Nadăș (Timiș)
Nadăș, Naidăș Nadasch Nádas, Mélynádas, Dubokinádas |
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Basic data | ||||
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State : | Romania | |||
Historical region : | Banat | |||
Circle : | Timiș | |||
Municipality : | Recaș | |||
Coordinates : | 45 ° 54 ' N , 21 ° 33' E | |||
Time zone : | EET ( UTC +2) | |||
Residents : | 0 (2002) | |||
Postal code : | 307344 | |||
Telephone code : | (+40) 02 56 | |||
License plate : | TM | |||
Structure and administration | ||||
Community type : | Village |
Nadăș (also Naidăș , German: Nadasch , Hungarian: Nádas , Mélynádas , Dubokinádas ) is a village in Timiș County , in the Banat region , in southwest Romania . Nadăș belongs to the administrative area of the city of Recaș .
Geographical location
Nadăș is located in the northeast of Timiș County, 16 km from Recaș and 40 km from Timișoara , at the foot of the Lipova Hills.
Neighboring places
Remetae Mica | Buzad | Comeat |
Sălciua Nouă | Hodoș | |
Bencecu de Jos | Stanciova | Brestovăț |
history
The village was first mentioned in 1247 under the name Nadasd . During the Turkish rule , the place disappeared from the historical documents, only to reappear at the time of the Habsburg Monarchy . The village with 17 houses is entered on the Josephine land survey of 1717. After the Peace of Passarowitz (1718) the village was part of the Habsburg crown domain Temescher Banat . On the Mercy map from 1723 the place Buboki-Natasch is inhabited. Dubski Nadosch , which belongs to the Lippa district, is entered on the military map from 1761 .
As a result of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise (1867), the Banat was annexed to the Kingdom of Hungary within the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary . The official place name was Mélynádas .
Until the beginning of the 19th century, the village was inhabited by Serbs and Romanians. Together they built the wooden Orthodox church, which was replaced by a stone church in 1897. In 1804 Hungarians from the Szeged area were settled here. The Hungarians built the Roman Catholic Church.
The Treaty of Trianon on June 4, 1920 resulted in the triple division of the Banat , whereby Nadăș fell to the Kingdom of Romania .
After the Second World War , the youth gradually left the village to find work in the surrounding towns. Nadăș has been an abandoned village since the 1990s.
Population development
census | Ethnicity | |||||||
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year | Residents | Romanians | Hungary | German | Serbs | |||
1880 | 582 | 416 | 109 | 36 | 21st | |||
1910 | 740 | 504 | 176 | 49 | 11 | |||
1930 | 659 | 492 | 143 | 5 | 19th | |||
1977 | 42 | 40 | 2 | - | - | |||
2002 | - | - | - | - | - |
Web links
- prinbanat.ro , Nadăș, the isolated village
- adevarul.ro , The depopulated village
- timpolis.ro , The Phantom Village