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Sighisoara
"the Pearl
of Transylvania" is
without any doubt the best preserved
strengthened city in Transylvania, with
a beautiful and authentic medieval architecture.
It is one of the last medieval towns
still inhabited in Europe.
The Sighisoara (Schaessburg) citadel
includes 164 houses.
This
little town full of charm, having 36,362
inhabitants, was decalred a UNESCO
site in 1999.
The
medieval fortress was built on a hill
surrounded by forests and known as "the
Hill of the Fortress". Sighisoara
always fascinate its visitors by its
picturesque lanes, houses, the bastions,
the towers, the churches; moreover,
it is the birthplace of a history hero,
the legendary Dracula or Vlad Impaler
.
The narrow street with steps rolling
up of towards the fortress, the towers
of the cathedral, the covered staircase
in a tunnel, the pediments arched with
mediaeval houses keeps and make a rich
and single external medieval museum.
Many shops and restaurants were opened
last years at the tourists who visited
Sighisoara were very enchanted.
Sighisoara
HISTORY
Archaeological discoveries show that,
the territory of the city was populated
by Scytians as of the 6th century. The
Dacian fortress which was built at the
3rd century was called Sandava. Roman
Castri (of which the ruins were preserved
at the day), built into 106 was supposed
to defend the roads coming from Alba
Iulia and going towards Odorhei and
the Oituz. strait. The name of Sighisoara
was initially mentioned in a document
written by Vlad Dracula in 1431. In
14th and 15th centuries, the economic
growth recorded by the hard-working
craftsmen of Sighisoara and the merchants
ensured of financial means for the construction
of a strong system of defense of 14
towers and several bastions. Each
bastion was built, maintained and defended
by a guild of trade. Their antiquated
and picturesque names i.e. Tinners,
the Butchers, Bronzing Manufacturers,
Tailors, Shoe-makers, Blacksmiths etc
also carried by the towers.
Crucial moments of the history are to
be brought closer last Sighisoara.
Vlad Dracula, prince de Wallachia
between 1435-1446, lived in Sighisoara
like a commander of the mountain guard
before becoming a prince and accepting
the throne. Its presence in Sighisoara
is worth being mentioned by money struck
with its éfigie circulating in
Transylvania and Wallachia.
In 1514, the Mayor of Sighisoara, which
was a dictator, was killed during the
revolt of the peasants carried out by
Gheorghe Doja.
In 1600, Sighisoara accomodates Michel
the Brave, the one which achieved for
the first time the union of the three
provinces speaking Rumanian, i.e.. Wallachia,
Moldova and Transylvania. Devastated
by the soldiers of George Basta in 1601,
besieged by the troops of Gabriel Bathory
in 1611, Sighisoara was always rebuilt
because of the love, the devotion and
the capacities of its hard-working and
commercial craftsmen.
Historic buildings
The most famous tower of Sighisoara,
which actually became a bench mark of
the city, is the Tower of Clock,
so known under the name of the Tower
of the Council, because it functioned
like such between the 14th-16th centuries.
The Tower of Clock is 64 m high. It
has four turrets and a wood walk covered
for the observation of the last stage.
Built at the 14th century, with thick
walls of 2 m, they were supposed to
defend the principal door of the citadel,
the ammunition dump, and the tresor
of the city. The four turrets symbolized
the legal autonomy of the Town council
which could apply, if necessary, the
death penalty. In 1648, a clock was
put at the top of the tower. The movement
of the wood figurines symbolize the
days of the week. For example, the soldier
Tuesday, the day of Mars and Venus are
upright during Friday. A midnight a
figurine leave his slit and are shown
to announce the next day. Others figurines
of the mechanism of clock, cut in the
tree of lime and a bright way coloured,
are brought closer a lapse of time;
characterizes the mythology or of the
various symbols, i.e. the Goddess of
Peace with the olive branch, the Goddess
of Justice with the balance, the gods
of war with the sword, two angels symbolizing
the Day and Night etc. The arrow of
the tower ends in a small gold sphere.
In top, there is a weather cock, that,
turned over by airstreams, predicted
time. During the Middle Ages, the Tower
of Clock would be defended by 29 regular
soldiers.
Since 1899 the Clock Tower shelters
the Museum of History. It proposes
also a Medieval Pharmacy of 1670,
the interesting artifacts of ethnography,
a section of beautiful arts and a collection
of watches. In 1780, close to the Tower
of Clock was built a covered walk the
passage called Passage of the Old Ladies,
which would protect from the falls of
snow or rain.
The
Citadel was built at the 12th century;
it was reinforced and prolonged at the
15th century. Today it counts 164 public
houses and 13 buildings. The solid and
differently coloured houses are aligned
along the narrow streets; around them
a wall of defense of 1 km length with
14 turns, of which only nine were preserved
to date.
Most impressive are the Tower of
the Shoe-makers, the Tower of
the Tailors and the Tower of
the Tinners.
Close
to the Tower of Clock, there is the
Church of the Monastery built
in the Gothic style. It incarne all
the changes undergone by the city with
the length of time. It formerly belonged
to the Dominican monks who lived in
a monastery placed at the north of the
church. The monastery was demolished
in 1888 and its place taken by the town
hall.
Close
to the church, there is the House
of Vlad Dracula, where Vlad the
Impaler lived between 1431 to 1435 before
accepting the throne of Wallachia.
On
the higher platform of the Church, one
can find another characteristic of medieval
architecture, namely the Wooden Covered
Staircase. It was built at the 17th
century to facilitate and protect the
schoolboys and the Christians of the
church. In the beginning the staircase
had 300 steps, but after 1849, their
numbers was tiny room to 175.
The
Church is a building representative
of the Gothique style in Transylvania,
it is placed on the School Hill (429
m high) and dominates the city. Its
construction started in 1330 and lasted
almost 200 years finishing in 1525.
After the Reform of 1547, it became
the principal church of the Saxons inhabitants
of Sighisoara, which had changed Roman
Catholicism in Lutheranism. The church
holds paintings of value made between
1483-1488 and of the pieces of furniture
in the style of art of Renessance. Four
statuettes cut in the stone placed below
the altarpiece make the well-known composition
Offers of Maggi. In the anterooms are
three blazons cut in wood. The only
known Roman crypt in Transylvania can
be seen with the Church, below the chorus
and dating from the 13th century.
On
the same side as the House of Vlad Dracul,
there is the House of Stag.
The
life was not easy in the City Higher
around the Fortress mainly because of
the lack of sources of water and the
provisions. By comparison, the living
conditions in the Lower City in particular
in times of peace, was better the inhabitants
of the Citadel were accustomed to living
in times of peace in the lower city
or one can see today houses of the 17th
century. Each house has its own history,
as is the case of that which belonged
to Johann Schuller von Rosenthal, a
Mayor of the city, which was decapitated
because of its dishonesty.
On
the Lower City (which is less picturesque
than the Citadel) on the footbridge
on the river of Mare Tarnava, one can
see the Romanian Orthodox Cathedral
, built in the Byzantin style in 1937.
In
the Eastern part of the city, in the
medium of the cemetery, there is an
obelisk.
Among
other worthy architectonic monuments
to be seen in Sighisoara must be mentioned
the Venetian House on the Museum
Square, which dates from the 16th century
and was rebuilt in Venetian the Gothique
style.
Around
the principal place of the town of many
frontages can hold your attention, the
historical heart of the city being very
rich it is hard to retain another place
which can support the comparison.
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