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Gazeta de Hunedoara; Gazeta de Oradea; Hermannstädter Zeitung (weekly in German language) Informația Cluj; Informația de Vest; Monitorul de Braşov; Monitorul de Cluj; Monitorul de Făgăraș; Monitorul de Sibiu; ProSport - Ediția de Transilvania; Realitatea Bihoreană; Repere Transilvane, weekly regional newspaper in Romanian and Hungarian ...
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 ...
In October 2022 Constanta's new BYD electric buses entered service with CT Bus. Constanța is one of the main focuses of the Rail-2-Sea project which aims to connect it to the Polish Baltic Sea port of Gdańsk with a 3,663 kilometres (2,276 miles) long railway line passing through Romania, Hungary, Slovakia and Poland.
In 2001, a night club, Pub 21, launched a cocktail with the name of "Fata de la Pagina 5". [6] After almost 20 years, in 2017, with a shift in editorial strategy, while rebranding as a popular newspaper, Libertatea cancels "Page 5 girl" section from its printed and online editions. [7]
Area code +40 x41 4: ISO 3166 code: RO-CT: Car Plates: CT 5: GDP nominal: US$14.640 billion (2024)GDP per capita: US$22,351 (2024)Economy rank: 3rd: Website: County Board County Prefecture
23 August (Romanian: Douăzeci și Trei August) is a commune in Constanța County, Northern Dobruja, Romania.The commune includes three villages: 23 August (historical names: Tatlâgeac Mare, Turkish: Büyük-Tatlıcak; Domnița Elena) – named after the day of the 1944 royal coup d'état
Evenimentul Zilei was founded by Ion Cristoiu, Cornel Nistorescu, and Mihai Cârciog [], and the first issue was published on 22 June 1992. [1] Ion Cristoiu, one of the 3 founders of the newspaper, was also its first director, but he is currently columnist at the same newspaper
In 2010 the largest liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) terminal in Romania was opened in the Port of Midia by Octagon Gas, after an initial investment of €12 million. The terminal occupies an area of 24,000 m 2 (260,000 sq ft) and has a storage capacity of 4,000 m 3 (140,000 cu ft) in 10 storage tanks 400 m 3 (14,000 cu ft) each.