Municipiul Cluj-Napoca - Kolozsvar Megyei Jogu Varos
Cluj-Napoca (in Hungarian Kolozsvar, in German Clausenburg) is a city in Cluj County of Romania (in the valley of Somes River in Transylvania). The city has got 328.602 inhabitants (74.900 (22,8%) Hungarians, 1992 census). The settlement as the second largest Hungarian community over the border is a cultural and political centre of the Transylvanian Hungarians.
The territory of the city is inhabited from Ages. Before the Roman troops arrived there was a Dacian fortress. 124-271 AC there was a Roman city - Napoca - of Dacia Province. Castle of Kolozs was found at the beginning of the 11th century by the Hungarian kings. The castle became a capital of Kolozs County (first mention of the county is from 1173). The city was devastated in 1242 by the Mongols. In 1260s King Stephen V. resettled the town with Saxonians. Royal Town from 1316 by King Charles I. In 1458 the settlement was a city with council (50 Saxons and 50 Hungarians). From 1552 to 1690 the city is part of the semi-independent Principality of Transylvania. From 1690 to 1703 the capital of Transylvania (under Habsburg rule). In 1791 the application "Supplex Libellus Valachorum" for more political right to the Romanians was made here. 1790-1848 capital of the Grand Duchy of Transylvania. The Parliament of Transylvania in Kolozsvar (in Romanian Cluj) decided the Union with Hungary on 30th May 1848. 1849-1867 part of Transylvania.
The settlement in 1910 was a city of the Kingdom of Hungary. Inhabitants in 1910: 60.808; 50.704 (83,4%) Hungarian, 7.562 (12,4%) Romanian, 1.676 (2,8%) German and 866 (1,4%) other by mother tongue, 20.726 (34,1%) Calvinist, 19.021 (31,3%) Roman Catholic, 8.646.(14,2) Greek Catholic, 7.054 (11,6%) Jew, 2.007 (3,3%) Lutheran, 1946 (3,2%) Unitarian, 1338 (2,2%) Greek Ortodox and 70 (0,1%) other by religion. After the Romanian Declaration of Alba Iulia about the Union with Romania the National Assembly of the Hungarians of Transylvania declarated the belonging to Hungary in Kolozsvar. From 1918/1920 (Romanian unification / Treaty of Trianon) to 1940 (Second Decision in Vienna) part of the Kingdom of Romania. 1940-1944 part of Hungary. The Treaty of Paris reallocated it to Romania. The settlement was the capital of Cluj Region 1952-1968 and from 1968 capital of Cluj county. In 1974 City of Cluj has got the new name Cluj-Napoca to remember the ancient city, Napoca.
Famous Hungarian celebrities were born in Cluj: King Matthias Corvinus (1440-1490), king of Hungary, Istvan Bocskay (1557-1606) Prince of Transylvania and Janos Bolyai mathematician (1802-1860). The city is very rich in historical buildings, sculptures from the centuries, there is the Transylvanian Hungarian National Pantheon and the seat of the Transylvanian Unitarian Church and the Transylvanian Reformed Church.
History of Cluj Napoca here: http://www.cjnet.ro/cj/istoric.html
and http://www.debrecen.com/kolozsvar/kvar.html
located at http://www.cjnet.ro/eindex/index.html
CoA of Cluj-Napoca. This is the official version from the 1990s years. The
CoA's colours relate to the Romanian inhabitants, the Roman soldier in the blue
fild relates to the Dacians and Roman Legions and Napoca city, the monument (you
can find in the High Square of the city) relates to the Romanian heroes of the
last centuries. I haven't got information about the dragon in the gold field.
This flag appears at Dr. Szell Sandor: Varosaink neve, cimere es lobogoja
(1941) as "Kolozsvar, Kolozs Co.".
Historical Coat of Arms
Old CoA of Cluj / Kolozsvar / Klausenburg here: http://www.msci.memphis.edu/~matlakz/kolozsvar/index.html.
The colours of the CoA same as the colours of the historical flag: blue and
silver (white). The CoA relates to the castle of the city. This old CoA which
was used to the communist era was a part of the CoA of Cluj-Napoca in 1980.
This version was in use till 1920 and 1940-1944
located at http://ns.interplus.ro/internet/serv_rom/cluj.htm
This version was in use in 1920-1940