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PLOIEÅžTI – THE CITY OF “BLACK GOLDâ€Â
Situated in the south – eastern Romania, having a population of over
250,000 inhabitants, Ploieşti is one of Romania’s most important
cities, on the second place after Bucharest as for the industrial
production.
At a 60 km distance from Bucharest, crossed by the 26( meridian and the
44( 55’ parallel, Ploieşti is the petroleum industrial citadel.
PloieÅŸti is also known for the production and exportation of the
petrochemical, chemical and petroleum equipment, heavy – duty
bearings, cables, detergents, cloths, furniture, as well for the civil
and industrial engineering made abroad.
EN (TIMKEN ROMANIA), by the steel cables plant CABLUL ROMÂNESC, by the
pipeline oil transport CONPET, by the polyethylene products plant
POLITEH, by the detergents plant DERO LEVER, by the cloths factory
DOROBANŢUL, by the ready – made clothes factory MODEXIM, by the
furniture plant ANTECO, by the food and drink plants SOCIETATEA DE
ÎMBUTELIAT COCA – COLA, PROLA, EFES PILSNER, EXTRAPAN, DI APOLLO
INDUSTRIA CĂRNII, the tobacco industry – BRITISH AMERICAN TOBACCO, in
the printing industry - MAYR MELNHOF PACKAGING ROMANIA, in
constructions (CIPROM, INSPET, UMO, CONTRASIMEX, ASCM., CONSTIL).
The private initiative led to the creation of some important firms in
the construction sector (ROOL CONSTRUCT, NOVA – CONS), in the computer
manufacturing (SPRINT COMPUTERS, PLATIN SYSTEMS)
The municipality
As any settlement, PloieÅŸti has always had a leader of its own. First,
there were a magistrate and town councillors, afterwards a chairman and
an executive committee and finally a mayor and a town council. All of
them did their best to solve the town’s problems concerning the
aspect, the constructions and the public utilities, the salubrity and to
contribute to the local economical development, social protection,
culture, education and local patrimony.
At first, the municipality did not have premises of its own, renting
various buildings. Later on they afforded to get two buildings
constructed. The first one (“THE OLD TOWN HALLâ€Â), which used to be
situated on the present – day “Prahova†Hotel, housed the Town
Hall between 1868 – 1894. It was demolished after 1940.
Between 1894 – 1972 the Town Hall was to be found in the “New Town
Hall“. The edifice, designed to become a museum of the city after
1972, had to be demolished after the 1977 earthquake. Since 1972, the
Town Hall has carried out its activity in the building of the
Administrative Palace. Besides this building, the public services carry
out their activity in other premises as a result of the development and
diversification of the activity: inside the Central Market – which has
been administrated by the municipality since 1997 – the Patrimony
Board and the Fiscal Board carry out activity; the former house of the
mayor Radu Stanian which has became the Weddings House, houses the
Registry Office.
A New Borough at the Feet of The Mountains
PloieÅŸti to sell him that land. The chief magistrate refused the money
offered by the Prince for that land because he said that villagers who
lived there were freeholders and if they had sold their land they would
have became serfs.
The legend is only partly true. In fact, the Prince bought the land
from two country squires and gave it to the inhabitants of PloieÅŸti to
keep into possession. Michael the Brave also got that land colonized by
brave soldiers. He set up there a weekly fair, which used to attract
people and goods from far away. Thus, the small borough developed in a
short time, being ruled by a magistrate and 12 town councillors, elected
by the townsmen.
Ploieşti was also a headquarters for Michael the Brave’s army, as he
prepared his glorious military campaign to Transylvania, first step to a
unification of the Romanian provinces. His military campaign started at
Ploieşti on October 4, 1599 and ended in triumph at Alba – Iulia on
November 1.
For all those reasons we can say that Michael the Brave was not only
the founder of the city, but also a huge personality who decided upon
the city’s future. In their turn, the inhabitants of Ploieşti have
remained eternally grateful to him.
The Statue of Liberty
Is the oldest monument of the city, a homage paid by its inhabitants to
democracy thy fought for. The news about the Radical – Liberals’
victory in the local election in PloieÅŸti in March 1869 against the
Government’s interferences concerning the constitutional rights was
quickly spread in the whole country. It was followed and amplified by
the news of the antidynastic movement in the same city in August 1870.
In that respect, Dimitrie Brătianu, together with C. A. Rossetti –
two Romanian political personalities of the time -, proposed that the
city of PloieÅŸti should be rewarded with a monument, opening a
subscription list for possible supporters through the newspaper “ The
Romanian “.
The initiators of the project sought abroad and eventually found in
France a well – suited statue, both by theme (the Goddess Minerva
wearing the Phrygian cap of liberty), size (3.5 m), artistical value and
technical execution (it was cast at L. Oudry & C – i.e. in Paris). The
statue was bought and brought in the country in 1876, but it was not
immediately put in place because of the war. The architect Toma N.
Socolescu, who had also designed the plinth, got the statue assembled in
Liberty Square on September 1st, 1879.
inhabitants of PloieÅŸti. Thus, during the painful days of theRevolution
of 1989, people gathered round the statue and every year after has
commemorated their heroes there.
The Soldier’s Memorial
Was also moved from the initial site where it had been unveiled on
October 12th, 1897(in a square on the main boulevard nearby the center
of the city) to another square close by the Southern Railway Station
(1954) and finally in a traffic circle not far from the previous site
(1980).
Griviţa Attack (August 30, 1877), the first victory of the young
Romanian army, to which the second Battalion soldiers of PloieÅŸti led
by Alexandru Candiano – Popescu contributed decisively.
After the war, a group of ex – servicemen joined by a few young
enthusiastic people (stimulated by Nicolae Prusanu) initiated the
erection of a Memorial to honour the heroes of the Griviţa Attack.
Within 7 years the initiators of the project gathered funds from over
20,000 people all over the country and gave the project into the charge
of the sculptor George Vasilescu.
The monument has two distinct parts: a stone part, a granite obelisk
above an almost cubic plinth over – topping a stepping platform and a
bronze part, both of them being made in Italy. The sculptures represent
an eagle wearing a flag into its beak (on the top of the monument), a
symbolic inlaid work, two allegoric high relief’s on a plinth and the
statues of four soldiers (made after real models) in various positions
and having their own personality.
Honour their Memory
The inhabitants of PloieÅŸti sacrificed their lives in the battles of
World War I or behind the front. Gratitude towards those heroes took
shape in a 60 m high spire, attached to the ample portal of “St.
John’s†Cathedral.
An initiators committee gathered funds and gave the project into the
charge of the great Romanian architect Toma T. Socolescu. It is a solid
narthex from which another two smaller lateral spires rise, beside the
60 m high spire.
The facade of the cathedral is embellished by the horizontal alternance
of stones and bricks and adorned with finely sculptured ornaments. The
high narrow windows complete the harmony of the facade.
The foundation stone was laid on November18th, 1923, and the building
works lasted up to 1937. The construction materials were brought from
all the areas where the soldiers of the country lost their lives: stone
blocks from Oituz, brick from Mărăşeşti, gravel for concrete from
Doaga, Valea ÅžuÅŸitei etc.
The heroes are also paid homage in a graveyard near the “Bolovaniâ€Â
cemetery. The architect Toma T. Socolescu achieved a monumental portal
on the separating side from which the main path of the graveyard starts.
Looking under the portal, one can see the obelisk rising up in order to
immortalize the heroes’ memory.
The National Oil Museum
In 1857 three international events took place in Romania:
Romania, the first country with an output of 275t officially registered
in international statistics;
The first refinery in the world built in Ploieşti by the Mehedinţeanu
brothers;
Bucharest, the first town in the world having public lightning with
kerosene.
In 1957, in Romania was celebrated one century of Romanian oil industry,
and that was the moment when the foundation of the National Oil Museum
was decided.
The main activity of the museum consists of illustrating the history of
Romanian oil industry and the science and technique of petroleum. There
is also mentioned the contribution of this industrial branch to the
economic and social progress of the country.
The subject matters of the museum consist of:
History of exploitation and petroleum utilization, laws and rules,
social and political events related to;
The beginning and evolution of geological investigations;
Evolution of techniques and tools for drilling, exploitation and
processing.
Based on these aspects the main exhibition was put in place and the
museum was inaugurated on October 8th, 1961.
The main exhibition displays in a modern arrangement its patrimony in a
big hall having more than 500 m². Original documents, geological maps,
technological documentation, photos and functional small – size copies
are some of the most important exhibits.
The second exhibition consists of a park of tools in the open air
nearby different equipment used in the oil industry over 80 years ago.
The third showroom is a hall presenting tools, small size equipment and
apparatus used principally in extractive industry.
The museum has also got a storehouse of original documents, photos and
videocassettes. The library consists of more than 3,000 volumes, an
important collection of ancient books about oil technique and science.
We notice there “Moniteur du Petrole Roumainâ€Â, a very important
bilingual publication (Romanian and French) issued in the period 1900
– 1948.
Among the most valuable exhibits, the museum has got a collection of
oil lamps, original documents and documentation concerning great
scientists of the oil industry. We mention some of them:
Gregoriu Ştefănescu, Grigore Cobălcescu, Ludovic Mrazec, Valeriu
Patriciu, from the geology department;
Ion Tănăsescu, Virgiliu Tacit, Ion Basgan, Andrei Dragulanescu, from
the drilling and exploitation department;
Lazăr Edeleanu, Nicolae Debie, from the chemistry department;
The National Oil Museum is due to enrich its collections by
acquisitions, donations and to leave this national patrimony to the
future generations.
Throughout its existence the museum had over 1 million visitors:
students, foreign delegations, politicians, etc.
The History and Archaeology Museum
This institution started up its activity in a different building on 25,
N. Bălcescu Street on 1 May 1953. That used to be a superb house; the
Great Tzar Nicholas was lodged in 1877, having a different utilization
today, as library, restoration studio, depository, etc.
The present – day edifice housing the “History and Archaeologyâ€Â
Museum, formerly called the “Old Secondary Schoolâ€Â, conceived by the
architect Alexandru Orăscu and raised between 1865 – 1866, is a large
building, with white facades whose forms cast subtle shadows and lights.
After 1968, as a result of prof. N. I. Simache’s efforts, the
building was assigned to the museum. The edifice has been repaired and
restored several times, the latest being a radical restoration (1992 –
1997), giving back the whole authenticity to the exterior and the
“aspect of palace†to the interior. In this excellent expositional
space, there have been organized, pursuing the most efficient
museological techniques, the numismatic and archaeology halls entitled
“Michael the Braveâ€Â, “1848â€Â, “I. A. Bassarabescu†as well as
many other rooms containing other exhibitions.
The aesthetical and scientific value of the establishment has increased
considerably due to the arrangement of its precincts and especially to
the very inspired “Lapidarius†from the back yard.
The “N. Simache†Museum of the Clock
This is another example where a remarkable building has housed an
exceptional museum, unique in the country and among the very few
throughout the world. The “Luca Elefterescu†House had been built
for the former MP and prefect Luca Elefterescu in 1885 – 1895, being
afterwards bought by the English oil magnate Masterson.
The house, built in Austrian neo – Gothic style, conceived for the
corner of the street, calls the viewer’s attention to the extremely
various relief of the facades, the dynamics of the adornments, the
sumptuousness of the interiors.
The institution came into being due to the professor N. Simache’s
efforts as a permanent exhibition, housed by one of the exposition halls
of the Palace of Culture (1963). The professor’s concerning to enrich
the collections and to obtain the necessary premises turned into a real
obsession. In 1971 he finally succeeded in getting premises and engaged
in the project of the organization of a museum that opened only a little
time before his death.
This museum bears his name to honour his memory. The museum exhibits
only a part of its very rich collections of more than 1000 pieces
designed and made by well – known craftsmen from all over Europe in a
very modern conception. The “Clock†Museum offers to the visitors’
real pieces of art, masterpieces of creativity and originality, which
confers to the city a strong personality.
n that had been founded as a municipal picture gallery that had
continuously enriched its patrimony and had been looking for proper
premises for more than three decades. The inhabitants of PloieÅŸti have
one of the best art museums in the country, which cannot be estimated in
numbers. If we mentioned all the sculptors, the painters, the drawers
and their work, which are to be found here, we would write the whole
history of the Romanian art. This institution is more than a simple
museum: foreign art exhibitions and artistical soirees are organized
here; valuable work is published under the aegis of this institution.
The Palace of Culture
Majestic neo – Classic building, embodying solidity and permanence,
the nowadays Palace of Culture began to be built before the World War I,
on the projects of the architect E. Doneaud, and was inaugurated only in
1933, on November 26, in the presence of King Carol the 2nd. Until 1951
the Prahova Law Court carried on its activity in this building. In 1951
its destination was changed into Palace of Culture (in the latest years,
the eastern wing has been given back to the Appeal Court).
The huge “Column Hall†offers an excellent space for exhibitions
(one of the best in the country) and the conference halls of the Palace
have housed local and national prestigious cultural events.
Some important institutions are accommodated in there: the Museum of
Ethnography of Prahova County, the Museum of Human Biology (developing
extremely various themes, thus making up a vivid in sharp relief
encyclopedia), and the School of Arts and Crafts (being founded over 50
years ago), with hundreds of students and thousands of former students.
Nevertheless, the most impressive of all the institutions housed in the
Palace is the “Nicolae Iorga†County Library, older than three
quarters of a century, created due to the initiative of few
intellectuals and enriched by permanent donations and acquisitions.
Having a book stock of more than half a million titles among which some
being very rare on an on – line catalogue, a hard – working
professional staff and thousands of readers, this library has also
published valuable books and brochures and regularly publishes the
“Magazine of Booksâ€Â.
Trade
eÅŸti has been a trade center, more precisely since 1597, when Michael
the Brave founded it as a borough. In the 19th century there were few
merchants (arrived from Transylvania and Bulgaria and settled there) who
carried on trade with the cities of BraÅŸov and Leipzig until the city
engaged into business also with other cities. There were certain
companies that carried on their activity for generations, such as the
blacksmith workshops: “Munteanuâ€Â, “Chitu and Iosifescuâ€Â,
“MoÅ£oiuâ€Â, whose employers, most of them being university graduates,
were also wholesalers, providing the whole county and not only with
various goods.
The trade field has improved in time: for instance, the cattle market
moved to the “Bucov†Turnpike in 1911, the Central Market
emblematical building conceived by the architect Toma T. Socolescu was
opened in 1935 and the first general store “Papagalul†was
inaugurated in 1938.
After 1948, the trade field began to regress in PloieÅŸti, and crossed
a difficult period. Nevertheless new supermarkets have taken shape
having a decorative as well as a functional architecture: “Bigâ€Â,
“Nordâ€Â, “Omniaâ€Â, “Mercurâ€Â, “Unireaâ€Â, “Lumea
Copiilorâ€Â, not to mention the “PloieÅŸti†Commercial Galleries.
Banks
At present, trade has developed also in smaller or bigger companies in
the private sector, keeping the up–to–date standards.
PloieÅŸti has also been an important business center under the leading
of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry, having even a local Stock
Exchange for a while.
The banks from Bucharest opened branches in PloieÅŸti in short time,
joining the existing ones, such as: “Central Bank†(Max Schapira),
“Prahovaâ€Â, “Kogălniceanuâ€Â, the “Romanian General†Bank,
which used to finance the petroleum industry.
Today, banks have revived in PloieÅŸti, some of them have found their
formerly premises, others have created modern impressive buildings.
Among those banks we must mention: the National Bank, the Romanian
Commercial Bank, the Romanian Bank of Development, Bank Post, the
“Transylvania†Bank, the Agricultural Bank, the Commercial and
Industrial Credit Bank, the “Ion Ţiriac†Commercial Bank, ABN AMRO
Bank, City Bank, Romextra Bank, Ing. Barings Bank.
The Education in PloieÅŸti
There are known just a few things about the beginnings of education in
PloieÅŸti. The first institution of education we have knowledge about
was certified in 1777: it was a “princely schoolâ€Â. In 1832 we have
testimonies about the first elementary public school in PloieÅŸti. In
1864 we find out about the beginnings of the secondary schools, and thus
PloieÅŸti becomes an important educational center.
PloieÅŸti.
At present, the education in PloieÅŸti is strongly represented by the
two National Colleges “I.L. Caragiale†(the former “Sf. Petru şi
Pavel†High School) and “Mihai Viteazul†(the former “Despina
Doamna†High School), by 32 primary schools and other 16 high schools,
where over 60,000 students are learning under the guidance of over 3,000
teachers. The most important high schools are: “Al. Ioan Cuza†High
School, “Nichita Stănescu†High School, The Art and Music High
School, The Military High School “Constantin Brâncoveanuâ€Â, The
Engineering Secondary School, UPETROM Secondary School, Petroleum
Secondary School, the Industrial Secondary School, the Energetic
Secondary School, the Construction Secondary School, the Economic
Secondary School, the Sanitary Secondary School.
PloieÅŸti
PloieÅŸti has remained thus the only one of the country having this
structure. There was created a vast, modern, open and functional campus,
the sacrifice made by the inhabitants being as great as their
aspirations. In 1992, when another faculty joined the previous ones: the
“Faculty of Literature and Sciencesâ€Â, the Institute became a
university (the “Petroleum and Gas University). We wouldn’t like to
seem overenthusiastic in regard to this 50 years old “alma matterâ€Â
of PloieÅŸti. In that respect we would like to let the statistics speak:
21,000 graduates (dipl. Engineers and engineers), has awarded over 325
Doctor’s Degrees and has trained almost 2,000 specialists within the
postgraduate courses. Almost 2,000 foreign citizens, of 85 countries in
the world, have attended various forms of education: graduate and
postgraduate courses (doctor’s degree, special training, UNESCO
courses). Over 800 books destined to the educational process, over 1,500
scientific articles published in specialty magazines in the country or
abroad, over 350 registered letters patents.
At present the “Petroleum and Gas†University of Ploieşti has over
3,600 students attending its courses and teaching staff (4 consulting
professors, 42 professors, 46 associate professors, 131 assistant
professors (lecturers), 38 teaching assistants and 13 tutors.
Theatre and Music
PloieÅŸti and unique talents such as Cazimir Belcot, Fory Etterle, Ion
Manolescu, George Oprina, Zephy AlÅŸec, Toma Caragiu were born here.
PloieÅŸti. The tour-concerts, and not only those held by George Enescu
were played with full houses and rewarded by generous applauses.
In 1960, the folk music orchestra “Flacăra Prahoveiâ€Â, and the
symphonic orchestra “Ciprian Porumbescu†(1955) were unified in the
Philharmonic Orchestra of PloieÅŸti, under the initiative of its first
conductor dr. C.N. Debie.
The Philharmonic Orchestra of PloieÅŸti was to become famous throughout
the country and abroad, due to C.N Debie and those who continued his
work, especially to Ion Baciu, one of the greatest Romanian contemporary
conductors.
At present, a great reputation is achieved by “I. Cr. Danielescuâ€Â
Chorus, which performed in France, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany.
The “Marama†folkloric ensemble composed by 24 dancers, vocalists,
instrumentalists, performed in France, Italy, Turkey, Spain, Hungary and
Greece. Also the modern dance group “Atlantis†obtained several
rewards.
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