The Thick Tower
The Thick Tower

The Thick Tower

5.0 1 review
Landmark

Turnul Gros, Bulevardul Corneliu Coposu şi Str. Cetăţii, Sibiu, România

About

The Thick Tower, located on Cetății Street and on Corneliu Coposu Avenue, is a massive construction on a semicircle U-shaped layout, protruding approx. 25 meters outside the exterior wall. The walls are made of brick, with stones at the base, having a platform on which the cannons used to be placed.

The tower was built around the year 1540 by Markus Pempfflinger, the royal judge of Sibiu, and it was part of the fortifications subsequently included into the city’s defensive belt. On the inside there used to be blockhouses provided with fire holes. Two brick ducts have also been discovered, one thought to have served for water drainage from the exterior ditch and the other one for the communication between the defence soldiers standing on each side of the tower.

At the initiative of Martin Hochmeister, typographer and initiator of the first bookshop of Romania, who became the mayor of Sibiu, a hall was included into the massive Thick Tower in 1787 – the Thalia Hall, where the first Romanian theatre was established and one of the few existing in Europe. The style of the hall was rococo and it used to have two balconies and one box reserved exclusively for the Governor of Transylvania. After it burnt during a fire, in 1826, the theatre building was rebuilt in a Viennese style.

Romanian theatre troupes conducted by Mihail Pascaly, Tardini-Vlădicescu and Matei Millo have performed on the stage of this theatre. Later on, many personalities of the Romanian culture have performed on the stage of Sibiu theatre, among them the famous composer George Enescu.

The theatre activated continuously in this hall until 1949, when another devastating fire took place.

During 1990-2004, the County Council of Sibiu rebuilt the Thalia Hall, at the same time changing its purpose. Today, the Thalia Hall hosts the State Philharmonic of Sibiu.

Photo Gallery

Similar Suggestions

Landmark
Open
5.0 4 reviews
Built on the location of a gate tower of the second fortification precincts, the Bridge of Lies that joins the two sectors of the Small Square, thus enabling the connection between the Lower Town and the Upper Town, is, undoubtedly, the place in Sibiu with the richest legend.  Featuring a true symbol of the city, the Bridge of Lies was rebuilt in 1859, at the factory of Fredericus Hutte, being the first one in Romania and the second one in Europe to be made of cast iron, with fretwork decorations and having two big circles at the ends decorated with the blazon of Sibiu. Until the construction of this bridge, the access between the two sectors of the square used to be done beneath a conglomerate of buildings, demolished in 1851. The wall supporting the stairs includes a square shaped stone framework, vestige of a medieval building. The Bridge of Lies is considered a romantic place where lovers used to meet, even though at least four legends surround this location... The most known legend has it that the bridge has ears and an unimaginably great power, therefore, while hearing each lie, it starts groaning at every joint and crashes, bringing the liar with his/her feet on the ground. According to another legend, in the Small Square of Sibiu there used to be several fairs, and, after arriving home, some shoppers would realize they were cheated. They would return to the square and would get to grips with the lying merchants and, in the crowd’s explosion of laughter, would throw them off the bridge. Thus, while lodging again in Sibiu the merchants were afraid to cheat the locals a second time. A legend has it that couples of lovers used to walk on the bridge. The young couples would make vows of eternal love and the girls claimed to be virgins. However, after the wedding night, some of the girls would be caught lying. They were dragged to the bridge and thrown off over hand rail. In Sibiu there used to live many cadets who studied at the Military Academy. They would make a date with the local young ladies on the bridge, they were making many promises and afterwards the girls were left waiting uselessly for the men who would forget about them and their love vows.
Piața Mică
Visit in Sibiu County Sibiu Surroundings Landmark
Open
4.88 8 reviews
Built in the 12th century, the fortified church in Cisnădioara is one of Romania’s oldest Romanesque basilicas, preserved almost unchanged, and hosting the oldest church organ in the country. The legend has it that the village lads used to prove their strength before getting married by rolling uphill the big boulder stones from the monastery yard, gathered there for times of trouble. Presently the basilica at the feet of Cindrel Mountains comes alive at film projections, concerts or romantic picnics in the moonlight. Photo and Text SOURCE: http://www.sibiu-turism.ro/Culture-and-Heritage-Religious-Heritage-Fortified-Churches-The-fortified-church-from-Cisnadioara.aspx
Strada Sub Cetate, Cisnădioara, Romania