Maramureş County
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Maramureş County | |||
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Facts | |||
Development region: | Nord-Vest | ||
Historic region: | Transylvania | ||
Capital city: | Baia Mare | ||
Population: • As of 2002: • Population density: |
510,110 81/km² |
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Area: | 6,304 km² | ||
Codes: • Car numbers • ISO 3166-2:RO |
MM RO-MM |
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Telephone code: | (+40) x62 (1) | ||
Web: |
County Council Prefecture |
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1. For the former state operator x is 2. For the alternate telephony operators, x is 3 |
Maramureş (IPA: [ma.ra.'mu.reʃ], Hungarian: Máramaros) is a county (judeţ) of Romania, in the Maramureş region. The county seat is Baia Mare.
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[edit] Neighbours
- Suceava County to the East.
- Satu Mare County to the West.
- Ukraine to the North - Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast and Zakarpattia Oblast.
- Sălaj County, Cluj County and Bistriţa-Năsăud County to the South.
[edit] Demographics
In 2002, the county had a population of 510,110 and a population density of 81/km².
- Romanians - 82.02% (or 418,405)[1]
- Hungarians - 9.07% (or 46,300)
- Rusyns and Ukrainians - 6.67% (or 34,027)
- Roma - 1.74% (or 8,913)
- Germans - 0.39% (or 2,012), and others.
Year | County population[2] |
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1948 | 321,287 |
1956 | 367,114 |
1966 | 427,645 |
1977 | 492,860 |
1992 | 540,099 |
2002 | 510,110 |
[edit] Geography
This county has a total area of 6,304 km², of which 43% is covered by the Rodna Mountains, with its tallest peak, Pietrosul, at 2,303m altitude. Together with Gutâi and Ţibleş mountain ranges, the Rodna mountains are part of the Eastern Carpathians. The rest of the county are hills, plateaus, and valleys. The county is crossed by Tisa River and its main tributaries: Iza, Viseu, and Mara rivers.
[edit] Economy
Maramureş is known for its pastoral and agricultural traditions, largely unscathed by the industrialisation campaign that had been carried on during Romania's communist period. Ploughing, planting, harvesting, and hay making and handling are mostly done through manual labour. The county is also home to a strong mining industry of extraction of metals other than iron. The industrial plants built around Baia Mare during the communist period heavily pollute the area.
[edit] Tourism
The region is known for its beautiful rural scenery, local small woodwork and craftwork industry as well as for its churches and original rural architecture. There are not many paved roads in rural areas, and some of them are not always accessible.
The county's main tourist attractions:
- The cities of Baia Mare and Sighetu Marmaţiei.
- The villages on the Iza, Mara, and Vişeu Valleys.
- The Rodna Mountains.
[edit] Administrative divisions
The county has 2 municipalities, 6 towns, and 62 communes.
[edit] Municipalities
- Baia Mare - county seat; population: 149,735
- Sighetu Marmaţiei
[edit] Towns
- Baia Sprie
- Borşa
- Cavnic
- Seini
- Târgu Lăpuş
- Tăuţii-Măgherăuş
- Vişeu de Sus
[edit] Communes
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[edit] Historical Notes
- The 10th century frontier county of Borsova was founded by Stephen I of Hungary
- 11th century historical Maramureş counties separation from Borsova (Rom. Borşa)
- 1241 Tartar invasion decimated about half of the local population
- 14th century Duke (knyaz) Bogdan of Maramureş said to be founder of Moldova
- In the Middle Ages, the historical region of Maramureş was known for its salt mines and later for its lumber
- As a result of the Paris Peace Conference (Treaty of Trianon, 1920), the historical region of Maramureş was partitioned, with about three-fifths of its territory becoming part of Czechoslovakia and the remainder, south of the Tisa River, staying on Romania's territory.
[edit] References
- ^ National Institute of Statistics, "Populaţia după etnie"
- ^ National Institute of Statistics, "Populaţia la recensămintele din anii 1948, 1956, 1966, 1977, 1992 şi 2002"
[edit] External links
- (Romanian) Poienile de sub Munte -- a website dedicated to this village
- Photos from the county in the dedicated Flickr group
Alba • Arad • Argeş • Bacău • Bihor • Bistriţa-Năsăud • Botoşani • Braşov • Brăila • Buzău • Caraş-Severin • Călăraşi • Cluj • Constanţa • Covasna • Dâmboviţa • Dolj • Galaţi • Giurgiu • Gorj • Harghita • Hunedoara • Ialomiţa • Iaşi • Ilfov • Maramureş • Mehedinţi • Mureş • Neamţ • Olt • Prahova • Satu Mare • Sălaj • Sibiu • Suceava • Teleorman • Timiş • Tulcea • Vaslui • Vâlcea • Vrancea |