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Târgu Neamț
—  Town  —
Neamt.citadel1.cristibur
Neamţ Citadel, located on Pleşu hill
Coa tg neamt ro
Coat of arms
Targu Neamt jud Neamt
Location of Târgu Neamţ in Neamț County



Târgu Neamț is located in Romania
Red pog
Târgu Neamț
Location of Târgu Neamț in Romania
Coordinates: 47°12′9″N 26°21′31″E / 47.2025, 26.35861
Country Flag of Romania Romania
County Neamț County
First mentioned 1387
Subordinated villages
Government
 • Mayor Vasile Harpa (USL)
Elevation 365 m (1,198 ft)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Website http://www.primariatgneamt.ro/

Târgu Neamţ (German: Niamtz, Hungarian: Németvásár, Hebrew: טרגו נאמץ‎, Latin: Ante Castrum Nempch) is a town in Neamţ County, Romania, on the Neamţ River. It had, as of 2002, a population of 20,496. Three villages are administered by the town: Blebea, Humulești and Humuleștii Noi.

History[]

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1912 9,095
1930 9,475 +4.2%
1948 8,948 −5.6%
1956 10,373 +15.9%
1966 12,877 +24.1%
1977 14,951 +16.1%
1992 22,282 +49.0%
2002 22,634 +1.6%
2011 18,232 −19.4%
Source: Census data

Originally a market town, hence its name (in Romanian "târg" = market), it had an important role in Moldavian culture. It was first mentioned in a late-14th century document.

TgNeamtViewFromCitadelSeptember22 2009

View from Citadel

Neamt monastery 1

Neamţ Monastery, located 10 km west of Tg. Neamţ

The name neamţ is derived from the Slavic word nemeti meaning "snows". In many Slavic languages, nemeti also means "German", as Germans could not understand Slavic speakers when the cultures first met. "Neamţ" is also a generic name for the German people in the Romanian language. This may lead to speculation of a German foundation of Târgu Neamţ, according to which Saxon colonists crossed the Carpathians from the Bistriţa area and built a commercial township. Some Romanian historians, including B. P. Haşdeu consider that Târgu Neamţ was probably a Teutonic settlement from the 13th century, when the Teutonic Order made incursions from Transylvania against the Cumanic peoples that were living in Moldavia. Nowadays, historians disagree with this possibility mostly because of the long-lasting influences of the communist-nationalistic historiography which refused to accept the town was anything else than a Romanian-founded settlement.

Access[]

The town is located at the crossing of two national roads: RO Roadsign 15B and RO Roadsign 15C. The planned East-West Motorway will bypass the town on its south when completed, providing access to Iaşi (to the east) and Târgu Mureş to the west. The railroad station is the terminus station of CFR Line 517 linking it to Paşcani via an electrified railway.

Tourism and attractions[]

  • The Neamţ Fortress (Cetatea Neamţului) was built in the 14th century by Voivode Petru I (possibly on the ruins of a smaller Teutonic castle), and is located on the north bank of the Neamţ river.
Cetate 20CahleTeracotass

Image discovered from the stove's remains in Neamţ Fortress, showing Zubr/Aurochs the coat of arms of Moldova.

  • Târgu Neamţ is an appropriate starting point for trips to the monasteries in the region, located all on an average 15 km radius: Neamţ Monastery, Secu, Agapia, Văratec Monastery Sihăstria and Sihla Skete. It is close to Ceahlău, Durău and Valea Bistriţei.
  • Ion Creangă memorial house in Humuleşti, across Ozana river: This is the house where the famous Romanian writer was born and where he spent his childhood. The stories from Ion Creangă's masterpiece Amintiri din copilărie ("Memories of my childhood") revolve around Humuleşti, Târgu Neamţ and in the surrounding villages.
  • Monumentul Eroilor (Heroes' Monument): an obelisk that commemorates the Romanian soldiers from World War I is found on Dealul Pleşu near the Pometea suburb. It commands views of the town and the mountains.
  • Vânători-Neamţ Natural Park, housing a herd of wisent, the European bisons that once roamed the Eastern Carpathians.
  • Nicolae Popa ethnographic museum in Târpești[1]

Natives[]

  • Ion Creangă
  • Gabriela Istrate
  • Irving Layton
  • Mariana Simionescu
  • Metropolitan Varlaam
  • Ioan Vieru
  • Moshe Idel


References[]



This page uses content from the English language Wikipedia. The original content was at Târgu Neamţ. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with this Familypedia wiki, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons License.
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