Lunca (Mureș)
Lunca Traßten Tekeújfalva |
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Basic data | ||||
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State : | Romania | |||
Historical region : | Transylvania | |||
Circle : | Mureș | |||
Coordinates : | 46 ° 51 ' N , 24 ° 35' E | |||
Time zone : | EET ( UTC +2) | |||
Height : | 400 m | |||
Area : | 85.20 km² | |||
Residents : | 2,625 (October 20, 2011) | |||
Population density : | 31 inhabitants per km² | |||
Postal code : | 547375 | |||
Telephone code : | (+40) 02 65 | |||
License plate : | MS | |||
Structure and administration (as of 2016) | ||||
Community type : | local community | |||
Structure : | Lunca, Băița , Frunzeni , Logig , Sântu | |||
Mayor : | Teodor Vultur ( PSD ) | |||
Postal address : | Str. Principală nr. 228 loc. Lunca, jud. Mureș, RO-547375 |
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Website : |
Lunca (outdated Uifalău or Vaidei ; German Traßten , Hungarian Tekeújfalva ) is a municipality in the Mureș County , in the Transylvania region in Romania .
The place Lunca is also known under the Hungarian names Oláhújfalu , Újfalu and Oláhfalu , and the German new town.
Geographical location
The municipality of Lunca is located in the Transylvanian Heath (Câmpia Transilvaniei) , part of the Transylvanian Basin . On the stream of the same name and the Drum național 15A , the town of Lunca is 14 kilometers northwest of the city of Reghin (Saxon rain) and about 45 kilometers north of the district capital Târgu Mureș (Neumarkt am Mieresch) .
history
The place Lunca was first mentioned in 1319 and was a Transylvanian-Saxon village in the Middle Ages .
Finds of a necropolis from the Hallstatt period on the area of the incorporated village of Băița (Ginsdorf) , on the area known by the locals as La Jie , indicate that the area was settled .
In the Kingdom of Hungary , the place belonged to the Teke district in the Cluj County , then to the historical Mureș County and, from 1950, the Mureș County of today.
population
The population of the municipality of Lunca developed as follows:
census | Ethnic composition | ||||
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year | population | Romanians | Hungary | German | other |
1850 | 2,938 | 2,429 | 246 | 195 | 68 |
1930 | 3,760 | 3,336 | 248 | 120 | 56 |
1956 | 4,283 | 3,872 | 228 | 117 | 66 |
2002 | 2,851 | 2,699 | 67 | 39 | 46 |
2011 | 2,625 | 2,464 | 60 | 24 | 77 |
The highest number of inhabitants has been registered in the area of today's municipality since 1850 and that of the Romanians in 1956. The highest number of Magyars (345) was determined in 1910, that of Romanian Germans in 1850 and that of Roma (65) in 1956.
Attractions
- In the incorporated village of Băița, the wooden church Sfinții Arhangheli Mihail și Gavriil , the bell tower and the wooden gate to the church, all built in 1723, are listed.
- In the incorporated village of Logig (Ludwigsdorf) , the country house of the Hungarian aristocratic Bornemisza family built in the 18th century and the properties in Hauptstraße (Str. Principală) No. 10, 15 and 265 built in the 19th century, are listed as historical monuments.
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ 2011 census in Romania ( MS Excel ; 1.3 MB)
- ↑ Arcanum Kézikönyvtár: Historical-administrative book of place names of Transylvania, Banat and Partium. Retrieved March 4, 2019 (Hungarian).
- ↑ Heinz Heltmann, Gustav Servatius (Ed.): Travel Guide Siebenbürgen . Kraft, Würzburg 1993, ISBN 3-8083-2019-2 , p. 517 .
- ↑ a b c List of historical monuments of the Romanian Ministry of Culture, updated 2015 (PDF; 12.7 MB; Romanian).
- ↑ Censuses 1850–2002, last updated November 2, 2008 (PDF; 1 MB; Hungarian).