Dragoslavele

Dragoslavele is a commune in the northern part of Argeș County, Muntenia, Romania, located by the former border between Wallachia and Transylvania, on the Wallachian side. It is a relatively important location for boarding house tourism. The commune is composed of two villages, Dragoslavele and Valea Hotarului.

Dragoslavele
The Mateiaș Mausoleum
The Mateiaș Mausoleum
Coat of arms of Dragoslavele
Location in Argeș County
Location in Argeș County
Dragoslavele is located in Romania
Dragoslavele
Dragoslavele
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 45°21′N 25°10′E
CountryRomania
CountyArgeș
Government
  Mayor (20202024) Ion Băcioiu (PNL)
Area
11.973 km2 (4.623 sq mi)
Elevation
657 m (2,156 ft)
Population
 (2021-12-01)[1]
2,474
  Density210/km2 (540/sq mi)
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Postal code
117375
Vehicle reg.AG
Websitewww.cjarges.ro/en/web/dragoslavele

Geography

The commune lies at the bottom of the Southern Carpathians' slopes, at one end of the Rucăr-Bran Pass (the narrow valley separating the Piatra Craiului and Bucegi mountains), on the banks of the Dâmbovița River.

Dragoslavele is located 18 km (11 mi) from Câmpulung and 73 km (45 mi) from the county seat, Pitești. To the north and northeast it borders the communes of Rucăr and Dâmbovicioara, to the south with the commune of Stoenești, and to the west with the commune of Valea Mare-Pravăț. It is crossed by the national road DN73, which connects Pitești to Brașov. At Dragoslavele, the county road DJ725 branches off from the national road, leading south to the commune of Stoenești, where it ends in DN72A.

History

From the Middle Ages until 1916, Dragoslavele was an important border crossing point between Wallachia and Transylvania.

In a commercial privilege confirming the relations with Brașov, on January 20, 1368, Vladislav I, Lord of Wallachia, also known as "Vlaicu Vodă", mentioned that merchants paid "customs at Câmpulung, or near". In 1413, Mircea the Elder renewed the old customs and fairs from Câmpulung and mentioned "the customs from Dâmbovița". The name is mentioned in documents from the Brașov archive, and in a document from 1451, where Vladislav II referred to Dragoslavele and Rucăr. In 1510, Vlad voivode wrote about the "carpenters" from Dragoslavele. The historian Nicolae Iorga located Posada in the Dragoslavele-Bran area and estimated that Charles Robert's troops passed through there in 1330. This is also where King Sigismund came in 1395; after "giving a deed near the village called Câmpulung", he was beaten in battle, according to the same historian, by the troops of Vlad-Vodă.

Documents from the 17th century show that the people of Dragoslavele were in charge of guarding the border, had properties outside the village boundaries, and were exempted from taxes through princely charters. Around 16411642, new residents came from the Hațeg area, called "rudari", meaning goldsmiths. The term "rudar" comes from the Slavic word "ruda", or (golden) rock.

Also in the 17th century, Vintilă Vornicul enslaved the inhabitants of the settlement but, through the intercession of Matei Basarab, they redeemed themselves with 3,000 gold coins. The stone cross in the center of the village, a cross from 1642, consecrates this event, and in 1647 the same voivode mentioned on April 10 "the royal customs from Rucăr and Dragoslavele", the latter having 12 more villages under its command "until Cotenești, Nucșoara, Slănic, Albești, Lerești, and Nămăiești".

Church of the Dormition ("Joseni") in Dragoslavele

At the end of the 19th century, the commune was part of the Dâmbovițan area of Muscel County and consisted only of the village of residence, with 1,104 inhabitants. Two churches and a school functioned in the commune.[2] The Socec yearbook from 1925 records it in the same area, with 1,864 inhabitants in the villages of Dragoslavele and Valea Caselor and in the hamlets of Fundata and Lunca Gârții.[3]

During World War I, in October 1916, the area between Dragoslavele and Mateiaș was the scene of a particularly violent battle between Romanian Army and German Army forces (see Romania during World War I).

During World War II, Dragoslavele was a place of refuge for the Polish Marshal Edward Rydz-Śmigły, at that time Commander-in-chief and General Inspector of the Armed Forces, considered "the second man in the state after the President". On September 7, 1939, along with most of the government, he left Warsaw under attack from Nazi Germany, and ten days later, when Soviet forces attacked Poland from the east, realizing that the fight against the two aggressors is impossible, Śmigły-Rydz ordered the Polish troops to retreat to Romania, avoiding the fight with the Red Army. Having managed to avoid capture by German or Soviet troops, Śmigły-Rydz crossed into Romania on September 18, 1939, along with the government, the Polish treasury and the remnants of the army. During his exile in Romania, Rydz-Śmigły was officially interned in the summer villa of the Patriarch Miron Cristea in Dragoslavele, by one of his friends, the former Romanian Prime Minister Armand Călinescu, but he remained free. The Marshal of Poland was accommodated in the patriarchal villa in Dragoslavele until December 10, 1940, when he fled, clandestinely crossed the borders with Hungary and Slovakia, returning to Poland.

In 1950, the commune was transferred to the Muscel district of Argeș region. In 1968, it moved to Argeș County.[4][5]

Demography

The ethnic composition of the Dragoslavele commune

  Romanians: 1.989 (76.12%)
  Roma: 555 (21.24%)
  Unknown: 69 (2.64%)

The confessional composition of the Dragoslavele commune

  Orthodox Christians: 2.339 (89.51%)
  Gospel Christians: 174 (6.66%)
  Jehovah's Witnesses: 13 (0.50%)
  Roman Catholics: 11 (0.42%)
  Evangelists: 3 (0.11%)
  Unknown: 73 (2.79%)

According to the census carried out in 2011, the population of Dragoslavele commune amounts to 2,613 inhabitants, increasing compared to the previous census in 2002, when 2,549 of inhabitants were registered.[6] The majority of the inhabitants are Romanians (76.12%), with a minority of Roma (21.24%). For 2.64% of the population, the ethnicity is unknown.[7]

Natives

See also

References

  1. "Populaţia rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021" (XLS). National Institute of Statistics.
  2. Lahovari, George Ioan. "Dragoslavele". Marele Dicționar Geografic al Romîniei. 3. București: Stab. grafic J. V. Socecu. 1900. pp. 221–222.
  3. "Dragoslavele commune in "Socec" Annuary of the Great Romania". US Library of Congress. Retrieved 2015-05-22.
  4. "Legea nr. 3/1968". Lege5.ro. Retrieved 2015-05-22.
  5. "Legea nr. 2/1968". Monitoruljuridic.ro. Retrieved 2015-05-22.
  6. "Recensământul Populației și al Locuințelor 2002 - populația unităților administrative pe etnii". Kulturális Innovációs Alapítvány (KIA.hu - Fundația Culturală pentru Inovație). Retrieved 2013-08-06.
  7. The final results of the 2011 Census: "Tab8. Stable population by ethnicity – counties, municipalities, cities, communes". National Institute of Statistics from Romania. Retrieved 2013-08-05.
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