ZalÃÂu (, unofficial and former official name: (; or , , ) is the seat of SÃÂlaj County, Romania. In 2021, its estimated population was 52,359.
ZalÃÂu is situated in the area inhabited by "Free Dacians", away from the historical landmark of Porolissum, a well-preserved Roman Castrum with an imposing fortress, an amphitheater, temples, houses and a customs house in the ancient Roman province of Dacia. ZalÃÂu was the crossing point between Central Europe and Transylvania, along the so-called "Salt Route".
Archaeological discoveries revealed evidence of human existence in this area since the Neolithic, approx. 6500 years ago. Dacian coins found in archaeological perimeters of the city central area and on the Valea MâÃÂii, west of the city, plus important items belonging to Roman culture, are evidence of free Dacian continuity in this area and of developing economic relations with the Roman ancient city of Porolissum.
After the conquest of Dacia by Trajan (106), the Roman Empire border stood atop the MeseÃÂ Mountains, just away from the city. Just north from the border, on the actual ZalÃÂu city area were the free Dacians tribes, and to the east, south-east (of MeseÃÂ Mountains) were Roman border fortifications, towers, walls, ditches and defense sides.
The first written mention about ZalÃÂu, was in the "Gesta Hungarorum", also called the "Chronicle of Anonymous" (probably notary of the King Béla III of Hungary), published around year 1200. According to this source, ZalÃÂu settlement would have been there as early as around 900. Later, ZalÃÂu is referred to as Villa Ziloc in 1220, Zylac in 1246, Zylah in 1282, Zyloh and oppidum Zylah in 1318, Zila in 1601, Zilahu in 1808, Sziláj / Szilágyi in 1839, Szilaju in 1850, and ZalÃÂu / Sziláju / Walthenberg in 1854. After the great Mongol invasion, which destroyed the city in 1241, ZalÃÂu came in 1246 under the administration of the Catholic Bishopric of Nagyvárad. The trusteeship was maintained until 1542, when ZalÃÂu became part of Principality of Transylvania.
On 1 August 1473, Matthias Corvinus, King of Hungary and Bohemia, acknowledged ZalÃÂu as a market town for the first time (called oppidum Zilah â Zilah fort), a privilege that freed the city from the county domination, granted its citizens the right of free trade and gave it a larger degree of economic autonomy. At the end of the 16th century, the city had an independent administrative leadership, composed of 33 elected senators (one of whom was the mayor), a notary, a registrar and a treasurer.
Other important events in the development of the city occurred in 1571 during the reign of Prince Istvan Bathory and in 1600 under the reign of Michael the Brave. After Transylvania had been annexed to the Habsburg Empire, the city experienced an economic decline due to the infusion of products from Western Europe. After Michael the Brave's victory in the Battle of GuruslÃÂu on 3 August 1601, ZalÃÂu received administrative, legislative, fiscal and military own rules, which provided real autonomy freedoms to citizens. A chronicle from the 17th century, first mentioned the main crafts of city residents: belt-makers, potters, wheelwrights, shoemakers, butchers, tailors, blacksmiths, carpenters, hat makers and armorers.
The city was under the rule Principality of Transylvania between 1526 and 1660. It was also controlled by the Ottomans between 1660 and 1692, the city being part of Varat Eyalet. The Calvinist college was formed in the first half of the 17th century.
On 9 November 1714, Charles XII of Sweden rested for a night in a building on Király street (now named after Corneliu Coposu) with an acquaintance György Zoványi as is indicated by a notice still on the house. Until the administrative reform of 1876, the city was the seat of Közép-Szolnok County for centuries.
ZalÃÂu is one of the most important urban centers in the region. It had a Reformed college (Wesselényi College), a township school for civil service (for boys only), and a national civil school (for girls only). It had the largest hospital in the region and a tax revenue office.
In 1850, it held a population of 4,294 and, in 1910âÂÂ8,062 (7,477 Hungarians, 19 Germans, 529 Romanians and 23 belonging to other ethnic groups). By religion, there were 1,333 Roman Catholics, 873 Greek Catholics, 5,363 members of the Reformed Church, and 415 Jews. The city had 1,427 households, and most of its inhabitants were employed by the manufacturing industry. The Reformed Church was built in 1246. It is one of the city's oldest buildings and one of the largest in Eastern Europe.
In 1876, ZalÃÂu became the seat of the Szilágy County. After the proclamation of the Union of Transylvania with Romania (1 December 1918), by the Treaty of Trianon ZalÃÂu has been part of Romania â except between 1940 until the end of World War II, when Northern Transylvania became part of Hungary as a result of the Second Vienna Award. On 8 September 1940, upon arrival in ZalÃÂu, the Hungarian Army killed 10 people just outside the city; in the following days, the NuÃÂfalÃÂu, Treznea, and Ip massacres were perpetrated in nearby villages.
Between 1892 and 1896, one of the most famous Hungarian poets Endre Ady attended the Protestant school in ZalÃÂu (since 1957, there has been a statue of Endre Ady in front of the school). The poet also published his first poem in the local newspaper "Szilágy" on 22 March 1896. A memorial plaque on the frontage of the building where he lived reminiscents of Ady Endre's time spent there.
At the end of the 19th century, Lajos Szikszai donated his private collection to the municipality and the first museum in ZalÃÂu was created. An exhibition was also organized in 1926, but the ZalÃÂu County Museum was officially inaugurated in 1951. On 9 July 1981, a new section of the ZalÃÂu County Museum was inaugurated and was named the "Ioan Sima" Arts Gallery.
The Battle of ZalÃÂu took place in 1919, during the HungarianâÂÂRomanian War.
The Central Library, owning 7,000 Romanian and Hungarian books, was opened on the 23 August 1950. In 1952 it became the Raion Library, coordinating all the ZalÃÂu Raion libraries. In 1957 it took the name of IoniÃÂÃÂ Scipione BÃÂdescu. It became the County Library with the administrative reform of February 1968.
As of the end of the 1960s, the city became a regional industrial center for the first time, which was heavily impacted by the Systematization process. Industrial factories like ArmÃÂtura ZalÃÂu, Silcotub ZalÃÂu, and Anvelope Silvania (recently bought by Michelin) hired thousands of workers, which sparked an increase in population as a result. The population influx gradually led to changes in the ethnic structure with the Romanians being now the majority and the Hungarians reduced to a minority. However, in many of the surrounding communes, the ethnic structure still remained unchanged (for example VârÃÂolÃÂ) are still populated by Hungarians; on the other hand, nearby villages such as Marin have a 100% ethnic Romanian population, basically unchanged for more than a century. In the 1970s with the working-class population expanding, housing estates of high-rise blocks of flats were built in both the centre and the outskirts of the town.
In 2007, due to the negligence of the local natural gas distributor, a gas accumulation produced an explosion that led to casualties and significant material damage.
Today ZalÃÂu is crossed by European road E81 and the national road DN1F. A new motorway (the Transylvania Highway) is being built to connect ZalÃÂu to Western Europe. The town has two nationally accredited University colleges, a public library, one museum, an art gallery, more than four hotels, a motel, and two student halls of residence.
ZalÃÂu is the county seat and the largest city in SÃÂlaj County. The city lies in the ZalÃÂu Valley, at the junction of the Apuseni Mountains and the Eastern Carpathians, at . It is located in the central part of SÃÂlaj County, in the ZalÃÂu River watershed, between three narrow valleys in the MeseÃÂ Mountains.
It neighbours ÃÂara MaramureÃÂului and Satu Mare County, in the northwestern part of the historical region of Transylvania, which in the past was a mainly independent small state but since 1918 has belonged to Romania (except between September 1940 and October 1944, when it was under the administration of Hungary following the Second Vienna Award). Whether ZalÃÂu lies in CriÃÂana or Transylvania is still a matter of debate because, geographically, ZalÃÂu lies on the eastern border of CriÃÂana.
The city includes a total surface of . This includes the one village it administers, Stâna (Felsà Ânyárló), situated south-east of MeseÃÂ, in the hydrographic basin of the Agrij River. MÃÂgura Stânii is at an altitude of .
The most important of the 24 monuments and buildings in the county capital of ZalÃÂu are: "Transilvania" (theatre in 1895), the city hall (court and seat of the prefects office in 1889), the Roman Catholic Church (1878), the reformed church (1904âÂÂ1907), the Greek Catholic "Dormition of the Theotokos Church" (1930âÂÂ1934), the Orthodox deanery (built in the late 19th century), the Historical Museum (built about 1900 â casino of the artisans fellowship), the primary school "Simion BÃÂrnuÃÂiu" (girls' school in 1895) and the National College Silvania (Reformed College in 1860), all these being valuable urbanistic elements for the historical and cultural patrimony of the land. The famous statuary group Wesselényi Monument of the heroic Hungarian nobleman with the same name (1902) by János Fadrusz, and the bust made in the honour of Simion BÃÂrnuÃÂiu by Romul Ladea are worth visiting as well.
ZalÃÂu hosts lively pageants each year, including a summer festival known as the "ZalÃÂu Days". There is a statue of Baron Wesselényi in Iuliu Maniu Square of the town center; the Tuhutum Memorial (both made by János Fadrusz in 1902); the ZalÃÂu County Museum of History and Art displays artifacts ranging from neolithic times to modern times, with a focus on the Roman period and hosts works of modern art. There are several churches, including the Calvinist Cathedral, which is one of the most beautiful and largest in Transylvania.
The population of ZalÃÂu went through important evolutions through time. At the 2021 census, ZalÃÂu had a population of 52,359. At the 2011 census it had 56,202 inhabitants; of those, 76.5% were Romanians, 15.4% Hungarians, 1.4% Romani, and for 6.5% no ethnicity information was available. According to the census in 2002, the population had the following structure: 80.89% Romanians, 17.50% Hungarians, 1.36% Romani, 0.25% others.
The location had various names: "Ziloc" in 1220, "Oppidum Zilah" in 1473, "Zila" in 1601, and "Zilahu" and "Zalahu" in the 19th century, or forms of German toponymy "Waltenberg" and "Zillenmarkt".
At the end of the 16th century, the town had an independent administrative rule made of 33 elected senators, from whom one of them was the mayor. There were also a notary, an archivist and a treasurer.
Formed by 21 members, the Local Council has the following attributes: to approve the local budget, loans, credit transfers and the means of the use of the budgetary reserve; it establishes local taxes as well as special taxes; to elect the vice-mayors, to decide on the staff of attendants number.
The ZalÃÂu Council, elected in the 2012 local government elections, was made up of 21 councilors, with the following party composition: 3-Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania, 12-Social Liberal Union, 3-Democratic Liberal Party, 3-People's Party â Dan Diaconescu. Mayor Radu CÃÂpîlnÃÂÃÂiu was re-elected.
Mayor Radu CÃÂpîlnÃÂÃÂiu was elected first time in 2004 as member of Democratic Party (PD) and re-elected in 2008 and 2012 as member of National Liberal Party (PNL).
The ZalÃÂu Municipal Council, elected in the 2008 local government elections, was made up of 21 councilors, with the following party composition:
The ZalÃÂu Municipal Council, elected in the 2004 local government elections, was made up of 21 councillors, with the following party composition:
The city has a women's handball team, named HC ZalÃÂu, that is coached by Gheorghe Tadici, the former head coach of Romania's national handball team.
Graiul SÃÂlajului, Magazin SÃÂlÃÂjean, SÃÂlajeanul, ÃÂara Silvaniei (1940, 1989), NÃÂzuinÃÂa (1960âÂÂ1989), SÃÂlajul Orizont, Gazeta de DuminicÃÂ, Glasul copilÃÂriei, Repere transilvane, SÃÂlajul european, Acta mvsei porolissensis, Caiete silvane, Limes, ÃÂrkád, Szilágy, Szilágyság.
ZalÃÂu is twinned with:
ZalÃÂu has a humid continental climate (Dfb in the Köppen climate classification).
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