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Cluj-Napoca, the county seat of Cluj County, is a popular tourist destination locally and nationally. There are several tourist destinations in Cluj County, such as, most notably, its county seat, Cluj-Napoca , the Apuseni Mountains , castles, fortresses, and churches.
The Cluj Metropolitan Area was legally established in the fall of 2008 as an inter-community development association, [4] [5] having as founders the municipality of Cluj-Napoca, the Cluj County Council and 17 communes in the vicinity of Cluj. In 2009, the commune of Sânpaul joined the metropolitan area, and in 2016, the commune of Săvădisla ...
Cluj-Napoca and the surrounding area (Cluj County) had a rate of 268 criminal convictions per 100,000 inhabitants during 2006, just above the national average. [116] After the revolution in 1989, the criminal conviction rate in the county entered a phase of sustained growth, reaching a historic high of 429 in 1998, when it began to fall. [116]
Cluj-Napoca is the major economic centre of the region Oradea is another important economic and cultural centre of the region. The economy of Nord-Vest is mainly agricultural (46% of its population having agriculture as their main occupation), even though there is some heavy and light industry in the major regional industrial centres of Cluj-Napoca, Oradea, Baia Mare, Bistrița, Satu Mare and ...
Cluj County geography stubs (1 C, 100 P) Pages in category "Geography of Cluj County" ... Cluj-Napoca metropolitan area; H. Hoia-Baciu Forest; M. Transylvanian Plain; T.
Cluj County Prefecture The Cluj County Prefecture ( Romanian : Palatul Prefecturii din Cluj ) is a building in Cluj-Napoca , Romania , housing the offices of the Cluj County prefect . It is located at 21 Decembrie 1989 Boulevard, nr.
Turda (Romanian pronunciation:; Hungarian: Torda, Hungarian pronunciation:; German: Thorenburg; Latin: Potaissa) is a city in Cluj County, Transylvania, Romania.It is located in the southeastern part of the county, 34.2 km (21.3 mi) from the county seat, Cluj-Napoca, to which it is connected by the European route E81, and 6.7 km (4.2 mi) from nearby Câmpia Turzii.
The capital of the region was the city of Cluj, and at first, its territory comprised an area slightly smaller than the nowadays Cluj and Sălaj counties. On September 19, 1952, the administrative regions of Romania were reorganized by Decree nr. 331.