The
biggest and most representative mosque in Romania has been for over a century
the “Carol I” Mosque of Constanța (Küstendge), built in 1910 after the project of the architect Victor
G.Ștephănescu (1876 – 1950), of Bucharest. Son of composer George Ștephănescu (1843 – 1925), founder of the Romanian
National Opera, and of his first wife, Caliopi Petrescu, sister of the father
of the diplomat Nicolae Petrescu – Comnen, Victor G.Ștephănescu was one of Romania’s most prolific architects
before the First World War and during the Interwar Period. He was a member of
the second generation of architects – after that of great architect Ion MIncu -
of the “Neo-Romanian” current, a sort of
Revival style of the medieval architecture of the Danubian Principalities.
Among
the numerous buildings he planned in Bucharest and in other towns of the
kingdom of Romania, there should be mentioned some buildings in the Carol Park
in Bucharest (1906), the Geological Institute also in the capital city, the
Coronation Cathedral in Alba Iulia, the Anglican Church in Bucharest and many
others. The “Carol I” Mosque in Constanța, situated in the center of the town, the capital
of the Dobrudja, is a genuine architectural accomplishment and a proof of Romania’s
openness, at that time, to all religions and ethnical groups.
Romanian composer George Ștephănescu diplomat Nicolae Petrescu – Comnen Romanian National Opera „Carol I” Mosque in Constanța (Küstendge Romania) „Neo-Romanian” style Carol park in Bucharest Cathedral of the Coronation in Alba Iulia (Romania)
Birincil Dil | Fransızca |
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Bölüm | Articles |
Yazarlar | |
Yayımlanma Tarihi | 30 Haziran 2019 |
Yayımlandığı Sayı | Yıl 2019 Sayı: 2 |