The Dolj County
A part of the old Oltenia, the Dolj county has 3,1 per cent of Romania's
surface and is on the fourth place concerning the population.
Craiova is the capital city.

Most of its territory is a plain crosses by seven rivers and the Danube River w
ith Bistro Lake to the South (1,867 ha).
The name of this county is given by the Jiu River which crosses it from North
to South, Dolj meaning "the Lower Jiu Land". Its first documentary attestation
as a county dates back in 1444 when its name was the Balta county situated in
the Danube Plain.
In the Dolj county a lot of Romanian political, scientific and cultural
personalities were born or lived : Voivode Mihai the Brave who united the three
Romanian Lands for the first time; great revolutionists Tudor Vladimirescu and
Nicolae Balcescu; painters Theodor Aman, Constantin Lecca and Ion Tuculescu and
sculptor Gheorghe Anghel; Constantin Brancusi stated his fly to infinite here
too; mathematicians Gheorghe Titeica, inventor Gogu Constantinescu; writers
Traian Demetrescu, Alexandru Macedonski and Elena Farago and world famous
diplomat Nicolae Titulescu.

The tourist potential of this county consists in the value and variety of its
traditional and modern historic, cultural and art monuments, the numberless
nature monuments, reservations, hunting grounds and picturesque landscapes, and
rich flora and fauna.

This county is also the crossroad of some important national and international
tourist routes. Also many motorways and railways make possible the access to
some picturesque zones as Pogile de Fier or to the counties of Valcea and Gorj
as well as to the Parang Mountain, to the North and the Danube, to the South.

By the railway Bucharest-Craiova-Timisoara-Jimbolia the connection with Serbia
is done through the frontier points of Phile de Fier, and Stamora-Moravita and
from Calafat and Bechet the connection with Bulgaria is done too.

Near by towns there are picturesque and interesting zones. Near by Craiova
there are the Bucovat, Ciutura and Bratovoesti forests. Near by Filiasi there a
re the Negaia and Burgetelu forests: near by Plenita - the Bujor Forest; in
Bailesti - the Cilieni zone and Calafat is the gate to Danube area which is
rich in fish.
An important attraction is the Romanescu Park (People's Park) in Craiova - one
of the valuable monuments of landscape architecture in Romania. It consists in
96 ha of forests, 4 ha of lakes, a zoo, landing place, two restaurants, and
over 250 species of trees and busches.
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Updated: 1997-06-11
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