Dumbrăvița, Timiș
Dumbrăviţa (also Szentesul Nou, Neuszentes German, Hungarian Ujszentes or Vadaszerdokozseg ) is a municipality in Timiş, Banat, Romania.
Neighboring towns
History
After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, when the Banat became part of the Kingdom of Hungary, the Hungarian government founded several villages in the immediate area of Timisoara and settled on it with Hungarians from the Szeged area.
1889 bought 127 people from six kilometers north of Timisoara Szentes land they had to pay off according to the contract within 20 years. The country was on a deforested area of the hunting Forest (Romanian: Pădurea Verde). So the town was named Vadaszerdokozseg ( German: Village in hunting forest, Romanian: Comuna din Pădurea Verde).
In the fall of 1891 built 133 families, a total of 768 persons from Szentes houses here. 1892 was the village at the request of the inhabitants of the name Ujszentes ( German: Neuszentes, Romanian: Szentesul nou ). The majority of the inhabitants were reformed faith; 1901, the Reformed Church was consecrated.
After connecting Banat to Romania due to the Treaty of Trianon in 1920, several families from the Serbian Banat, from large - and small - Torak Torak settled, but also Romanian and Hungarian families from other parts of the country. In 1950, the village name was changed to Dumbrăviţa.
Demography
Gallery
Catholic Church
Orthodox Church
New School
From the air