Topics related to Romania (sorted alphabetically) include:
1802 Vrancea earthquake - 1838 Vrancea earthquake - 1940 Vrancea earthquake - 1977 Vrancea earthquake - 1986 Vrancea earthquake - 1990 Vrancea earthquakes - 2014 Vrancea earthquake - 2007 enlargement of the European Union - 2007 Romanian electoral system referendum - 2017–2019 Romanian protests - 2018 Brăila attack - 2019 European Parliament election in Romania - 2019 Romanian presidential election - 2019 Romanian referendum
Arena Națională - Arenele BNR - Art Museum of Cluj-Napoca - Art of Romania
Bacău - Bacău County - Basarab railway station - Băneasa railway station - BT Arena - Bucharest - Bucharest North railway station - Bucharest Yiddish Studio Theater - Bulandra Theatre - Buzău - Buzău County
Cantacuzino Palace - Caracal, Romania - Caransebeș - Caraș-Severin County - Cluj Arena - Cluj-Napoca Hintz House - Cluj-Napoca National Theatre - Colectiv nightclub fire - Commissions of the Danube River - Constanța - Constanța County - Costache Caragiale - Cotroceni Palace - Covasna County - Craiova - Craiova Art Museum - Curtea Veche
Dacian Cioloș - Danube Delta - Demographics of Romania - Digi 24 - Dimitrie Gusti National Village Museum - Dimitrie Leonida Technical Museum - Dinamo Polyvalent Hall Dobruja
Economy of Romania - Editura Curtea Veche - Ethnic Romanian - Ethnographic Museum of Transylvania
Floreasca City Center - Foișorul de Foc - Fondul Proprietatea - Frederic and Cecilia Cuțescu-Storck Art Museum - Freedom, Unity and Solidarity Party
Geology Museum (Romania) - Geography of Romania - Geology of Romania - Grigore Antipa National Museum of Natural History
Haig Acterian - Hârlău - History of Romania - Horia Demian Sports Hall - Hungarians in Romania - Huta Pass
Iași - Iași County - Ion Caramitru - Ion Heliade Rădulescu - Ion Luca Caragiale - Ion Neculce, Iași - Ipatele
Lake Ceauru (project) - Law enforcement in Romania - Line of succession to the former Romanian throne - List of 2019 box office number-one films in Romania - List of crossings of the Danube River - List of earthquakes in Romania - List of historic monuments in Romania - List of massacres in Romania - List of prisons in Romania - List of medieval roads in Romania - List of museums in Bucharest - List of renamed places in Romania - List of Romanian inventors and discoverers - List of Romanians - List of rulers of Wallachia - List of wars involving Romania - List of years in Romania
Media of Romania - Mihăilești explosion - Museum of Art Collections - Museum of Banat - Museum of Oltenia - Music of Romania
National Military Museum, Romania - National Museum of Art of Romania - National Museum of Contemporary Art (Romania) - National Museum of Romanian History - National Museum of Transylvanian History - National Theatre Bucharest Noesis Cultural Society
Odeon Theatre (Bucharest) - Oracle Tower Bucharest - Oradea - Oradea International Airport - Oradea metropolitan area - Oradea Transport Local - Orange Romania
Palace of Culture (Iași) - Palace of the Parliament - Pașcani - Ploiești - Plugari - Podu Iloaiei - Politics of Romania - Polyvalent Hall (Bucharest) - Polyvalent Hall (Sfântu Gheorghe) - Prahova County - President of Romania
Radu Beligan - Romania - Romanian architecture - Romanian concession in Sarandë - Romanian Communist Party - Romanian Football Federation - Romanian language - Romania national football team - Romanian National Opera, Bucharest - Romania women's national football team - Romexpo
Satu Mare - Satu Mare County - Satu Mare metropolitan area - Save Romania Union - Sălaj (river) - Sălaj County - Sălsig - Science and technology in Romania - Sibiu - Sibiu County - Someș - Someșul Mare - Someșul Mic - Sport in Romania - Stadionul ANEFS - Stadionul Arcul de Triumf - Stadionul Arcul de Triumf (1913) - Stadionul Clujana - Stadionul Colentina - Stadionul Dinamo - Stadionul Dr. Constantin Rădulescu - Stadionul Electromagnetica - Stadionul Florea Dumitrache - Stadionul Giulești-Valentin Stănescu - Stadionul Ion Moina (1911) - Stadionul Regie - Stadionul Steaua (1974) - Stadionul Steaua (2020) - State Jewish Theater (Romania) - Suceava - Suceava County
Târgu Frumos - Theodor Pallady Museum - Titan Sud Topography of Romania - Tourism in Romania - Traian Băsescu - Transport in Romania
Cluj County is a county (județ) of Romania, in Transylvania, with the capital city at Cluj-Napoca.
Satu Mare is a city with a population of 102,400 (2011) and the capital of Satu Mare County, Romania, as well as the center of the Satu Mare metropolitan area. Mentioned in the Gesta Hungarorum as castrum Zotmar, the city has a history going back to the Middle Ages. Today, it is an academic, cultural, industrial and business centre in northwestern Romania.
Public roads in Romania are ranked according to importance and traffic as follows:
Dej is a municipality in northwestern Romania, 60 km north of Cluj-Napoca, in Cluj County. It lies where the Someşul Mic River meets the river Someşul Mare River. The city administers four villages: Ocna Dejului (Désakna), Peștera (Pestes), Pintic (Oláhpéntek) and Șomcutu Mic (Kissomkút).
According to National Tourism Statistics 15.7 million domestic and foreign tourists stayed in overnight accommodations in 2018. Of these 2.2 million are recorded as foreign tourists.
Nord-Vest is a development region in Romania, created in 1998. As other development regions, it does not have any administrative powers, its main function being to co-ordinate regional development projects and manage funds from the European Union.
The Someșul Mic is a river in north-western Romania. At its confluence with the Someșul Mare in Dej, the Someș is formed. Its total length is 178 km (111 mi), and its drainage basin area is 3,773 km2 (1,457 sq mi). It is formed at the confluence of two headwaters, Someșul Cald and Someșul Rece, that come from the Apuseni Mountains. From the confluence, in Gilău, the Someșul Mic flows east and north through Cluj-Napoca, Apahida and Gherla, until it meets the Someșul Mare in Dej.
Transelectrica is an electricity transmission system operator in Romania. It is publicly traded company with 58,69% of the shares being held by the Ministry of Economy and Commerce, 13,5% by Fondul Proprietatea, and 27,81% being floated on the Bucharest Stock Exchange or held by other investors. It is listed at the Bucharest Stock Exchange.
The Reformed Church in Romania is the organization of the Calvinist church in Romania. The majority of its followers are of Hungarian ethnicity and Hungarian is the main church language. The large majority of the Church's parishes are in Transylvania; according to the 2002 census, 701,077 people or 3.15% of the total population belong to the Reformed Church. About 95% of the members were of Hungarian ethnicity.
There are 10 metropolitan areas in Romania that have been constituted as of 2013.
Timișoara North railway station is the main railway station in Timișoara, Romania.
Braşov railway station is the main station in Brașov, Romania. The building on the current location was opened to traffic in 1962. The station's bell chimes preceding the announcements represent a few notes of Ciprian Porumbescu's operetta Crai Nou.
The National Register of Historic Monuments is the official English name of the Romania government's list of National Heritage Sites known as Monumente istorice. In Romania, these include sites, buildings, structures, and objects considered worthy of preservation due to the importance of their Romanian cultural heritage. The list, created in 2004, contains places that have been designated by the Ministry of Culture and National Patrimony of Romania and are maintained by the Romanian National Institute of Historical Monuments, as being of national historic significance.
Monument istoric, a "historic monument", is the Romanian term of designation for National Heritage Sites in Romania.
Alexandru I. Lapedatu was Cults and Arts and State minister of Romania, President of the Senate of Romania, member of the Romanian Academy, its President and General Secretary.
The 2004–05 season was Bihor Oradea's 46th season in the Romanian football league system, and their 26th season in the Divizia B. At the end of the season the team finished on 3rd place, far away from the promotion place, which was the goal of the team at the start of the season. The season was a tumultuous one for the management, technical staff and players, the club's management being vehemently criticized for defective management and being dismissed with 5 rounds before the end of the season. Also 3 head coaches were changed during this season. This was the last season when FC Bihor was known as FC Oradea.
The 2005–06 season was Bihor Oradea's 47th season in the Romanian football league system, and their 27th season in the Divizia B. At the end of the season the team finished on 2nd place and qualified for the Divizia A promotion play-off that was held on Lia Manoliu Stadium from Bucharest. FC Bihor played against the 2nd places from the other series, Forex Brașov and Unirea Urziceni, but failed to promoted. FC Bihor's 47th seasons was another agitated one, with a lot of changes in the managerial and technical staff, also for promotion was a tough fight against another team from Bihor County, Liberty Salonta, which finished 1st. FC Bihor lost the play-off and Liberty sold its first division place to UTA Arad, so from 2 potential teams in the first league, the county remained with none.