Misplaced Pages

Baia (disambiguation)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Baia ( German : Baja, Stadt Molde, or Moldenmarkt ; Hungarian : Moldvabánya ; Latin : Civitas Moldaviae ) is a commune in Suceava County , in the historical region of Western Moldavia , northeastern Romania with a population of 6,793 (2002 census). It is composed of two villages, namely Baia and Bogata. Located on the Moldova River , it was one of the earliest urban settlements in Moldavia .

#47952

8-465: Baia is a commune in Suceava County, Romania. Baia may also refer to : Baia The Romanian baia and Hungarian bánya both mean "mine". Archeologists found traces of iron slag and coal, but only for a brief period before 14th century, before the arrival of the colonists. It is possible that it derives from the term Bania (from Ban , a political leader). Baia was mentioned for

16-606: The first time in the Nestor chronicle under the name Bania. Another name of the settlement was Târgul Moldovei which means "the market of Moldavia", referring to the Moldova River . Its Hungarian name was Moldvabánya , "the Moldova mine". It also had a Latin name, Civitas Moldaviae which was found on an early seal of the city. There has been a settlement in Baia since the 13th century, but

24-570: The first written evidence is from the following century. It is possible that a document in Poland mentions the town in 1335, when a certain merchant was mentioned by the name of "Alexa Moldaowicz" (i.e. Alexa from the Town of Moldavia) and the next was in 1345, when Baia is placed on a list of towns of the Franciscan missionaries. It was through Baia that the army of King Louis I of Hungary went when conquering

32-511: The mills were privately owned. The pârgari (local council) and șoltuzes (mayors) were initially elected among the Germans, but this changed with time and in a 1586 document, only half of the pârgari had German or Hungarian names, while the other half had Romanian names, including the șoltuz . In 1467, Matthias Corvinus began an expedition against Ștefan the Great , who had previously conquered

40-506: The region around 1345-1347. There is evidence of a large fire dated mid-14th century discovered by the archeologists and associated with this conquest. The early Moldavian chronicles place the first capital of Moldavia in Baia, but it was only an interim capital. Soon the court was moved to Siret , and Baia was not even a county seat by the time of Bogdan I of Moldavia . After the Hungarian conquest, colonists from Transylvania settled in

48-511: The stronghold of Kilia , previously held by Hungary. During Matthias's campaign, his armies set on fire the Moldavian towns of Trotuș, Bacău, Roman and Neamț, but he spares the town of Baia, in which he settled in a fortified stone house in the center. Ștefan cel Mare attacked and burnt the town on the night of December 15, 1467, in the prelude to the Battle of Baia . The town entered a decline after

56-418: The town, leading to the urbanization of the settlement, which gained a special status. According to chronicler Grigore Ureche , the târg at Baia was founded by "German potters". The area where the colonists settled was reorganized: they built a wooden church and a central marketplace, surrounding which parcels of land were laid out. By 1400, the inhabitants of the town had a standard of living similar to

64-437: The urban areas of Transylvania: the houses were heated by cocklestoves and the town's streets paved with river gravel . The town was defended by a wooden palisade which was burnt down in 1467. The exact ethnic makeup of the townfolks is unknown, but several 15th century documents talk of the " Saxons in Baia". The town's pârgari had a collective ownership over the mills, which is unlike in other Moldavian towns, where

#47952