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Check out your transportation options in Făgăraş in County Braşov, part of the region of Transilvania in Romania. Find your accommodation options in either Făgăraş or Sibiu, with fun things to do from eoc-tourism, to nearby hiking and even skiing.
 
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 Făgăraş  the Făgăraş Mountains and Olt River Valley

REGIONS
 In County Braşov
/\  Bran  Braşov  Codlea  Făgăraş  Predeal  Râşnov  Săcele

 

Făgăraş in County Braşov
 
County Braşov is in the Transilvania region

Fabulous Făgăras!

Fabulous Făgăraş keeps you guessing with surprises in all directions.  Saxon citadels to the north, stunning mountains the south, verdant river valleys to the west and fabulous little villages with great accommodation to the east.  

This is also one region that driving through can be difficult, so alluring and beautiful the views to jagged peaks of the Făgăraş mountains are to the south!
With a population of over 35,000, the township Fărăgaş was a key location throughout the history of Transilvania, sited as it is in the wide alluvial Olt River valley, rich with agricultural fields and on a key trade route.  

The Faithful of Făgăraş

Dotted throughout the wide valley are fine villages with churches and monasteries like the famous Brâncoveanu Monastery, long a stalwart of Orthodox faith through Calvinist, Catholic and Uniate influences which swept through the wide valley over the centuries.
Although the town of Făgăraş has become almost totally Romanian-populated through Saxon and Hungarian emigration, the diverse background is still obvious. In town, see the Reformed Church and the Franciscan Monastery and Roman Catholic Church complex for an insight into the non-Othodox views of Christianity in the area through time.

The Strength of Făgăraş

The Fortress of Făgăraş was yet another castle which felt the wrath of the de facto Dracula, Vlad the Impaler, as he raged through the Olt River Valley on his campaign to the Lower Bârsa Land beyond the Perşani mountains.   The Museum of the Făgăraş Land is a worthwhile stopping off point for your time in the Făgăraş area too, with some brilliant glass-painted icons (more can be seen at the Brâncoveanu Museum at Sâmbata de Sus)

Near it All

Făgăraş is a good stopping-off point which positions you well for the mountains to the south and the Saxon churches to the north.  With some reasonably well-priced accommodation, Făgăraş is centrally located in the Olt River Valley

 

 

Just 20 minutes down the road to Sibiu, Victoria is one of Romania's newest towns, a fabrication of communist zeal and ideal, erected in 1948. 

Not at all like the much older and historically rich communities around it, Victoria sports a vaguely modernist feel. 

The Fortress of Făgăraş

A nicely imposing facade with five large towers, 3 levels and some great Italianate loggias built during a Renaissance resurgence.

Photo:  Wikipedia
 
 
Făgăraş
The Town Centre
 
 
 
 
Gabriel Bethlen, Prince of Transilvania
Bethlen was popular with the ethnic Romanian population of Făgăraş for fighting against the Habsburg overlords, albeit at the expense of siding with the Ottoman empire.
The Protestant Church in Făgăraş
The preferred Romanian word is "Evangelical", although to Americans at least, this has an inaccurate meaning, with Evangelical meaning Protestant, rather than the style and dogma of preaching and proselytisinsg.
Here in the main Făgăraş Protestant church, don't miss the Bible printed in German in 1544, great old organ and three local craft guild funerary monuments
Photo:  Foton.ro

The Fortress of Făgăraş

Făgăraş Fortress and Castle were wholly built in brick. At present, the castle has 80 rooms, and the fortress is still surrounded by a moat which is deep and wide.

At times of war or social unrest in the area, the moat could easily fill with water from a mountain brook nearby, whose course had been specially deviated to this purpose. The citadel was ranked among the strongest in Transilvania, standing in the way of Turkish and Tartar invasions.
Its massive walls, towers and tall roofs are arranged in the shape of a trapezium with four corners provided with four large bastions. Access is made through a bridge over the defence moat.

At the centre of the citadel stands the castle. The three levels are bounded by the Red Tower, the Black Tower, the Prison Tower, Tomori Tower and the Motley Tower.

The exterior wall of the castle was erected in the first half of the 15th century. The castle was first mentioned in 1455, when Transilvania's prince, Iancu de Hunedoara, appointed two lords to administer it.
The Făgăraş Fortress belongs to the western system of fortifications used in the 15th century, and brought along to Transilvania as early as the 14th century. In 1539, Transilvania's prince Stephen Mailath partially rebuilt the fortress.
Gaspar Bekes built the moat, strengthened the earthen exterior walls and resumed works in the northern wing of the castle.   Stephen and Balthazar Bathóry together finished the second level of the northern wing, the third level of the southern wing and the loggia on the south side.

It was Gabriel Bethlen in the early 1600s who brought along major architectural changes, building Italianate bastions and casemates, reshaping the southern loggia in the Renaissance style.

He turned the edifice into a fortified castle, with much the same its present-day aspect. Strongly influenced by the Italian Renaissance, Bethlen brought along architects and glass-makers from Italy, bestowing elegance and beauty to a construction formerly designed for merely military and utilitarian purposes.

For a year (1599-1600), Făgăraş Fortress was the residence home of Michael the Brave's family his wife, lady Stanca and their children.

Under subsequent Austrian-Hungarian rule, Michael Apáfi held Diets at Făgăraş fortress, and after 1699, the fortress fell under Hapsburg rule.  Functional as a castle under Maria Theresa's reign (1740-1780), by the end of the 18th century, it was turned into military headquarters and barracks. The only changes that were made by that time were of a strictly military or utilitarian nature.

In 1948, the Făgăraş Fortress was taken over by the communists and became a dreadful political prison.

As the castle and its fortress had fallen into disrepair since it's last military use in the early 1900s, restoration works were carried out between 1965-1977.

The Făgăraş Museum

Since 1954, the Fortress of Făgăraş has housed the Museum of Făgăraş, comprising of an archaelogy section, which shows the evolution of the Făgăraş region, along with sections on history, which display Roman artefacts and a collection of medieval weapons, ethnographic sections, which focus on artistic and folk crafts in the area.

The museum hosts also a beautiful collection of glass painted icons made by Ioan Pop, Savu Moga, Matei Simfonea alonside recent ones, made by archimandrite Timotei Tohaneanu from Sambata de Sus monastery.
Open Daily Except Mondays 9am - 4pm, closes at 3pm on weekends

The Church of Saint Nicholas

Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church was founded by the Wallachian prince Constantin Brancoveanu together with his wife Maria. Despite its modest appearance, the church has a particular artistic value, being the town's oldest religious monument.

The church was inspired from the chapel of Brancoveanu's palace at Mogosoaia (near Bucharest), and served as a model, in its turn, for another twenty churches in Transilvania.The nave and the altar preserve the original painting made by Preda from Campulung (Brancovan style similar to Hurez Monastery in Wallachia).
Beyond their intrinsic value, Preda's paintings are of a special importance, as they point to the spread of the Brancovan painting style in the whole of Transilvania. They also mark the birth of a community of Romanian masters whose art could not be annihilated either by the Hapsburg oppression or by the severe interdictions imposed on the Orthodox Romanians in Transilvania.

The Church Layout

Of a rectangular plan, with its belfry over the narthex, the church has on its western side a porch with archways and octangular girdles made of brick which resemble the solid churches built under the rule of Matei Basarab in Wallachia. The iconostasis, richly decorated, is typical of the Brancovan style of art.
The entrance door to the narthex is beautifully carved, revealing a balanced sense of composition and proportions. The "pisania" with Wallachia's coat of arms is placed above it. In 1721, the church became the Cathedral of the Romanian Bishopric United with Rome (Greek-Catholic) by papal decree.

The Orthodox Church dedicated to the Holy Trinity has mural paintings from 1791-1797.

 

The Evangelical Church

The Evangelical Church in its present form was built between 1842-1843, on the foundation of former constructions demolished because of repeated fires.

The church features a valuable Bible printed in German in 1544. Other assets inside the church are an organ and three funerary monuments placed at the entrance in the 19th century; they bear the trademark of the tanners' and of the potters' guilds, as Făgăraş was renowned for its crafts since the Middle Ages.

The Franciscan Monastery

Building of the Roman Catholic church and the Franciscan Monastery complex were first finished in 1737, but fell prey (as was too often the case) to a great town fire in 1760.   Most of the town was lost, but following well-worn tradition, the the church was rebuilt and restored in a fairly grand fashion beginning in 1761.

 The new building went up in the prevailing rococo style, much to it's credit and today adds a very interesting feature to the architectural landscape of the Făgăraş township.  In 1895 an Angster organ was imported from Germany and became the highlight of church life. With 18 registers and a vibrant sound not heard before by the townsfolk, the organ was an instant hit. 

 Other Făgăraş Township Sites

The Reformed Church

This fine old church, built from 1712 to 1715, has a carved pulpit whose compositions, based on vegetal motifs, blend the baroque and the oriental styles of art with the Transilvanian one.

The Klein House

Ioan Inocentiu Micu Klein's House was built in Transilvanian Renaissance style in 1727. Micu Klein, a salient representative of the Romanian Enlightenment, was the initiator of the Romanians' political struggle for equal rights in Transilvania.

Local Statues

Lady Stanca's Statue is the work of Spiridon Georgescu and has been placed in the park which faces the castle in 1938, on Nicolae Iorga's initiative.   The statue of Badea Cârtan's reminds the passers-by that this one-time villager from nearby Cârta spread the Romanian language throughout Transilvania with his teachings.

 

From the Rest Romania Website at

the Olt River Valley

The Făgăraş Chain

Marching on like perfect triangles, the alternating peaks and valleys of the Făgăraş mountains guarded Transilvania from the invading Turks.

The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMÂNIA
Localities in The Olt River Valley area:
Făgăraş  Beclean  Şinca Veche  Şinca  Şinca Nouă  Vâlcea  Perşani  Bucium  Şercăiţa  Vad  Părău  Şercaia  Mândra  Veneţtia de Sus  Şona  Râuşor  Hârseni  Recea  Sâmbăta de Sus  Drăguş  Lisa  Breaza  Voivodeni  Voila  Sâmbăta de Jos  Viştea de Sus  Victoria  Ucea de jos  Ucea  Viştea de Jos  Viştea  Olteţ  Rucăr  Feldioara  Cincşro  Cincu  Şoarş  Rodbav  Felmer  Bărcut  Seliştat  Văleni  Lovnic  Ileni  Săsciori  Hurez  Sebeş  Mărgineni  Toderiţa  Hălmeag  Părău 

For other towns in OTHERREGION, please see our OTHERPAGENAME section!

Şoars

Just to the north of Făgăraş about 12km you begin to enter the real Saxon territory, which stretches from the Sibiu margins through to the Upper Bârsa Land

The old Saxon church here was put up in the middle of the 15th Century, serving Şoars and the surrounding villages of Felmer, Bărcuţ, Seliştat and Rodbav. 

 

Vibrant Victoria!

As the number two town in the Olt River Valley, Victoria benefits from a bit of elevation and is the doorstep to the delightful Făgăraş mountains. 

If you've been reading through our Romanian pages, you'll notice most of the towns in County Braşov, and for that matter, most of Romania, have pedigrees going back hundreds of years.   However, little Victoria, perched on the foothills of the jagged peaks of the Făgăraş mountains, was created by the communists in 1948!

 

Sâmbata de Sus and the Brâncoveanu Monastery

If you have the chance to spend some time here at Sâmbata de Sus, you're lucky!   With new buildings and a thriving supportive community, the Brâncoveanu monastery is a prime example of modern Romanian community life.

The 40 monks and nuns currently living in the monastery maintain the rather impressive monastery library and the adjoining museum (in the attic of the southern buliding),  both of which hold interesting artefacts and books.  
One of the highlights of this monastery is the fairly successful blending of styles from the 17th century through to the present.  The church in the middle lending guidance to the surrounding buildings renovated in the 1920s, 1970s, and in the 1990s after the fall of communism.

 

The Brâncoveanu Monastery
The centre of the monastery complex, the gleaming white church
 
 
 

 

The Monastery Attractions

The complex is four-sided with the two major buildings to the north and south across two levels.    On the south, the main building has a refectory, kitchen and sleeping cells on the ground floor, with a library and living quarters upstairs, including a parlour for receiving guests (called a xenodochium, or "visitor house").

An Architectural Icon
The Brâncoveanu monastery is the touchstone for the "Brâncoveanu style" throughout Romania, in particular the columnar arched loggias.
Photo:  The Guardian
Go up to the attic to find the nicely presented Brâncoveanu Museum containing knick-knacks and bric-a-brac compiled about the monastery by a respected elder of the church.   The old glass and wood icons in particular are worth a look, although the books and manuscripts are perhaps best left for the scholarly types, although the decorations on some are quite interesting.

The new conference centre is also worth a look, home to national and international theological events, nicely done, and surprisingly well appointed.

An Orthodox Island through Time

Unlike it's far older Wallachian sisters over the mountains, it was only in the late 1600s this monastery was founded, the land handed down from the grandfather of the namesake Brâncoveanu (Constantin) in 1614, with the first wooden church built soon after along the river Sâmbata.
Fortified with stone in 1696, the Orthodox monastery was spiritually fortified with additional monks living on the grounds to provide a counterweight to the prevailing Protestant (Calvinist, Evangelical) faith of the Hungarian princes and Saxon community.  Additional pressure came from the Catholic church after the principality of Transilvania fell under the the Habsburg crown.  This led to a hybrid form of Catholicism with Orthodox rites (the Greek-Uniate church), sanctioned by Rome, but not accepted by conservatives in the Orthodox fold, who became more entrenched.   In the end, the Uniate push probably ended up strengthening sentiments of Romanian nationalism, as well as fortifying the dogma and liturgy of the Romanian Orthodox church.

Restoration Works, 1920 - Present

Once Greater Romania was proclaimed in 1920, a new golden age dawned with a new King and Queen.  At the Brâncoveanu monastery, restoration work began in 1926 with rebuilding of the walls, and some more ambitious works, including larger accommodation wings, facilities for the older monks, and a printing house.  

All work was true it's 17th century roots, with reconstruction of the belfry and it's 5 bells being the crowning achievement of the restoration works.   The bells were moved in 1997 to the newer section of the complex.
In the 1970s, the healing waters of the spring were given a canopy of carved oak, and an alter added to accommodate open-air sermons.  As soon as the communists were out of the way in the early 1990s, paintings were restored, walls moved to reveal some cleverly concealed building works, and much of the more religious tone of the complex was restored.

 

From the Rest Romania Website at

the Făgăraş mountains

The Făgăraş Mountains
Looking to the south from the central Olt River Valley, the beautiful peaks of the Făgăraş will give 100 snapshot opportunities!  Hopefully, you'll have a digital camera with at least 256MB of memory!

The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMÂNIA

Read about the Transfăgăraşan Highway Here!     

Făgăraş Mountains

Făgăraş Mountains are the highest mountains in Romania, and also the highest mountains in the entire Southern Carpathian mountains.

Romania's highest mountain is here, Moldoveanu at 2544m, along with brothers Negoiu (2535m), Viştea Mare (2527 m), Lespezi (2522 m), Vânătoarea lui Buteanu (2507 m), and Dara (2501 m). The Făgăraş mountains are bordered in the north and west by the Olt River Valley.
Kids Playing in Făgăraş
Kids playing on the main highway on the outskirts of Făgăraş
The photo immediately preceding this notice is Copyright (c)2005 - 2008 Rest Romania SRL, All rights reserved. Photo: © REST ROMÂNIA
Mountaineering in the Făgăraş chains is quite popular with Romanians, and European tourists alike.  A string of chalets, from the well-appointed Negoiu and Bâlea chalets to those at Sâmbata, Podragu, Turnuri, Baraciu, and more at Pietrele, Curmatura, Omu, and Babele dot the upper reaches of the Făgăraş mountains with varying levels of comfort and convenience.   Reservations are rarely required, with capacity keeping up with demand through 90% of the year.

Of course as with all mountain hiking activities, plenty of food, water and safety gear is a must.   See our Hiking Section for more information on enjoying the Carpathians.

Click here to see more about this great primer for anyone travelling to Romania!From Mike Ormsby's new must-read book 'NEVER MIND THE BALKANS, HERE'S ROMANIA!', with a laconic English perspective on life in Romania and the Romanian people
Read More Here

In Love with Transilvania

"I'm in love with Transilvania.  I love the way the horizon rolls, I love how the Carpathian Alps soar like a tidal wave two thousand metres high. 
I love the sound of the words:  Făgăraş (fugger-ash), Ucea (oo-chay-ah), Braşov (brash-ov).
"I love the timeless images of rural life flashing past the window of my train.   A shepherd leans on his stick, wearing a fleecy coat the size of a small car. 
"A ramshackle wooden wagon jolts down a muddy track, lead by a prancing, skinny black horse with blinkers and a faded rosette.  Mucky kids squat in ditches, tossing pebbles into pools. 
-- from the tale "Lucky"
Stout women in headscarves carry wood or chat over a fence, tough as old boots.  Wizened old men sip from small glasses, playing chess in their rumpled black suits, white shirts and black hats."

 

For more great things to do, see also County Braşov, About Sibiu, and the Transilvania region

 

Listed below are some local agents who can help you with bookings and organize local tours in the Făgăraş area.

Please Use the links above for Agenţi in each town. If you own a business, please check out our advertising options for Agenţi!,  
We are making a list now of agents for this area -- please click on the e-mail link below if you know of an agency we can use!
+40 (788) 029 0143  FAX: +40 (31) 710 7036 
 

Click here for a larger version, or CLICK ON TOWNS
for info on each town in CountyBraşov

 
    See a General Road Map of the Făgăraş Area

See More Maps of Romania and Făgăraş at

  

 

Map of the Făgăraş and Olt River Valley Area

From the Făgăraş Vacation Website (in Romanian)

 

 

See an Area Map of the Olt River Valley

See More Street Maps of Făgăraş at


See a Street Map of Făgăraş

See More Street Maps of Făgăraş on hartionline.ro

See Other Towns in County Braşov Here

From the Rest Romania Website at

Transportation

See More about Train
Travel in Romania Here

If you're arriving by train, get a taxi and ask for Piaţa Republicii, the heart of the town.  It's only a 5 minute ride and won't cost much.  By car, park anywhere around the main square and have a look for accommodation if you haven't already made arrangements. 

You can pick up anything needed at the main market near the train station before you head into the town centre, about a kilometre north from the train station. 

Busses, Maxi-Taxis and Taxis

The main highway has maxi-taxes and busses running to Braşov, Sibiu and north to Mediaş and Sighişoara as well.  All depart from next to the train station for near-seamless connections onwards to Victoria, Sâmbata de Sus, Ucea (which also has it's own train stop) and Agnita. 
See More about Taxis, Busses
and Driving Here
You rarely need to wait long for most destinations after getting off the train, as the ground transport is ready and waiting for the arrival of the trains on most days and times.   If you don't see your maxi-taxi, ask around if you can.  If you have to wait, it's rarely more than an hour or so, and you can cool your heals in the local market on Strada Negoiu around the corner from the train station. 

Fly to Făgăraş!

See More about Air
Travel in Romania Here
Well, the planes don't quite make it into Făgăraş, although the airport at Sibiu is just over an hour away by the national highway linking the two towns.  If you get into Sibiu early enough (flights from Vienna arrive around mid-day), you can bus or train to Făgăraş from Sibiu.  

Listed below are some local hotels, guesthouses (B&Bs) and other accommodation in the Făgăraş area.

Pensiunea Roata, Strada Vasile Alecsandri 10 in Făgăraş
The pension is placed in Pârau commune, Grid village, next to Fagaras.
744 548 684  FAX: 268 411491 
Pensiunea Diana, Strada Piata Republicii 24 in Făgăraş
The Diana Pension is placed in the centre of Fagaras, close to the City Hall and Cetate.
268 216887  
Hotel Montana, Strada Negoiu 98 in Făgăraş
If you are a tourist visiting Fagaras, don't hesitate to look for it.
268 212327  FAX: 268 212327 
Pensiunea Flora, Strada Vasile Alecsandri 12 in Făgăraş
The pension is compounded of 2 houses.
268 215103  
Hotel Progresul, Strada Republicii 15 in Făgăraş
It is a good place if you like fishing.
268 211634  
Hotel Fântânita Craiesei, Strada Vlad Tepes 4 in Făgăraş
You can ride horses or go fishing.
268 212501  
Hotel Fântâna Mândrei, DN1 Brasov-Sibiu in Mândra
An acceptable place and quite good if you are coming after a long trip.
268 247606  
Motel Dealu Persani, DN1 Km45 in Persani
An acceptable place if you are not in a hurry.
268 245135  
Pensiunea Emma, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
The house is built on 2 levels, new, finished in May 2005.
268 280403  
Hotel Floarea Reginei, Sâmbâta de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
Placed at an altitude of 800 metres in a forest.
268 206500  FAX: 268 216111 
Vila Ana, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
Tired after weeks of work, you deserve a vacation at Ana pension.
268 241900  FAX: 268 280102 
Hotel Diana, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
A quiet, lovely and civilized place, the Diana Hotel is placed at the feet of Fagaras Mountains.
268 241900  FAX: 268 280102 
Pensiunea Casa Maria, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
Oasis of quietness at the feet of Fagaras Mountains, Casa Maria was open in 2000.
268 243290  
Pensiunea Casa Ardeleana, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
The pension has 8 doubles, terrace, living and turret.
745 843411  
Complex Nicodor, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
The complex has a motel, a house and 9 2-person little houses.
722 315593  
Cabana Valea Sâmbetei, Sâmbata de Sus in Sâmbata de Sus
Placed on the southern side of Fagaras Mountains at an altitude of 1400 metres.
268 211072  
Pensiunea Moara Ohaba, Sinca 32 in Sinca
A pension placed in the middle of the nature.
268 245372  
 

 

See also County Braşov for accommodation in other nearby towns

The area code for County Braşov is (2AA) or (3AA)

"Făgăraş"

The name is alleged to derive from the Romanian word for "beech" (fag). Another source of the name is given by folk etymology to be Hungarian, as the rendering of "wood" (fa) and "money" (garas), with legends stating that money made of wood had been used to pay the peasants who built the fortress around 1310.  Although why anyone would name a town after wooden money is not particularly clear.
Brâncoveanu Reconstruction
About 1927, works underway to restore the monastery and expand it

Michael Apafi (1632–15 April 1690) was Prince of Transylvania and held Diets at Făgăraş starting in 1688.

He was elected by the nobles of Transilvania (the majority ethnic Romanians did not vote) on 14 September 1661.  With the support of the Ottoman Empire, as a rival to the Habsburg-backed ruler Janos Kemény who died in 1662, leaving Apafi as uncontested ruler of Transylvania.
Opposed to the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I, he supported the Ottomans and Hungarian rebels until the Ottoman defeat at the Battle of Vienna on 12 September 1683.
Following this, Michael opened talks with Leopold and concluded a treaty with the Austrians on 27 September 1687, obtaining their recognition of his authority in Transylvania.
He died at Alba Regia in 1690 and was succeeded by his son Michael II Apafi.

Early Făgăraş History

Făgăraş was during the Middle Ages, together with Amlaş, a traditional Wallachian enclave in Transilvania. The place was also called the Land of Vlachs (Romanians) in the 13th century.

In those times, the settlement was centre of the surrounding royal estates belonging to the Hungarian kings. After the Tartar invasion in 1241-1242, Saxons settled in the area, too. In 1369, Louis I of Hungary gave the Royal Estates of Făgăraş to his vassal, Vladislav I of Wallachia, the territory remained in the possession of Wallachian Princes until 1464.
 

During the rule of Transilvanian Prince Gabriel Bethlen (1613-1629), the city became an economic role model city in the southern regions of the realm. Bethlen rebuilt the fortress entirely.

Ever since that time, Făgăraş was the residence of the wives of Transilvanian Princes, as an equivalent of Veszprém, the Hungarian "city of queens". Of these, Zsuzsanna Lorántffy, the widow of George I Rákóczy established a Vlach (Romanian) school here in 1658. Probably the most prominent of the princesses residing in the town was the orphan Princess Kata Bethlen (1700-1759), buried in front of the Reformed church. The church holds several precious relics of her life. Her bridal gown, with the family coat of arms embroidered on it, and her bridal veil now covers the altar table. Both are made of yellow silk.

Făgăraş was the site of several Transilvanian Diets, mostly during the reign of Michael I Apafi.

The church was built around 1715-1740. Not far from it is the Radu Negru high school - built around 1909, it was originally a Hungarian language middle school where Babits Mihály taught for a while.
A local legend says that Negru Vodă left the central fortress to travel south past the Transilvanian Alps in become the founder the Principality of Wallachia, although Basarab I is traditionally known as the 14th century founder of the state. By the end of the 12th century the fortress itself was made of wood, but it was reinforced in the 14th century and became a stone fortification.

In the 20th century, the Fortress of Făgăraş's was used as a stronghold by the Communist regime of Romania.

During the 1950s it was a prison for opponents and dissidents. After the fall of the Communist regime in 1989, the castle was restored and is used as a museum and library (see more above).
The city's economy was badly shaken by the disappearance of most of its industries following the Revolution, critical hardships, and reforms. A large part of the city population left as guest workers to Italy, Spain, or Ireland.
 
Read More about Făgăraş at:

The Făgăraş town hall

The Sâmbata de Sus Complex

 

 
From the Rest Romania Website at

Thanks for Reading our Information about Făgăraş in Transilvania!

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