

|
| Galaţi | |
|---|---|
| Facts | |
| County | Galaţi County |
| Status | County capital |
| Mayor | Dumitru Nicolae since 2000 |
| Area | km² |
| Population |
350,000 inh/km² |
| Geographical coordinates | 45°27' N / 28°02' E |
| Web | City Website |
Galaţi (/ga'laʦʲ/) is a city in eastern Romania, in the Galaţi County of the region of Wallachia, on the banks of the Danube, very close to Brăila. It has a population of about 350,000, making it Romania's 7th largest city.
Contents |
The name of the city appeares to have derived from Cuman galat, which was borrowed from Arabic qal'at (fortress). There have been other etymologies suggested, such as Serbian galac, but the galat root also appears in nearby toponyms, some of which show clearly a Cuman origin, for example Gălăţui Lake, which has the typical Cuman -ui suffix for "water". This area was inhabited by Celts in antiquity, and a derivation from Galatia (Gaul) is possible, but unlikely.
The first mention of the city dates from 1445. In 1789, during the Russo-Turkish War, Galaţi was burnt down by the forces of Russian general Mikhail Kamensky.
A peasant revolt occured in and around the city in 1907, being crushed with asistance from the Romanian Army.
Galaţi has a fine 17th century Eastern Orthodox cathedral - St. George (Sfântu Gheorghe), and another particularly striking fortified church (that of St. Mary - Sf. Precista) on the banks of the Danube (legend has it that a tunnel was dug from the church and under the river). Other features of the city include a sculpture park, a botanical garden, several museums, a television tower opened to the public and offering full view of the city, the newly-restored Galaţi Opera House, and a promenade of several kilometres along the banks of the Danube (huge sculptures are placed on either side of the road).
Galaţi has a university, the Universitatea Dunărea de Jos (Lower Danube University), founded in 1948 and given university status in 1974, and a teacher-training college as well as a host of other educational and cultural institutions. Among these, the Vasile Alecsandri National College - ranks as the first pre-university level educational institution in Galaţi.
The city has the largest iron and steel plant in Romania the Mittal Steel Galaţi, state-owned until 2001. It is still commonly reffered to under the old name Sidex. Also, the country's largest shipyard is foud here, profiting from the good access Galaţi has to the Black Sea through the Danube and the short distance between its facilities and the Mittal Plant.