Medgidia Explained

Type:municipality
County:Constanța
Official Name:Medgidia
Subdivisions:Remus Opreanu, Valea Dacilor
Leader Name:Valentin Vrabie[1]
Leader Party:PNL
Leader Term:2020 - 2024
Coordinates:44.2503°N 28.2614°W
Elevation:75
Area Total:90.17
Population Total:auto
Postal Code:905600
Area Code:(+40) 02 41

Medgidia (in Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan pronounced as /med͡ʒiˈdi.a/ or in Romanian; Moldavian; Moldovan pronounced as /med.d͡ʒiˈdi.a/; historical Turkish names: Karasu or Carasu, Mecidiye or Megidie) is a city in Constanța County, Northern Dobruja, south-eastern Romania.

History

Archaeological findings show that Dobruja was inhabited since the Neolithic period. Starting with 46 BC the region was administered by the Roman Empire. A castrum was built in the Carasu Valley, becoming the cradle of the settlement.

In 1417, the Turks invaded Dobruja. From the 15th century onwards, the region started to be colonized with a Muslim population. The settlement named "Karasu" (Turkish for "Black Water") was mentioned on the map of Iehuda ben Zara in 1497, in the notes of Paolo Giorgio (1590) and Evliya Çelebi (1653).[2]

Modern Medgidia was built by the Ottoman administration on the place of the old Karasu beginning with 1856. It was built as a planned city to accommodate refugees from the Crimean War and to serve as an economic hub for the central zone of Dobruja. The town was named in honour of the sultan Abdülmecid I, the Ottoman sovereign of the period.[3]

After the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, Northern Dobruja became part of Romania. Medgidia was the last capital of Silistra Nouă County (1878–1879) before it was merged into Constanța County.

Geography

Medgidia is located between the Danube and the Black Sea, away from Constanța. The city is crossed by the Danube–Black Sea Canal west to east; the river Medgidia discharges into the Canal in Remus Opreanu village.

The general aspect of the relief is that of a low plateau with a limestone structure, covered with thick deposits of loess. The natural resources in the area consist of limestone deposits and kaolin sand. The limestone structure of the earth permits a natural filtering of the groundwater.

Climate

The climate is temperate-continental, with short and cold winters and very hot summers.

Local administration

Medgidia became a municipality in 1994.

The town infrastructure is continuously developing and offers the inhabitants 4 high schools, 8 primary schools, 12 nurseries, 4 cultural centers with a hall for cultural activities, 2 show and cinema halls, 3 clubs and 5 libraries, a 30,000-seat stadium, a sports hall, and a swimming pool. Medgidia also houses a 500-bed hospital.

The following villages are administered by the municipality:

Politics

The current mayor of Medgidia is (PNL).[1] The Medgidia Municipal Council, elected in the 2020 local government elections, consists of 18 councilors, with the following party composition:[1]

   PartySeatsCurrent Council
 National Liberal Party (PNL)13                          
 Social Democratic Party (PSD)3                
 Save Romania Union (USR)2               

Economy

The economic landscape spotlights the existence of a town fully involved in its progress. Out of 1,200 registered enterprises, only 30 are state-owned and 15 are joint ventures.

Beside the agricultural activities (milk-processing, milling, bakery and wine growing), the main industry deals in cement and building materials, agricultural machinery and forging equipment, wood processing and furniture factories.

Medgidia lies in the center of an agricultural area of several tens of millions hectares, with a fertile soil and provided with irrigation systems.

The area offers:

The Medgidia clinker storage facility was completed in 2009 and is the world's largest dome-type cement clinker storage facility.

The Romanian Air Force operates a WSR-98D radar station in Medgidia. The facility is officially designated and operated as a civilian radar station by the National Meteorological Administration, however the data is fed into the NATO Integrated Air Defense System as well.

Transport

The town is a road and rail node and an inland port to the Danube–Black Sea Canal. The Canal crosses the town for about of its length.

The Danube–Black Sea Canal has a capacity of 11.2 million tons/year and can admit ships of . Provided with road and rail links, the harbor offers storage facilities and cranes able to lift up to 16-ton weights. Beside a SNCFR marshaling yard, along the Canal there is a Free Trade Area in course of being finalized.

The A2 highway from Bucharest to Constanța, partially financed by the European Union, bypasses the town, allowing the development of associated services (hotels, petrol stations and a parking yard for trucks) in the area.

Also, the Medgidia train station is an important node on the CFR Main Line 800. The station provides rail service to several towns and cities, including Constanța (35 km), Tulcea (144 km), and București Nord (199 km).

Landmarks

The Art Museum "Lucian Grigorescu"

It was opened in 1964 with exhibitions of Romanian contemporary painting, sculpture, and graphics, signed Lucian Grigorescu, Marius Bunescu, Ion Jalea, and others. The permanent exhibition takes in classic and modern artworks but also works of contemporary art classics, including Lucian Grigorescu, Nicolae Tonitza, Francisc Șirato, Ștefan Dimitrescu, and Iosif Iser. The museum also displays a collection of ceramic artworks.

In 1991 the museum was named after Lucian Grigorescu, a town native, who was deemed as the most Latin among the Romanian painters. The city honors the painter every year on 1 February, the anniversary of his birthday.

Because of low income due to few visitors and high maintenance costs, the museum was closed in 2009.

The "Abdul Mejid" Mosque

Built in 1860 by the Ottoman Government, the mosque is an historic and architectural monument. It was named after the sultan Abdulmejid I, who reigned between 1839 and 1861.

The mosque is served by an imam and a muezzin. The building respects the traditional form of the Muslim cultural placements, decorated in the interior with oriental ornaments and inscriptions in Arabic.

The "Saints Peter and Paul" Orthodox church

The church was built in a Roman-Greek style and it was raised with the contribution of the local Christians on the ruins of a Roman castrum.

The Serbian Heroes' Monument

In 1926, Medgidia commemorated the heroism of the First Serbian Volunteer Division, which fought in Dobruja during World War I as a part of the bloody Romanian theatre, by inaugurating a monument in the group's honor. The completed memorial, featuring an iconic white marble pyramid, was the setting of a ceremony held with the participation of both Romanian and Yugoslavian officials. Wreaths were laid at the base of the monument by members of the Serbian and Romanian royal families.

Natives

Sports

CS Medgidia is the city's sports club. Its professional football club currently play in the Liga IV. Apart from football, the club also competes in handball, volleyball, wrestling, boxing, arm wrestling, swimming, chess, and rugby. The home ground for the club is Stadionul Iftimie Ilisei; opened in 1978, the stadium holds 32,700 people.

The Medgidia Festival

The festival has been celebrated each year since 1999, at the end of October, and is attended by thousands of locals.

Media

International relations

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Romania.

Twin towns — Sister cities

Medgidia is twinned with:[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Results of the 2020 local elections . Central Electoral Bureau . 15 June 2021 . dmy-all.
  2. Ziua de Constanţa, Medgidia- în clepsidra timpului ("Medgidia – in the hourglass of time"), September 4, 2006
  3. News: Medgidia a aniversat 151 de ani. Iorga. Tatian. September 3, 2007. Telegraf. ro. 2008-11-18.
  4. http://www.emedgidia.ro/stiri/comunicate/medgidia-si-favara-orase-infratite-26.html Twin towns