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Constanţa

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Municipiul Constanţa
Coat of arms of Municipiul Constanţa
Coat of arms
Coordinates: 44°10.4′N 28°38.3′E / 44.1733, 28.6383
Country Romania
County Constanţa County
Government
 - Mayor Radu Ştefan Mazăre
Area
 - City 1,121.66 km² (433.1 sq mi)
Population (2002)
 - City 310,471
 - Density 2,486/km² (6,438.7/sq mi)
 - Metro 550,000
 - 2006 306,200 (January 1)
 - Ethnic groups Romanians, Turks, Tatars, Greeks, Aromanians
Postal code 900xxx
Languages Romanian
Sister cities: Sulmona, Turku, Yokohama, Brest, Istanbul, Rotterdam, Odessa, Boulogne-sur-Mer, Dobrich, Thessaloniki, Mobile, Trapani, Sidon, Lattakia, Heraklion, İzmir, Alexandria, Santos, Havana, Shanghai, Perugia, Novorossiysk.
Website: www.primaria-constanta.ro

Constanţa (pronunciation in Romanian: /kon'stan.ʦa/; historical names: Tomis, Greek: Κωνστάντια or Constantia, Turkish: Köstence, Bulgarian: Кюстенджа) is the oldest living city in Romania, the fourth largest (as of 2007),[1] and the largest economy.[citation needed] Constanţa has the biggest harbour on the Black Sea, Port of Constanţa, the fourth largest in Europe,[citation needed] having the potential in the next few years to become the second largest in Europe after Rotterdam.

Contents

History

See also: History of Dobruja

A number of inscriptions found in the town and its vicinity show that Constanţa lies where once Tomis stood.

Tomis (also called Tomi) was a Greek colony in the province of Scythia Minor on the Black Sea's shore, founded around 500 BC for commercial exchanges with local Daco-Getic populations. Probably the name is derived from Greek Τόμη meaning cut, section.

According to the Bibliotheke it was founded by Aeetes:

"When Aeetes discovered the daring deeds done by Medea, he started off in pursuit of the ship; but when she saw him near, Medea murdered her brother and cutting him limb from limb threw the pieces into the deep. Gathering the child's limbs, Aeetes fell behind in the pursuit; wherefore he turned back, and, having buried the rescued limbs of his child, he called the place Tomi. "
( Bibliotheke I, ix, 24 )

According to Jordanes (after Cassiodorus), the founder of the city was a Getae queen (Jord. De origine actibusque Getarum, "The origin and deeds of the Goths"):

"After achieving this victory (against Cyrus the Great) and winning so much booty from her enemies, Queen Tomyris crossed over into that part of Moesia which is now called Lesser Scythia - a name borrowed from Great Scythia -, and built on the Moesian shore of the Black Sea the city of Tomi, named after herself."

In 29 BC the Romans captured the region from the Odryses, and annexed it as far as the Danube, under the name of Limes Scythicus.

In AD 8, the Roman poet Ovid (43 BC-17) was banished here by Augustus and died there eight years later, celebrating the town of Tomis in his poems. A statue of Ovid stands in the Ovid Square (Piaţa Ovidiu) of Constanţa, in front of the History Museum (the former City Hall).

The city was afterwards included in the Province of Moesia, and, from the time of Diocletian, in Scythia Minor, of which it was the metropolis. After the split of the Roman Empire, Tomis fell under the rule of Byzantine Empire. During Maurice's Balkan campaigns, Tomis was besieged by the Avars in winter 597/598.

Tomis was later renamed to Constantiana in honour of Constantia, the half-sister of Constantine the Great (274-337). The earliest known usage of this name was "Κωνστάντια" ("Constantia") in 950. The city lay at the seaward end of the Great Wall of Trajan, and has evidently been surrounded by fortifications of its own.

After successively becoming part of the Bulgarian Empires, the independent principality of Dobrotitsa/Dobrotici and of Wallachia under Mircea I of Wallachia, Constanţa fell under the Ottoman rule around 1419.

A railroad linking Constanţa to Cernavodă was opened in 1860. In spite of damage done by railway contractors there are considerable remains of ancient masonry walls, pillars, etc. An impressive public building, thought to have originally been a port building, has been excavated, and contains the substantial remains of one of the longest mosaic pavements in the world.

Image:Cazinoul.jpg
The Casino

In 1878, after the Romanian War of Independence, Constanţa and the rest of Northern Dobruja were ceded by the Ottoman Empire to Romania. The city became Romania's main seaport and transit point for much of Romania's exports.

On October 22, 1916 (during the World War I), Constanţa was occupied by the Central Powers (German, Turkish and Bulgarian troops). According to the Treaty of Bucharest in May 1918, article 10.b (treaty which has never been ratified by Romania), Constanţa remained under the joint control of the Central Powers. The city was liberated by the Allied troops in 1918 after the successful offensive on the Thessaloniki front which knocked Bulgaria out of the war.

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The city beach.

Geography

In the vicinity there are mineral springs, and the sea-bathing also attracts many visitors in summer. The chief local industries are tanning and the manufacture of petroleum drums. Mamaia is a beach resort immediately to the north.

Climate

Constanţa has a moderate continental climate with considerable maritime and some mediterranean influences. There are four distinct seasons in a year.

Summers are warm, dry and sunny with a July average of 23 °C. Constanţa rarely experiences very hot days often found in the interior, because of the moderating influence of the Black Sea. Summers settle around early June and end in mid September.

Autumns start late September, they're long and relatively warm. Nights can still be tropical (temperatures above 20 °C) on an average of 10 days in September. September is often warmer than June, because of the heat accumulated by the Black Sea. The first frost occurs on average on November 19.

Winter is much balmier compared to other cities in southern Romania. Snow is not abundant and the weather can be very windy and thus, unpleasant. Winter arrives much later than in the interior and December weather is often mild with high temperatures reaching 12 °C. Average January temperature is +0.4 °C.

Spring arrives early but it's quite cool. Often in April and May the Black Sea coast is the coolest place in Romania (high mountains excluded).

The winter of 2007 was the warmest in recorded history. The January average was 6.5 °C - 6 degrees above the normal. The summer of 2007 was the second hottest in history (after the summer of 1946) with a record breaking June average temperature of 23.0 °C - 3.5 degrees above the normal.

Image:Mamaia Avenue, Constanta.jpg
Constanţa, the second largest city of Romania.
Image:Tom - Carrefour.jpg
Tom Mall, Constanta

Population

According to the 2002 census, the population of Constanţa city proper (the Municipality) was 310,471. Constanţa is the second Romanian largest city. The municipality of Constanţa and the neighbouring localities make up a permanent population of 487,000 inhabitants, i.e. 65% of the total population of the county, and a minimum average of 120,000 per day, tourists or seasonal workers, come-and-go people during the high tourist season.

Ethnicity 1853[2] 1913[3] 2002[4]
All 5,204 27,201 310,471
Romanian 279 (5.4%) 15,663 (57.6%) 286,332 (92.2%)
Tatar 1,853 (35.6%) 277 (1%) 8,724 (2.8%)
Greek 1,542 (29.6%) 3,170 (11.6%) 546 (0.17%)
Turkish 104 (2.0%) 2,451 (9%) 9,018 (2.9%)
Bulgarian 342 (6.5%) 940 (3.4%) 48 (0.01%)
Jewish 344 (6.6%) 1,266 (4.6%) 44 (0.01%)
Roma/Gypsy 127 (2.4%) n/a 2,962 (0.95%)
Image:Fantana Cazino 1.jpg
The Mamaia Casino Fountain

Historical population

Languages
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