Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rank Airport City Code (IATA/ICAO) Passengers [1] Annual change Rank change 1. Henri Coandă International Airport: Bucharest: OTP/LROP: 15,940,443: 9.0%: 2. Cluj Avram Iancu International Airport
To combat some of the negative stigma associated with contact tracing and STIs, health departments sometimes referred to contact tracing as partner notification in the 1980s. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Partner notification , also called partner care, is a subset of contact tracing aimed specifically at informing sexual partners of an infected person and ...
Sibiu International Airport (Romanian: Aeroportul Internațional Sibiu) (IATA: SBZ, ICAO: LRSB) serves the city of Sibiu. It is located in southern Transylvania, 3 km (1.9 mi) west [1] of Sibiu and about 260 km (160 mi) northwest of Romania's capital city, Bucharest.
Since the 12th or 13th century the town was inhabited by Transylvanian Saxons and from 1355 it became one of the original seven seats of Saxondom from the Sibiu area. The town is the place of birth of Ilie Măcelaru [ ro ] (1822–1891), a lawyer who participated in the 1848 revolution and a founding member of the Romanian National Party that ...
Ocna Sibiului (German: Salzburg; Hungarian: Vízakna) is a town in the centre of Sibiu County, in southern Transylvania, central Romania, 10 km (6.2 mi) to the north-west of the county seat, Sibiu. The town administers a single village, Topârcea ( Tschapertsch ; Toporcsa ).
City/Town Villages Sibiu: Păltiniș Mediaș: Ighișu Nou Agnita: Coveș, Ruja Avrig: Bradu, Glâmboaca, Mârșa, Săcădate Cisnădie: Cisnădioara Copșa Mică
Four-digit postal codes were introduced in Romania in 1974. Beginning with 1 May 2003, postal codes have six digits, and represent addresses to the street level in major cities (those with population over 50,000).
Porumbacu de Jos (German: Unter-Bornbach; Hungarian: Alsóporumbák) is a commune in Sibiu County, Transylvania, central Romania, first documented in 1473.It is composed of five villages: Colun, Porumbacu de Jos, Porumbacu de Sus, Sărata, and Scoreiu.