Ținutul Bucegi
Ținutul Bucegi
Ținutul Argeș | |
---|---|
Land (Ținut) | |
Country | Romania |
Former counties included | Argeș County, Brașov County, Buzău County, Dâmbovița County, Ilfov County, Muscel County, Prahova County, Teleorman County, Trei Scaune County, Vlașca County |
Historic region | Wallachia (Muntenia) and parts of Transylvania |
Capital city (Reședință de ținut) | Bucharest |
Established | 14 August 1938 |
Ceased to exist | 22 September 1940 |
Government | |
• Type | Rezident Regal |
Time zone | UTC+2 (EET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+3 (EEST) |
Ținutul Bucegi (draft version: Ținutul Argeș) was one of the ten Romanian ținuturi ("lands") founded in 1938, after King Carol II initiated an institutional reform by modifying the 1923 Constitution and the law of territorial administration.[1] Named after the Bucegi Mountains and extending over historical areas of Wallachia and South-Eastern Transylvania, it had its capital in the city of Bucharest. Ținutul Bucegi ceased to exist following the territorial losses of Romania (Second Vienna Award) and the king's abdication in 1940.[2]
Coat of arms
The coat of arms consisted of ten bars, five of azure and five of argent, representing the former ten counties (județe) of Greater Romania (71 in total in 1938) included in it, charged with or eagle wings displayed facing dexter with an or Latin cross in the beak (elements taken from Wallachia's historical coat of arms) standing over five peaks argent representing the Bucegi Mountains.[3]
Counties incorporated
After the 1938 Administrative and Constitutional Reform, out of the older 71 counties, Ținutul Bucegi incorporated 10:[4]
- Argeș County
- Brașov County
- Buzău County
- Dâmbovița County
- Ilfov County
- Muscel County
- Prahova County
- Teleorman County
- Trei Scaune County
- Vlașca County
See also
References
- ^ Published in „Monitorul Oficial”, Part 1, Nr. 187 from 14 August 1938
- ^ Decree-Law Nr. 3219 from 21 September 1940, published in „Monitorul Oficial”, Part 1, Nr. 221 from 22 September 1940, pp. 5530-5532
- ^ Royal Decree Nr. 4285 from 13 December 1938, published in „Monitorul Oficial”, Part I, Nr. 34 from 10 February 1939, p. 698
- ^ Administrative Law published in „Monitorul Oficial”, Part 1, Nr. 187 from 14 August 1938, p. 3778
External links
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- Pages using infobox settlement with no coordinates
- Ținuturi of Romania
- Romania articles missing geocoordinate data
- All articles needing coordinates
- Articles missing coordinates without coordinates on Wikidata
- 20th century in Transylvania
- Wallachia
- 1938 establishments in Romania
- 1940 disestablishments in Romania
- States and territories established in 1938
- States and territories disestablished in 1940