Bacau
About Bacau
Bacau is the main city in Bacau County, Romania. Its population was 196,883 in the 2016 National Assessment, making it Romania's 12th largest city. The city is located in the historic area of Molpawia, on the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains, and on the Bistriyu River which is approximately 8 kilometers in the south of Bayreau, with the river Seret. Ghime of Pass connects Bacau to the area of Transylvania. Like many urban centers in Moldavia, the rest emerged on an area that allowed waterways.
Between the 6th and the 7th centuries there are archaeological evidence of human settlement in the center of Baku near Kertiya Domesk; These settlements were kept in the old settlements from the 4th and 5th centuries. Many of the ships found here are ornamented with the cross, indicating that the resident was Christian. During the 10th, 11th and 12th centuries, Pechenegs and Commons controlled the Bistro Valley. The colonists played an important role in the development of the town.
Archaeological finds, some surface or semi-buried housing from the late 15th century suggests that Hungary had started settling in the area after 1345-1347 when the area was under the control of the Hungarian empire. They mainly occupied the level edges of the Bistriya river. A type of ceramic of gray ceramic 14th century, which has been found in Northern Europe, also suggests the presence of German colonists from the north. Originally the city was centered around the Roman Catholic community, which regularly settled near the local market by the area's population on the lower reaches of the river.