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There is a page named "Talk:Cluj Prison" on Wikipedia

  • 46 bytes (0 words) - 20:17, 9 March 2024
  • Cluj-Napoca became the only growing city developing between Bucharest and Budapest This is also referenced from the Financial Times article. What does...
    94 KB (13,577 words) - 15:30, 8 June 2021
  • Judenrat, Ghettos in occupied Europe 1939-1944, Oyneg Shabbos Main ghettos: Cluj Ghetto, Kraków Ghetto, Łachwa Ghetto, Łódź Ghetto, Lwów Ghetto, Theresienstadt...
    36 KB (4,380 words) - 13:39, 22 July 2017
  • for some other occurences you can invoke Hungarian alternate as helpful. Cluj (Kolozsvár in Hungarian) was known in 12-13th centuries as Kuluswar. These...
    72 KB (11,366 words) - 13:33, 1 February 2023
  • over 20% was adopted, Cluj's mayor Gheorghe Funar told that the law will have no effect as Hungarian name for "Cluj" is also "Cluj". It was necesarry to...
    206 KB (30,794 words) - 09:07, 10 April 2020
  • January 2007 (UTC) Actually, I still have a copy of that web page on Ziua de Cluj. The mere fact that recent information disappears from newspaper sites is...
    53 KB (8,967 words) - 04:00, 15 March 2023
  • determines your views. For instance, I know a number of Romanians (from Cluj, no less, so there goes your Transylvania connection) who don't have the...
    91 KB (13,761 words) - 09:05, 4 March 2023
  • Bessarabian komsomol leader, who died on hunger strike while imprisoned in Cluj in 1929. See details in the Russian Wikipedia article on her. --SimulacrumDP...
    133 KB (20,622 words) - 01:16, 25 February 2024
  • Rompres news agency,] quoted by [http://adevarul.cluj.astral.ro/arhiva/2005/04/13/p4.pdf Adevarul de Cluj) . In your view they are neither reliable nor verifiable...
    122 KB (19,745 words) - 23:36, 7 July 2017
  • purchasing power between Bucharest (and perhaps few other cities such as Cluj) and the rest of the country. Other sources seem to tell a slightly different...
    102 KB (15,202 words) - 01:33, 30 January 2023
  • participants in the Romanian events were probably ethnic Hungarians, as Cluj/Kolozsvár was fully half Hungarian at the time, and it was Hungarians who...
    232 KB (35,978 words) - 10:27, 21 March 2023
  • came in Romania, they took possibly hundreds of thousands of Romanian prisoneers (of which at least 75,000 German ethnics and many other pro-Germans, anti-communists...
    244 KB (38,644 words) - 09:17, 3 February 2023
  • trains with romanians leaving for Targu Mures from Bucharest, Iasi, Craiova, Cluj, or Constanta... — Preceding unsigned comment added by 78.43.41.111 (talk)...
    123 KB (17,936 words) - 12:25, 1 February 2024
  • eastern part of Partium, several cities of Partium and Transylvania (Oradea, Cluj, etc.), southern part of Slovakia including Kosice, and norther part of Vojvodina...
    258 KB (40,649 words) - 20:45, 20 December 2023
  • Paris, 2002 Spanish, Editorial Critica, Madrid, 2002 Romanian, Polrom, Cluj, 2002 Russian, Text Publishers, Moscow so, claiming that it was published...
    141 KB (19,984 words) - 23:48, 29 January 2023
  • though there is a German name for the city of Cluj-Napoca Klausenburg, the article in de.wiki is called Cluj-Napoca and not Klausenburg. That is because...
    282 KB (42,277 words) - 09:13, 7 May 2023
  • See the really big, big dots? One is in Cluj/Kolozsvár/Clausenburg -- the other, here, that is I. The one in Cluj is an independent being who followed our...
    506 KB (80,954 words) - 13:30, 7 January 2022
  • gave to Dan Tapalagă, originally published in Ziua 's local branch, Ziua de Cluj. As those of you who speak Romanian will note, the article gives both positive...
    294 KB (47,989 words) - 04:57, 18 July 2021