Moinești ( Romanian pronunciation: [mojˈneʃtʲ] ; Hungarian : Mojnest ) is a city in Bacău County , Western Moldavia , Romania , with a population of 19,728 as of 2021. Its name is derived from the Romanian-language word moină , which means " fallow " or "light rain". Moinești once had a large Jewish community, and in 1899 about half of the population was Jewish; in Jewish contexts the name is often given as Mojnescht or "Monesht". The city administers one village, Găzărie.
6-644: The city is situated in the foothills of the Tarcău Mountains , at an altitude of 400 m (1,300 ft), on the banks of the river Tazlăul Sărat . It is located in the northwestern part of Bacău County, 45 km (28 mi) west of the county seat, Bacău . Moinești is crossed by national road DN2G [ ro ] , which connects it to Bacău (where it ends in DN2 ) and to nearby Comănești (where it ends in DN12A [ ro ] ). First mentioned in 1467,
12-545: A mountain range, part of the Moldavian-Muntenian Carpathians of the Outer Eastern Carpathians . The range is located between the latitudes 46°25′ and 46°57′ N and between the longitudes 25°52′ and 26°28′ E. The range is bordered by the following rivers: To the east they are limited by the subcarpathian hills along a line running approximately from Piatra Neamț to Moinești . The highest point
18-665: The 2021 census , the city had a population of 19,728. There are two secondary schools in Moinești: the Spiru Haret Theoretical High School and the Grigore Cobălcescu Technical College. The area around Moinești is rich in natural resources such as petroleum , natural gas , salt, and timber . From the 1950s to the 1980s, Moinești experienced a steady economic growth thanks to the large petroleum extracting industry. After 1990, however, following
24-529: The locality was listed among the Moldavian villages on the Bawer map of 1783. A târg was first attested in this location in 1832; it had 188 houses and 588 inhabitants. In 1921, Moinești was designated a comună urbană ("urban commune"), with its own coat of arms and local administration, but a step short of being considered a city. It became a municipality in 2002. The 2011 census counted 20,855 inhabitants. At
30-770: The nationwide industry privatization , Moinești's economy changed dramatically, at some points reaching level of unemployment of over 20%. In 1996, a monument was built in the town in honor of Tristan Tzara , the Moinești-born founder of Dadaism . It was created from concrete and steel by the German-Romanian sculptor Ingo Glass in the true Dada spirit. It is 25 meters long, 2.6 meters wide, and 10 meters high and it weighs 120 tons. Tourist attractions in Moinești include: Băi Park (with healing mineral waters), Pine Tree Park, Ghindaru Hill (where archaeologists discovered artefacts of
36-688: The pre- Cucuteni culture , over 5,000 years old), the Dada Monument (dedicated to Tristan Tzara), Cetățuia (Dacian fortified city archaeologically certified), and the Jewish Cemetery (where the oldest tombstone with recognisable text dates back to 1692). This Bacău County location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article related to Jewish history is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Tarc%C4%83u Mountains The Tarcău Mountains ( Romanian : Munții Tarcău , Hungarian : Tarkő-hegység ) are
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