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Banca Transilvania S.A. (also BT or TLV) is a banking institution with headquarters in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. The bank was founded in 1993 in Cluj-Napoca with a capital of 2 billion RON, of which 79% was Romanian and 21% foreign. BT is the largest bank in Romania in terms of assets, with a market share of over 16%. [2]
a Banca Transilvania acquired Bancpost in 2018 from Eurobank. b Banca Transilvania acquired Volksbank Group's Romanian subsidiary in 2015. c UniCredit Bank acquired Royal Bank of Scotland's Romanian subsidiary in 2015. d Raiffeisen Bank acquired Citibank's retail banking operations in 2013. e OTP Bank acquired Millennium BCP's Romanian ...
As a result of this agreement, OTP Group is selling the subsidiaries of OTP Bank Romania as well which results fully exiting the Romanian market. [ 33 ] [ 34 ] Wizz Air is a low-cost airline from Hungary, which operates flights from several airports in Romania ( Bucharest , Cluj-Napoca , Târgu Mureș , Sibiu , Timișoara , Iasi , Suceava and ...
Name Date Present location Deaths Notes Siculeni massacre: 7 January 1764: Csík-Mádéfalva, Principality of Transylvania, Habsburg monarchy (today Siculeni, Harghita County) 400 Székelys
Export-Import Bank of Romania logo until 2023. In June 2019, Export-Import Bank of Romania has signed an agreement with National Bank of Greece (NBG) to acquire 99.28% stake in Banca Românească (BROM). [1] Following the completion of the deal, EximBank will foray into the domestic retail banking market and will become a universal commercial bank.
Transylvania (Romanian: Transilvania [transilˈvani.a] or Ardeal; or Hungarian: Erdély; German: Siebenbürgen [ˌziːbm̩ˈbʏʁɡn̩] ⓘ or Transsilvanien, historically Überwald; Transylvanian Saxon: Siweberjen) is a historical and cultural region in Central Europe, encompassing central Romania.
Southern Transylvania was a region of the Kingdom of Romania between 1940 and 1944, during World War II.The region of Transylvania, belonging entirely to Romania when the war started in 1939, was split in 1940 between Romania and Hungary, with the latter taking Northern Transylvania in the aftermath of the Second Vienna Award.
One year after the starting of The Holocaust in Romania, Ion Antonescu ordered surveys to assess the Romani population in Romania. The results estimated 208,700 people of Romani ethnicity, out of whom the ones without fixed residence and those deemed "dangerous" - for example those who had previous criminal convictions or even those who were jobless - fell under the criteria for deportation.