Milișăuți

Milişăuţi ( German Milleschoutz ) is a town in the district of Suceava in Romania.

Location

Milişăuţi located in Bucovina Suceava on the river at the eastern edge of the Eastern Carpathians. The county capital of Suceava is located approximately 25 kilometers southeast.

History

Milişăuţi (specifically today is my finished site Bădeuţi ) was 1413 - first mentioned - the time of the Moldavian prince Alexandru cel Bun. In 1487 the old church was in Bădeuţi replaced by a new stone, which donated the Prince Ştefan cel Mare in gratitude for a victory in a battle against the Wallachian Prince Basarab Ţepeluş cel Tanar. The place was on the way between the capital city of Suceava and Putna Monastery important. Multiple held here on Moldavian princes. 1538 selected in Bădeuţi the Moldovan nobles Ştefan Lăcustă prince. Milişăuţi originally consisted of an upper and a lower district that belonged to each of various nobles and monasteries.

1774 Bukovina and thus Milişăuţi a part of the Habsburg monarchy. As part of the planned settlement moved to the years 1788/89 German Protestant from Swabia to Milleschoutz and after Bădeuţi ( Badeutz ). From 1791 to 1861 was in Milleschoutz a parish of the Protestant superintendent AB Galicia.

1910 were administratively united the upper and lower district.

After the First World War, the Bukovina and thus Milişăuţi came to Romania. 1940 left most of Bukovina Germans Milişăuţi as a result of an agreement between the German Reich and Romania.

In communist Romania Milişăuţi and Bădeuţi formed together with the adjacent town Iaslovat a church that was named after the recently deceased functionary Emil Bodnaras 1976. After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, carried out in 1996 to rename the in Milişăuţi. 2001 Iaslovat was spun off from the community association, officially declared in 2004 Milişăuţi to the city.

The main industries are agriculture and trade.

Population

1930 lived on the territory of today's approximately 4,800 residents. Of these, 4,000 Romanians, 550 German, 250 Ukrainian and Hutsul and 50 Jews and Russians. 2007 lived 5,397 residents in the city; According to the 2002 census, almost all Romanians.

Traffic

Milişăuţi lies on the railway line Chernivtsi - Suceava. Daily train here each about six local trains to Suceava and Putna after. There is a regular bus service to Rădăuţi and Suceava.

Attractions

  • Ruins of the church of 1487 in the district Bădeuţi
  • Ruin of a noble residence ( 14-15. Century)
  • Forge ( early 19th century )

Born in Milişăuţi

  • Ury Benador (actually Simon Moise Grinberg, 1895-1971 ), Jewish- Romanian writer
  • Emil Bodnaras (1904-1976), official of the Communist Party of Romania
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