- Romanian architecture
Pre-Modern styles
During the
middle ages inRomania there were two types of construction that developed in parallel and different in point of both materials and technique. The first is the popular architecture, whose most spectacular achievements were the wooden churches, especially those in the villages ofMaramureş ,Banat andApuseni Mountains , where the tradition is still carried out today. In Maramureş, inSurdeşti village, the 54-m high church tower built during 1721-1724 is among the highest of this kind inEurope . The second comprises mainly of monasteries, as well as princely seats or boyar mansions. Unfortunatelly, most of the old lay edifices were destroyed by time, wars, earthquakes and fires.In mediaeval architecture, influences of Western trends can be traced, to a greater or lesser extent, in all the three lands inhabited by Romanians. Such influences are stronger in
Transylvania , and weaker inMoldavia , in forms absorbed by local andByzantine tradition. InWallachia , Western elements in architecture were even fewer; there, from the 14th century architecture was based on the local adaptation of the Byzantine model (thePrincely Church inCurtea de Arges and theCozia Monastery ).There are monuments significant for the Transylvanian
Gothic style preserved to this day, in spite of all alterations, such as theBlack Church inBraşov (14th-15th c.) and a number of othercathedrals , as well as theBran Castle inBraşov County (14th c.), theHunyades Castle in Hunedoara (15th c.).Transylvania also developed fortified towns extensively during the Middle Ages; their urban growth respected principles of functionality (the usual pattern is a central market place with a church, narrow streets with sides linked here and there by archways): the cities of
Sighişoara ,Sibiu and Braşov are remarkable examples in that sense. Building greatly developed in Moldavia, too. A great number of fortresses were built or rebuilt during the reign of Moldavia's greatest prince,Stephen the Great (1457-1504).Suceava ,Neamţ ,Hotin ,Soroca and others were raised and successfully withstood the sieges laid in the course of time bySultan Mehmet II , the conqueror ofConstantinople , by the kings ofPoland andHungary . It was during his time that the Moldavian style, of great originality and stylistic unity, developed, by blending Gothic elements with the Byzantine structure specific to the churches. Among such constructions, the monumental church of theNeamţ Monastery served, for more than a century, as a model for Moldavian churches and monasteries. The style was continued in the 16th c., during the rule of Stephen the Great's son,Petru Rareş (1527-1538; 1541-1546). The main innovation was the porch and the outwall paintings (the churches ofVoroneţ , Suceviţa, Moldoviţa monasteries). These churches of Northern Moldavia have become famous worldwide, due to the beauty of their painted elegant shapes that can be seen from afar.The 17th century, the zenith of the pre-modern Romanian civilisation, brought about a more significant development of outstanding lay constructions (elegant boyard mansions or sumptuous princely palaces in Moldavia and Wallachia, Renaissance-style lordly castles in Transylvania), as well as the expansion of great monasteries. The latter were endowed with schools, art workshops, printing presses, and they were significant cultural centres. To this period belongs the church of the
Trei Ierarhi Monastery inIaşi , raised in 1635-1639, a unique monument due to its lavish decoration with carved geometric motifs, coloured inlapis lazuli and golden foil, all over the facades. The architectural style developed inWallachia , especially under the reigns ofMatei Basarab (1632-1654) andConstantin Brâncoveanu (1688-1714), is of a remarkable stylistic unity. TheBrancovan style is characterized by integration ofBaroque andOriental features into the local tradition. Some examples are theHurezi Monastery inOltenia or the princely palace ofMogoşoaia , both of which are lavishly decorated, with beautiful stone carvings, stucco work and paintings.The 18th century (the
Phanariot rule ) brought to Wallachia and Moldavia elements ofOriental influence in urban civil architecture, where the number of religious constructions decreased relatively. In Transylvania, the Baroque dominated both religious (the Roman-Catholic churches in Timisoara and Oradea) and lay architecture (Banffy Palace in Cluj and Brukenthal Palace in Sibiu).Modern Styles
In the first half of the 19th century, urban life grew considerably and there was a Western-type modernisation policy, due to which the architecture of the Romanian lands became a combination of Romantic and Neo-Classical elements. In the second half of the century a national tendency developed, to use to a great extent elements and forms of the traditional local architecture.
Ion Mincu (1852-1912) was founder of both trends and of the Romanian school of architecture. His works, the Lahovary House or the Central Girls School in Bucharest, are among the most prominent achievements of this movement. It is due to an opposite trend that they designed houses and administrative buildings in the spirit of French eclecticism (theJustice Palace , the Central Post Office) or by adapting classicism (the buildings that now hosts the House of the Men of Science, or theCantacuzino Palace in Bucharest).That was the time when the
Romanian Athaeneum , one of the capitals most famous buildings, was erected in the same style (1886-1888). All those French-looking buildings raised around 1900 were a reason to nickname Bucharest "Little Paris ". Other important architects, likePetre Antonescu (1873-1965),Horia Creanga (1893-1943) andDuiliu Marcu (1885-1966) stood out by their commitment to simple and functional forms.In the first decades of the 20th century, Romanian towns and cities still had a contrasting aspect, exhibiting a sharp difference between the downtown sumptuous buildings and the almost rural outskirts, while the villages remained, architecturally speaking, mainly unchanged. Nevertheless, the first signs of town planning appeared in some urban districts (the first two- or three-storied blocks of flats or one-family houses on two levels).
Industrialization brought some engineering feats such as the
King Carol I Bridge (later renamed Anghel Saligny Bridge). Built between 1890 and 1895 in over theDanube , when it was completed it then became the longest bridge in Europe and the third in the world.Industrialisation and fast urban growth, forced especially in the last two decades of the communist epoch, introduced in architecture long-series typified projects and pre-fab technology in the construction of 8-10 storeyed blocks of flats, which resulted in huge living quarters, levelling up the Romanian townscape. Unfortunately, nationalism, characterizing the last
Ceausescu stage of Romanian communism, did not reflect in Romanian architecture. Traditional urban central areas and rural towns were destroyed, and replaced by conglomerates of blocks of flats, while the same ruler imposed the erection of monumental public buildings of a dull eclectic solemnity. Proof of this intrusion of politics in the life of the city stands the huge palace built on Ceausescus order in Bucharest, now theParliament House , whose construction necessitated the demolition of several quarters downtown. As in so many other domains, the post-revolutionary Romanian world will be bound to find again in architecture the way that best answers its needs for functionality and outlook.ee also
*
Constantin Brancoveanu
*List of buildings in Bucharest
*Horia Creangă
*Károly Kós
*Ion Mincu
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