Welcome to County Satu Mare in the Maramureş region of Romania! Discover historic Satu Mare and surrounding villages, and understand the rich Maramureş culture unfolding in beautiful SatuMare. Rest Romania will help you find the perfect hotel or B&B in our Satu Mare Accommodation section, or a guest house or pensiune in a village nestled in the mountains. Explore all of Satu Mare from Satu Mare to Carei and smaller towns like Negreşti-Oaş and topsy-turvy Tăşnad!
Travel by rental car or tour bus and train through the Satu Mare region of Maramureş in Romania. Hotels in Satu Mare are well-priced, and great travel and tourism activities from shopping, to exploring the villages, folk art, castles, mountains and forests. See all of County Satu Mare, from Satu Mare to Carei and smaller towns like Negreşti-Oaş and topsy-turvy Tăşnad!
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County Satu Mare is bordered by sister county
Maramureş to the east, both of which comprise the
Maramureş region. Counties
Sălaj and Bihor border to the south. To the west is Hungary
and the Ukraine is to the north. Satu Mare is part of the Carpathian euroregion.
With a land area of 4,418 kmČ, the eastern part of County Satu Mare is
comprised of the Oaş Mountains, founding members in some ways of
the Carpathians. This makes up around 17% of the surface.
The rest consists of hills - 20% of the surface - and plains. The Western
part of the county is the Eastern part of the famed Pannonian Plain,
stretching down to the river Tisa where Romania's borders used to be.
The county is crossed by the Someş River and also
Tur River and Crasna River.
Demographics
In 2002, it had a population of 367,281 and the
population density was 83/kmČ, with just over half being Romanian (58%).
35% of the population are ethnic Hungarian, with 3.7% Rromas and 1.7%
Germans, one of the highest German populations by percentage in Romania
for a county. Otherwise there are handfuls of Ukrainians, Slovaks,
and others.
Hungarians are mostly inhabiting the localities
along the border with Hungary, they are also distributed throughout the
county.
Economy
Satu Mare County benefits from its position, close
to the border of Romania with Hungary an Ukraine, and it's one of the
places which attracts major foreign investment in industry and
agriculture. Satu Mare has some textiles, food processing, machine
and auto parts manufacturing, as well as timber-getting and furniture
manufacturing.
Towns
The main city and county seat of Satu Mare has about 125,000 people,
and is one of two cities in the county with Carei. There are also
two other smaller towns of Negreşti-Oaş and Tăşnad, as
well as 57 communes.
A Commune is a larger village which usually acts as a regional centre, with a
mayor, postal and police services, and sometimes larger stores. Other
villages may belong to the commune, and the over 2500 communes in Romania vary
widely in size.
Acâş
Andrid
Apa
Ardud
Bătarci
Beltiug
Berveni
Bixad
Bârsău
Bogdand
Botiz
Călineşti-Oaş
Cămărzana
Căpleni
Căuaş
Cehal
Certeze
Craidorolţ
Crucişor
Culciu
Doba
Dorolţ
Foieni
Gherţa Mică
Halmeu
Hodod
Homoroade
Lazuri
Livada
Medieşu Aurit
Micula
Moftin
Odoreu
Oraşu Nou
Păuleşti
Petreşti
Pir
Pişcolt
Pomi
Sanislău
Santău
Săcăşeni
Săuca
Socond
Supur
Tarna Mare
Terebeşti
Tiream
Târşolţ
Turţ
Turulung
Urziceni
Valea Vinului
Măriuş
Vetiş
Viile Satu Mare
License plates in Satu Mare begin with SM, and the
dialling area code is (x61)
This website is a
general tourist guide, designed to help English-speaking tourists
understand Romania, and as such, provides historical
information for the interest of our traveller readers. History
can be a contentious issue, and we welcome input where readers think
clarification or correction is advisable. Please
e-mail us here
if you have questions or comments about anything in this history
section.
Vasile Lucaciu Statue
Stone Age Origins
The area of Satu Mare has been inhabited since the stone age. The
archaeological discoveries made in Ţara Oaşului, Ardud, Medieşu Aurit,
Homorod and other places have unearthed abundant evidence regarding the
Stone Age and Bronze Age settlements in this area.
A fortress by the name of Zotmar (Castrum Zotmar) was mentioned in the
Gesta Hungarorum as being in the lands ruled by Menumorut in the early
10th century. According to the chronicle, the fortress was taken by the
Magyars after three days of fighting. In 1006 Germans were settled around
the fortress by the Hungarian queen Gizella. Later, more Germans settled
in the town of Mintin, across the Someş river.
After 1543 the fortress, then owned by the Báthory family, was reinforced
and a moat was built around it. The fortress was under siege by the
Ottomans in 1562 and later destroyed by the Habsburg Monarchy (Austrian
Habsburgs). The Austrian Lazar Schwendi, using the latest Italian
fortification techniques, rebuilt the fortress.
The Dacia Hotel, in the historic centre of Satu Mare. In 1703 the whole
city burned down.
The Rebuilt Satu Mare
In 1721, Satu Mare, united with Mintiu/Mintin, became a "royal free city"
and prospered as an important centre of trade and craftsmanship.
In the 18th century much of the city was rebuilt and among the landmarks
from that time are the old City Hall, the inn and several churches.
At the end of the 1760s the population rose to about 5,000 people.
In 1804, a Roman Catholic Bishopric was established in the city.
In 1902, the first Hasidic Rabbi to settle in Satu Mare, Rabbi Yisachar
Bertchi Leifer, the son of the famous Rabbi Mordechai Leifer of Nadvorna,
moved from Selish to Satu Mare, where he gathered a large following until
his passing in 1906. He was buried in the local Jewish Cemetery, and his
grave is still visited by hundreds of Hasidim each year.
According to the census of 1910, Satu Mare had a population of 45,000, out
of which 94.5% were Magyars (including the Hungarian-speaking Jews).
On 2 March 1919, Hungarian Prime minister Mihály Károlyi delivered a
historic speech in Satu Mare in front of the Szekely division: "we'll
fight for our country". It came as an answer to the dispute over the
Austro-Hungarian legacy at the end of World War I.
On 20 March 1919 a representative of the Allies in Budapest handed Károlyi
a Note ordering him to evacuate a further area of central Hungary for the
benefit of the Romanians. The new cease-fire line was: Satu Mare - Carei -
Oradea - Salonta - Arad. Count Karolyi's government resigned, and
Bolsheviks led by Béla Kun replaced his government.
On 16 April 1919 the Romanian Army started an attack across the cease-fire
line against the Hungarian Soviet Republic, and marched on Satu Mare on 19
April.
In 1920 Satu Mare became part of Romania. In 1930 it was the 15th largest
city of Romania, with a population of 51,495. (Craiova (12): 63,215,
Braşov: (13) 59,232, Constanţa (14): 59,164).
More than half of those who fled Poland after the Nazi German September
invasion of 1939 went to Romania and Hungary, passing through Satu Mare.
Hungarian Satu Mare
As a consequence of the Second Vienna Award, on 30 August 1940, the city
was given to Hungary with the rest of Northern Transylvania.
During World War II, Satu Mare and the surrounding areas were the stage of
many deportations carried out by the Hungarian government, and
Anti-Semitic violence was a common reality in the life of Satu Mare while
the city was under Hungarian occupation. In memory of the victims of the
crimes committed by the Hungarians and German Nazis in the Satu Mare area,
a monument has been raised in front of the Satu Mare Synagogue.
Satu Mare City Hall Despite the many casualties and discriminatory
measures, however, the bulk of the Jews of Northern Transylvania, like
those of Hungary as a whole, lived in relative physical safety, convinced
that they would continue to enjoy the protection of the
conservative-aristocratic government. This conviction was shattered almost
immediately after the German occupation of Hungary on March 19,1944.
Some details relating to the ghettoization of the Jews in Northern
Transylvania were discussed and finalized at two conferences chaired by
László Endre (undersecretary of State in the Ministry of the Interior).
These were attended by the top Hungarian officials in charge of the Final
Solution and representatives of the various counties and municipalities,
including the county prefects and/or deputy prefects, mayors, and the
police and gendarmerie commanders of the affected counties. The first
conference was held in Satu Mare on April 6,1944, and was devoted to the
"de-Jewification" operations in the counties of Gendarmerie District IX,
namely Bistriţa-Năsăud, Bihor, Cluj, Satu Mare, Sălaj, and Someş.
The area was recovered by Romanian troops and the Soviet Red Army on 25
October 1944 after the intense battle of Carei. During the war at least
18,000 Jews from the Satu Mare area were deported and murdered in
concentration and extermination camps as part of the Holocaust.
Communist Satu Mare
By 1950 Satu Mare once again had roughly the same population as in 1930.
It took almost three decades for Satu Mare to become a prosperous city
once again. In the 1970s the city was subject to an extensive process of
modernization undertaken by the Romanian Communist government of that time
after the floods that took place on 14 May 1970. The most visible
achievement of the reconstruction process was the impressive building of a
city hall that features a unique architecturethe symbol of the city. The
1977 census was the first to show Hungarians in a minority.
Satu Mare Libre
The collapse
of Communism placed Satu Mare into a long period of stagnation during the
1990s when it lost around 20,000 inhabitants due to the closing down of
many industrial plants.
Nowadays Satu Mare is a dynamic city with an industry that is entering the
global economy. A considerable number of the inhabitants are active as
guest workers, mostly in Western Europe, while their families remain based
in Satu Mare.
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