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Ziua de Ardeal; Ziua de Cluj; Clujmedia; Hungarian language. Bihari Napl ... Românul de la Pind (1903–1912) Scînteia (1931–1940; 1944–1989) Ziua (1995–2009)
Ziua (The Day in Romanian) was a major Romanian daily newspaper published in Bucharest. It was published in Romanian, with a fairly sizeable and often informative English section. Ziua was founded in 1994 by Sorin Roșca Stănescu , eventually becoming foreign-owned. It was the most conservative of the major Romanian dailies, often taking a ...
Constanta.ro - realitatea urbană de zi cu zi. Adolescentul; Litoral; Atac de Constanța; Jurnalul de Constanța; Replica de Constanța; Ziua de Constanța; Bună ...
Constanța's public transport system is run by CT Bus (formerly Regia Autonomă de Transport în Comun Constanța - RATC), and consists of 19 year-round bus lines, and two seasonal lines, including a sightseeing double decker open top bus line. In the early 2000s, the city bought 130 new MAZ buses to replace the aging fleet of DAC buses.
The Constanța metropolitan area, is a metropolitan area, established in 2007, that includes the municipality of Constanța, the towns of Năvodari, Ovidiu, Eforie, Murfatlar, Techirghiol and 8 communes: Mihail Kogălniceanu, Cumpăna, Valu lui Traian, Lumina, Tuzla, Agigea, Corbu and Poarta Albă.
Ziua Muncii: Labour Day: International Labour Day April/May Paștele: Good Friday, Easter, Easter Monday: The official holiday is the Orthodox Easter. The holiday is three days long, Good Friday, [3] Easter Sunday and Easter Monday are non-working. 1 June Ziua Copilului: Children's Day: Public holiday starting with 2017 [4] May/June Rusaliile ...
The museum building was designed as a city hall by architect Victor Ștefănescu. Prince Ferdinand laid the cornerstone in May 1912. Construction was halted in 1913, restarted in summer 1914, then stopped again during World War I.
Lumina (Romanian for "the light") is a commune in Constanța County, Northern Dobruja, Romania.. The commune includes three villages: Lumina (historical names: Valea Neagră (until 1965); Cogealia, Kogea-Ali (until 1929) - Turkish: Kocaali, German: Kodschalie)