 Fortified churches and painted monasteries stand  regally amid a pristine landscape. In the cities, former Saxon settlements such  as Sibiu and Braşov ooze charm, while vibrant Bucharest is all energy.
Fortified churches and painted monasteries stand  regally amid a pristine landscape. In the cities, former Saxon settlements such  as Sibiu and Braşov ooze charm, while vibrant Bucharest is all energy. Natural Beauty
The Carpathian Mountains draw a wide arc through the  centre of the country, leaving a swath of exposed rocky peaks surrounded by  groves of pine and deciduous trees, and stretches of bright green meadow below.  Hiking trails skirt the peaks, and a network of mountain huts provides somewhere  to rest your head at night. Europe's second-longest river, the Danube, marks  Romania's southern border before turning suddenly northward and emptying into  the Black Sea. The Danube Delta is a vast and unique protected wetland, perfect  for hiking, fishing, boating and birdwatching.
Friendly Faces
A country is only as good as its people, and you'll find  Romanians in every region to be open, friendly, proud of their history and eager  to share it with visitors. While tourism is growing, Romania is still considered  something of an off-the-beaten-track destination for foreigners, and you'll get  kudos from the locals just for showing up. While Romanians themselves decry what  they see as the brashness, even rudeness, of their countrymen in Bucharest, even there  you'll discover plenty of friendly faces and impromptu drinking buddies if you  make the effort.
Castles and Medieval Villages
The land that gave us Dracula has no shortage of  jaw-dropping castles pitched precariously on rocky hilltops. There's spooky Bran  Castle of course, with its spurious connection to Bram Stoker’s fictional count,  but don’t overlook beauties such as Hunedoara’s 14th-century Corvin Castle or  King Carol I’s sumptuous 19th-century pile, Peleş Castle. North of Curtea de  Argeş, you’ll find the ruins of a fortress that really was the stomping ground  of old Vlad Ţepeş. In Maramureş you'll discover towns and villages that seemingly stepped out of the Middle  Ages, complete with hay racks, horse carts and stately wooden churches. 
Folk Culture
Romanian history is filled with tales of heroic princes  battling fierce Ottoman warriors. That's all true, but it partly obscures the  reality that much of Romania, for centuries, was a productive peasant culture.  The hilly geography and lack of passable roads necessitated the emergence of  literally hundreds of self-sufficient villages, where old-school crafts such as  bread making, pottery, tanning and weaving were honed to an art. These days much  of the country has moved on to more modern methods, but a fondness for that  'simpler' way of life persists. Folk museums, particularly open-air  skansens, are a must. In smaller villages, many old folkways are still  practised.





















 
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