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Contents

   



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1 History  





2 Mining project  





3 FânFest festival  





4 Demographics  





5 Natives  





6 References  





7 External links  














Roșia Montană






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Coordinates: 46°1822N 23°0749E / 46.30611°N 23.13028°E / 46.30611; 23.13028
 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Roşia Montană)

Roșia Montană
Roșia Montană, 2007
Roșia Montană, 2007
Location in Alba County
Location in Alba County
Roșia Montană is located in Romania
Roșia Montană

Roșia Montană

Location in Romania

Coordinates: 46°18′22N 23°07′49E / 46.30611°N 23.13028°E / 46.30611; 23.13028
CountryRomania
CountyAlba
Established131 (first reference)[1]
Government
 • Mayor (2020–2024) Eugen Furdui[2] (PNL)
Area
42 km2 (16 sq mi)
Elevation
850 m (2,790 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-01)[3]
2,428
 • Density58/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Postal code
517615[4]
Area code(+40) 02 58
Vehicle reg.AB
Websiteprimariarosiamontana.ro

UNESCO World Heritage Site

Official nameRoșia Montană Mining Landscape
TypeCultural
Criteria(ii) (iii) (iv)
Designated2021 (44th session)
Reference no.1552
Endangered2021-present

Roșia Montană (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈroʃi.a monˈtanə], "Roșia of the Mountains"; Latin: Alburnus Maior; Hungarian: Verespatak, [ˈvɛrɛʃpɒtɒk]; German: Goldbach, Rotseifen) is a communeofAlba County in the Apuseni Mountains of western Transylvania, Romania. It is located in the Valea Roșiei, through which the small river Roșia Montană flows. The commune is composed of sixteen villages: Bălmoșești, Blidești, Bunta, Cărpiniș (Abrudkerpenyes), Coasta Henții, Corna (Szarvaspatak), Curături, Dăroaia, Gârda-Bărbulești, Gura Roșiei (Verespataktorka), Iacobești, Ignățești, Roșia Montană, Șoal, Țarina, and Vârtop (Vartop).

The rich mineral resources of the area have been exploited since Roman times or before. The state-run gold mine closed in late 2006 in advance of Romania's accession to the European Union. Gabriel Resources of Canada plan to open a new mine. This has caused controversy on one hand over the extent to which remains of Roman mining would be preserved and over fears of a repeat of the cyanide pollution at Baia Mare and on the other, over the benefits that mining would bring to this poor and underdeveloped part of the country.

The campaign against mining at Roșia Montană was one of the largest protest campaigns in the last 20 years in Romania. A plethora of organizations spoke out against the project, from Greenpeace to the Romanian Academy. After a series of nationwide protests in the autumn of 2013, the Chamber of Deputies eventually rejected the project on 3 June 2014.[5] Moreover, Roșia Montană has been classified as a historic site of national importance, by an order of the Ministry of Culture issued on 30 December 2015.[6] Thus, industrial activity is prohibited in the area.

History[edit]

Ruins of Alburnus Maior in Roșia Montană
Roșia Montană in 1890
Roșia Montană has one of the most extensive networks of Roman gold mines.
Museum of Gold Mining

There is archaeological and metallurgical evidence of gold mining in the 'Golden Quadrilateral' of Transylvania since the late Stone Age.[7] The community, then known as Alburnus Maior, was founded by the Romans during the rule of Trajan as a mining town, with Illyrian colonists from South Dalmatia.[8] The earliest reference to the town is on a wax tablet dated 6 February 131. Archaeologists have discovered in the town ancient dwellings, necropolises, mine galleries, mining tools, 25 wax tablets and many inscriptions in Greek and Latin, centred around Carpeni Hill.[9] The Romans left Dacia in 271.

Mining appears to have started again in the Middle Ages by German (Transylvanian Saxon) migrants using similar techniques to the Romans. This continued until the devastating wars of the mid-16th century.[citation needed]

Mining was much expanded under the Austrian Empire with the encouragement of the Imperial authorities. Charles VI funded the construction of ponds (tăuri) in 1733.[8] After the empire broke up in 1918, most of the remaining veins were mined out under fixed-length concessions granted to local citizens. The sulphide-rich waste generated large volumes of sulphuric acid which in turn liberated heavy metals into local water sources, in addition to the mercury used to extract the gold.[citation needed]

In 1948 the mines were taken over by the Romanian state, with traditional small scale underground mining continuing until the late 1960s. Attention then turned to the lower-grade gold disseminated through the rock surrounding the veins. In 1975 an open-cast pit was constructed at Cetate for bulk mining. This mine was operated by Roșiamin, a subsidiary of the state-owned company Regia Autonomă a Cuprului din Deva (RAC), and provided 775 jobs,[10] representing most of the employment in the region.[11] The ore was flotation-concentrated at Gura Roșiei and then extracted by cyanide leachingatBaia de Arieș.[12] This mine needed subsidies of US$3 million per year in 2004[11] and was closed in 2006 before Romania joined the European Union.

Mining project[edit]

Cetate open-pit gold mine (1971–2006) near Roșia Montană
Roșia Montană planned mining facilities

The Project's origins are in a 1995 deal signed by RAC Deva with the controversial Romanian-Australian businessman Frank Timiș about reprocessing the tailings at Roșia Montană.[13] Several years later, the mining licence for an area of 23.8823 km2 (9.2210 sq mi) around Roșia Montană was transferred to the Roșia Montană Gold Corporation (RMGC) from Minvest Deva SA (successor to RAC Deva). RMGC is owned 80% by Toronto-listed company Gabriel Resources, 19.3% by the Romanian government via Minvest.[citation needed]

Within the project, Roșia Montană Gold Corporation (RMGC) plans to produce 225 tonnes of gold and 819 tonnes of silver over 17 years and it would involve digging up a large area, involving the creation of four mining pits covering 205 ha (510 acres), the first two at the old mining sites of Cirnic and Cetate, followed by pits at Jig and Orlea in Phase II. Up to 250 million tonnes of cyanide-laced tailings will be stored in a 363 ha (900 acres) pond in the Corna Valley behind a 185m-high dam.[8]

The corporation was not able to gain full authorization for the project. State authorities granted permits which were later annulled by the courts following appeals by environmental groups. The environmental impact assessment procedure started in 2004, but a final approval was still been given.[14]

The company began buying up houses in the city, but about 100 residents refused to sell and, supported by environmentalists, architects, archeologists and lawyers, they have been battling the corporation and the state in courts.[14] The main concerns of the opponents are related to environmental dangers of cyanide leaching of gold (as Romania witnessed the 2000 Baia Mare cyanide spill), as well as the destruction of the ancient Roman sites in Roșia Montană.[14]

Resistance to RMGC's plans followed a Romanian Academy report on the project released in April 2003, which recommended that all cyanide mining be suspended in Roșia Montană.[10] In the following years, the Romanian Orthodox Church, the Romanian Catholic Church and the Romanian Unitarian Church have all signalled their opposition to the project.[15] Large NGOs such as Greenpeace[16] and political organisations such as the European Federation of Green Parties[17] are also opposed.

In August 2005, the Canadian government announced that it supports Gabriel Resources' project; in October 2005, Miklós Persányi the Hungarian Minister of Environment announced that the Hungarian government strongly opposes the project.[15][18] The Hungarian Historic Churches are particularly concerned about the threat to monuments and churches that are part of the common Hungarian cultural heritage.[19]

In 2013, the Victor Ponta government announced that it will send through parliament a new law that would allow the bypass of environmental and heritage regulations that prevented the project from being started. This led to the 2013 Romanian protests against the Roșia Montană Project in major cities across the country.

In November 2013 the senate rejected a draft law which would have paved the way for the mining project to go ahead. Previously, a parliamentary Special Commission concluded that the wording of the draft law was inadequate and recommended that a new law be introduced for the implementation of large scale mining projects across Romania. Amid speculation that the rejection of the draft law could mean the end of the mining project,[20] Gabriel have said that it is 'a first step in defining the next phase of developing Roșia Montană'.[21]

FânFest festival[edit]

Tourists' tents alongside locals houses in Roșia Montană during the FânFest in 2007

In Roșia Montană, each year since 2004, in August, several NGOs have organized a free music festival in aid of the Save Roșia Montană campaign.『FânFest』(Fân means "hay" in Romanian) has featured many big Romanian bands and singers, such as Ada Milea, Luna Amară, Shukar Collective, Timpuri Noi, Sarmalele Reci, Vița de Vie [ro] and, from the Republic of Moldova, Zdob și Zdub. All artists perform pro bono in aid of the campaign and to celebrate artistic diversity and multiculturalism.

The three-day FânFest event has a large range of cultural, environmental, musical and outdoor activities as well as offering the chance to participate in various workshops. The main stage features groups performing rock, jazz, folk, reggae and world music. The 2006 FânFest saw a second, "Alternative Activity", tent hosting theatre and dance performances, video projections and other cultural, environmental and social activities.

About 10,000 people attended the 2005 event and 15,000 in 2006.[22][23]

Demographics[edit]

Year Total Romanians Hungarians Roma References
1850 5,756 4,651 (81%) 669 170 [24]
1880 5,640 4,130 (73%) 1,452
1890 5,543 4,037 (73%) 1,472
1900 5,665 4,211 (74%) 1,424
1910 5,165 3,623 (70%) 1,515
1920 4,252 3,341 (79%) 880
1930 4,362 3,673 (84%) 609 60
1941 5,409 4,557 (84%) 651
1956 4,169 3,684 (88%) 416 63
1966 4,591 4,178 (91%) 317 87
1977 4,393 4,060 (92%) 157 168
1992 4,146 3,808 (92%) 104 228
2002 3,872 3,518 (91%) 55 289 [25]
2011 2,656 2,239 (84%) 6 334 [26]
2021 2,428 1,798 (74%) 2 395 [27]

Natives[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "6 februarie 2015 – Roșia Montană, cea mai veche localitate minieră din România împlinește 1884 de ani de la prima atestare documentară". Ziarul Unirea. 5 February 2015.
  • ^ "Results of the 2020 local elections". Central Electoral Bureau. Retrieved 6 June 2021.
  • ^ "Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (XLS). National Institute of Statistics.
  • ^ "Cod postal Roșia Montană". Oceanus.ro.
  • ^ "Deputații au respins proiectul de lege privind Roșia Montană" (in Romanian). HotNews. 3 June 2014.
  • ^ "Roșia Montană a fost declarată sit istoric de importanță națională". Gândul. 11 January 2016.
  • ^ Gündisch, Konrad. "Siebenbürgen und die Siebenbürger Sachsen" tr. Georg Schuller".[permanent dead link]
  • ^ a b c PROIECT Alba SA Zonal Urbanism Plan for Roșia Montană Industrial Area Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ --- (1976) Dicționar de istorie veche a României, Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică p. 27
  • ^ a b Haiduc, Ionel (13 April 2003), "Report on Roșia Montană by the Romanian Academy", Academica: 77–80
  • ^ a b Richards, Jeremy "Rosia Montana gold controversy"[permanent dead link] Mining Environmental Management January 2005 pp5-13 Overview of the project
  • ^ Gabriel Resources, Overview of Roșia Montană Archived 2007-01-15 at the Wayback Machine History of mining in the area and describes the geology in detail
  • ^ Radu, Paul Christian "Viața secretă a lui Vasile Frank Timiș" Archived 2006-11-15 at the Wayback Machine June 23, 2005 (English translation Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine)
  • ^ a b c Claudia Ciobanu (5 September 2013). "Romania's struggle for democracy is encapsulated in a village". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
  • ^ a b Risk analysis Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine by the Alburnus Maior group, November 2005.
  • ^ NGO statement in support of Roșia Montană community January 22, 2007
  • ^ European Federation of Green Parties Adopted resolution on Roșia Montană November 2003.
  • ^ Barnett, Neil "Romanian Gold Project Stalled", February 25, 2005. Looks at the Hungarian view
  • ^ Historic Hungarian Churches Declaration on the Roșia Montană Project Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine, July 21, 2003
  • ^ "Romania shuts door on Gabriel's giant Roșia Montană gold mine". Financial Post. November 11, 2013. Archived from the original on November 24, 2013.
  • ^ "Gabriel Resources remains committed to Roșia Montană despite Romanian decision". Canadian Business. November 12, 2013.[dead link]
  • ^ "FânFest, cel mai mare festival verde din România | Alternativ". Alternativ.ro. 2007-07-29. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-01-03.
  • ^ "FânFest Roșia Montană – protestul continuă împreună cu cei 15 000 de participanți prezenți" [Protest continues with 15,000 participants]. www.romaniangraffiti.ro. 2010-05-30. Retrieved 2013-01-03.[dead link]
  • ^ Varga E. Árpád: Erdély etnikai és felekezeti statisztikája (1850-1992) Retrieved 2007-05-14
  • ^ Transindex Recensamânt 2002 website Archived 2008-03-17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007-05-10
  • ^ Recensământ 2012: Populația stabilă după etnie – județe, municipii, orașe, comune
  • ^ "Populația rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (in Romanian). INSSE. 31 May 2023.
  • External links[edit]


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