Photographers Note
This is a street in Targoviste, the capital of Dambovita county.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia:
Location of Tārgovişte: Dāmboviţa County
Status: County capital
Mayor: Iulian Furcoiu, Social Democratic Party, since 2000
Population (2002):89,429
Geographical coordinates:44°55′27″N, 25°27′24″E
Web site:http://www.pmtgv.ro/
Tārgovişte (also spelled Tīrgovişte; IPA: [tɨr.ˈgo.viʃ.te]) is a city in the Dāmboviţa county of Romania. It is situated on the right bank of the Ialomiţa River. As of 2003, it has an estimated population of 89,000.
First attested in 1396, in the Travel Accounts of Johannes Schiltberger, it became the capital of the Wallachian voivodship, probably during the reign of Mircea cel Bătrān, when the Royal Court ("Curtea Domnească") was built. Vlad III Dracula later added the Chindia Tower, now a symbol of the city.
In 1597 Mihai Viteazul fought and won a decisive battle against the Ottoman Empire in Tārgovişte.
After Constantin Brāncoveanu moved the capital to Bucharest, Tārgovişte lost its importance, decaying economically as its population decreased.
Tārgovişte was the site of the trial and execution of Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife Elena in December 1989.
Interestingly, there are towns with the same name (albeit with different spellings) in both Bulgaria and Serbia. The Romanian and Bulgarian towns are twinned. The name is of Slavic origin, from the root -trg- or -tǎrg- ("trade") and the placename suffix -ite, and means "marketplace".
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Photo Information
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Copyright: Andreea Teodorescu (anducina)
(8070) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2006-09-03
- Categories: Architecture
- Camera: Canon Powershot A510
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2006-09-04 12:16








