I can not believe. I have already thanked you that, unlike the Western media, in your videos you spoke nicely of the Serbs and their culture (Novi Sad, Belgrade, Golubac), and you continued to do the same in Timisoara. Even there, you have not bypassed the Serbian cultural heritage. Of course, the other Timisoara stories are also fantastic. With thanks, I wish you all the best. * Question: Do you know any two peoples in the world who have lived side by side for many centuries, without ever going to war with each other? Answer: Serbs and Romanians! Never, really.
It looks straight out of Austria because its the same architecture style. Its called Vienna Secession and was used all ove Austro Hungary which Timisoara belonged to.
Great video! Always good to see the my old city from someone else's perspective. Timisoara is this year's European Capital of Culture (2023). It is also the first city in all of continental Europe to have electric powered street lights. So it isn't just the revolution that started in Timisoara but also electricity which lit the streets of Europe.
Nice video, one mistake only, Timisoara is well known since the early 2000s for tourists. I know this because I live here and there's a constant flow of tourists in my city. What you mean is the international tourism as our tourists are mostly neighbors, especially Italians/Germans/Serbs/Hungarians and less USA/Africa or Asia but even that had risen. Hope u had a good time!
Wow... You bozgora truly can't count ... It is 2024 ... Where is a millenium gone from your maghyarpropaganda??? Little hint, the settlement of nowaday Timisoara was already inhabited in the neolithic and also a castrum by the romans.... So no big deal what you bozgor nomads did... Conquering, destroying and rebuilding....
It’s Timisoara! You lost Transylvania to the Ottoman Empire after the battle of Mohacs in the16 th century and after it became a province of the Austrian Empire under the direct rule of the emperor! A millennium has 1000 years so what kind of math did you learn in school?
@@goodrecipes2283 You use its twisted version, without your own (therefore Vlachs were nowhere near when the place was built), its name only makes sense in Hungarian, to begin with. Second, the name Temes county (vármegye) indicates from the 11the early 13th century indicates that there WAS a castle, so Temes Vár. Third, Transylvania was an Ottoman client state under Hungarian principality, but pursuing its own policy, and importantly, continued Hungarian statehood ideology. Fourth, the emperor of Austria was the King of Hungary who had to be crowned with St Stephen's crown, and observe the laws of Hungary. I'm glad I could help - you needed it.
@@peterbalogh8138 So in your opinion if Matei Corvin who was half Romanian and ruled Hungary does this mean that Hungary is Romanian? So what if it was ruled by Hungarian people. You forgot that also Iancu de Hunedoara was Romanian too and he ruled Transylvania also. There could have been more Romanian rulers if the Romanians were accepted in the ruling of Transylvania but without being forced to give up their faith and accept Catholicism as their faith and take an Hungarian name! Your own fellow in Gesta Hungarorum tells about the existence of the Vlachs in Transylvania from which you stole the land!
@@goodrecipes2283 King Mathias could not have been Romanian in the mid 1400s, because there was no Romanian at all for about three centuries yet to come. None. Besides - GH refers to Blaks (mentioned as Blachus, Blacci or Blachi), a Turcik nation probably related to Bulgars, and not Vlachs.
6:50 Timisoara also started this umbrellas trend across the country 🥹
11:13 Timisoara offers jobs for nomads. Or the people that want to move here
I can not believe. I have already thanked you that, unlike the Western media, in your videos you spoke nicely of the Serbs and their culture (Novi Sad, Belgrade, Golubac), and you continued to do the same in Timisoara. Even there, you have not bypassed the Serbian cultural heritage. Of course, the other Timisoara stories are also fantastic. With thanks, I wish you all the best.
*
Question: Do you know any two peoples in the world who have lived side by side for many centuries, without ever going to war with each other?
Answer: Serbs and Romanians! Never, really.
Thank you so much for your support! Your comment is so encouraging!
lovely comment.
love Serbia from Timisoara, you guys are great, the youth is going to change the country alot in the future im sure of it
wow your intro was perfection! 🤩
Bardzo ciekawa wirtualna wycieczka.❤❤😊 Pozdrawiamy 💙
Thank you🎉🎉🎉🎉
It looks straight out of Austria because its the same architecture style. Its called Vienna Secession and was used all ove Austro Hungary which Timisoara belonged to.
Thank you for visiting!🤩 Very proud to be timișorean🫶
Actually the city was full of tourists this year, since Timisoara is in 2023 the European Capital Of Culture, but yeah overall great video
Fr i live in Timisoara
Great video! Always good to see the my old city from someone else's perspective. Timisoara is this year's European Capital of Culture (2023). It is also the first city in all of continental Europe to have electric powered street lights. So it isn't just the revolution that started in Timisoara but also electricity which lit the streets of Europe.
Thank you so much for the support!
1:01 I mean its relative, its definitely one of the biggest in Romania, bigger than Brasov/Sibiu
Nice video, one mistake only, Timisoara is well known since the early 2000s for tourists. I know this because I live here and there's a constant flow of tourists in my city. What you mean is the international tourism as our tourists are mostly neighbors, especially Italians/Germans/Serbs/Hungarians and less USA/Africa or Asia but even that had risen.
Hope u had a good time!
❤❤❤
"There's no tourists here" lol, last time I went to the city center I heard more English than Romanian :))
Small? It's larger than Braosv, Sibiu, Constanta , actually it's the biggest city beside Cluj and Iasi !
Thank you for promoting my beautiful city Timisoara!!❤
👏❤️✊🇷🇴
Temesvár. Built and developed by the Hungarian Kingdom through a millenium.
Wow... You bozgora truly can't count ... It is 2024 ... Where is a millenium gone from your maghyarpropaganda???
Little hint, the settlement of nowaday Timisoara was already inhabited in the neolithic and also a castrum by the romans.... So no big deal what you bozgor nomads did... Conquering, destroying and rebuilding....
It’s Timisoara! You lost Transylvania to the Ottoman Empire after the battle of Mohacs in the16 th century and after it became a province of the Austrian Empire under the direct rule of the emperor! A millennium has 1000 years so what kind of math did you learn in school?
@@goodrecipes2283 You use its twisted version, without your own (therefore Vlachs were nowhere near when the place was built), its name only makes sense in Hungarian, to begin with. Second, the name Temes county (vármegye) indicates from the 11the early 13th century indicates that there WAS a castle, so Temes Vár. Third, Transylvania was an Ottoman client state under Hungarian principality, but pursuing its own policy, and importantly, continued Hungarian statehood ideology. Fourth, the emperor of Austria was the King of Hungary who had to be crowned with St Stephen's crown, and observe the laws of Hungary. I'm glad I could help - you needed it.
@@peterbalogh8138 So in your opinion if Matei Corvin who was half Romanian and ruled Hungary does this mean that Hungary is Romanian? So what if it was ruled by Hungarian people. You forgot that also Iancu de Hunedoara was Romanian too and he ruled Transylvania also. There could have been more Romanian rulers if the Romanians were accepted in the ruling of Transylvania but without being forced to give up their faith and accept Catholicism as their faith and take an Hungarian name! Your own fellow in Gesta Hungarorum tells about the existence of the Vlachs in Transylvania from which you stole the land!
@@goodrecipes2283 King Mathias could not have been Romanian in the mid 1400s, because there was no Romanian at all for about three centuries yet to come. None. Besides - GH refers to Blaks (mentioned as Blachus, Blacci or Blachi), a Turcik nation probably related to Bulgars, and not Vlachs.