Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The History Museum in Suceava (August 2020) 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 ...
The Medieval Seat Fortress of Suceava (Romanian: Cetatea Medievală de Scaun a Sucevei or Cetatea Sucevei; German: Sotschen Festung or Festung Suceava) [2] is a fortified castle in the middle-sized town of Suceava, the county seat town of Suceava County, situated in the historical regions of Bukovina and Moldavia, northeastern Romania.
In the beginning, the museum included only a few collections that were obtained as a result of the researches and excavation works at the Seat Fortress of Suceava. The museum was expanded and developed over time and became an important cultural institution, currently named Bukovina Museum (Romanian: Muzeul Bucovinei).
"Hanul Domnesc" (The Princely Inn) Ethnographic Museum – Suceava Wooden Spoons Museum , Câmpulung Moldovenesc Museum of Romanian History (Muzeul de Istorie Roman) – Roman
Bukovina [nb 1] is a historical region at the crossroads of Central and Eastern Europe. [1] The region is located on the northern slopes of the central Eastern Carpathians and the adjoining plains, today divided between Romania and Ukraine.
The monastery is located to the south of Gura Humorului in Suceava County, in the valley of the Voroneț River. The legend of the origin of the church unites two men central to Romanian history: the founder of the monastery, Stephen the Great, and Saint Daniil the Hermit, the first abbot of the monastery. The tomb of Saint Daniil is located ...
The five Romanian interwar counties of the region of Bukovina (Câmpulung, Cernăuți, Rădăuți, Storojineț and Suceava), as well as the Hotin County of northern Bessarabia, formed the new Bukovina Governorate, to which the Dorohoi County (in Western Moldavia) was posteriorly attached in October 1941.
Henrieta Todorova (Bulgarian: Хенриета Тодорова) (25 February 1933 – 12 April 2015) was a Bulgarian archaeologist, specialist in prehistory, professor, corresponding member of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, corresponding member of the German Archaeological Institute in Berlin, and a foreign member of the academy Leibniz Scientific Society (Leibniz-Sozietät der ...