finally reached our destination for the night – Sibiu – around 7:30 PM.  Val recommended a Romanian restaurant with a German flair – Hermania.  Although they were busy, Val was able to persuade them to find us a table.  We had a very enjoyable meal which was followed by a small glass of blueberry brandy.  It was very delicious – about 10 times better than plum brandy!

We started the next morning with a walking tour around the old city of Sibiu.  Sibiu was the largest and wealthiest of the seven walled citadels built in the 12th century by German settlers known as Transylvanian Saxons. Today it still retains its distinctive Germanic feeling.  Surrounded by imposing walls, Sibiu’s original fortifications included 39 defensive towers, five bulwarks, four gates and five artillery batteries.  Sibiu’s Old Town retains the grandeur of its earlier days when rich and powerful guilds dominated regional trade.  Sections of the medieval wall still guard the historic area, where narrow streets pass steep-roofed 17th century buildings with gable overhangs before opening into vast, church-dominated squares such as Great Square and Little Square.
Roman Catholic Church


Inside Catholic Church
 

We walked around the Great Square where the Roman Catholic Church dominates the north side.  This beautiful baroque structure with classical decorations was built between 1726 and 1738.  The tower was attached to the nave in 1738 and one year later, a cross was seated on the top.  The completely renovated interior is magnificent with gold-laced walls and colorful ceiling frescoes.

Our walking tour included a trip to see some of the remaining walls and towers, Huet Square with it lovely Lutheran Church, and a quick peek inside a Romanian Orthodox Church with its beautifully painted frescos.  The Lutheran Cathedral of Saint Mary is the most famous Gothic-style church in Sibiu and its massive 230’ steeple is a landmark of the city.  The four turrets situated on top of the steeple were a sign to let foreigners know that the town had the right to sentence to death.
Main Square of Sibiu

Potter's Tower in the  wall
 

 
 
 
 
Romanian Orthodox Church

Inside Orthodox Church
 
 
 
 

Lutheran Cathedral of Saint Mary



Enroute to Sighisoara, we stopped Biertan, one of the most important Saxon villages with fortified churches in Transylvania.  The Biertan fortified church was the Evangelic Episcopal See for 300 years (1572 – 1867) and the religious center for the Saxons in Transylvania.    Bill and Val walked up 187 steps to get to the church while I took the pathway up – either way it was a steep climb.
Biertan Evangelical Church
Steps leading up to church











Inside the church

Door with 19 locks


One of the unique attractions of this church is the wooden door of the vestry, built in 1515, which has 19 bolts and won first prize at the World Exhibition of Paris in 1900.  In time of war, the thesaurus of the church and that of the village were kept in the vestry, and that is the reason why the door was well secured.


Countryside outside of Biertan

We then continued our drive to Sighisoara, another of the seven fortified cities built by the Transylvanian Saxons during the 12 century and still today one of the most beautiful and best-preserved medieval towns in Europe.  It is also the birthplace of Vlad Dracula, also known as Vlad Tepes (Vlad the Impaler), ruler of the province of Walachia from 1456 to 1462. It was he who inspired Bram Stoker's fictional creation, Count Dracula.
For several centuries, Sighisoara was a military and political stronghold. During the 14th - 16th centuries, the Saxon and Magyar craft guilds erected towers around the citadel walls to protect the town from Turkish raids. Laid out on two to four levels, the towers stored ammunition and food supplies and were provided with firing windows for cannons, shells and arrows. Of the original fourteen towers and five artillery bastions, nine towers and two bastions have survived the test of time.

Sighisoara's main attraction is the Clock Tower, also known as the Council Tower, built in the second half of the 14th century and expanded in the 16th century. The four small corner turrets on top of the tower symbolized the judicial autonomy of the Town Council, which could apply, if necessary, the death penalty.  In the 17th century, a two-plate clock, with figurines carved from linden wood, was set at the top of the tower, with one dial looking over the Lower Town and the other facing the citadel. The figurines, moved by the clock's mechanism, each represent a different character.  On the citadel side we see Peace holding an olive branch, accompanied by a drummer who is beating the hours on his bronze drum; above them are Justice, with a set of scales, and Law, wielding a sword, accompanied by two angels representing Day and Night. At 6 am, the angel symbolizing the day appears, marking the beginning of the working day and at 6 pm, the angel symbolizing the night comes out carrying two burning candles, marking the end of the working day.  The dial overlooking the Lower City features a set of seven figurines, each representing the pagan gods who personified the days of the week: Diane (Monday), Mars (Tuesday), Mercury (Wednesday), Jupiter (Thursday), Venus (Friday), Saturn (Saturday)and the Sun (Sunday). There is only one man that is qualified to make repairs on this clock.

Bell Tower in Sighisoara

Sighisoara from the Bell Tower

We climbed up the clock tower and were rewarded with a splendid view of the city.  There is an outside ledge around the top that made for great photos.  Val said there was a special treat for Bill at the top.  Inside the tower is a display honoring Dr. Obert, a German pre-WWII rocket scientist, and Von Braun’s mentor.

We also visited the Evangelical Church, another of the old fortified churches of the Transylvanian Saxons.  This one was built on the top of a hill (another long hike), but it differs from most of the other fortified churches in that it had a crypt in the basement of the church. .  In addition to the church on the top, there was a German High School (still in use today) – those kids are probably in very good shape if they have to walk that hill every day! 

Evangelical Church

Inside the Evangelical Church













Transylvania Hotel
As we were leaving Sighisoara, Bill had Val drive by the Hotel Transylvania so he could get a picture of it! It was a fairly long drive back to Sibiu, so after a quick dinner at another good Romanian restaurant, it was off to bed. 





The next morning we said goodbye to Transylvania as we drove toward Bucharest.  As we drove over the Carpathian Mountains, the fall colors were gorgeous.  However as we ascended toward the top, the weather became very foggy and then sleet and snow began to fall.  At the top, Val stopped at a little ski resort – it was beginning to look like winter there.  After we drove through the tunnel at the top and started our descent down, it was amazing how quickly the weather turned.  The sun came out and it warmed up rather quickly.  Driving down from the mountain, we were treated to waterfalls and more of the gorgeous fall foliage.  We stopped for lunch at a restaurant on an artificial lake that was created by the Vidraru Dam, built during the Communist era .  After another wonderful lunch we stopped for a few minutes at the Dam.  It was built on the Arges River between 1961 and 1966 and was the first dam built in Romania.  It is approximately 360’ high.  On the hill overlooking the dam is a statue of Prometheus with a lightning bolt in his hand, a symbol of electricity.

Winter conditions on top of mountain

Road leading down from top
 






Waterfall on trip down the mountain

Fall Foliage











Fall Foliage

Artificial made by Dam











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Vidraru Dam











Statue of Prometheus

Fall Splendor











A little further on down the road we stopped for another photo opportunity – this time the real castle of Count Vlad (Vlad Tepes) – Poienari Castle.  It was built on the top of a mountain (1489 steps to reach the top).  The Count’s father had been killed by a group of noblemen.  Count Vlad captured the men, but instead of executing them, he sentenced them to build this castle, carrying the stone blocks up the hill on their backs.  The castle is only a ruin now.  A large section fell off the back during an earthquake.  Needless to say, Bill and I did not walk up all those steps – the camera zoom gave us a good picture of the castle’s ruins.

Count Vlad Dracula's Castle

Monastery at Curtea de Arges
 

Our last stop before reaching Bucharest was at the monastery at Curtea de Arges.  The church , built between 1512 and 1517,  was beautiful.  It has been restored several times, the last one being in 1885.  One of the unique features in this church is part of the Bible that was hand painted by Queen Elisabeth of Romania.  The monastery also contains the tombs of Kings Ferdinand and Carol (Charles) I and Queens Elisabeth and Maria.
There is a legend about the construction of this monastery:
The legend has it that one day, a very wealthy and religious Wallachian prince, the Black Prince, rode with nine masons and their master, Manole, to find a place and build a church more beautiful than anyone may have seen before. The masons started to work, but whenever they reached to the top, the walls would collapse before they could ever finish it. They decided that the first human being they would lay their eyes upon was to be sacrificed in order to see their work done. And it so happened the Manole 's wife showed up to bring her husband's lunch, so that he had to keep his vow and buried his own wife alive within the church walls. The place of this entombment can still be seen between two walls of the southern front side of the church. This is how the monastery could be finished, and the prince was pleased to find that it was as beautiful as it could be. But the prince would not want Manole to build another church that could match his own. So he ordered the scaffolding removed, which left Manole stranded on the roof. In an attempt to escape, Manole made himself a pair of wings from shingles, but they were of no avail, and he would crash to the ground like Icarus and die. Upon his crash, on that very spot, a spring would gush forth, which is now called Manole's well. Today people throw coins in its basin, to make their wishes come true.

We finally reached Bucharest about 5 PM.  Our trip to Romania was finished.  Tomorrow we would fly to Spain to spend some time with Juan, the exchange student the Stevens hosted 2 years ago.  Romania was all that we expected and much more.  The country side is beautiful, and the people friendly and helpful.  Our preconceptions of Transylvania and Maramures still living in the 18th and 19th centuries were both true and untrue.  The main roads are well maintained, most people have cars and cable tv, and school is mandatory through the age of 14.  But many still farm the land as they have done for centuries and still get around on horse drawn carts (that are allowed on the main roads).  They are a proud, happy, and self-sufficient people.  It was sad to leave, but we take with us many wonderful memories of Transylvania and Maramures.