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In the interwar period, the building served as prefecture of the district.. The Bukovina Museum (Romanian: Muzeul Bucovinei) is a museum located in the Romanian middle-sized town of Suceava, the seat of Suceava County, named after the historical region of Bukovina (the southern part) which Suceava can be also perceived as a capital cultural of (along with Chernivtsi in the northern part).
English: The renovated history museum of Bukovina is a historical building situated in the town centre of Suceava, seat of Suceava County, north-eastern Romania Date 11 August 2020, 16:08:35
The Wooden Spoons Museum (Romanian: Muzeul Lingurilor de Lemn) or Ion Țugui Spoon Museum (Muzeul Lingurilor "Ion Țugui") [1] is a museum in Câmpulung Moldovenesc, in the Suceava County, Romania. It is located in the house where the history professor Ion Țugui lived, [2] at no. 1 in Gh. Popovici Street. [1]
Satu Mare (German: Grossdorf) [2] is a commune located in Suceava County, Bukovina, Romania. It is composed of two villages, Satu Mare (German: Deutsch Satulmare) and Țibeni (Hungarian: Istensegíts). From 1776 to 1941, Țibeni village was inhabited by the Székelys of Bukovina.
As it is the case of other former mining rural settlements from Suceava County, Fundu Moldovei (German: Luisenthal) was previously inhabited by a sizeable German community, more specifically by Zipser Germans (part of the larger Bukovina German community) during the modern period up until the mid 20th century, starting as early as the Habsburg period and, later on, the Austro-Hungarian period.
Ion I. Nistor (August 16, 1876 – November 11, 1962) was a Romanian historian and politician. He was a titular member of the Romanian Academy from 1915 and a professor at the universities of Cernăuți and Bucharest, while also serving as Minister of State for Bukovina, Minister of Public Works, Minister of Labor, and Minister of Religious Affairs and the Arts with a number of governments ...
Often known as the "Sistine Chapel of the East" [2] for its vivid frescoes, Voroneț's walls feature an intense shade of blue known in Romania as "Voroneț blue." [ 1 ] The monastery is located to the south of Gura Humorului in Suceava County , in the valley of the Voroneț River .
Under communism, official history in Romania taught that Germans were the sole perpetrators of the Holocaust, thereby ignoring the role of the Romanian government in the deportation of hundreds of thousands of Jews and tens of thousands of Romani, from the historical regions of Bessarabia, northern Bukovina, and Transnistria, during World War II.