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Browsing: Photo_Gallery A,B,C...Z can inspire you «-» Photo_Gallery ATTITUDE «-» Holidays in Romania 5 Reasons Bucharest is the Paris of Eastern Europe «-» Valea Prahovei Ag Platinum Infofashion va recomanda `Bucegii intre Kogainon si Sahashrara`, autori Dan Anghelescu, George Avanu
Valea Prahovei Ag Platinum Infofashion va recomanda `Bucegii intre Kogainon si Sahashrara`, autori Dan Anghelescu, George AvanuPrahova Valley (Romanian: Valea Prahovei) is the valley where the Prahova river makes its way in the Carpathian Mountains, Romania. It is a tourist region, situated about 100 km north of the capital city of Bucharest. Geographically, the Prahova river separates the Eastern Carpathians chain from the Southern Carpathians. Historically, the corridor was the most important passage way between the principalities of Wallachia and Transylvania. The present DN1 road, linking Bucharest with the city of Braşov and the future A3 will be built along the Prahova Valley. The region is a popular destination for mountaineers and for winter sports fans. The most important resorts are: SINAIA Sinaia is about 60 km northwest of Ploieşti and 50 km south of Braşov, in a mountainous area on the Prahova River valley, just east of the Bucegi Mountains. The altitude varies between 767 m and 860 m. The city is a popular destination for hiking and winter sports, especially downhill skiing. Among the tourist landmarks, the most important are Peleş Castle, Pelişor Castle, Sinaia Monastery, Sinaia Casino, Sinaia train station, and the Franz Joseph and Saint Anne Cliffs. Sinaia was also the summer residence of the great Romanian composer George Enescu, who stayed at the Luminiş villa. Sinaia (/si'na.ja/) (population: 14,636) is a mountain resort in Romania. The town was named after Sinaia Monastery, around which it was built; the monastery in turn is named after the Biblical Mount Sinai. King Carol I of Romania built his summer home, Peleş Castle, near the town. In Sinaia, Peles Castle is the most notable residents Romanian Royal family, one of the most beautiful castles in Eastern Europe. A testimony to the 19th century ruler`s refinement, the wonderful edifice was built after the wish of Romanias first king, Carol I, and it happily mingled everything that was most beautiful and representative about the neo-Renaissance. The intricate facades, with applications of brown silky wood towers that seem to scratch the sky with their sharp roofs, along with the fountains and statues all make up a harmonious ensemble designed by accomplished Viennese architects. Peleş has entered history as the place where some of the most important decisions were taken regarding Romanias fate. Anniversaries, balls, music, literary events, and theater shows organized on the scene of the theater hall gave life to the castle and refreshed the Romanian high life. The atmosphere of this place preserves so much of the force of those times that visitors will be surprised when, at their departure, they will notice that no gilded carriage is waiting at the stairs! Since 1953, the year when Peleş Castle became a museum, any visitor can admire the elegant interiors and superb terraces, as well as the buildings belonging to the castle: Pelişor Castle, The Watch Tower and Sinaia Monastery, situated right near the castle. The tourists can visit the castle every week, from Wednesday until Sunday, between 9.00 - 17.00, for only 10 RON (2,5 euro) and 5 RON for children (1,25 euro). Sinaia is about 60 km northwest of Ploieşti and 50 km south of Braşov, in a mountainous area on the Prahova River valley, just east of the Bucegi Mountains. The altitude varies between 767 m and 860 m. The city is a popular destination for hiking and winter sports, especially downhill skiing. Among the tourist landmarks, the most important are Peleş Castle, Pelişor Castle, Sinaia Monastery, Sinaia Casino, Sinaia train station, and the Franz Joseph and Saint Anne Cliffs. Sinaia was also the summer residence of the great Romanian composer George Enescu, who stayed at the Luminiş villa. Natural cure factors Proponents claim that Sinaia has a refreshing and stimulating a climate that is beneficial for the human body. There are also some mineral springs in Câinelui Valley that have sulphur-ferric mineral water and contain other soluble minerals. In the town of Sinaia and its surroundings restrictions are in place regarding cutting down or picking up flora. The felling of trees is not allowed. It is forbidden to pick up any alpine plants. Severe punishment may be in store for those who gather these plants: the Mountain Peony (Rhododendron Kotsky), Edelweiss (Leontopodium alpinum), and the Yellow Gentiana (Gentiana lutea). Tourist camping is only authorized in designated places, following necessary and compulsory protection standards. The mountainous area in which Sinaia is located is in the Bucegi Natural Park region. The Park covers a total area of 326.63 square kilometres, of which 58.05 square kilometres are under strict protection and shelter natural monuments. The Bucegi Natural Preserve area includes all the abrupt areas of the mountains Vârful cu Dor, Furnica, and Piatra Arsă. The mountainous area is continuously patrolled by mountain rescue patrols as well as by members of the Mountain Police. At the entrance to the Cumpătu district, one can find the Sinaia alder-tree grove botanical reservation placed under the protection of the Romanian Academy and the Bucharest Biology Institute. In the same district, there is also another ecological research station under the patronage of UNESCO Jacques-Yves Cousteau, belonging to the University of Bucharest, which also includes a museum of Bucegi Mountains fauna in a laboratory for nature protection. BUSTENI Buşteni (Romanian pronunciation: /buʃ.'tenʲ/) is a small mountain town in the north of the county Prahova, in the center of Romania. It is located in the Prahova Valley, at the bottom of the Bucegi mountains, that have a maximum altitude of 2505 m. Its name literally means tree-logs in Romanian. Buşteni's average altitude is 900 m. It is one of the most popular mountain resorts, offering spectacular views, with lots of year-round tourism opportunities, ranging from skiing to mountain climbing. The town and the surrounding mountains were the site of military confrontations in 1916, during World War I (see Romanian Campaign (World War I)). A large commemorative monument (about 25 m high), Heroes' Cross (Crucea Eroilor) lies atop nearby Caraiman Peak, at nearly 2,260 m. The monument is lighted at night and is visible from virtually everywhere in Buşteni. The average population is 15,000 inhabitants, although numbers vary greatly because of tourism. The main local industries are wood industry and tourism. Many holiday houses have been recently built in the town. Also was created a new Information Tourism Center near the City Hall - Centrul de Informare si Promovare Turistica Busteni Sister cities: Moissy-Cramayel, France, since 1993, Djerba-Midoun, Tunisia, since 2000 PREDEAL Predeal (Romanian pronunciation: /pre.'de̯al/, Hungarian: Predeál) is a town in Romania, in Braşov County. An important mountain resort, Predeal is located on the Prahova Valley and is surrounded by five massifs: Postăvarul, Piatra Mare, Bucegi, Baiului and Fiţifoi. The name is derived from the Romanian archaic form "pre deal" which means "on the hill". The Predeal city-station developed in the Predeal defile - 1032m altitude, but also on the slopes bordering, is not only the city which has the highest altitude of the country but also the city from where the river of Prahova spouts out. The city is limited to north by the massis mountainous Postavaru and Piatra Mare, has is south-eastern Gârbova, and in south-west by the solid mass of Bucegi. It is supported by the climatic conditions, the landscapes but also by the conditions social-policy and a constant development after the First World War, nowadays becoming one of the first stations of Romania. AZUGA Azuga is a small resort town nestled in the mountains of Prahova county in the Wallachian region of Romania. Azuga is located at the foot of the Bucegi mountains, and contains the longest ski run in Romania, the Sorica. The town also has a famous beer factory that brews Azuga Beer. The town is an emerging ski resort, that (as of 2006-2007) sees tremendous development in tourism infrastructure (see the link below). Dacian games, old habits between the Bucegi Megaliths The Pastoral Calendar The New Pastoral Year begins one month after the New Agrarian Year in the day of the `Sangiorz`, when the cows and the sheep are giving the maxim production. After the copulation period (in autumn) and the gestation one(in winter), the little animals are born in spring. In our country, the copulation of the sheep and goats begins on 14 October by the celebration of the `Samedru`.Even if this day can be on all of the week`s day,the people called it `The Big Friday` or `The Swoop of The Buck`(`The Wedding of The Sheep`).After a gestation that duress over twenty one weeks,the animals are born on March, after the Sun begins to warm the land. So, the animals` reproduction divides the year in two equal seasons: -the copulation, the gestation, the born, the weanling (between Samedru and Sangiorz) -the sterile season,when the animals eat so to prepare for the cold winter (between Sangiorz and Samedru) It is known one legend about the representations of the opening of the two seasons : the two mythical personages received one day from God the weather keys with one Sangiorz close the winter and opens the summer, meanwhile Samedru close the summerand opens the winter. The saints were very happy for that and left one in the right side and one in the left one. The frog is like a messenger from God, when Sangiorz hears it, he passes the keys to Samedru closing the winter with one key and opening the summer with another. The purification for the malefic forces Between the `Big Thursday` and the `Rusalii`, the graves remain opened and the dead man`s spirits are in our world.The malefic spirits are called `strigoi` (poltergeists) and the `moron` which are living humans who are about to transform after death in bad spirits. This forces were controlled by the witches in the night of the Sangiorz specially.The garlic was like an arm for those spells, people used it to protect themselves. The noises are also a scare technique like the pales. In the Sangiorz` day , the people organize alms and give to the others a lot of alimentary products, this day is called `Mosii de Sangiorz`. The sacrifice of the lamb The lamb is the sacrificed animal at the beginning of the new pastoral year. It is totally fried, and it is eaten on a grass land, at the fold, without a knife, only by hand. The sacrificed lamb can be considerate a sacramental food, like an immolation for two divinities : one agrarian and one pastoral. The agrarian and pastoral significations are that the customs of the Sangiorz are so dense, that the hypothesis according that this festivity brought one day two independent festivities seems verisimilar . The Vivant Fire Is difficult to demonstrate if the vivant fires from Sangiorz have something to do with the spring equinox, because the Sangiorz and the equinox are situated at one month distance.Of course, there are many habits in Romania based on the firing of natural elements , but this fire`s purpose was always the ritual-magical text: the incantation against the witches which are guilty for all the disasters. So, this fire is like a purification one, intended to clean the all nature by its warm, its light and its fug.By vivant fire we understand two woods which one are used to create it on very archaic techniques. This fire was always fired only by men ( unmarried men) in all the villages at the same time.The participators had to jump over the fire and the animals too, to purify. Near the fire, were also used the water, and a green branch. Magical tactics Like all of the new year`s or season`s beginnings, by Sangiorz, the people from pastoral mediums were trying to find out what the future preserves., what it is going to happen in the new year. The most important for the spells were, of course, the young unmarried girls. A very appreciated practice and also very used was the plantation of the basil which was going to grow up more beautiful then in normal days. So, the basil (original from India and China, member of the Labiatae`s family), was planted by the young beautiful girls early in the morning of the Sangiorz`day. It was used in popular medicine in christen tactics or in familiar habits. There is a legend that suppose that the plant was born on a young girl`s grave tear stained by his boyfriend, called Basil. The basil it is also used by young girls to know who will be the man they will marry with. It also helps them to be always beautiful and fresh and admired by all the boys. The girl who put basil under her pillow on the big celebration`s eve dreamed about her future husband. The basil is the Romanians `most loved plant. It is a symbol of purity and fertilization. The burning of the treasures People used to believe that in the night on Sangiorz, the sky is opening for a second, and the people who could see that might hope in the realization of all their wishes. But the night of the Sangiorz was also the best night for finding out the places where the treasures are hidden. It was said that like the treasures are burning, so must burn the place where it are, because they have to be found. Info F(ares) A(dvertising) S(uccess) H(umour) I(ntelligence) O(pportunity) N(ews) va invita sa descoperiti personalitati ce va pot inspira ! www.InfoFashion.ro Subcategorii
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