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Revolution Square, Bucharest: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 44°26′26″N 26°05′47″E / 44.44058°N 26.09646°E / 44.44058; 26.09646
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<!--Image:National Museum of Art Bucharest.jpg|National Museum of Art (the former Royal Palace)-->
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Image:Athenee Palace Hilton.JPG|Athénée Palace-Hilton hotel
Image:Athenee Palace Hilton.JPG|Athénée Palace-Hilton hotel
Image:Muzeul National de Arta, Bucuresti.jpg|National Museum of Art
Image:Piata Revoluției.jpg|View from Palatul Telefoanelor
Image:Biblioteca Nationala Universitara.jpg|Library of the University of Bucharest
Image:Piata Revolutiei, Statuia lui Carol.jpg|Statue of King Carol
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Revision as of 13:06, 29 June 2011

Revolution Square (Romanian: Piaţa Revoluţiei) is a square in central Bucharest, on Calea Victoriei. Known as Piaţa Palatului (Palace Square) until 1989, it was later renamed after the 1989 Romanian Revolution.

The former Royal Palace (now the National Museum of Art of Romania), the Athenaeum, the Athénée Palace Hotel, the University of Bucharest Library and the Memorial of Rebirth are located here. The square also houses the building of the former Central Committee of the Romanian Communist Party (from where Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife fled by helicopter on December 22, 1989). In 1990, the building became the seat of the Senate and since 2006 it houses the Ministry of Interior and Administrative Reform.[1]

Prior to 1948, an equestrian statue of Carol I of Romania stood there. Created in 1930 by the Croatian and American sculptor Ivan Meštrović, the statue was destroyed in 1948 by the Communists, who never paid damages to the sculptor. In 2005, the Romanian Minister of Culture decided to recreate the destroyed statue from a model that was kept by Meštrović's family. In 2007, the Bucharest City Hall assigned the project to the sculptor Florin Codre, who is going to design an original statue of Carol inspired by Meštrović's model (most consider it a plagiarism).[2]

In August 1968 and December 1989, the square was the site of a two mass meetings which represented the apogee and the nadir of Ceauşescu's regime.[3] The 1968 moment marked the highest point in Ceauşescu's popularity, when he openly condemned the invasion of Czechoslovakia and started pursuing a policy of independence from Kremlin. The 1989 meeting was meant to emulate the 1968 assembly and presented by the official media as a "spontaneous movement of support for Ceauşescu", erupting in the popular revolt which led to the end of the regime.

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References

http://www.cotidianul.ro/nora_lui_mestrovici_statul_roman_n_a_negociat_cu_mostenitorii-45659.html http://www.flickr.com/photos/93051314@N00/sets/72157594148443846/

44°26′26″N 26°05′47″E / 44.44058°N 26.09646°E / 44.44058; 26.09646