Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Starting with January 2009, Piatra Neamț is the host of a short film festival called "Filmul de Piatra" (derived from the name of the city "Piatra" which means stone (rock) and translated as "Stone-film Festival"). The 1st edition took place in the building of Teatrul Tineretului and other locations between 7th and 11 January 2009.
[2] [3] Highways in Romania in December 2024. Please consider this map is not an official map. Legislation. ... Piatra Neamț : 52.12 0 – – 52.12 ...
Piatra Neamț (German: Kreuzburg an der Bistritz) The History Museum in Roman. Neamț County has 2 municipalities, 3 towns and 78 communes. Municipalities Piatra Neamț - capital city; population: 77,393 (as of 2011 census) Roman - population: 45,344 (as of 2011 census) Towns Bicaz; Roznov; Târgu Neamț
Motorways are identified by A followed by a number. As of April 2024, Romania has 1,098 km of motorway in use, with another 720 km under construction. [citation needed] In recent years, a master plan for the national motorway network has been developed and many works have begun around the country, [4] which will result in significant changes by 2015, [5] and eventually by 2022.
It is situated 29 km (18 mi) southeast of Târgu Neamț and 30 km (19 mi) northeast of the county seat, Piatra Neamț. Războieni is crossed by the county road DJ208G, which connects it to the south to Dragomirești , Ștefan cel Mare , and Girov (where it ends in DN15D [ ro ] ) and to the east to Tupilați .
Târgu Neamț (Romanian pronunciation: [ˌtɨrɡu ˈne̯amt͡s]; German: Niamtz, Hungarian: Németvásár, Hebrew: טרגו ניאמץ, Latin: Ante Castrum Nempch) is ...
It originally formed part of the Piatra Neamț Princely Court, with the royal residence built from 1468 to 1475. [2] The interior is divided into a vestibule, nave and altar. The vestibule has two domed ceilings, one in front of the other and divided by a large stone transverse arch. Originally, a sizable wall separated the vestibule from the nave.
The DEx12 expressway (Romanian: Drumul expres DEx12), also known as the Pitești–Craiova Expressway (Romanian: Drumul expres Pitești–Craiova), is a partially built expressway in the south-western part of Romania, previously labelled as A12, when it was considered as a future motorway. [1]