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At the time of its inauguration, it was the fourth open-air museum of Europe after Skansen (Stockholm, Sweden), Norsk Folkemuseum at Bygdøy (Oslo, Norway), and the Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania at Hoia Forest in Cluj-Napoca. [3] The museum initially was 4.5 ha in size with 33 authentic settlements that were transferred from the ...
George Topîrceanu Museum; Mihai Eminescu Museum; Nicolae Gane Museum; House of Museums Romanian Literature Museum; Museum of Poetry; Museum of the Jewish Theatre in Romania; Museum of Iași Pogrom; Museum of Childhood under Communism; Vasile Alecsandri Museum (in Mircești) Constantin Negruzzi Museum (in Hermeziu) Garabet Ibrăileanu museum ...
This is a list of the most important tourist sites in Cluj-Napoca, Romania. Historical places. Places of worship. St. Michael's Church, one of the tallest in the ...
Since 1951, the Art Museum in Cluj has housed works by artists Nicolae Grigorescu, Stefan Luchian, Dimitrie Paciurea, Theodor Pallady, Camil Ressu, Vasile Popescu, and others, arranged over 20 rooms. The exhibition presents works by artists less known in Transylvania in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, namely an important collection of ...
National Museum of Transylvanian History. The National Museum of Transylvanian History (Romanian: Muzeul Național de Istorie a Transilvaniei, Hungarian: Erdélyi Történelmi Múzeum) is a history and archaeology museum in the city of Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
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In February 1951 the council of the city decided to empty the palace to establish an Art Museum there; the works were finished in the summer of 1954. [5] The museum was opened in the restored palace on 30 December 1965. [6] The cinema occupying the inner yard of the palace was demolished in 1974. [7] Panorama of the palace
Cluj-Napoca is the major economic centre of the region Oradea is another important economic and cultural centre of the region. The economy of Nord-Vest is mainly agricultural (46% of its population having agriculture as their main occupation), even though there is some heavy and light industry in the major regional industrial centres of Cluj-Napoca, Oradea, Baia Mare, Bistrița, Satu Mare and ...