Misplaced Pages

Snagov

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Ciofliceni) For the lake in southern Romania, see Lake Snagov. For the monastery, see Snagov Monastery.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Snagov" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Commune in Ilfov, Romania
Snagov
Commune
The Snagov MonasteryThe Snagov Monastery
Flag of SnagovFlagCoat of arms of SnagovCoat of arms
Location in Ilfov CountyLocation in Ilfov County
Snagov is located in RomaniaSnagovSnagovLocation in Romania
Coordinates: 44°42′32″N 26°10′17″E / 44.70889°N 26.17139°E / 44.70889; 26.17139
CountryRomania
CountyIlfov
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2024) Mihai Anghel (PNL)
Area88 km (34 sq mi)
Elevation91 m (299 ft)
Population8,331
 • Density95/km (250/sq mi)
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Postal code077165
Vehicle reg.IF
Websiteprimaria-snagov.ro

Snagov is a commune, located 40 km (25 mi) north of Bucharest, in Ilfov County, Muntenia, Romania. The commune is composed of five villages: Ciofliceni, Ghermănești, Snagov, Tâncăbești, and Vlădiceasca. Snagov is a tourist and spa resort, but the necessary infrastructure has regressed after 1989. At the 2021 census, the commune had a population of 8,331.

Name

The name "Snagov" is of Slavic origin, from the word sneg (meaning "snow"). The area of today's commune along with surrounding lands has had this name since at least 1408.

Geography

Snagov is located on the Wallachian Plain, on the shore of Lake Snagov (biggest natural lake in Romania: 600 hectares; 2¼ sq. mi., 16 km; 10 miles long), which is still partially surrounded by old oak forest (remnants of Codrii Vlăsiei).

History

Antiquity

Archaeologists confirmed human presence of inhabitants since 400 BC.

Early medieval history and the feudal estate

Snagov village was built around Lake Snagov and Snagov Monastery, founded in the late 14th century on an islet in Lake Snagov, about 2 km (1.2 mi) north of Snagov village. The first written record of it is found in a document from the court of Mircea cel Bătrân and dated 1408.

The modern settlement

Snagov monastery was excavated in 1933 by archaeologist Dinu V. Rosetti.

Tourism

Cultural attractions include the Snagov Monastery, Snagov Palace, several monuments, the Snagov Museum, a set of four local traditions (fishing, braiding of vegetable fibers, pottery, traditional fabrics).

Natural attractions are associated with two protected natural areas, Snagov Lake (100–150 ha; approx. 300 acres) and Snagov Forest (10 ha; 25 acres), which are included in the Snagov Natural Complex Reserve. With an area of 1,147.7 ha (4½ sq. mi.), the nature reserve was established in 1952 and includes all the forests on the shore of the lake.

Also in Snagov one can find a Tourist Information Center, a Rental Center (bicycles, kayaks), a Biodiversity Center, and a site with the entire Snagov Eco-tourism Offer (attractions, activities, circuits, audio guides, etc.)

Events

  • 25 June 1933: The National Celebration of Water day, with King Carol II, Michael I, Nicolae Iorga, Iuliu Maniu, Dimitrie Gusti, Grigore Antipa and many other top officials, as well as Liga Navală Română, Cercetașii României and representatives of the local community in attendance. This is the reason for celebrating the day of Lake Snagov on June 25, when Romanians also celebrate "Sânzienele/Drăgaica".
  • 23 August 1944: Ion Antonescu left Snagov Palace in order to go to Bucharest at the request of King Michael I, where he was arrested during the Royal Coup. Manfred von Killinger, who was also staying at a nearby villa on the shore of Lake Snagov, committed suicide soon after, because he failed to maintain Romania on the side of Nazi Germany, as requested by Adolf Hitler.
  • 1962 to 1972: Regata Snagov was an international rowing competition held between 1962 and 1972.
  • 2002: The Romanian government decided to build at Snagov a Disneyland-style theme park, called "Dracula Park"; the project was canceled in 2006. The connection with "Dracula" is due to a spurious 19th-century tradition that makes Snagov Monastery the site of the tomb of Vlad the Impaler.
  • 4–5 April 2003: An informal meeting of the prime ministers of the seven states invited to join the NATO alliance was held at Snagov Palace.
  • 25 June 2008: A pedestrian footbridge was struck by a tipper lorry, which was lifted and then collapsed onto a moving car, killing a 21-year old woman driving towards Bucharest and a male passenger. The footbridge has not been rebuilt since then, and the stairways were left as a memorial to the death of the victim, and a new footbridge was built further away from the original one.
  • 2016: Protection of the natural area (heritage) was reinforced by "The management plan and the ANPLS regulation" published in the Official Gazette.

Notable people

Romanian president Nicolae Ceaușescu and his entourage used Snagov as a vacation retreat. Over 50 heads of state, prime ministers, top politicians from more than 40 states, crossed Lake Snagov with the "Snagov 1" luxury boat (today called "Leader"). In Snagov, at the film studios Castel Film Romania, over 250 films were produced. At the Snagov Museum, collections are presented about 130 personalities related to Snagov.

Twin towns/sister cities

Initiated but not yet implemented - with: Port of Le Havre from France and Sarkad from Hungary, Gandiaye village from Senegal.

Notable sites

Snagov monastery
Snagov monastery -interior

External links

References

  1. "Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (XLS). National Institute of Statistics.
  2. "Origin of "Snagov"". epedia.ro (in Romanian). 21 April 2012. Retrieved December 21, 2023.
  3. Dinu V. Rosetti, Săpăturile Arheologice de la Snagov (1935).
  4. "Fundația Snagov". fundatiasnagov.ro (in Romanian). Retrieved January 1, 2023.
Ilfov County, Romania
Cities
  • None
Coat of arms of Ilfov County
Towns
Communes
Categories: