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Suceava

 
 
Suceava (sūchä'), town (1990 pop. 107,988), NE Romania, in Bukovina, on the Suceava River. It is a commercial center and has industries that manufacture food products, paper, wood products, and cellulose. Suceava was the capital of Moldavia from 1388 to 1565, when it was succeeded by Iasi. A historic shrine with many churches (notably the 16th-century St. George Church, a famous pilgrimage center), the town is also the seat of an Orthodox metropolitan. Nearby is the renowned 17th-century Dragomirna monastery.


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Dialing Code: The telephone dialing code for: Suceava, Romania
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The country code is: 40
The city code is: 30


Wikipedia: Suceava
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Suceava
—  County capital  —

Coat of arms
Location of Suceava
Coordinates: 47°39′05″N 26°15′20″E / 47.65139°N 26.25556°E / 47.65139; 26.25556
Country  Romania
County Suceava County
Status County capital
Government
 - Mayor Ion Lungu (Liberal Democratic Party (Romania))
Area
 - Total 52 km2 (20.1 sq mi)
Population (2002)[1]
 - Total 105,865
 - Density 2,032/km2 (5,262.9/sq mi)
 - July 1, 2004 107,513
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Website http://www.primariasv.ro/

Suceava (Romanian pronunciation: [suˈt͡ʃava]; Polish: Suczawa, Ukrainian: Сучава, Yiddish: שאַץ [ʃats]) is the Suceava County seat in Bukovina, northeastern Romania.

Contents

Geography

The city covers two types of geographical areas, the hills (of which the highest is Zamca Hill) and the meadows of the Suceava River valley. The unique setting of Suceava City includes two groves, Zamca and Şipote, which are both located within the city limits. Burdujeni, one of the neighbourhoods, is connected to the rest of the city by a prominent avenue, which makes the neighbourhood appear to be a separate satellite town.

History

Suceava Castle Plan as in 1901

Dimitrie Cantemir in his famous work Descriptio Moldavie gives the origin of the name as Hungarian: Szűcsvár, meaning city of furriers.

View of the city from fortress remains. The Church of St. Demetrius is visible in the distance.

The city of Suceava was for long the capital of the Moldavian state and main residence of the Moldavian princes (between 1388 and 1565). The city was the capital of the lands of Stephen the Great, one of the pivotal figures in Romanian history, who died in Suceava in 1504. He built a church every time he defeated an enemy army. During the rule of Alexandru Lăpuşneanu, the seat was moved to Iaşi in 1565. Michael the Brave captured the city in 1600 during the Moldavian Magnate Wars in attempt to unite Wallachia, Moldavia and Transylvania, but he was defeated the same year and Suceava failed to become the capital again.

Together with the rest of Bukovina, Suceava was under the rule of the Habsburg Monarchy (later Austria-Hungary) from 1775 to 1918; the border of Habsburg domains passed just south-east of the city. At the end of World War I, it became part of Greater Romania.

During the communist period in Romania, Suceava was heavy industrialized.[2]

Tourism

In the past few years Suceava started to evolve more rapidly. The most important sights in the town date from the time as a princely capital.

  • Mirǎuti Church

Founded in 1390 by Petru I of Moldavia, it is the oldest church in Suceava, and established the city as a see of the church (which later moved to the [3]). Stephen the Great was crowned in this church in 1457 and the church remained the coronation church of Moldavia until 1522.

Founded by Bogdan the One-eyed in 1514. It has frescoes painted on the outside, typical of the region, and is one of the seven churches listed by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site (see Painted churches of northern Moldavia). Saint John the New was a Moldavian monk who preached during Turkish occupation and was subsequently martyred in Cetatea Alba, present-day Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi in Ukraine. Alexander the Good brought his relics to Moldavia in 1415. The monastery serves as the seat of the Archbishop of Suceava and Radauti.

this church was founded by Petru Rareş in 1534, with a bell tower added in 1561, and the frescoes inside restored recently

Build by Basil the Wolf in 1643

There are numerous museums in the city: the Bucovina History Museum, the Bucovina Village Museum [1], the Bucovina Ethnographic Museum (housed in an inn from the 17th century), and the Natural History Museum. Furthermore, there is the Cetatea de Scaun or Princely Citadel, like the Mirǎuti Church founded by Petru I of Moldavia when he moved the capital from Siret to Suceava. Alexander the Good and Stephen the Great expanded the citadel, and it became strong enough to hold off an attack by Ottoman sultan Mehmed II (the conqueror of Constantinople), in 1476 .

Natives

See also

External links

Notes

  1. ^ National Institute of Statistics, Population of counties, municipalities and towns, July 1, 2004
  2. ^ The Rough Guide to Romania, ISBN 978-1843533269
  3. ^ Monastery of Saint John the New

 
 
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Suceava
Anastasie Crimca (art)
Bukovina (former region, Ukraine/Romania)

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