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1859 – City becomes seat of the Romanian United Principalities. 1860 University of Iași founded. Music and Declamation School and School for Sculpture and Painting founded. 1861 – Seat of Romanian government relocated from Iași to Bucharest. [2] 1864 – Central State Library of Iași in operation. [4] 1870 – Iași railway station opens.
The Independence of Romania: Independenţa României: 1912 1887–1878 Romanian War of Independence, Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) Carol I, Alexander II of Russia, Osman Pasha, Peneş Curcanul: Independenta Romaniei at IMDb, Cinemagia: The Column: Columna: 1968 106 AD Trajan's Dacian Wars: Trajan, Decebalus: Columna at IMDb: Cantemir ...
The Central University Library of Iași, where the chief records of Romanian history are preserved, is the oldest and the second largest in Romania. As of 2016, Iași has 74 public schools, coordinated by the Iași County School Inspectorate. The city is also home to 19 private schools. [85] Notable high schools: Iași National College (1828)
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The Metropolitan Cathedral, Iași (Romanian: Catedrala Mitropolitană din Iași), located at 16 Ștefan cel Mare și Sfânt Boulevard, Iași, Romania, is the seat of the Romanian Orthodox Archbishop of Iași and Metropolitan of Moldavia and Bukovina, and the largest historic Orthodox church in Romania. [1]
It was widely believed in interwar Romania that Communism was the work of the Jews, and Romania's coming entry into the war against the Soviet Union – a war billed as a struggle to "annihilate" the forces of "Judeo-Bolshevism" – greatly served to increase the anti-Semitic paranoia of the Iron Guard regime. [8]
The Palace of Culture (Romanian: Palatul Culturii) is an edifice located in Iași, Romania.The building served as the Administrative and Justice Palace until 1955, when its designation and use was changed, and assigned to the four museums nowadays united under the name of Moldavia National Museum Complex.