Brăduț

Brăduț (Romanian: Brăduț; Hungarian: Bardóc) is a commune in Covasna County, Transylvania, Romania composed of four villages: Brăduț, Doboșeni (Székelyszáldobos), Filia (Erdőfüle), Tălișoara (Olasztelek).

Brăduț

Bardóc
Location in Covasna County
Brăduț
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 46°8′N 25°37′E
Country Romania
CountyCovasna
Government
  MayorDénes Balázsi (UDMR)
Population
 (2011)[1]
4,728
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Vehicle reg.CV

Demographics

The commune has an absolute Székely Hungarian majority. According to the 2002 census, it has a population of 4,688, of which 83.64% or 3,921 are Hungarian. The villages are located in the valley of the Kormos stream.

Brăduț

In Hungarian, the village is called Bardóc. It is centrally located within the commune. Its first mention as "Bardach" dates back to 1333. The only high school and clinic of the commune are here.

Doboșeni

In Hungarian, the village is called Székelyszáldobos, meaning "The only Székely drummer". A legend explains this name by the only survivor of the Mongol-Tatar invasion who was a drummer. According to another legend, this village appeared after the Mongol-Tatar invasion, when the population of the earlier villages Dobó and Valál resettled here. Many mineral water springs exist around the village. Some people get their mineral water by lowering a bottle attached to a stick into a well near the South end of the village. There is a significant (and growing) Gypsy-Roma population near the North end of the village.

Filia

In Hungarian, the village is called Erdőfüle, meaning the "ear of the forest". However, the first part of the name probably comes from the name of the area, Erdővidék (Forest-Land). It is the largest village of the commune, nearly fused with Bardóc. The group of buildings between the two villages is amusingly referred to as "Ésfalu" (And-village). Since the nearby mountains are rich in iron ore, this was one of the villages were cannons were cast during the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. The building where the cannons were made still stands.

Tălișoara

Daniel Castle of Tălișoara

In Hungarian, the village of Tălișoara is called Olasztelek, meaning "Italian settlement" and referring to the Italian colonists settled there by Charles I of Hungary. Family names of Italian origin are still common in the village (Kolumbán, Márkó).

Of the buildings in the village, the historic castle of the Dániel family (built around 1609), the Calvinist-Reformed church (rebuilt in 1858) and its steeple (built in 1795) are noteworthy. The oldest object in the village is probably the smaller of the two church bells in the steeple, which bears the inscription "Ad honorem Sancti Martini et omnium Sanctorum - 1489".

Carbonated mineral water springs and other signs of past volcanic activity are common around the village. People still remember the springs called Nyillaki, Fingó, Bolond. Of these, only the Bolond (Crazy) spring is still active, due to the mining attempt near Vârghiș in the late 1980s. Trying to pump out the vast underground mineral water layer that covered the coal, the project only managed to decimate the mineral water springs in the area. However, mineral water still found its way back to the surface. After the fall of the communist regime and the termination of the infamous mining project, springs soon appeared in new locations around the village. Also of volcanic origin, the Likaskő is a cone-shaped formation with a hole in the middle, which resembles some of the geysers in Yellowstone National Park - except it is empty inside.

gollark: I mean, *some* of them would be prevented using not-C, obviously some are logic errors of some kind and wouldn't.
gollark: Partly, yes.
gollark: Or at least, you know, fewer.
gollark: I'd prefer there to not be.
gollark: Probably all the complex ones, yes.

References

  1. "Populaţia stabilă pe judeţe, municipii, oraşe şi localităti componenete la RPL_2011" (in Romanian). National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
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