exploreCARPATHIA
Attractions along the Carpathians
Transylvania / Romania

Déva

Deva
Déva
Hungarian:
Déva
Romanian:
Deva
German:
Diemrich,Schlossberg,Denburg
Latin:
Sargetia
Déva
Costel Munteanu, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Historical Hungarian county:
Hunyad
Country:
Romania
County:
Hunedoara
River:
Maros
Altitude:
187 m
GPS coordinates:
45.885695, 22.898734
Google map:
Population
Population:
58k
Hungarian:
8.53%
Population in 1910
Total 8654
Hungarian 67.33%
German 3.19%
Vlach 27.93%
Coat of Arms
ROU HD Deva CoA
As seen in [www.primariadeva.ro], Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

When we hear the name Déva, the castle on the hill overlooking the Maros River and, of course, the story of Kelemen the Mason come to mind. Legend has it, that the walls of the castle kept falling down during construction, so the 12 masons agreed that the first of their wives to came up to the castle would be thrown into the fire and her ashes mixed with the lime. The victim was Kelemen's wife. The castle was built by Béla IV after the 1241-42 Mongol invasion and was a royal castle and the property of the vajda representing the power of the Hungarian king in Transylvania. The castle was held on that title by the oligarch Kán László, who imprisoned the pretender to the throne, Otto of Bavaria, in this castle after taking the Holy Crown of Hungary from him. After his death, his sons' army was defeated by Charles I of Hungary under the castle, which was also captured by the king. Hunyadi János, who later became Governor of Hungary, also gained possession of the castle as a vajda, as did Szapolyi János (the future King John I) later. Few people know that after his triumph over the Turks as captain of Eger Castle in 1552, Dobó István was appointed vajda of Transylvania, and with it he received Déva. During the Principality of Transylvania, its military importance increased when in 1616 Prince Bethlen Gábor had to cede Lippa to the Turks, making Déva a border castle. However, the Turks never laid siege to it. It was here that Széchy Mária, the future 'Venus of Murány', who inherited the castle from her husband, the nephew of Prince Bethlen Gábor, found refuge from her aggressive new husband. During the 1703-1711 Hungarian War of Independence, it was captured by the kuruc insurgents, and taken back from them by the 'labanc', the imperials, under the leadership of Csáky András. It was then strengthened by the Austrians, and the nobility of Hunyad County took refuge here from the bloodthirsty Vlach mob led by Horea in 1784. The castle was then abandoned, and it was only saved by the fact that in 1817 the visiting Emperor Francis I liked it so much that he ordered its restoration. During the 1848-1849 Hungarian War of Independence, the Austrian guards surrendered the castle to the Hungarian soldiers. At the end of the war, however, the castle's powder magazine exploded under circumstances that are still unclear, killing more than a hundred Hungarian soldiers and destroying the castle.

History
Sights
© OpenStreetMap contributors
895
Arrival of the Hungarians
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895
The alliance of the seven Hungarian tribes took possession of the then largely uninhabited Carpathian Basin. Until then, the sparse Slavic population of the north-western Carpathians had lived under Moravian rule for a few decades after the collapse of the Avar Khaganate in the early 9th century.
1000
Foundation of the Hungarian Kingdom
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1000
The Kingdom of Hungary was established with the coronation of King Stephen I. He converted the Hungarians to Christianity and created two archdioceses (Esztergom and Kalocsa) and ten dioceses. He divided Hungary into counties led by ispáns, who were appointed by the king.
1241-1242
Mongol Invasion
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1241-1242
The hordes of the Mongol Empire invaded Hungary and almost completely destroyed it. One third to one half of the population was destroyed. The Mongols also suffered heavy losses in the battle of Muhi and they could not hunt down the king. After their withdrawal, King Béla IV reorganized Hungary. He allowed the feudal lords to build stone castles because they were able to successfully resist the nomadic Mongols. The vast majority of stone castles were built after this. The king called in German, Vlach (Romanian) and Slavic settlers to replace the destroyed population.
after 1241
King Béla IV of Hungary built the castle after the Mongol invasion. It was owned by the king or the vajda of Transylvania later as well. According to the Romanians, there was a Dacian and a Roman fortress on the castle hill, but it was not proven by archaeologists.
1262
A war broke out between King Béla IV of Hungary and his son, István. They made an agreement in Pozsony at the end of the year, and divided the country between themselves. The eastern part of Hungary, including Transylvania, became the domain of István.
1264
King Béla IV launched an attack against István. The army of Kán László and Gyula consisting of mainly Cumans was defeated by Csák Péter, the follower of István, at Déva („castrum Dewa”). But István had to retreat to the castle of Feketehalom from the army of Judge Royal Lőrinc son of Kemény, where he was besieged.
early 1265
When the liberation army arrived, István broke out from Feketehalom Castle and defeated the besiegers. He launched a counter-attack and defeated the royal army led by bán Béla of Macsó and nádor Kőszegi Nagy Henrik in the battle of Isaszeg.
1269
The castle was mentioned for the first time as Dewa. Some suggest that the name comes from the Slavic deva word meaning girl. This may be connected to the legend of the woman walled up in the castle. Legend has it, that the walls of the castle kept on crumbling during the construction, and the masons feared that they would not be paid. The 12 masons agreed that one of their wives, whoever showed up at the castle first, would be burned and her ashes would be mixed into the mortar. The victim was the wife of Kelemen, the castle was completed and the masons got paid. According to another theory, the name comes from an old Hungarian personal name of Turk origin, the original form of which was Győ preserved in the Algyő settlement name.
from the late 13th century
The castle belonged to the domain of vajda Kán László of Transylvania, who was one of the most powerful oligarchs of Hungary after the last king of the House of Árpád died.
from 1302
Déva Castle was the seat of the vice vajda of Transylvania.
1307
The oligarch Kán László captured Otto, Duke of Lower Bavaria, a pretender to the throne of Hungary, who came to Transylvania to get married. Duke Otto was crowned King of Hungary in 1305, but the coronation was invalid according to the traditions. He was held captive in Déva Castle for a couple of months until he was ransomed. But Kán László kept the Holy Crown of Hungary, which he had taken from Otto.
1309
Kán László delivered the Holy Crown of Hungary to Charles Robert (later King Charles I of Hungary), after Gentile, the papal legate threatened him with excommunication.
1316
Kán László died. King Charles I appointed Miklós of the Pok clan vajda of Transylvania, which the sons of Kán László refused to accept. The royal army defeated the army of the sons of Kán under Déva Castle and occupied the castle. Déva belonged to the vajda of Transylvania afterwards.
from 1442
Hunyadi János and Újlaki Miklós controlled Déva as vajdas of Transylvania.
around 1443-1444
King Ulászló I of Hungary donated Déva to Hunyadi János, but as the king fell in the battle of Varna in 1444, Hunyadi wasn’t officially registered as its owner and Déva remained a royal casatle.
1453
King László V of Hungary donated Déva to Hunyadi János.
1456
Siege of Nándorfehérvár (Belgrade)
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1456
The Turkish army of Sultan Mehmed II, the conqueror of Constantinople, besieged the castle of Nándorfehérvár (Belgrade), which was the southern gateway to Hungary. But the Hungarian army, led by Hunyadi János, won a decisive victory over the twice to three times larger Turkish army. The Pope had earlier ordered that church bells should be rung every noon to pray for the victory of the defenders. Hunyadi János died of plague in the camp after the battle.
1456
Hunyadi János died from plague. His widow, Szilágyi Erzsébet, had to return Déva to the king along with other castles.
1457
King László V of Hungary died. The castle was acquired by Szilágyi Mihály, who gave it to his nephew, Hunyadi Mátyás (later King Matthias).
1490
King Ulászló II of Hungary donated Déva to Báthory István of Ecsed, who was Judge Royal and vajda of Transylvania. Later it was acquired by vajda Szapolyi János of Transylvania.
1504
The castle was owned by the Hunyadi family until the death of Corvin János.
1526
Battle of Mohács and the splitting of Hungary into two parts
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1526
Sultan Suleiman I launched a war against Vienna, instigated by the French. Ferdinand I, Duke of Austria, was the brother-in-law of King Louis II of Hungary. The army of the Ottoman Empire defeated the much smaller Hungarian army at Mohács, and King Louis II died in the battle. A group of the barons elected Ferdinand I of the House of Habsburg to the throne, who promised to defend Hungary from the Turks. He was the younger brother of the most powerful European monarch Emperor Charles V. But the nobility chose the most powerful Hungarian baron, Szapolyai János, who was also crowned as King John I. The country was split in two and a decades-long struggle for power began.
after 1526
Vajda Perényi Péter received Déva after the battle of Mohács.
1529
King John I of Hungary acquired the castle.
1539
King John I of Hungary gave Déva to his wife, Queen Isabella, as a wedding gift.
1541
The Turkish occupation of the capital, Buda, and the division of Hungary into three parts
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1541
The Turks conquered Buda, the capital of Hungary, after the death of King John I. The central part of the country was under Turkish rule for 150 years. The western and northern parts (including present-day Slovakia) formed the Kingdom of Hungary ruled by the Habsburg emperors. The eastern parts (now mainly under Romanian rule) were ruled by the successors of King John I of Hungary, who later established the Principality of Transylvania.
November 1550
Török János of Enying, ispán of Hunyad County, defeated the outpost of the army of Pasha Kasim here. The damages caused by the Turks were later repaired.
1551
King Ferdinand I took control of Déva. The child John Sigismund's guardian, George Martinuzzi, with Castaldo's imperial army, forced Queen Isabella to surrender the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (including Transylvania) to King Ferdinand I. Isabella left for Poland with her child, the heir to the throne. The Turks then launched a punitive campaign against Hungary.
1552
The Turks captured the castles of Temesvár, Solymos and Lippa during their campaign launched to take revenge for the surrender of Hungary to the Habsburgs. Déva became part of the frontier.
1553
King Ferdinand I of Hungry appointed Kendy Ferenc and Dobó István vajdas of Transylvania. Dobó István was gifted the castles of Déva and Szamosújvár as a reward for having defended heroically Eger Castle against the Turkish army.
1556
The Estates of Transylvania, dissatisfied with Habsburg rule, recalled Queen Isabella to the throne, to which the Sultan gave his consent. On her return, she regained control of eastern Hungary.
1556
Queen Isabella returned to Hungary and took control of Déva. Dobó István was removed from the office of vajda of Transylvania by the Estates of Transylvania. He was held captive for nearly 10 months in the castle of Szamosújvár until he managed to escape.
1570
The establishment of the Principality of Transylvania
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1570
John II (John Sigismund), the son of King John I of Hungary, renounced the title of King of Hungary in favor of King Maximilian of the House of Habsburg, and henceforth held the title of Prince. This formally created the Principality of Transylvania, which was the eastern half of Hungary not ruled by the Habsburgs and was also a vassal of the Ottoman Empire. John II died in 1571, after which the three nations of Transylvania (the Hungarian nobility, the Székelys and the Saxons) elected the prince.
November 15, 1579
The first Unitarian bishop of Transylvania, Dávid Ferenc, died in the prison of Déva Castle. John II, the son of King John I of Hungary and Queen Isabella, who also converted to the Unitarian faith in 1567, gave Dávid Ferenc the printing press in Gyulafehérvár. After the death of John II in 1571, the Catholic Báthory István became Prince of Transylvania, who took the printing press from the Unitarians and prohibited any further renewal of faith. In 1579, Dávid Ferenc was arrested for denying the divinity of Jesus and the country assembly gathered in Gyulafehérvár sentenced him for life imprisonment.
around 1580
The castle was reinforced due to its military significance.
1581
Geszthy Ferenc arrived in Transylvania and became the counsellor of Prince Báthory Kristóf and the captain of Déva Castle. He expanded the castle and built a manor house at the foot of the castle hill. Geszthy Ferenc published the first Vlach language translation of the Old Testament at his own expense, which was based on the work of Heltai Gáspár, the first Hungarian translation of the Bible.
1591-1606
Fifteen Years' War
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1591-1606
The Ottoman Empire started a war against the Habsburg Empire. The war was waged in the territory of Hungary. The Turks defeated the combined armies of the Habsburg Empire and the Principality of Transylvania in the battle of Mezőkeresztes in 1596, but their victory was not decisive. The war devastated the Principality of Transylvania, which was occupied by the Habsburg army, and General Basta introduced a reign of terror.
1594
Prince Báthory Zsigmond of Transylvania donated Déva to Geszthy Ferenc. Geszthy died in 1595 and established the first school in Déva in his will. His widow, Horváth Anna, gave Déva Castle back to Prince Báthory Zsigmond in 1596. After that, the castle was held by the princes of Transylvania.
September 9, 1603
The imperial general Giorgio Basta wanted to execute the aristocrats of Transylvania in Déva.
1604-1606
Uprising of Bocskai István
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1604-1606
The alliance of the Habsburgs and the Principality of Transylvania was defeated by the Ottoman Empire in the Fifteen Years' War. The war devastated Transylvania, which was occupied by the Habsburg imperial army, and General Basta introduced a reign of terror. The nobility and the burghers were upset about the terror, the plundering mercenaries and the violent Counter-Reformation. Bocskai István decided to lead their uprising after the Habsburg emperor tried to confiscate his estates. Bocskai also rallied the hajdú warriors to his side. He was elected Prince of Transylvania and soon liberated the Kingdom of Hungary from the Habsburgs. In 1605 Bocskai István was crowned King of Hungary with the crown he received from the Turks.
23 June 1606
Peace of Vienna
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23 June 1606
Bocski István made peace with Emperor Rudolf. Their agreement secured the constitutional rights of the Estates of Hungary, and the freedom of religion. The counties of Szatmár, Bereg and Ugocsa were annexed to the Principality of Transylvania. Bocskai died of illness in the same year, leaving to his successors the idea of unifying Hungary from Transylvania.
1610
Prince Báthory Gábor of Transylvania donated Déva to Bethlen Gábor.
1614
Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania donated Déva to his wife, Károlyi Zsuzsanna, who died in 1622.
1616
The importance of Déva as a frontier castle of Transylvania increased, after Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania handed over Lippa to the Turks, in exchange for helping him to power. In spite of this, the castle was never reinforced with the defences the military standards of that age would have demanded. The Turks never besieged the castle.
1619
The campaign of Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania in the Thirty Years' War
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1619
At the beginning of the Thirty Years' War (1618-1648), Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania went to war against the Habsburg emperor as an ally of the rebelling Czech-Moravian-Austrian estates. The whole Kingdom of Hungary joined him, only the Austrian defenders of Pozsony had to be put to the sword. With his allies, he laid siege to Vienna. However, he was forced to abandon the siege because the Habsburg-loyal Hungarian aristocrat Homonnai Drugeth György attacked his heartland with Polish mercenaries. On 25 August 1620, the Diet of Besztercebánya elected Bethlen Gábor King of Hungary as vassal of the Turks. He continued to fight after the defeat of the Czechs at White Mountain on 8 November 1620, but without real chance to achieve decisive victory, he decided to come to an agreement with Emperor Ferdinand II.
31 December 1621
Peace of Nikolsburg
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31 December 1621
Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania made peace with Emperor Ferdinand II. Their agreement secured the constitutional rights of the Estates of Hungary, and later it was supplemented with the freedom of religion. Bethlen renounced the title of King of Hungary in exchange for seven counties of the Upper Tisza region (Szabolcs, Szatmár, Bereg, Ugocsa, Zemplén, Borsod, Abaúj) for the rest of his life, other estates in Hungary as his private property and the imperial title of Duke of Oppeln and Ratibor (Opole and Racibórz), one of the Duchies of Silesia. Prince Bethlen went to war against the Habsburgs in 1623 and 1626, but was unable to negotiate more favourable terms.
1621
Prince Bethlen Gábor of Transylvania converted the manor house built by Geszthy Ferenc to a Renaissance palace. It has been called Bethlen Palace as well ever since.
1622
The castle was acquired by Bethlen István, the nephew of Prince Bethlen Gábor. In 1627, he married Széchy Mária, who was later called "Venus of Murány".
1632
Bethlen István died young. Széchy Mária lived in the manor house of Déva. In 1634, she married again to Kun István, ispán of Szatmár County, but she abandoned his violent husband soon and moved back to Déva. Kun István went after her with his soldiers, but Széchy Mária managed to flee from the manor house to the castle on the hill, which Kun István didn’t dare to besiege.
1640
Széchy Mária sold Déva to Prince Rákóczi György I of Transylvania. The prince ordered the construction of the round bastion to protect the castle from the east.
1644-1645
The campaign of Prince Rákóczi György I of Transylvania in the Thirty Years' War
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1644-1645
Prince Rákóczi György I of Transylvania allied with the Swedes and the French in the Thirty Years' War and went to war against the Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand III. On 18 July 1645 his army joined forces with Torstenson's Swedish army under Brno (Moravia). The excellent artillery of Transylvania opened fire on the city walls. However, Rákóczi had to give up the siege, having been informed that the Turks were planning a punitive campaign against Transylvania, because he went to war against the Sultan's prohibition.
16 December 1645
Peace of Linz
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16 December 1645
Prince Rákóczi György I of Transylvania made peace with Emperor Ferdinand III. It secured the freedom of religion for the Protestants and extended it also to the serfs. Rákóczi received the same seven Hungarian counties that Prince Bethlen Gábor had also held (Abauj, Zemplén, Borsod, Bereg, Ugocsa, Szabolcs, Szatmár) until his death, and the counties of Szabolcs and Szatmár were also to be inherited by his sons. The Rákóczi family also received several new estates.
I657
Prince Rákóczi György II of Transylvania donated Déva to Barcsay Ákos.
1657
Prince Rákóczi György II of Transylvania launched a campaign for the crown of Poland in alliance with Carl X Gustaf of Sweden. His aim was to unite the Hungarian-Polish-Wallachian forces against the Turks. The campaign started successfully with the prince taking Kraków and Warsawa, but then the King of Sweden abandoned him. The vengeful Poles invaded northern Transylvania, burning defenceless villages, destroying churches and castles. Soon the punitive campaign of Turkish and Tatar armies devastated Transylvania, as the prince launched his Polish campaign against the Sultan's will.
1658
The Tartars ravaged and plundered throughout Transylvania and Grand Vizier Köprülü Mehmed captured Jenő Castle. The Estates of Transylvania sent Barcsay Ákos to the camp of the grand vizier to beg for mercy. In return, the Grand Vizier demanded that the annual tax be raised from 15 to 40 thousand forints (gold coins) and that Lugos and Karansebes be ceded. This was the price for the Turks to leave Transylvania. The grand vizier appointed Barcsay prince on 14 September.
1659
Prince Rákóczi György II returned to Transylvania and forced Barcsay Ákos to retreat to Szeben and besieged him.
May 22, 1660
In the battle of Sászfenes, Pasha Shejdi Ahmed of Buda defeated Rákóczi György II, who lost his life. The Tatar armies invaded Transylvania for the second time.
November 1660
Kemény János, the former commander of Rákóczi György II, defeated the army of Gáspár, the brother of Prince Barcsay András, at Örményes. Barcsay Gáspár fell in the battle. Then, on 31 December, Barcsay Ákos renounced the throne. Déva Castle was handed over to Kemény János by its German garrison. In 1661 Kemény János had Barcsay Ákos captured and murdered.
1661
The army of Pasha Seydi Ahmed of Buda marched into Transylvania, after the country assembly held in Beszterce on 23 April declared the independence of Transylvania from the Ottoman Empire and placed the country under the protection of Emperor Leopold I. On 14 September, Pasha Ali forced the country assembly to elect Apafi Mihály Prince of Transylvania in Marosvásárhely.
January 23, 1662
The deposed prince Kemény János, having been abandoned by his imperial allies, was defeated by the Turks at Nagyszőlős (near Segesvár), where he fell.
1661-1690
The castle operated as a prison during the reign of Prince Apafi Mihály I of Transylvania.
1683
Turkish defeat at Vienna and the formation of the Holy League
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1683
The combined armies of the Habsburg Empire and the Kingdom of Poland defeated the Turkish army besieging Vienna. Emperor Leopold I wanted to make peace with the Turks, but was refused by Sultan Mehmed IV. In 1684, at the persistent urging of Pope Innocent XI, the Holy League, an alliance of the Kingdom of Poland, the Habsburg Empire, the Republic of Venice and the Papal States, was formed to expel the Turks from Hungary. Thököly Imre, who had allied himself with the Turks, was gradually driven out of northern Hungary.
1686
Recapture of Buda and the liberation of Hungary from the Turks
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1686
The army of the Holy League recaptured Buda from the Turks by siege. In 1687, the Imperial army invaded the Principality of Transylvania. The liberation was hindered by the French breaking their promise of peace in 1688 and attacking the Habsburg Empire. By 1699, when the Peace of Karlóca was signed, all of Hungary and Croatia had been liberated from the Ottoman Empire with the exception of Temesköz, the area bounded by the Maros, the Tisza and the Danube rivers. It was not until the Peace of Požarevac in 1718 that Temesköz was liberated from the Turks. However, the continuous war against the Turkish invaders and the Habsburg autocracy, which lasted for more than 150 years, wiped out large areas of the Hungarian population, which had previously made up 80% of the country's population, and was replaced by Vlachs (Romanians), Serbs and other Slavic settlers and Germans. The Habsburgs also favoured the settlement of these foreign peoples over the 'rebellious' Hungarians.
1690
Transylvania became part of the Kingdom of Hungary again, with internal autonomy and freedom of religion
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1690
According to the Diploma Leopoldinum issued by Emperor Leopold I, Transylvania became part of the Kingdom of Hungary again and Hungarian law remained in force. The three nations (the Hungarians, the Székelys – who are also Hungarians –, and the Saxons) administered its internal affairs with autonomy and the freedom of religion was also preserved. The incorporation of Transylvania into the Habsburg Empire was prevented by the temporary election of Thököly Imre as Prince of Transylvania in 1690 with Turkish help.
1701
Emperor Leopold I ordered the destruction of many Hungarian castles, but Déva was spared, because its German garrison was to keep the rebellious population of the neighbourhood at bay.
1703-1711
Hungarian War of Independence led by Prince Rákóczi Ferenc II
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1703-1711
After the expulsion of the Turks, the Habsburgs treated Hungary as a newly conquered province and did not respect its constitution. The serfs rose up against the Habsburg ruler because of the sufferings caused by the war and the heavy burdens, and they invited Rákóczi Ferenc II to lead them. Trusting in the help promised by King Louis XIV of France, he accepted. Rákóczi rallied the nobility to his side, and soon most of the country was under his control. The rebels were called the kurucs. In 1704, the French and the Bavarians were defeated at the Battle of Blenheim, depriving the Hungarians of their international allies. The Rusyn, Slovak and Vlach peasants and the Saxons of Szepes supported the fight for freedom, while the Serbs in the south and the Saxons in Transylvania served the Habsburgs. Due to lack of funds Rákóczi could not raise a strong regular army, and in 1710, Hungary was also hit by a severe plague. Rákóczi tried unsuccessfully to forge an alliance with Tsar Peter the Great of Russia. In his absence, without his knowledge, his commander-in-chief, Károlyi Sándor, accepted Emperor Joseph I's peace offer. The Peace of Szatmár formally restored the Hungarian constitution and religious freedom and granted amnesty, but did not ease the burden of serfdom. Rákóczi refused to accept the pardon and went into exile. He died in Rodosto, Turkey.
1704
The castle was captured by the kuruc insurgents.
1706
Csáky András took the castle back for the Emperor by three months of siege.
1711–1712
Roman Catholic Bulgarian merchants found refuge in Déva from the Turks. They gained significant influence in the town.
1717-1719
General Steinville, the military commander of Transylvania, repaired the damages of the castle, and reinforced and expanded it in Vauban-style.
1724
A Franciscans started to build a monastery with the support of the Bulgarian merchants.
1733
The castle was acquired by the Haller family.
1738
A great plague decimated the population.
1752
Count Maximilian Ulisse Broune renovated and reinforced the castle, but it already had little military value.
1773
The heir, Joseph II, visited the castle.
1784
A significant part of the nobility of Hunyad County retreated to Déva Castle from the Vlach peasant uprising of Horea. Some of the captured participants were executed in Déva. In 1784, Emperor Joseph II ordered an increase in the number of border guards. The Valch serfs in Transylvania were under the misapprehension that the conscription had been started, and began to gather en masse, as the military service was the only way for the Vlach migrants that overpopulated in the Transylvanian mountains to escape the misery. The leaders of the local administration, believing that they were being bypassed by the imperial court, tried to block the process. In addition, the Vlach Orthodox priests incited the Vlach population against the Hungarians, whom they hated, and fooled the Vlachs with the myth of their Daco-Roman origin. Horea spread the word that the emperor had appointed him as the leader of the Vlachs. The enraged Vlach peasants attacked the Hungarian and Saxon citizens and began a terrible ethnic cleansing, exterminating 133 mostly Hungarian settlements and murdering thousands of people. After the mob was crushed, two of their leaders, Horea and Cloșca, were executed by the wheel in Gyulafehérvár. The third leader, Crişan, cowardly committed suicide in the prison. There was no mass reprisal.
1800
The movables of the castle were purchased by Pogány Franciska for only 150 forints in an auction. She took everything from the castle,that could be moved. The stones of the castle were used for the constructions in the town.
1817
King Francis I of Hungary visited Déva and liked the castle and its neighbourhood. He ordered its restoration, which took 12 years and cost 216 thousand forints.
1848-1849
Hungarian Revolution and War of Independence
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1848-1849
Following the news of the Paris Revolution on 22 February 1848, the Hungarian liberal opposition led by Kossuth Lajos demanded the abolition of serfdom, the abolition of the tax exemption of the nobility, a parliament elected by the people, and an independent and accountable national government. The revolution that broke out in Pest on 15 March expressed its demands in 12 points, which, in addition to the above mentioned, included the freedom of the press, equality before the law, the release of the political prisoners and the union with Transylvania. A Hungarian government was formed, Batthyány Lajos became prime minister, and on 11 April Emperor Ferdinand V ratified the reform laws. On August 31 the Emperor demanded the repeal of the laws threatening with military intervention. In September the Emperor unleashed the army of Jelacic, Ban of Croatia, on Hungary, but they were defeated by the Hungarians in the Battle of Pákozd on 29 September. An open war began for the independence of Hungary. The Habsburgs incited the nationalities against the Hungarians. The Rusyns, the Slovenes and most of the Slovaks and Germans supported the cause persistently, but the Vlachs (Romanians) and the Serbians turned against the Hungarians. The glorious Spring Campaign in 1849 led by General Görgei Artúr liberated almost all of Hungary. On 1 May 1849, Emperor Franz Joseph, effectively admitting defeat, asked for the help of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia, who sent an intervention army of 200,000 soldiers against Hungary. The resistance became hopeless against the overwhelming enemy forces and on 13 August Görgei Artúr surrendered to the Russians at Világos. Bloody reprisals followed, and on 6 October 1849, 12 generals and a colonel of the Hungarian Revolution, the martyrs of Arad, were executed in Arad. On the same day, Batthyány Lajos, the first Hungarian Prime Minister, was executed by firing squad in Pest. The Habsburgs introduced total authoritarianism in Hungary, but they also failed to fulfil their promises to the nationalities that had betrayed the Hungarians.
1848
An Austrian garrison stationed in the castle at the beginning of the Hungarian War of Independence.
February 7, 1849
The Hungarian revolutionary army of Kemény Farkas was surprised by the attack of the Vlach insurgents led by Avram Iancu, and only the arrival of the troops of Bethlen could save them. General Bem József retreated to Déva after his defeat at Vízakna. The Vlachs supported the imperial forces.
May 27, 1849
The Austrian garrison of Déva Castle consisting of 200 soldiers surrendered to the Hungarians after four weeks of encirclement. The Hungarians let the Austrians retreat to Temesvár. General Bem József set up an ammunition depot in the castle.
August 13, 1849
After the Hungarian army had to give up the siege of Temesvár due to the Russian intervention, the munitions stored in Déva Castle exploded under unknown circumstances causing the death of more than one hundred Hungarian soldiers. Only the ruined walls on top of the castle hill can be seen of the once important and extensive fortification ever since.
1867
Austro-Hungarian Compromise
Little more...
1867
The Habsburg Empire was weakened by the defeats it suffered in the implementation of Italian and German unity. The Hungarians wanted to return to the reform laws of 1848, but they did not have the strength to do so. Emperor Franz Joseph and the Hungarian opposition, led by Deák Ferenc, finally agreed to restructure the Empire and abolish absolutism. Hungary was given autonomy in its internal affairs, with its own government and parliament, which was essential for the development of its economy and culture. However, foreign and military affairs remained in the hands of the Habsburgs and served their aspiration for becoming a great power. The majority wanted Hungary's independence, but they were excluded from political power.
August 18, 1849
The remains of the Hungarian army of General Bem and Guyon Richárd surrendered to the Austrian forces in Déva.
1914-1918
World War I
Little more...
1914-1918
As part of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, Hungary took part in the war on the side of the Central Powers.
1916
On 27 August, Romania declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and launched an attack against Hungary. This triggered a huge wave of refugees from Transylvania, as the population feared a repeat of the Romanian ethnic cleansing of 1848-49. Austro-Hungarian and German forces drove the invaders out of the country by mid-October and occupied Bucharest on 6 December. Romania surrendered and signed a peace treaty with the central powers on 7 May 1918 (Treaty of Bucharest).
1918
On 3 November, the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy signed the Armistice of Padua. The already defeated Romania then declared war on Germany on 10 November, just one day before the Germans signed the armistice near Compiègne. The Romanians then launched an offensive against Hungary, which had already unconditionally ceased fighting at the demand of the Entente. Romania was only recognised by the Entente powers as one of the victors of WWI only later.
November 1918 - January 1919
The Czech, Romanian and Serbian occupation of Hungary
Little more...
November 1918 - January 1919
In Hungary, the freemasonic subversion brought the pro-Entente Károlyi Mihály to power. The new government, naively trusting the Entente powers, met all their demands and disbanded the Hungarian military, which rendered the country completely defenseless in the most dire need. Under French and Italian command, Czech, Romanian and Serbian troops invaded large parts of Hungary, where they immediately began the takeover. They fired Hungarian railway workers, officials and teachers, banned the use of the Hungarian language, abolished Hungarian education, and disposed of everything that reminded them of the country's Hungarian past. Hundreds of thousands of Hungarians were forced to leave their homeland, and the forcible assimilation of the remaining Hungarians was begun.
from 1918
By 1922, 197,000 Hungarians were forced to leave the Romanian-occupied part of the country. By 1939 a further 169,000 Hungarians had left Transylvania, mostly aristocrats, intellectuals and a significant number of farmers. Most of them moved to Hungary. Before the Romanian invasion, 1,662,000 Hungarians lived in Transylvania, 32 percent of the population.
4 June 1920
Trianon Dictate
Little more...
4 June 1920
Hungary was forced to sign the Treaty of Trianon, although the country was not invited to the peace talks. Hungary lost two thirds of its territory that had belonged to it for more than 1000 years. One-third of the Hungarian population came under foreign rule. On the basis of the national principle, countries with a more mixed and less ethnically balanced composition than the former Hungary were created, such as Czechoslovakia and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later Yugoslavia). For example, while 48% of the population of the territory ceded to Czechoslovakia was Slovak and 30% Hungarian, 54% of the population of the former Hungary was Hungarian and 10.6% Slovak. And in the territory that is now part of Serbia, the Hungarians outnumbered the Serbs. The part of the territory allocated to Romania from Hungary was larger than the remaining territory of Hungary, despite the fact that there were 10 million Hungarians and less than 3 million Romanians in the former Hungary. While Hungary used to have the most liberal nationality policy in Europe, the successor states had no respect at all for the national and cultural rights of the indigenous Hungarians and engaged in forced assimilation. The Trianon Dictate destroyed the organic economic unity of the region. Before the First World War, Hungary had a dynamic economy, more advanced than Spain's. After 1920, the successor states formed the so-called "Little Entente", putting Hungary under an economic blockade and sabotaging it on the international stage.
from the 1950s
800,000 Romanians were settled in Transylvania from Moldavia, but many also came from Wallachia. The aim was to Romanianize the still majorly Hungarian towns and to break up the ethnic Hungarian blocks. While previously there was a Romanian majority in only a few small towns, this has been reversed by now.
2002
7.2 million people lived in Transylvania, including 1.42 million Hungarians. There were 1.65 million Hungarians out of 5.2 million in 1910. The proportion of the Romanians increased from 53.78% to 74.69%, while the proportion of the Hungarians decreased from 31.64% to 19.6%. The proportion of the Germans dropped from 10.75% to below 1%. These changes were mainly the results of migration and the persecution of Hungarians and Saxons. Transylvania here refers to the entire territory that once belonged to Hungary, which is much larger than historical Transylvania.
2010
Extensive restorations started in the castle.
Castles
Déva Castle
Cetatea Devei
Déva Castle
Radu Muntean, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Condition:
Spectacular ruins
Entrance:
Entrance fee
Visit
Manor houses
Bethlen Mansion; Magna Curia
Muzeul Civilizației Dacice și Romane
Bethlen Mansion; Magna Curia
Thaler Tamas, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Currently:
Museum
Note:
The manor houses a Daco-Roman museum.
Visit
Sights
All
Churches, religious buildings
Public buildings
Cultural facilities
Commerce, industry, hospitality
Private buildings
Memorials
Churches, religious buildings
Franciscan Church and Monastery
Mănăstirea Franciscană
Deva, kostel
Dezidor, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
church and monastery
Currently:
church and monastery
Church:
Roman Catholic
Visit
Franciscan Church and Monastery
History

Next to the railway station, in the district formerly known as Fox Town, is the imposing 17th-century Baroque Franciscan church and monastery. It is now the seat of the internationally renowned children's rescue centre, the St. Francis Foundation of Déva established by Father Böjte Csaba and the Roman Catholic Lyceum of Déva, with instruction in Hungarian.

Calvinist Church
Biserica Reformată
RO HD Biserica reformata din Deva (1)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
church
Currently:
church
Church:
Calvinist
Visit
Calvinist Church
History

The medieval church must have been built in the 13th century, and at the end of the 14th century a Gothic sanctuary was built to replace the old one. Its thick bell tower had a tower clock from the mid-16th century. By 1898, it was in such a state that it was no longer worth restoring. In 1899, the nave and tower were demolished, and eight years later the Gothic sanctuary was also demolished due to its poor condition. The construction of the new neo-Romanesque church began in 1908, based on plans by Dobovszky József. The construction was hindered by a number of problems, including the arrest of the contractor, Lábas Gyula, in 1909 for fraud. Construction was completed in 1910 and the church was consecrated on 23 October 1910.

In the south-western part of the old town centre, on the site of the 16th-century Reformed castle church, is the large Reformed church with one main tower and two side towers, built in 1908 in Art Nouveau style (Piața Episcopul Tordai Sándor András, Bishop Tordai Sándor András Square). It was restored in the 1970s.

The town's first known pastor, Tordai Sándor András, began his ministry in 1564, and his statue stands in front of the church entrance.

Old Tower of the Orthodox Church
Turnul Vechii Biserici Ortodoxe
RO HD Turnul vechii biserici ortodoxe din Deva (14)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
church
Currently:
n/a
Church:
Orthodox
Visit
Old Tower of the Orthodox Church
History

Built in the 1640s, it was the tower of the first Orthodox church.

St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Csángótelep
Biserica Catolică Sfântul Anton
Originally:
church
Currently:
church
Church:
Roman Catholic
Visit
St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Csángótelep
History

In the part of the town towards Piski, where the former settlement of the Hungarian Csángó people in Déva once stretched for several kilometres, there are still some streets of folkloric value bearing the marks of folk architecture. In 1910, one of the most significant groups of the Székelys from Bukovina settled in Déva and Hunyad County (Csernakeresztúr, Vajdahunyad, Sztrigyszentgyörgy).

Calvinist parish
Parohia Reformată
RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (13)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
parish
Currently:
parish
Church:
Calvinist
Visit
Calvinist parish
History

The house was built in the 19th century. The inscription on the facade is bilingual (Romanian, Hungarian). In 1892, a marble plaque commemorating Salamon Ferenc, historian and professor at the University of Budapest, was placed on the imposing and carefully restored corner building. The plaque was restored in 2011 by the Reformed parish of Déva.

Synagogue
Sinagoga
Deva zsinagoga
Oguszt, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
synagogue
Currently:
synagogue
Church:
Jewish
Visit
Synagogue
History

Built in 1896, it was rebuilt and enlarged in 1905-1907. The Jewish community was founded in 1851.

Public buildings
Former County Hall of Hunyad
Prefectura
Városháza, (Polgármesteri Hivatal), Déva
Thaler Tamas, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
county hall
Currently:
county hall
Visit
Former County Hall of Hunyad
History

By 1890, the seat of Hunyad County was completed in German Renaissance style, based on the plans of Alpár Ignác, at the instigation of ispán Pogány György, and vice ispán Barcsa Kálmán.

Opposite the entrance to the town park at the foot of the Castle Hill stands the building of the former county hall with a tower and the coat of arms of the Hunyadi family. In front of it is an atmospheric fountain cast in bronze and decorated with frogs.

Town Hall
Primăria
RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (4)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
town hall
Currently:
town hall
Visit
Town Hall
History

The town hall was built in 1901.

Former Hungarian Royal Court of Justice
Tribunalul
Originally:
court
Currently:
court
Visit
Former Hungarian Royal Court of Justice
History

To the left of the entrance to the town park is the County Court building and the bourgeois quarter surrounding Magyar (Hungarian) Street (str. Aurel Vlaicu), mostly built in the early years of the 20th century.

Former Hungarian Barracks
Colegiul Național Sportiv Cetate
Originally:
barracks
Currently:
school
Visit
Former Hungarian Barracks
History

Cultural facilities
Theatre
Teatrul de Artă
RO HD Teatrul de Arta Deva (1)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
theatre/opera
Currently:
theatre/opera
Visit
Theatre
History

Built in the old centre, the theatre was designed by Komor Marcell and Jakab Dezső in the Hungarian Art Nouveau style and completed in 1910-11. The restoration of the interior and exterior of the building was completed in 2011.

Former Hungarian National Casino
Casina
RO HD Deva Casina Romana (15)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
casino
Currently:
restaurant / confectionery / café
Visit
Former Hungarian National Casino
History

The social and cultural association was founded in 1842. In 1847, a one-storey building was built on the market square, which had been bought from the Reformed Church. It took its present form in 1894 with the addition of the first floor. On the ground floor there was a café and restaurant, while the large upstairs hall was used for theatre performances, balls, concerts, lectures, and there was also a library and a games room.

Parva Curia
RO HD Deva Parva Curia (9)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
school, county hall, hospital / clinic / sanatorium / doctor's office, university / college
Currently:
public administration
Visit
Parva Curia
History

When the military role of Déva Castle ceased in 1800, the new owner, Pogány Franciska, auctioned off the castle's movables; tradition has it that she used the money to build Parva Curia, where she established a school. It was the seat of the Hunyad County after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise. It later housed a military hospital and, from 1870, the teacher training school of Déva.

Former Hungarian State Girl's School
Colegiul Național Pedagogic Regina Maria
RO HD Deva Scoala Regina Maria (6)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
school
Currently:
university / college
Visit
Former Hungarian State Girl's School
History

Former Hungarian State High School of Sciences
Colegiul Național Decebal
2019 Ansamblul urban „Bd. 1 Decembrie 1918” 07
Leontin l, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
school
Currently:
school
Visit
Former Hungarian State High School of Sciences
History

Located in the old centre, it was built between 1888 and 1891 for the former Hungarian State High School of Sciences.

Hungarian Téglás Gábor High School in Csángótelep
Originally:
school
Currently:
school
Visit
Hungarian Téglás Gábor High School in Csángótelep
History

The institution was created in 2005. The new, modern building provides education for the Hungarian population of the county, from kindergarten to the high school-leaving examination.

The first Hungarian school was founded by the castle captain Geszthy Ferenc in Déva at the beginning of the 16th century.

In the part of the town towards Piski, where the former settlement of the Hungarian Csángó people in Déva once stretched for several kilometres, there are still some streets of folkloric value bearing the marks of folk architecture. In 1910, one of the most significant groups of the Székelys from Bukovina settled in Déva and Hunyad County (Csernakeresztúr, Vajdahunyad, Sztrigyszentgyörgy).

Former Hungarian Royal State Teacher Training Institution
Colegiul Național Sabin Drăgoi
Originally:
university / college
Currently:
school
Visit
Former Hungarian Royal State Teacher Training Institution
History

Education at the Hungarian Teacher Training Institute began in 1870. The institute operated in the Parva Curia and in the building that used to stand on the site of the present building, built in 1913. In 1913, a new building was constructed, which now houses a Romanian secondary school.

Commerce, industry, hospitality
Orient Hotel
RO HD Deva Hotel Orient (2)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
hotel / tavern / guesthouse
Currently:
house
Visit
Orient Hotel
History

Private buildings
Art Nouveau House
Originally:
house
Currently:
n/a
Visit
Art Nouveau House
History

The house was built in the early 20th century in Art Nouveau style.

Memorials
Statue of Decebal
Statuia lui Decebal
Statue of Decebal - Deva 00
Saturnian, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
statue / memorial / relief
Currently:
statue / memorial / relief
Visit
Statue of Decebal
History

The Romanians themselves can't decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in Déva, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards.

Statue of Emperor Trajan
Statuia lui Traian
RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (5)
Țetcu Mircea Rareș, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Originally:
statue / memorial / relief
Currently:
statue / memorial / relief
Visit
Statue of Emperor Trajan
History

Erected after 1989. The Romanians themselves cannot decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or of the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in Déva, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards.

Memorial to Horia, Cloșca and Crișan
Originally:
statue / memorial / relief
Currently:
statue / memorial / relief
Visit
Memorial to Horia, Cloșca and Crișan
History

It commemorates the leaders of the 1784 Vlach peasant uprising. Agitated by the Orthodox popes against the Hungarians, the Vlach mob murdered 4,000 Transylvanian inhabitants (mostly Hungarians and Saxons) and burnt 133 settlements during the uprising. Horia and Cloșca were executed by wheel in Gyulafehérvár on 28 February 1785, and Crișán committed suicide in prison. There was no mass reprisal after the uprising. They are now considered national heroes by the Romanians.

Bust of Tordai Sándor András
Originally:
statue / memorial / relief
Currently:
statue / memorial / relief
Church:
Calvinist
Visit
Bust of Tordai Sándor András
History

The bust was unveiled in front of the newer Reformed church in Déva in 2004. Tordai Sándor András was born in Torda in 1529, studied at the University of Wittenberg, from where he returned to his hometown to become a pastor. He was instrumental in spreading the Calvinist faith in Transylvania. He served in Déva from 1564 and was elected Reformed Bishop of Transylvania. He died in Déva in 1579 and was buried in the church there.

{"item":"town","set":{"mapcenter":{"lat":"45.8856950000","long":"22.8987340000"},"townlink":"deva","town":{"townId":71,"active":1,"name_HU":"D\u00e9va","name_LO":"Deva","name_GE":"Diemrich;Schlossberg;Denburg","name_LT":"Sargetia","seolink":"deva","listorder":18,"oldcounty":35,"country":4,"division":20,"altitude":"187","gps_lat":"45.8856950000","gps_long":"22.8987340000","population":58,"hungarian_2011":8.53,"population_1910":8654,"hungarian_1910":67.33,"german_1910":3.19,"slovak_1910":0,"romanian_1910":27.93,"rusin_1910":0,"serbian_1910":0,"croatian_1910":0,"slovenian_1910":0,"coatofarms":"","coatofarms_ref":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Costel Munteanu, CC BY-SA 3.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cetatea_-_panoramio.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022Cetatea - panoramio\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/6\/66\/Cetatea_-_panoramio.jpg\/512px-Cetatea_-_panoramio.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cetatea_-_panoramio.jpg\u0022\u003ECostel Munteanu\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 3.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","georegion":"Hunyad","river":"Maros","description":"When we hear the name D\u00e9va, the castle on the hill overlooking the Maros River and, of course, the story of Kelemen the Mason come to mind. Legend has it, that the walls of the castle kept falling down during construction, so the 12 masons agreed that the first of their wives to came up to the castle would be thrown into the fire and her ashes mixed with the lime. The victim was Kelemen's wife. The castle was built by B\u00e9la IV after the 1241-42 Mongol invasion and was a royal castle and the property of the vajda representing the power of the Hungarian king in Transylvania. The castle was held on that title by the oligarch K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3, who imprisoned the pretender to the throne, Otto of Bavaria, in this castle after taking the Holy Crown of Hungary from him. After his death, his sons' army was defeated by Charles I of Hungary under the castle, which was also captured by the king. Hunyadi J\u00e1nos, who later became Governor of Hungary, also gained possession of the castle as a vajda, as did Szapolyi J\u00e1nos (the future King John I) later. Few people know that after his triumph over the Turks as captain of Eger Castle in 1552, Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n was appointed vajda of Transylvania, and with it he received D\u00e9va. During the Principality of Transylvania, its military importance increased when in 1616 Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor had to cede Lippa to the Turks, making D\u00e9va a border castle. However, the Turks never laid siege to it. It was here that Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria, the future 'Venus of Mur\u00e1ny', who inherited the castle from her husband, the nephew of Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor, found refuge from her aggressive new husband. During the 1703-1711 Hungarian War of Independence, it was captured by the kuruc insurgents, and taken back from them by the 'labanc', the imperials, under the leadership of Cs\u00e1ky Andr\u00e1s. It was then strengthened by the Austrians, and the nobility of Hunyad County took refuge here from the bloodthirsty Vlach mob led by Horea in 1784. The castle was then abandoned, and it was only saved by the fact that in 1817 the visiting Emperor Francis I liked it so much that he ordered its restoration. During the 1848-1849 Hungarian War of Independence, the Austrian guards surrendered the castle to the Hungarian soldiers. At the end of the war, however, the castle's powder magazine exploded under circumstances that are still unclear, killing more than a hundred Hungarian soldiers and destroying the castle.","nameorigin":"","history":"#1|@#3|@#5|@after 1241|King B\u00e9la IV of Hungary built the castle after the Mongol invasion. It was owned by the king or the vajda of Transylvania later as well. According to the Romanians, there was a Dacian and a Roman fortress on the castle hill, but it was not proven by archaeologists.@1262|A war broke out between King B\u00e9la IV of Hungary and his son, Istv\u00e1n. They made an agreement in Pozsony at the end of the year, and divided the country between themselves. The eastern part of Hungary, including Transylvania, became the domain of Istv\u00e1n.@1264|King B\u00e9la IV launched an attack against Istv\u00e1n. The army of K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 and Gyula consisting of mainly Cumans was defeated by Cs\u00e1k P\u00e9ter, the follower of Istv\u00e1n, at D\u00e9va (\u201ecastrum Dewa\u201d). But Istv\u00e1n had to retreat to the castle of Feketehalom from the army of Judge Royal L\u0151rinc son of Kem\u00e9ny, where he was besieged.@early 1265|When the liberation army arrived, Istv\u00e1n broke out from Feketehalom Castle and defeated the besiegers. He launched a counter-attack and defeated the royal army led by b\u00e1n B\u00e9la of Macs\u00f3 and n\u00e1dor K\u0151szegi Nagy Henrik in the battle of Isaszeg.@1269|The castle was mentioned for the first time as Dewa. Some suggest that the name comes from the Slavic deva word meaning girl. This may be connected to the legend of the woman walled up in the castle. Legend has it, that the walls of the castle kept on crumbling during the construction, and the masons feared that they would not be paid. The 12 masons agreed that one of their wives, whoever showed up at the castle first, would be burned and her ashes would be mixed into the mortar. The victim was the wife of Kelemen, the castle was completed and the masons got paid. According to another theory, the name comes from an old Hungarian personal name of Turk origin, the original form of which was Gy\u0151 preserved in the Algy\u0151 settlement name.@from the late 13th century|The castle belonged to the domain of vajda K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 of Transylvania, who was one of the most powerful oligarchs of Hungary after the last king of the House of \u00c1rp\u00e1d died.@from 1302|D\u00e9va Castle was the seat of the vice vajda of Transylvania.@1307|The oligarch K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 captured Otto, Duke of Lower Bavaria, a pretender to the throne of Hungary, who came to Transylvania to get married. Duke Otto was crowned King of Hungary in 1305, but the coronation was invalid according to the traditions. He was held captive in D\u00e9va Castle for a couple of months until he was ransomed. But K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 kept the Holy Crown of Hungary, which he had taken from Otto.@1309|K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 delivered the Holy Crown of Hungary to Charles Robert (later King Charles I of Hungary), after Gentile, the papal legate threatened him with excommunication.@1316|K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 died. King Charles I appointed Mikl\u00f3s of the Pok clan vajda of Transylvania, which the sons of K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 refused to accept. The royal army defeated the army of the sons of K\u00e1n under D\u00e9va Castle and occupied the castle. D\u00e9va belonged to the vajda of Transylvania afterwards.@from 1442|Hunyadi J\u00e1nos and \u00dajlaki Mikl\u00f3s controlled D\u00e9va as vajdas of Transylvania.@around 1443-1444|King Ul\u00e1szl\u00f3 I of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to Hunyadi J\u00e1nos, but as the king fell in the battle of Varna in 1444, Hunyadi wasn\u2019t officially registered as its owner and D\u00e9va remained a royal casatle.@1453|King L\u00e1szl\u00f3 V of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to Hunyadi J\u00e1nos.@#7|@1456|Hunyadi J\u00e1nos died from plague. His widow, Szil\u00e1gyi Erzs\u00e9bet, had to return D\u00e9va to the king along with other castles.@1457|King L\u00e1szl\u00f3 V of Hungary died. The castle was acquired by Szil\u00e1gyi Mih\u00e1ly, who gave it to his nephew, Hunyadi M\u00e1ty\u00e1s (later King Matthias).@1490|King Ul\u00e1szl\u00f3 II of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to B\u00e1thory Istv\u00e1n of Ecsed, who was Judge Royal and vajda of Transylvania. Later it was acquired by vajda Szapolyi J\u00e1nos of Transylvania.@1504|The castle was owned by the Hunyadi family until the death of Corvin J\u00e1nos.@#8|@after 1526|Vajda Per\u00e9nyi P\u00e9ter received D\u00e9va after the battle of Moh\u00e1cs.@1529|King John I of Hungary acquired the castle.@1539|King John I of Hungary gave D\u00e9va to his wife, Queen Isabella, as a wedding gift.@#9|@November 1550|T\u00f6r\u00f6k J\u00e1nos of Enying, isp\u00e1n of Hunyad County, defeated the outpost of the army of Pasha Kasim here. The damages caused by the Turks were later repaired.@1551|King Ferdinand I took control of D\u00e9va. The child John Sigismund's guardian, George Martinuzzi, with Castaldo's imperial army, forced Queen Isabella to surrender the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (including Transylvania) to King Ferdinand I. Isabella left for Poland with her child, the heir to the throne. The Turks then launched a punitive campaign against Hungary.@1552|The Turks captured the castles of Temesv\u00e1r, Solymos and Lippa during their campaign launched to take revenge for the surrender of Hungary to the Habsburgs. D\u00e9va became part of the frontier.@1553|King Ferdinand I of Hungry appointed Kendy Ferenc and Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n vajdas of Transylvania. Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n was gifted the castles of D\u00e9va and Szamos\u00fajv\u00e1r as a reward for having defended heroically Eger Castle against the Turkish army.@1556|The Estates of Transylvania, dissatisfied with Habsburg rule, recalled Queen Isabella to the throne, to which the Sultan gave his consent. On her return, she regained control of eastern Hungary.@1556|Queen Isabella returned to Hungary and took control of D\u00e9va. Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n was removed from the office of vajda of Transylvania by the Estates of Transylvania. He was held captive for nearly 10 months in the castle of Szamos\u00fajv\u00e1r until he managed to escape.@#10|@November 15, 1579|The first Unitarian bishop of Transylvania, D\u00e1vid Ferenc, died in the prison of D\u00e9va Castle. John II, the son of King John I of Hungary and Queen Isabella, who also converted to the Unitarian faith in 1567, gave D\u00e1vid Ferenc the printing press in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r. After the death of John II in 1571, the Catholic B\u00e1thory Istv\u00e1n became Prince of Transylvania, who took the printing press from the Unitarians and prohibited any further renewal of faith. In 1579, D\u00e1vid Ferenc was arrested for denying the divinity of Jesus and the country assembly gathered in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r sentenced him for life imprisonment.@around 1580|The castle was reinforced due to its military significance.@1581|Geszthy Ferenc arrived in Transylvania and became the counsellor of Prince B\u00e1thory Krist\u00f3f and the captain of D\u00e9va Castle. He expanded the castle and built a manor house at the foot of the castle hill. Geszthy Ferenc published the first Vlach language translation of the Old Testament at his own expense, which was based on the work of Heltai G\u00e1sp\u00e1r, the first Hungarian translation of the Bible.@#12|@1594|Prince B\u00e1thory Zsigmond of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Geszthy Ferenc. Geszthy died in 1595 and established the first school in D\u00e9va in his will. His widow, Horv\u00e1th Anna, gave D\u00e9va Castle back to Prince B\u00e1thory Zsigmond in 1596. After that, the castle was held by the princes of Transylvania.@September 9, 1603|The imperial general Giorgio Basta wanted to execute the aristocrats of Transylvania in D\u00e9va.@#13|@#14|@1610|Prince B\u00e1thory G\u00e1bor of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Bethlen G\u00e1bor.@1614|Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to his wife, K\u00e1rolyi Zsuzsanna, who died in 1622.@1616|The importance of D\u00e9va as a frontier castle of Transylvania increased, after Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania handed over Lippa to the Turks, in exchange for helping him to power. In spite of this, the castle was never reinforced with the defences the military standards of that age would have demanded. The Turks never besieged the castle.@#15|@#16|@1621|Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania converted the manor house built by Geszthy Ferenc to a Renaissance palace. It has been called Bethlen Palace as well ever since.@1622|The castle was acquired by Bethlen Istv\u00e1n, the nephew of Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor. In 1627, he married Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria, who was later called \u0022Venus of Mur\u00e1ny\u0022.@1632|Bethlen Istv\u00e1n died young. Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria lived in the manor house of D\u00e9va. In 1634, she married again to Kun Istv\u00e1n, isp\u00e1n of Szatm\u00e1r County, but she abandoned his violent husband soon and moved back to D\u00e9va. Kun Istv\u00e1n went after her with his soldiers, but Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria managed to flee from the manor house to the castle on the hill, which Kun Istv\u00e1n didn\u2019t dare to besiege.@1640|Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria sold D\u00e9va to Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy I of Transylvania. The prince ordered the construction of the round bastion to protect the castle from the east.@#17|@#18|@I657|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Barcsay \u00c1kos.@1657|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II of Transylvania launched a campaign for the crown of Poland in alliance with Carl X Gustaf of Sweden. His aim was to unite the Hungarian-Polish-Wallachian forces against the Turks. The campaign started successfully with the prince taking Krak\u00f3w and Warsawa, but then the King of Sweden abandoned him. The vengeful Poles invaded northern Transylvania, burning defenceless villages, destroying churches and castles. Soon the punitive campaign of Turkish and Tatar armies devastated Transylvania, as the prince launched his Polish campaign against the Sultan's will.@1658|The Tartars ravaged and plundered throughout Transylvania and Grand Vizier K\u00f6pr\u00fcl\u00fc Mehmed captured Jen\u0151 Castle. The Estates of Transylvania sent Barcsay \u00c1kos to the camp of the grand vizier to beg for mercy. In return, the Grand Vizier demanded that the annual tax be raised from 15 to 40 thousand forints (gold coins) and that Lugos and Karansebes be ceded. This was the price for the Turks to leave Transylvania. The grand vizier appointed Barcsay prince on 14 September.@1659|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II returned to Transylvania and forced Barcsay \u00c1kos to retreat to Szeben and besieged him.@May 22, 1660|In the battle of S\u00e1szfenes, Pasha Shejdi Ahmed of Buda defeated R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II, who lost his life. The Tatar armies invaded Transylvania for the second time.@November 1660|Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos, the former commander of R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II, defeated the army of G\u00e1sp\u00e1r, the brother of Prince Barcsay Andr\u00e1s, at \u00d6rm\u00e9nyes. Barcsay G\u00e1sp\u00e1r fell in the battle. Then, on 31 December, Barcsay \u00c1kos renounced the throne. D\u00e9va Castle was handed over to Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos by its German garrison. In 1661 Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos had Barcsay \u00c1kos captured and murdered.@1661|The army of Pasha Seydi Ahmed of Buda marched into Transylvania, after the country assembly held in Beszterce on 23 April declared the independence of Transylvania from the Ottoman Empire and placed the country under the protection of Emperor Leopold I. On 14 September, Pasha Ali forced the country assembly to elect Apafi Mih\u00e1ly Prince of Transylvania in Marosv\u00e1s\u00e1rhely.@January 23, 1662|The deposed prince Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos, having been abandoned by his imperial allies, was defeated by the Turks at Nagysz\u0151l\u0151s (near Segesv\u00e1r), where he fell.@1661-1690|The castle operated as a prison during the reign of Prince Apafi Mih\u00e1ly I of Transylvania.@#23|@#25|@#26|@1701|Emperor Leopold I ordered the destruction of many Hungarian castles, but D\u00e9va was spared, because its German garrison was to keep the rebellious population of the neighbourhood at bay.@#27|@1704|The castle was captured by the kuruc insurgents.@1706|Cs\u00e1ky Andr\u00e1s took the castle back for the Emperor by three months of siege.@1711\u20131712|Roman Catholic Bulgarian merchants found refuge in D\u00e9va from the Turks. They gained significant influence in the town.@1717-1719|General Steinville, the military commander of Transylvania, repaired the damages of the castle, and reinforced and expanded it in Vauban-style.@1724|A Franciscans started to build a monastery with the support of the Bulgarian merchants.@1733|The castle was acquired by the Haller family.@1738|A great plague decimated the population.@1752|Count Maximilian Ulisse Broune renovated and reinforced the castle, but it already had little military value.@1773|The heir, Joseph II, visited the castle.@1784|A significant part of the nobility of Hunyad County retreated to D\u00e9va Castle from the Vlach peasant uprising of Horea. Some of the captured participants were executed in D\u00e9va. In 1784, Emperor Joseph II ordered an increase in the number of border guards. The Valch serfs in Transylvania were under the misapprehension that the conscription had been started, and began to gather en masse, as the military service was the only way for the Vlach migrants that overpopulated in the Transylvanian mountains to escape the misery. The leaders of the local administration, believing that they were being bypassed by the imperial court, tried to block the process. In addition, the Vlach Orthodox priests incited the Vlach population against the Hungarians, whom they hated, and fooled the Vlachs with the myth of their Daco-Roman origin. Horea spread the word that the emperor had appointed him as the leader of the Vlachs. The enraged Vlach peasants attacked the Hungarian and Saxon citizens and began a terrible ethnic cleansing, exterminating 133 mostly Hungarian settlements and murdering thousands of people. After the mob was crushed, two of their leaders, Horea and Clo\u0219ca, were executed by the wheel in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r. The third leader, Cri\u015fan, cowardly committed suicide in the prison. There was no mass reprisal.@1800|The movables of the castle were purchased by Pog\u00e1ny Franciska for only 150 forints in an auction. She took everything from the castle,that could be moved. The stones of the castle were used for the constructions in the town.@1817|King Francis I of Hungary visited D\u00e9va and liked the castle and its neighbourhood. He ordered its restoration, which took 12 years and cost 216 thousand forints.@#28|@1848|An Austrian garrison stationed in the castle at the beginning of the Hungarian War of Independence.@February 7, 1849|The Hungarian revolutionary army of Kem\u00e9ny Farkas was surprised by the attack of the Vlach insurgents led by Avram Iancu, and only the arrival of the troops of Bethlen could save them. General Bem J\u00f3zsef retreated to D\u00e9va after his defeat at V\u00edzakna. The Vlachs supported the imperial forces.@May 27, 1849|The Austrian garrison of D\u00e9va Castle consisting of 200 soldiers surrendered to the Hungarians after four weeks of encirclement. The Hungarians let the Austrians retreat to Temesv\u00e1r. General Bem J\u00f3zsef set up an ammunition depot in the castle.@August 13, 1849|After the Hungarian army had to give up the siege of Temesv\u00e1r due to the Russian intervention, the munitions stored in D\u00e9va Castle exploded under unknown circumstances causing the death of more than one hundred Hungarian soldiers. Only the ruined walls on top of the castle hill can be seen of the once important and extensive fortification ever since.@#30|@August 18, 1849|The remains of the Hungarian army of General Bem and Guyon Rich\u00e1rd surrendered to the Austrian forces in D\u00e9va.@#31|@1916|On 27 August, Romania declared war on the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and launched an attack against Hungary. This triggered a huge wave of refugees from Transylvania, as the population feared a repeat of the Romanian ethnic cleansing of 1848-49. Austro-Hungarian and German forces drove the invaders out of the country by mid-October and occupied Bucharest on 6 December. Romania surrendered and signed a peace treaty with the central powers on 7 May 1918 (Treaty of Bucharest).@1918|On 3 November, the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy signed the Armistice of Padua. The already defeated Romania then declared war on Germany on 10 November, just one day before the Germans signed the armistice near Compi\u00e8gne. The Romanians then launched an offensive against Hungary, which had already unconditionally ceased fighting at the demand of the Entente. Romania was only recognised by the Entente powers as one of the victors of WWI only later.@#32|@from 1918|By 1922, 197,000 Hungarians were forced to leave the Romanian-occupied part of the country. By 1939 a further 169,000 Hungarians had left Transylvania, mostly aristocrats, intellectuals and a significant number of farmers. Most of them moved to Hungary. Before the Romanian invasion, 1,662,000 Hungarians lived in Transylvania, 32 percent of the population.@#36|@from the 1950s|800,000 Romanians were settled in Transylvania from Moldavia, but many also came from Wallachia. The aim was to Romanianize the still majorly Hungarian towns and to break up the ethnic Hungarian blocks. While previously there was a Romanian majority in only a few small towns, this has been reversed by now.@2002|7.2 million people lived in Transylvania, including 1.42 million Hungarians. There were 1.65 million Hungarians out of 5.2 million in 1910. The proportion of the Romanians increased from 53.78% to 74.69%, while the proportion of the Hungarians decreased from 31.64% to 19.6%. The proportion of the Germans dropped from 10.75% to below 1%. These changes were mainly the results of migration and the persecution of Hungarians and Saxons. Transylvania here refers to the entire territory that once belonged to Hungary, which is much larger than historical Transylvania.@2010|Extensive restorations started in the castle.&studhist.blog.hu: D\u00e9va v\u00e1ra \u00e9s a tizenk\u00e9t k\u0151mives|https:\/\/studhist.blog.hu\/2017\/11\/30\/deva_vara_es_a_tizenket_komives\nstudhist.blog.hu: D\u00e9va v\u00e1ra \u00e9s a Mur\u00e1nyi V\u00e9nusz|https:\/\/studhist.blog.hu\/2017\/12\/06\/deva_vara_es_a_muranyi_venusz"},"castles":[{"castleId":169,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Cetatea Devei","settlement_HU":"D\u00e9va","settlement_LO":"Deva","address":"Strada Cet\u0103\u021bii","listorder":2,"gps_lat":"45.8887860000","gps_long":"22.8969100000","oldcounty":35,"country":4,"division":20,"cond":3,"entrance":1,"varaklink":"https:\/\/varak.hu\/latnivalo\/index\/1432-Deva-Var\/","homepage":"","openinghours":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Radu Muntean, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cetatea_Plutitoare.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022Cetatea Plutitoare\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/4\/4d\/Cetatea_Plutitoare.jpg\/512px-Cetatea_Plutitoare.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Cetatea_Plutitoare.jpg\u0022\u003ERadu Muntean\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"D\u00e9va Castle","seolink":"deva-castle-cetatea-devei","georegion":"Ruszka Mountains, B\u00e1ns\u00e1g Mountains","description":"","nameorigin":"","history":"#1|@#3|@#5|@after 1241|King B\u00e9la IV of Hungary built the castle after the Mongol invasion. It was owned by the king or the vajda of Transylvania later as well. According to the Romanians, there was a Dacian and a Roman fortress on the castle hill, but it was not proven by archaeologists.@1262|A war broke out between King B\u00e9la IV of Hungary and his son, Istv\u00e1n. They made an agreement in Pozsony at the end of the year, and divided the country between themselves. The eastern part of Hungary, including Transylvania, became the domain of Istv\u00e1n.@1264|King B\u00e9la IV launched an attack against Istv\u00e1n. The army of K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 and Gyula consisting of mainly Cumans was defeated by Cs\u00e1k P\u00e9ter, the follower of Istv\u00e1n, at D\u00e9va (\u201ecastrum Dewa\u201d). But Istv\u00e1n had to retreat to the castle of Feketehalom from the army of Judge Royal L\u0151rinc son of Kem\u00e9ny, where he was besieged.@early 1265|When the liberation army arrived, Istv\u00e1n broke out from Feketehalom Castle and defeated the besiegers. He launched a counter-attack and defeated the royal army led by b\u00e1n B\u00e9la of Macs\u00f3 and n\u00e1dor K\u0151szegi Nagy Henrik in the battle of Isaszeg.@1269|The castle was mentioned for the first time as Dewa. Some suggest that the name comes from the Slavic deva word meaning girl. This may be connected to the legend of the woman walled up in the castle. Legend has it, that the walls of the castle kept on crumbling during the construction, and the masons feared that they would not be paid. The 12 masons agreed that one of their wives, whoever showed up at the castle first, would be burned and her ashes would be mixed into the mortar. The victim was the wife of Kelemen, the castle was completed and the masons got paid. According to another theory, the name comes from an old Hungarian personal name of Turk origin, the original form of which was Gy\u0151 preserved in the Algy\u0151 settlement name.@from the end of the 13th century|The castle belonged to the domain of vajda K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 of Transylvania, who was one of the most powerful oligarchs of Hungary after the last king of the House of \u00c1rp\u00e1d died.@from 1302|D\u00e9va Castle was the seat of the vice vajda of Transylvania.@1307|The oligarch K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 captured Otto, Duke of Lower Bavaria, a pretender to the throne of Hungary, who came to Transylvania to get married. Duke Otto was crowned King of Hungary in 1305, but the coronation was invalid according to the traditions. He was held captive in D\u00e9va Castle for a couple of months until he was ransomed. But K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 kept the Holy Crown of Hungary, which he had taken from Otto.@1309|K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 delivered the Holy Crown of Hungary to Charles Robert (later King Charles I of Hungary), after Gentile, the papal legate threatened him with excommunication.@1316|K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 died. King Charles I appointed Mikl\u00f3s of the Pok clan vajda of Transylvania, which the sons of K\u00e1n L\u00e1szl\u00f3 refused to accept. The royal army defeated the army of the sons of K\u00e1n under D\u00e9va Castle and occupied the castle. D\u00e9va belonged to the vajda of Transylvania afterwards.@from 1442|Hunyadi J\u00e1nos and \u00dajlaki Mikl\u00f3s controlled D\u00e9va as vajdas of Transylvania.@around 1443-1444|King Ul\u00e1szl\u00f3 I of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to Hunyadi J\u00e1nos, but as the king fell in the battle of Varna in 1444, Hunyadi wasn\u2019t officially registered as its owner and D\u00e9va remained a royal casatle.@1453|King L\u00e1szl\u00f3 V of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to Hunyadi J\u00e1nos.@#7|@1456|Hunyadi J\u00e1nos died from plague. His widow, Szil\u00e1gyi Erzs\u00e9bet, had to return D\u00e9va to the king along with other castles.@1457|King L\u00e1szl\u00f3 V of Hungary died. The castle was acquired by Szil\u00e1gyi Mih\u00e1ly, who gave it to his nephew, Hunyadi M\u00e1ty\u00e1s (later King Matthias).@1490|King Ul\u00e1szl\u00f3 II of Hungary donated D\u00e9va to B\u00e1thory Istv\u00e1n of Ecsed, who was Judge Royal and vajda of Transylvania. Later it was acquired by vajda Szapolyi J\u00e1nos of Transylvania.@1504|The castle was owned by the Hunyadi family until the death of Corvin J\u00e1nos.@#8|@after 1526|Vajda Per\u00e9nyi P\u00e9ter received D\u00e9va after the battle of Moh\u00e1cs.@1529|King John I of Hungary acquired the castle.@1539|King John I of Hungary gave D\u00e9va to his wife, Queen Isabella, as a wedding gift.@#9|@November 1550|T\u00f6r\u00f6k J\u00e1nos of Enying, isp\u00e1n of Hunyad County, defeated the outpost of the army of Pasha Kasim here. The damages caused by the Turks were later repaired.@1551|King Ferdinand I took control of D\u00e9va. The child John Sigismund's guardian, George Martinuzzi, with Castaldo's imperial army, forced Queen Isabella to surrender the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom (including Transylvania) to King Ferdinand I. Isabella left for Poland with her child, the heir to the throne. The Turks then launched a punitive campaign against Hungary.@1552|The Turks captured the castles of Temesv\u00e1r, Solymos and Lippa during their campaign launched to take revenge for the surrender of Hungary to the Habsburgs. D\u00e9va became part of the frontier.@1553|King Ferdinand I of Hungry appointed Kendy Ferenc and Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n vajdas of Transylvania. Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n was gifted the castles of D\u00e9va and Szamos\u00fajv\u00e1r as a reward for having defended heroically Eger Castle against the Turkish army.@1556|The Estates of Transylvania, dissatisfied with Habsburg rule, recalled Queen Isabella to the throne, to which the Sultan gave his consent. On her return, she regained control of eastern Hungary.@1556|Queen Isabella returned to Hungary and took control of D\u00e9va. Dob\u00f3 Istv\u00e1n was removed from the office of vajda of Transylvania by the Estates of Transylvania. He was held captive for nearly 10 months in the castle of Szamos\u00fajv\u00e1r until he managed to escape.@#10|@November 15, 1579|The first Unitarian bishop of Transylvania, D\u00e1vid Ferenc, died in the prison of D\u00e9va Castle. John II, the son of King John I of Hungary and Queen Isabella, who also converted to the Unitarian faith in 1567, gave D\u00e1vid Ferenc the printing press in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r. After the death of John II in 1571, the Catholic B\u00e1thory Istv\u00e1n became Prince of Transylvania, who took the printing press from the Unitarians and prohibited any further renewal of faith. In 1579, D\u00e1vid Ferenc was arrested for denying the divinity of Jesus and the country assembly gathered in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r sentenced him for life imprisonment.@around 1580|The castle was reinforced due to its military significance.@1581|Geszthy Ferenc arrived in Transylvania and became the counsellor of Prince B\u00e1thory Krist\u00f3f and the captain of D\u00e9va Castle. He expanded the castle and built a manor house at the foot of the castle hill. Geszthy Ferenc published the first Vlach language translation of the Old Testament at his own expense, which was based on the work of Heltai G\u00e1sp\u00e1r, the first Hungarian translation of the Bible.@#12|@1594|Prince B\u00e1thory Zsigmond of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Geszthy Ferenc. Geszthy died in 1595 and established the first school in D\u00e9va in his will. His widow, Horv\u00e1th Anna, gave D\u00e9va Castle back to Prince B\u00e1thory Zsigmond in 1596. After that, the castle was held by the princes of Transylvania.@September 9, 1603|The imperial general Giorgio Basta wanted to execute the aristocrats of Transylvania in D\u00e9va.@#13|@#14|@1610|Prince B\u00e1thory G\u00e1bor of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Bethlen G\u00e1bor.@1614|Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to his wife, K\u00e1rolyi Zsuzsanna, who died in 1622.@1616|The importance of D\u00e9va as a frontier castle of Transylvania increased, after Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania handed over Lippa to the Turks, in exchange for helping him to power. In spite of this, the castle was never reinforced with the defences the military standards of that age would have demanded. The Turks never besieged the castle.@#15|@#16|@1621|Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor of Transylvania converted the manor house built by Geszthy Ferenc to a Renaissance palace. It has been called Bethlen Palace as well ever since.@1622|The castle was acquired by Bethlen Istv\u00e1n, the nephew of Prince Bethlen G\u00e1bor. In 1627, he married Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria, who was later called \u0022Venus of Mur\u00e1ny\u0022.@1632|Bethlen Istv\u00e1n died young. Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria lived in the manor house of D\u00e9va. In 1634, she married again to Kun Istv\u00e1n, isp\u00e1n of Szatm\u00e1r County, but she abandoned his violent husband soon and moved back to D\u00e9va. Kun Istv\u00e1n went after her with his soldiers, but Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria managed to flee from the manor house to the castle on the hill, which Kun Istv\u00e1n didn\u2019t dare to besiege.@1640|Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria sold D\u00e9va to Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy I of Transylvania. The prince ordered the construction of the round bastion to protect the castle from the east.@#17|@#18|@I657|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II of Transylvania donated D\u00e9va to Barcsay \u00c1kos.@1657|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II of Transylvania launched a campaign for the crown of Poland in alliance with Carl X Gustaf of Sweden. His aim was to unite the Hungarian-Polish-Wallachian forces against the Turks. The campaign started successfully with the prince taking Krak\u00f3w and Warsawa, but then the King of Sweden abandoned him. The vengeful Poles invaded northern Transylvania, burning defenceless villages, destroying churches and castles. Soon the punitive campaign of Turkish and Tatar armies devastated Transylvania, as the prince launched his Polish campaign against the Sultan's will.@1658|The Tartars ravaged and plundered throughout Transylvania and Grand Vizier K\u00f6pr\u00fcl\u00fc Mehmed captured Jen\u0151 Castle. The Estates of Transylvania sent Barcsay \u00c1kos to the camp of the grand vizier to beg for mercy. In return, the Grand Vizier demanded that the annual tax be raised from 15 to 40 thousand forints (gold coins) and that Lugos and Karansebes be ceded. This was the price for the Turks to leave Transylvania. The grand vizier appointed Barcsay prince on 14 September.@1659|Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II returned to Transylvania and forced Barcsay \u00c1kos to retreat to Szeben and besieged him.@May 22, 1660|In the battle of S\u00e1szfenes, Pasha Shejdi Ahmed of Buda defeated R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II, who lost his life. The Tatar armies invaded Transylvania for the second time.@November 1660|Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos, the former commander of R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy II, defeated the army of G\u00e1sp\u00e1r, the brother of Prince Barcsay Andr\u00e1s, at \u00d6rm\u00e9nyes. Barcsay G\u00e1sp\u00e1r fell in the battle. Then, on 31 December, Barcsay \u00c1kos renounced the throne. D\u00e9va Castle was handed over to Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos by its German garrison. In 1661 Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos had Barcsay \u00c1kos captured and murdered.@1661|The army of Pasha Seydi Ahmed of Buda marched into Transylvania, after the country assembly held in Beszterce on 23 April declared the independence of Transylvania from the Ottoman Empire and placed the country under the protection of Emperor Leopold I. On 14 September, Pasha Ali forced the country assembly to elect Apafi Mih\u00e1ly Prince of Transylvania in Marosv\u00e1s\u00e1rhely.@January 23, 1662|The deposed prince Kem\u00e9ny J\u00e1nos, having been abandoned by his imperial allies, was defeated by the Turks at Nagysz\u0151l\u0151s (near Segesv\u00e1r), where he fell.@1661-1690|The castle operated as a prison during the reign of Prince Apafi Mih\u00e1ly I of Transylvania.@#23|@#25|@#26|@1701|Emperor Leopold I ordered the destruction of many Hungarian castles, but D\u00e9va was spared, because its German garrison was to keep the rebellious population of the neighbourhood at bay.@#27|@1704|The castle was captured by the kuruc insurgents.@1706|Cs\u00e1ky Andr\u00e1s took the castle back for the Emperor by three months of siege.@1717-1719|General Steinville, the military commander of Transylvania, repaired the damages of the castle, and reinforced and expanded it in Vauban-style.@1733|The castle was acquired by the Haller family.@1752|Count Maximilian Ulisse Broune renovated and reinforced the castle, but it already had little military value.@1773|The heir, Joseph II, visited the castle.@1784|A significant part of the nobility of Hunyad County retreated to D\u00e9va Castle from the Vlach peasant uprising of Horea. Some of the captured participants were executed in D\u00e9va. In 1784, Emperor Joseph II ordered an increase in the number of border guards. The Valch serfs in Transylvania were under the misapprehension that the conscription had been started, and began to gather en masse, as the military service was the only way for the Vlach migrants that overpopulated in the Transylvanian mountains to escape the misery. The leaders of the local administration, believing that they were being bypassed by the imperial court, tried to block the process. In addition, the Vlach Orthodox priests incited the Vlach population against the Hungarians, whom they hated, and fooled the Vlachs with the myth of their Daco-Roman origin. Horea spread the word that the emperor had appointed him as the leader of the Vlachs. The enraged Vlach peasants attacked the Hungarian and Saxon citizens and began a terrible ethnic cleansing, exterminating 133 mostly Hungarian settlements and murdering thousands of people. After the mob was crushed, two of their leaders, Horea and Clo\u0219ca, were executed by the wheel in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r. The third leader, Cri\u015fan, cowardly committed suicide in the prison. There was no mass reprisal.@1800|The movables of the castle were purchased by Pog\u00e1ny Franciska for only 150 forints in an auction. She took everything from the castle,that could be moved. The stones of the castle were used for the constructions in the town.@1817|King Francis I of Hungary visited D\u00e9va and liked the castle and its neighbourhood. He ordered its restoration, which took 12 years and cost 216 thousand forints.@#28|@1848|An Austrian garrison stationed in the castle at the beginning of the Hungarian War of Independence.@May 27, 1849|The Austrian garrison of D\u00e9va Castle consisting of 200 soldiers surrendered to the Hungarians after four weeks of encirclement. The Hungarians let the Austrians retreat to Temesv\u00e1r. General Bem J\u00f3zsef set up an ammunition depot in the castle.@August 13, 1849|After the Hungarian army had to give up the siege of Temesv\u00e1r due to the Russian intervention, the munitions stored in D\u00e9va Castle exploded under unknown circumstances causing the death of more than one hundred Hungarian soldiers. Only the ruined walls on top of the castle hill can be seen of the once important and extensive fortification ever since.@#30|@#31|@#32|@#36|@2010|Extensive restorations started in the castle.&studhist.blog.hu: D\u00e9va v\u00e1ra \u00e9s a tizenk\u00e9t k\u0151mives|https:\/\/studhist.blog.hu\/2017\/11\/30\/deva_vara_es_a_tizenket_komives\nstudhist.blog.hu: D\u00e9va v\u00e1ra \u00e9s a Mur\u00e1nyi V\u00e9nusz|https:\/\/studhist.blog.hu\/2017\/12\/06\/deva_vara_es_a_muranyi_venusz"}],"palaces":[{"palaceId":156,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Muzeul Civiliza\u021biei Dacice \u0219i Romane","settlement_HU":"D\u00e9va","settlement_LO":"Deva","address":"","listorder":4,"gps_lat":"45.8860500000","gps_long":"22.8984400000","oldcounty":35,"country":4,"division":20,"cond":1,"entrance":0,"func":1,"display":1,"homepage":"http:\/\/www.mcdr.ro\/","openinghours":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Thaler Tamas, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:DevaFotoThalerTamas21.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022DevaFotoThalerTamas21\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/f\/f4\/DevaFotoThalerTamas21.jpg\/512px-DevaFotoThalerTamas21.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:DevaFotoThalerTamas21.jpg\u0022\u003EThaler Tamas\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Bethlen Mansion; Magna Curia","seolink":"deva-bethlen-mansion-magna-curia","description":" The manor houses a Daco-Roman museum.","history":"1582|The manor house in D\u00e9va was mentioned for the first time. Geszti Ferenc, captain of D\u00e9va Castle, built a Renaissance mansion in the town under the castle.@1608|The manor was donated to Bethlen G\u00e1bor, isp\u00e1n of Hunyad County and later Prince of Transylvania. He started the reconstruction and expansion of the mansion in 1621.@from 1627|As a wife of Count Bethlen Istv\u00e1n, the 'Venus of Mur\u00e1ny' Sz\u00e9chy M\u00e1ria lived in the mansion for five years. Later she fled to this mansion from Szatm\u00e1r chased by her second husband Kun Istv\u00e1n. She later sold the mansion to Prince R\u00e1k\u00f3czi Gy\u00f6rgy I of Transylvania.@1743|Haller J\u00e1nos, governor of Transylvania, acquired the mansion and significantly enlarged it to its present form.@end of the 19th century|The town acquired the mansion. It was used as county hall as well for some time.@1882|The Historical and Archaeological Association of Hunyad County opened a museum in the mansion with an archaeological collection, which forms the core of the collection of the present museum.@from 1934|The county museum was located in the building.@1996-2006|The mansion was restored. As the Museum of the Dacian and Roman Civilization, it propagates the fairy tales of the Daco-Romanian continuity theory and the Romanian's Roman origin.&kastelyok.com: Bethlen-kast\u00e9ly|https:\/\/www.kastelyok.com\/adatlap.php?details=4042"}],"sights":[{"sightId":1805,"townId":71,"active":2,"name_LO":"M\u0103n\u0103stirea Franciscan\u0103","address":"Strada Progresului 6","mapdata":"1|1595|656","gps_lat":"45.8873889467","gps_long":"22.9065710499","religion":1,"oldtype":"9","newtype":"9","homepage":"http:\/\/szentferencalapitvany.org\/","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Dezidor, CC BY 3.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/3.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Deva,_kostel.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022256\u0022 alt=\u0022Deva, kostel\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/7\/7f\/Deva%2C_kostel.jpg\/256px-Deva%2C_kostel.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Deva,_kostel.jpg\u0022\u003EDezidor\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/3.0\u0022\u003ECC BY 3.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Franciscan Church and Monastery ","seolink":"franciscan-church-and-monastery","note":"","history":"Next to the railway station, in the district formerly known as Fox Town, is the imposing 17th-century Baroque Franciscan church and monastery. It is now the seat of the internationally renowned children's rescue centre, the St. Francis Foundation of D\u00e9va established by Father B\u00f6jte Csaba and the Roman Catholic Lyceum of D\u00e9va, with instruction in Hungarian."},{"sightId":1806,"townId":71,"active":2,"name_LO":"Biserica Reformat\u0103","address":"Strada Gheorghe Bari\u021biu","mapdata":"1|634|1763","gps_lat":"45.8808195730","gps_long":"22.8982391083","religion":2,"oldtype":"1","newtype":"1","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"https:\/\/www.muemlekem.hu\/hatareset\/Reformatus-templom-Deva-1892","csemadoklink":"https:\/\/lexikon.adatbank.transindex.ro\/muemlek.php?id=432","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Biserica_reformata_din_Deva_(1).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Biserica reformata din Deva (1)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/1\/18\/RO_HD_Biserica_reformata_din_Deva_%281%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Biserica_reformata_din_Deva_%281%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Biserica_reformata_din_Deva_(1).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Calvinist Church","seolink":"calvinist-church","note":"","history":"The medieval church must have been built in the 13th century, and at the end of the 14th century a Gothic sanctuary was built to replace the old one. Its thick bell tower had a tower clock from the mid-16th century. By 1898, it was in such a state that it was no longer worth restoring. In 1899, the nave and tower were demolished, and eight years later the Gothic sanctuary was also demolished due to its poor condition. The construction of the new neo-Romanesque church began in 1908, based on plans by Dobovszky J\u00f3zsef. The construction was hindered by a number of problems, including the arrest of the contractor, L\u00e1bas Gyula, in 1909 for fraud. Construction was completed in 1910 and the church was consecrated on 23 October 1910.@\nIn the south-western part of the old town centre, on the site of the 16th-century Reformed castle church, is the large Reformed church with one main tower and two side towers, built in 1908 in Art Nouveau style (Pia\u021ba Episcopul Tordai S\u00e1ndor Andr\u00e1s, Bishop Tordai S\u00e1ndor Andr\u00e1s Square). It was restored in the 1970s.@\nThe town's first known pastor, Tordai S\u00e1ndor Andr\u00e1s, began his ministry in 1564, and his statue stands in front of the church entrance."},{"sightId":1807,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Biserica Catolic\u0103 Sf\u00e2ntul Anton","address":"Bart\u00f3k B\u00e9la 1","mapdata":"2|1243|1495","gps_lat":"45.8674645870","gps_long":"22.9132053810","religion":1,"oldtype":"1","newtype":"1","homepage":"https:\/\/www.angelfire.com\/ms\/mihaly\/plebania.html","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church in Cs\u00e1ng\u00f3telep","seolink":"st-anthony-of-padua-roman-catholic-church-in-csangotelep","note":"","history":"In the part of the town towards Piski, where the former settlement of the Hungarian Cs\u00e1ng\u00f3 people in D\u00e9va once stretched for several kilometres, there are still some streets of folkloric value bearing the marks of folk architecture. In 1910, one of the most significant groups of the Sz\u00e9kelys from Bukovina settled in D\u00e9va and Hunyad County (Csernakereszt\u00far, Vajdahunyad, Sztrigyszentgy\u00f6rgy)."},{"sightId":1808,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Sinagoga","address":"Strada Gheorghe Bari\u021biu 9","mapdata":"1|890|1768","gps_lat":"45.8807442255","gps_long":"22.9004667078","religion":6,"oldtype":"8","newtype":"8","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Oguszt, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Deva_zsinagoga.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022Deva zsinagoga\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/8\/87\/Deva_zsinagoga.jpg\/512px-Deva_zsinagoga.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Deva_zsinagoga.jpg\u0022\u003EOguszt\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 3.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Synagogue","seolink":"synagogue","note":"","history":"Built in 1896, it was rebuilt and enlarged in 1905-1907. The Jewish community was founded in 1851."},{"sightId":1809,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Parohia Reformat\u0103","address":"Strada Lucian Blaga 2","mapdata":"1|694|1656","gps_lat":"45.8814376716","gps_long":"22.8987574811","religion":2,"oldtype":"4","newtype":"4","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(13).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (13)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/0\/0f\/RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%2813%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%2813%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(13).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Calvinist parish","seolink":"calvinist-parish","note":"","history":"The house was built in the 19th century. The inscription on the facade is bilingual (Romanian, Hungarian). In 1892, a marble plaque commemorating Salamon Ferenc, historian and professor at the University of Budapest, was placed on the imposing and carefully restored corner building. The plaque was restored in 2011 by the Reformed parish of D\u00e9va."},{"sightId":1810,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Colegiul Na\u021bional Decebal","address":"Strada 1 Decembrie 1918 22","mapdata":"1|913|1357","gps_lat":"45.8832067824","gps_long":"22.9006278006","religion":0,"oldtype":"74","newtype":"74","homepage":"https:\/\/www.cnd.ro\/","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Leontin l, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:2019_Ansamblul_urban_%E2%80%9EBd._1_Decembrie_1918%E2%80%9D_07.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u00222019 Ansamblul urban \u201eBd. 1 Decembrie 1918\u201d 07\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/2\/26\/2019_Ansamblul_urban_%E2%80%9EBd._1_Decembrie_1918%E2%80%9D_07.jpg\/512px-2019_Ansamblul_urban_%E2%80%9EBd._1_Decembrie_1918%E2%80%9D_07.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:2019_Ansamblul_urban_%E2%80%9EBd._1_Decembrie_1918%E2%80%9D_07.jpg\u0022\u003ELeontin l\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Former Hungarian State High School of Sciences","seolink":"former-hungarian-state-high-school-of-sciences","note":"","history":"Located in the old centre, it was built between 1888 and 1891 for the former Hungarian State High School of Sciences."},{"sightId":1811,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Prefectura","address":"Strada 1 Decembrie 1918 28","mapdata":"1|855|1139","gps_lat":"45.8845256246","gps_long":"22.9001006507","religion":0,"oldtype":"11","newtype":"11","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Thaler Tamas, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:V%C3%A1rosh%C3%A1za,_(Polg%C3%A1rmesteri_Hivatal),_D%C3%A9va.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022V\u00e1rosh\u00e1za, (Polg\u00e1rmesteri Hivatal), D\u00e9va\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/7\/7b\/V%C3%A1rosh%C3%A1za%2C_%28Polg%C3%A1rmesteri_Hivatal%29%2C_D%C3%A9va.jpg\/512px-V%C3%A1rosh%C3%A1za%2C_%28Polg%C3%A1rmesteri_Hivatal%29%2C_D%C3%A9va.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:V%C3%A1rosh%C3%A1za,_(Polg%C3%A1rmesteri_Hivatal),_D%C3%A9va.jpg\u0022\u003EThaler Tamas\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Former County Hall of Hunyad","seolink":"former-county-hall-of-hunyad","note":"","history":"By 1890, the seat of Hunyad County was completed in German Renaissance style, based on the plans of Alp\u00e1r Ign\u00e1c, at the instigation of isp\u00e1n Pog\u00e1ny Gy\u00f6rgy, and vice isp\u00e1n Barcsa K\u00e1lm\u00e1n.@\nOpposite the entrance to the town park at the foot of the Castle Hill stands the building of the former county hall with a tower and the coat of arms of the Hunyadi family. In front of it is an atmospheric fountain cast in bronze and decorated with frogs."},{"sightId":1812,"townId":71,"active":2,"name_LO":"Teatrul de Art\u0103","address":"Bulevardul 1 Decembrie 1918 nr.15","mapdata":"1|884|1456","gps_lat":"45.8826714925","gps_long":"22.9004607073","religion":0,"oldtype":"91","newtype":"91","homepage":"https:\/\/teatruldeartadeva.ro\/deva\/","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"https:\/\/www.muemlekem.hu\/hatareset\/Varosi-szinhaz-Deva-1746","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Teatrul_de_Arta_Deva_(1).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Teatrul de Arta Deva (1)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/c\/cc\/RO_HD_Teatrul_de_Arta_Deva_%281%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Teatrul_de_Arta_Deva_%281%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Teatrul_de_Arta_Deva_(1).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Theatre","seolink":"theatre","note":"","history":"Built in the old centre, the theatre was designed by Komor Marcell and Jakab Dezs\u0151 in the Hungarian Art Nouveau style and completed in 1910-11. The restoration of the interior and exterior of the building was completed in 2011."},{"sightId":1813,"townId":71,"active":2,"name_LO":"Casina","address":"Pia\u021ba Unirii","mapdata":"1|781|1701","gps_lat":"45.8812043463","gps_long":"22.8995278829","religion":0,"oldtype":"93","newtype":"81","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Casina_Romana_(15).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Casina Romana (15)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/a\/a7\/RO_HD_Deva_Casina_Romana_%2815%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Casina_Romana_%2815%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Casina_Romana_(15).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Former Hungarian National Casino","seolink":"former-hungarian-national-casino","note":"","history":"The social and cultural association was founded in 1842. In 1847, a one-storey building was built on the market square, which had been bought from the Reformed Church. It took its present form in 1894 with the addition of the first floor. On the ground floor there was a caf\u00e9 and restaurant, while the large upstairs hall was used for theatre performances, balls, concerts, lectures, and there was also a library and a games room."},{"sightId":1814,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Strada Gheorghe Bari\u021biu, Strada Mihai Eminescu,","mapdata":"1|773|1788","gps_lat":"45.8806793649","gps_long":"22.8993584257","religion":0,"oldtype":"74,11,71,75","newtype":"15","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Parva_Curia_(9).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Parva Curia (9)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/e\/e5\/RO_HD_Deva_Parva_Curia_%289%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Parva_Curia_%289%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Parva_Curia_(9).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Parva Curia","seolink":"parva-curia","note":"","history":"When the military role of D\u00e9va Castle ceased in 1800, the new owner, Pog\u00e1ny Franciska, auctioned off the castle's movables; tradition has it that she used the money to build Parva Curia, where she established a school. It was the seat of the Hunyad County after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise. It later housed a military hospital and, from 1870, the teacher training school of D\u00e9va."},{"sightId":1815,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Tribunalul","address":"Strada 1 Decembrie 1918","mapdata":"1|714|1065","gps_lat":"45.8849028616","gps_long":"22.8989807241","religion":0,"oldtype":"17","newtype":"17","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Former Hungarian Royal Court of Justice","seolink":"former-hungarian-royal-court-of-justice","note":"","history":"To the left of the entrance to the town park is the County Court building and the bourgeois quarter surrounding Magyar (Hungarian) Street (str. Aurel Vlaicu), mostly built in the early years of the 20th century."},{"sightId":1816,"townId":71,"active":2,"name_LO":"Turnul Vechii Biserici Ortodoxe","address":"Temet\u0151 (Cemetery)","mapdata":"1|649|2472","gps_lat":"45.8766423992","gps_long":"22.8982882181","religion":5,"oldtype":"1","newtype":"120","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 \u003Chttps:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Turnul_vechii_biserici_ortodoxe_din_Deva_(14).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Turnul vechii biserici ortodoxe din Deva (14)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/d\/d7\/RO_HD_Turnul_vechii_biserici_ortodoxe_din_Deva_%2814%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Turnul_vechii_biserici_ortodoxe_din_Deva_%2814%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Turnul_vechii_biserici_ortodoxe_din_Deva_(14).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Old Tower of the Orthodox Church","seolink":"old-tower-of-the-orthodox-church","note":"","history":"Built in the 1640s, it was the tower of the first Orthodox church."},{"sightId":1817,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Prim\u0103ria ","address":"Pia\u021ba Unirii 4","mapdata":"1|880|1582","gps_lat":"45.8819271317","gps_long":"22.9004300427","religion":0,"oldtype":"12","newtype":"12","homepage":"http:\/\/www.primariadeva.ro\/","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(4).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022256\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (4)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/1\/17\/RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%284%29.jpg\/256px-RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%284%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(4).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Town Hall","seolink":"town-hall","note":"","history":"The town hall was built in 1901."},{"sightId":1818,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Pia\u021ba Unirii 11","mapdata":"1|702|1714","gps_lat":"45.8810973802","gps_long":"22.8988539590","religion":0,"oldtype":"53","newtype":"120","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Art Nouveau House","seolink":"art-nouveau-house","note":"","history":"The house was built in the early 20th century in Art Nouveau style."},{"sightId":1819,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Colegiul Na\u021bional Sabin Dr\u0103goi","address":"Str. Gheorghe Bari\u021biu","mapdata":"1|541|1758","gps_lat":"45.8807661678","gps_long":"22.8975058889","religion":0,"oldtype":"75","newtype":"74","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Former Hungarian Royal State Teacher Training Institution","seolink":"former-hungarian-royal-state-teacher-training-institution","note":"","history":"Education at the Hungarian Teacher Training Institute began in 1870. The institute operated in the Parva Curia and in the building that used to stand on the site of the present building, built in 1913. In 1913, a new building was constructed, which now houses a Romanian secondary school."},{"sightId":1820,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Colegiul Na\u021bional Pedagogic Regina Maria","address":"Strada Gheorghe Bari\u021biu","mapdata":"1|654|1679","gps_lat":"45.8813507697","gps_long":"22.8985037716","religion":0,"oldtype":"74","newtype":"75","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Scoala_Regina_Maria_(6).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Scoala Regina Maria (6)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/8\/84\/RO_HD_Deva_Scoala_Regina_Maria_%286%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Scoala_Regina_Maria_%286%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Scoala_Regina_Maria_(6).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Former Hungarian State Girl's School","seolink":"former-hungarian-state-girls-school","note":"","history":""},{"sightId":1821,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Colegiul Na\u021bional Sportiv Cetate","address":"Axente Sever Nr. 3","mapdata":"1|993|783","gps_lat":"45.8867553109","gps_long":"22.9013381782","religion":0,"oldtype":"21","newtype":"74","homepage":"http:\/\/www.lpscetatedeva.ro\/","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Former Hungarian Barracks","seolink":"former-hungarian-barracks","note":"","history":""},{"sightId":1822,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Pia\u021ba Unirii","mapdata":"1|924|1563","gps_lat":"45.8820358473","gps_long":"22.9007962790","religion":0,"oldtype":"80","newtype":"53","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Hotel_Orient_(2).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Hotel Orient (2)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/d\/d7\/RO_HD_Deva_Hotel_Orient_%282%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Hotel_Orient_%282%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Hotel_Orient_(2).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Orient Hotel","seolink":"orient-hotel","note":"","history":""},{"sightId":1823,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Aleea Anemonelor 57A","mapdata":"2|697|1160","gps_lat":"45.8713399331","gps_long":"22.9037892722","religion":0,"oldtype":"74","newtype":"74","homepage":"https:\/\/www.devatgi.ro\/hu","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Hungarian T\u00e9gl\u00e1s G\u00e1bor High School in Cs\u00e1ng\u00f3telep","seolink":"hungarian-teglas-gabor-high-school-in-csangotelep","note":"","history":"The institution was created in 2005. The new, modern building provides education for the Hungarian population of the county, from kindergarten to the high school-leaving examination.@\nThe first Hungarian school was founded by the castle captain Geszthy Ferenc in D\u00e9va at the beginning of the 16th century.@\nIn the part of the town towards Piski, where the former settlement of the Hungarian Cs\u00e1ng\u00f3 people in D\u00e9va once stretched for several kilometres, there are still some streets of folkloric value bearing the marks of folk architecture. In 1910, one of the most significant groups of the Sz\u00e9kelys from Bukovina settled in D\u00e9va and Hunyad County (Csernakereszt\u00far, Vajdahunyad, Sztrigyszentgy\u00f6rgy)."},{"sightId":1824,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Strada Gheorghe Bari\u021biu","mapdata":"1|663|1749","gps_lat":"45.8809341778","gps_long":"22.8984773468","religion":2,"oldtype":"38","newtype":"38","homepage":"https:\/\/www.kozterkep.hu\/28179\/tordai-sandor-andras-mellszobra#","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Bust of Tordai S\u00e1ndor Andr\u00e1s","seolink":"bust-of-tordai-sandor-andras","note":"","history":"The bust was unveiled in front of the newer Reformed church in D\u00e9va in 2004. Tordai S\u00e1ndor Andr\u00e1s was born in Torda in 1529, studied at the University of Wittenberg, from where he returned to his hometown to become a pastor. He was instrumental in spreading the Calvinist faith in Transylvania. He served in D\u00e9va from 1564 and was elected Reformed Bishop of Transylvania. He died in D\u00e9va in 1579 and was buried in the church there."},{"sightId":1825,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Statuia lui Traian","address":"Pia\u021ba Unirii","mapdata":"1|907|1617","gps_lat":"45.8816952446","gps_long":"22.9006119774","religion":0,"oldtype":"38","newtype":"38","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219, CC BY-SA 4.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(5).jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022512\u0022 alt=\u0022RO HD Deva Piata Unirii (5)\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/d\/d3\/RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%285%29.jpg\/512px-RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_%285%29.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:RO_HD_Deva_Piata_Unirii_(5).jpg\u0022\u003E\u021aetcu Mircea Rare\u0219\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 4.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Statue of Emperor Trajan","seolink":"statue-of-emperor-trajan","note":"","history":"Erected after 1989. The Romanians themselves cannot decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or of the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in D\u00e9va, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards."},{"sightId":1826,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"Statuia lui Decebal","address":"Pia\u021ba Victoriei","mapdata":"1|1134|2158","gps_lat":"45.8784676532","gps_long":"22.9025417375","religion":0,"oldtype":"38","newtype":"38","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"\u003Ca title=\u0022Saturnian, CC BY-SA 3.0 <https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0>, via Wikimedia Commons\u0022 href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003Cimg width=\u0022256\u0022 alt=\u0022Statue of Decebal - Deva 00\u0022 src=\u0022https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/b\/b1\/Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\/256px-Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003E\u003C\/a\u003E","picture_ref":"\u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Statue_of_Decebal_-_Deva_00.jpg\u0022\u003ESaturnian\u003C\/a\u003E, \u003Ca href=\u0022https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/3.0\u0022\u003ECC BY-SA 3.0\u003C\/a\u003E, via Wikimedia Commons","name":"Statue of Decebal","seolink":"statue-of-decebal","note":"","history":"The Romanians themselves can't decide whether they are the descendants of the conquered Dacians or the conquering Romans, so they have erected statues to both Decebal and Emperor Trajan in D\u00e9va, just to be sure. Nothing of the Dacian language and culture has survived after little more than a century and a half of Roman rule. The Romanians claim that some of their words are derived from the Dacians, but in fact they are of unknown origin, as nothing of the Dacian language has survived. The province of Dacia, founded by the Romans, also ceased to exist around 270 AD, when the Romans moved its population, largely made up of the military and settlers who had arrived after their conquest, south of the Danube to Moesia to escape the invasion of Germanic tribes. There is no archeological or documental proof of their continued existance in present day Transylvania afterwards."},{"sightId":1827,"townId":71,"active":1,"name_LO":"","address":"Strada 1 Decembrie","mapdata":"1|683|945","gps_lat":"45.8856541743","gps_long":"22.8986488299","religion":0,"oldtype":"38","newtype":"38","homepage":"","openinghours":"","muemlekemlink":"","csemadoklink":"","picture":"","picture_ref":"","name":"Memorial to Horia, Clo\u0219ca and Cri\u0219an","seolink":"memorial-to-horia-closca-and-crisan","note":"","history":"It commemorates the leaders of the 1784 Vlach peasant uprising. Agitated by the Orthodox popes against the Hungarians, the Vlach mob murdered 4,000 Transylvanian inhabitants (mostly Hungarians and Saxons) and burnt 133 settlements during the uprising. Horia and Clo\u0219ca were executed by wheel in Gyulafeh\u00e9rv\u00e1r on 28 February 1785, and Cri\u0219\u00e1n committed suicide in prison. There was no mass reprisal after the uprising. They are now considered national heroes by the Romanians."}]},"language":"en","region":"romania","regionid":4,"offer":[],"gallery":false,"album":false}