CARTA / KERZ



Red people, a tad shorter than our kind, came out of a mountain riding red horses. There were about two hundred of them, and they started preaching all sorts of things in front of the people. Suddenly, they ran all over the people who were listening and returned to their cave, never to come out again. They vanished, all but one, who got caught by his hand by a man. Alas, the little devil turned that man's hand forever red and then ran off. During the following year, some kind of misfortune came upon almost all who witnessed that terrible event." Western Europe used to hear a lot of red creatures on red or fiery steeds, of demons and doomsday visions. But it is for the first time that the western imagination finds its way into the east, at Cārţa, in Transylvania. What could have determined this transfer and, more precisely, what caused the appearance of a Romanian Saxon settlement in a western chronicle?


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The answer to both of these questions lies with the Cistercian order. Cārţa was a monastery founded by the Cistercians in 1202.

The church and the monastary

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Cārţa was a monastery subordinated to the abbey of Igris. It was first acknowledged in a document from the times of King Andrei II which confirms a donation of a Cistercian monk, Gocelnius, to the monastery. Its ruins may be seen on the road between Brasov and Sibiu in the Olt valley. All that is left of the old cells of the monks is a high wall located south of the church that still preserves a two-party window and round-arch ones. The great Tatar invasion of 1241 caused unimaginable damage. Nearly the entire church needed to be rebuilt in 1250. The new building was executed in what is called early or Burgundy gothic - a style that still used a fair amount of typically Romanesque building techniques. At the same time that construction was taking place at the Cārţa building site, this early gothic style was also being used at the Saint Bartolomeu church in Braşov. Although less visible now, the Cistercian style had a strong influence on the churches of Prejmer, Hărman, Sānpetru and Feldioara. Elements of this style were also adopted in other buildings in the Hārtibaciu valley, where the church of Cārţa was regarded as a worthy model.

Inside the courtyard of the parish house, the little hammers on the water mill still knock on wood. They almost seem to say that time will always keep passing.

You can find more information about this church and many others on this CD dedicated to the fortified churches in Transylvania.

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Copsa Mare / Grosskopisch
A free commune of the old Fundus Regius, Copsa Mare used to have some of the most vast and famous vineyards of the region, "The Wine Country". Two churches are mentioned as being used in this town. In the early 14th century, the holy service was recorded as being held in a three-nave gothic basilica; a 1283 document introduces the hypothesis of an earlier church.

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Fortified Churches Multimedia CD
15 EUR
Over 400 images revealing 44 saxon villages from Transylvania and their Fortified Churches, historical facts and architectural information, 19 local legends, an interactive map of the site, explicit hand-made drawings on how were the churches made, a see-through section ; all this toghether with a large, easy-to-use dictionary which will accurately explain all the specific or not so well-known terms you will come upon. Available in 5 languages: Romanian, German, English, Hungarian, French


Cultural heritage Mioritics
With the support of: Cooperazione Unesco Bresce