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After World War I, when Austria-Hungary broke up and Transylvania (including Cluj) joined Romania, a Romanian university was founded in 1920; it used the existing Central University Library (dedicated in the presence of the royal family and renamed the Library of King Ferdinand I University) and the Library of the Transylvanian Museum, still ...
Technical University of Cluj-Napoca: Cluj-Napoca: 1920/1948 University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of Cluj-Napoca: Cluj-Napoca: 1869 Babeş-Bolyai University: Cluj-Napoca: 1581/1919 1945/1959 Iuliu Haţieganu University of Medicine and Pharmacy: Cluj-Napoca: 1919/1948 Gheorghe Dima National Music Academy: Cluj-Napoca: 1919
National Library of Romania. / 44.4255; 26.1101. The National Library of Romania ( Romanian: Biblioteca Națională a României) is the national library of Romania. It is intended to be the repository of all that is published in Romania. The construction cost was €110 million.
Education in Romania. Education in Romania is based on a free-tuition, egalitarian system. Access to free education is guaranteed by Article 32 in the Constitution of Romania. [1] Education is regulated and enforced by the Ministry of National Education. [2] Each step has its own form of organization and is subject to different laws and directives.
Cluj-Napoca ( Romanian: [ˈkluʒ naˈpoka] ⓘ ), or simply Cluj ( Hungarian: Kolozsvár [ˈkoloʒvaːr] ⓘ, German: Klausenburg ), is the second-most populous city in Romania [5] and the seat of Cluj County in the northwestern part of the country. Geographically, it is roughly equidistant from Bucharest (445 kilometres (277 miles)), Budapest ...
Two volumes of a catalogue of the remaining works were published by Erich Hermann Mueller von Asow (1892–1964) in 1959. After von Asow's death, Franz Trenner (d. 1993) and Alfons Ott (d. 1976) published the third volume, based on von Asow's notes; this catalogue lists 323 titles, including Strauss's literary writings.
Iclod (Hungarian: Nagyiklód; German: Grossikladen) is a commune in Cluj County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of five villages: Fundătura (Szamosjenő), Iclod, Iclozel (Kisiklód), Livada (Dengeleg) and Orman (Ormány). Demographics. According to the census from 2002 there was a total population of 4,420 people living in this commune.
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