Romania

Wooden Churches of Maramures

WHS Score 3.37
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2.0

  • Ivan Rucek
  • Tevity

2.5

  • Csaba Nováczky
  • DavidS
  • Lucio Gorla
  • Persian Globetrotter
  • Yevhen Ivanovych

3.0

  • Alexander Lehmann
  • Clyde
  • George Gdanski
  • GeorgeIng61
  • Joyce van Soest
  • Paul Schofield
  • Remigiusz
  • Szucs Tamas
  • Zoë Sheng

3.5

  • Els Slots
  • fkarpfinger
  • Lisu Marian
  • Martina Rúčková
  • nan
  • Richard Stone
  • Zhenjun Liu

4.0

  • Alex Marcean
  • Aspasia
  • Bodil Ankerly
  • Cezar Grozavu
  • Elia Vettorato
  • giulio25
  • Hanming
  • Jakob Frenzel
  • John Smaranda
  • paolosan82
  • Philipp Leu
  • Philipp Peterer
  • Roman Raab
  • WalGra
  • Wojciech Fedoruk

4.5

  • JobStopar

5.0

  • Aljaz
  • Jan-Willem
  • Juropa
  • KentishTownRocks
  • Małgosia Łupicka
  • Mihai Dascalu
  • Rafał Kałczuga
  • Roman Koeln
  • Violeta

The Wooden Churches of Maramureş are examples of vernacular timber architecture.

The eight churches were (re)built in the 18th and 19th centuries after the last great Tatar invasions ended in 1717. They were a response to a Hungarian prohibition against stone Orthodox churches. The small churches are built from thick logs and are painted with rather 'naïve' Biblical scenes inside. The most characteristic features are the narrow, tall clock towers above the entrance.

Community Perspective: these churches require a scavenger hunt to reach them, but that is part of the fun in this Romanian backwater. Some can be done without your own car as well, as testified by John and Nan.

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
Wooden Churches of Maramureş (ID: 904)
Country
Romania
Status
Inscribed 1999 Site history
History of Wooden Churches of Maramures
1999: Inscribed
Inscribed
WHS Type
Cultural
Criteria
  • iv
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
Related Resources

Community Information

  • Community Category
  • Religious structure: Christian
Travel Information
No travel information
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Connections of Wooden Churches of Maramures
Trivia
  • Depicted in Mizielinska Maps
    Wooden Churches in Barsana and Desesti

    See i.pinimg.com

  • Moved from location of original construction
    The Church of the Holy Archangels in Rogoz: "The church built in 1663 was moved from Suciu in Sus to Rogoz in 1883." (AB Ev) – The Church of the Presentation of the Virgin in the Temple in Barsana was built in 1720 and served as abbey church, before becoming parish church in 1806 when it was moved to its current location. (Nomination file Barsana, p. 2, 10)
History
  • Fusion
    "The Maramures wooden churches are outstanding examples of vernacular religious wooden architecture resulting from the interchange of Orthodox religious traditions with Gothic influences in a specific vernacular interpretation of timber construction traditions, showing a high level of artistic maturity and craft skills." (Criterion iv)
  • Tatars
    The Church of the Holy Archangels in Rogoz withstood the invasion of the Tatars in 1717. (Nomination file Rogoz, p. 9) "The church survived the last Tatar invasion of 1717 which is referred to on a mural writing which mentions the terrifying year 1717 of the time of the Tatars." (wiki)

    See en.wikipedia.org

Architecture
  • Vernacular architecture
  • Gothic
    "interpretation of Gothic spirit in wood" (AB evaluation)
  • Baroque
    The Church of the Presentation of the Virgin at the Temple: "The painter Hodor Toader did the painted decoration in 1806, using an iconography and style which confirms the influences of Baroque and Rococo painting, especially in the naos and sanctuary." (AB Ev) – "The church (...) features some of the most representative baroque indoor murals in Maramures." (wiki)

    See en.wikipedia.org

  • Rococo
    The Church of the Presentation of the Virgin at the Temple: "The painter Hodor Toader did the painted decoration in 1806, using an iconography and style which confirms the influences of Baroque and Rococo painting, especially in the naos and sanctuary." (AB Ev)
  • Wooden architecture
World Heritage Process
Constructions
  • Cemeteries
    "The nominated churches with their mural paintings and the surrounding churchyards and cemeteries are representative examples for the geographically and historically different areas of these vernacular traditions in the mountainous regions of the northern Carpathians." (AB Ev)
Timeline
Science and Technology
  • Geocentric model
    Church of the Archangels Michael and Gabriel, Surdesti: "Le plafond du pronaos conserve une très intéressante représentation du Système Solaire en conception géocentrique: au centre la Terre qui contourne la Lune; sur l'orbite suivante se trouve le Soleil, et sur d'autres orbites éloignées se trouvent les Planètes (...)." (Nomination file Surdesti, p. 8-9)
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Community Reviews

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First published: 04/12/24.

Jakob Frenzel

Wooden Churches Of Maramures

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by Jakob Frenzel

August 2024 - after spending the night on a wonderful campground in Săcălășeni (Camping Noroc), which also has a nice wooden church, we drove to Sudesti and Plopis next morning. It is very convenient to visit as these two churches are close together and represent two different religions. The first is greek catholic the second is romanian orthodox, thus the paintings and interior is also varying quiet a bit. In both churches a lady with Keys had to arrive prior to our visit. She asked for a small tip and explained a bit about the architecture and history. As it was our first romanian WHS, we were very enthusiatic about the visit and scrutinized every detail of the interior and exterior. The unique thing about these churches are the high wooden bell towers. As we have seen further non-whs wooden churches in Maramures, we got the essence of this WHS despite visiting only 2/8 churches.

 

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First published: 01/03/24.

Clyde

Wooden Churches Of Maramures

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by Clyde

I visited all 8 locations of this WHS in 2023. Unlike the Painted Churches of Moldavia, the 8 locations are not that easy to cover as a loop. I used Desesti and Baia Mare as my base and covered Ieud, Poienile Izei, Barsana, Budesti and Desesti (in that order) after an early departure from Suceava, and Rogoz and the 2 wooden churches of Sisesti the following day from Baia Mare. Make sure to save the churches' names and locations on Google Maps as finding their entrances and/or small parking spaces/lots sometimes can be quite challenging and not always that obvious due to similar but newer churches built close to them. Data roaming or a Romanian sim is a must to be able to contact the "holders of the key" in most locations. Try to time your visits around the 10:00-15:00 timeframe (some close on Mondays) but I would suggest trying your luck by calling the numbers provided just the same, as more often than not, the caretakers are the closest neighbors and will still come to open with a smile on their faces and collect a token fee if they are around.

The 8 wooden churches are quite similar to some of the wooden churches of the Southern Malapolska in Poland or the wooden churches of the Slovak Carpatians as an experience. The wooden churches of Maramures in northern Transylvania are a group of almost one hundred Orthodox churches, and occasionally Greek-Catholic ones, of different architectural solutions from different …

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First published: 19/08/21.

Nan

Wooden Churches Of Maramures By Nan

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by Nan

Frankly, I am a sucker for wooden churches, so much so that I see myself as biased and would implore you to not take my judgements at face value. For instance, I generally loath serial sites. And yet with wooden churches, I am delighted that Eastern Europe is full of them and I get to see even more in the future.

I have spent some time reflecting why I like wooden churches so much. Visits tend to be brief (30min tends to be a lot), the artistry rather simple ... And still I enjoy these visits more than the big run of the mill, awe inspiring cathedral. Or the absolutist Baroque palace. Or...

What I like about Wooden Churches is that these rarely are the buildings of the elite. These are village churches built by the local population with the limited means they had at their disposal. And yet they vary and each has an individual story to tell. While the artistry may be simple, it tends to be sincere and personal.

With this in mind I set out to visit the Wooden Churches of Maramures. Maramures is the Northwestern most region of Romania. Historically, it used to span into what is now Southwestern Ukraine. Nowadays, it's somewhat of a backwater.

Coming as a day trip from Cluj I visited the two easiest to reach churches: Plopis and Surdesti. Both are a 20min drive from Baia Mara and in viewing distance of each other. The Plopis …

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First published: 06/12/12.

John Booth

Wooden Churches Of Maramures

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by john booth

Despite the lack of public transport I managed to visit five of the listed churches :

Barsana - accessed by bus from Sighet, the ancient church is located on a hilltop at the western end of the village. This should not be confused with the much visited Barsana Monastery at the eastern end, 6km away. The monastery is a huge 21st century complex constructed in the vernacular style, demonstrating that ancient construction techniques are still alive and well.

Desesti - accessed by buses running between Sighet and Baia Mare and descibed above by Els.

Sudesti - I accessed three other churches by taxi from Baia Mare. This church had an amazingly tall steeple. The interior wall and ceiling decoration was very flakey.

Plopis - only a short distance from Sudesti, this church also has a tall steeple.

Rogoz - The friendly priest drove 14kms from Targu Lapus to open the church especially for me! He showed me all the symbolic carvings decorating the exterior of the church, and explained their significance. The interior decoration was in surprisingly good condition.

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First published: 01/09/10.

Els Slots

Wooden Churches Of Maramures

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by Els Slots

I visited 4 out of these 8 churches by car on a day trip from Baia Mare. The first one I headed for was in Rogoz. Memories of a trip searching for small wooden churches in Slovakia came to my mind – finding them in towns full of churches is not all that easy. Rogoz also has several churches. The “old wooden one” is at the back of the village, while the newer ones have prime locations. In fact, there are two old wooden churches next to each other here. The church was locked so I only had a look at its distinct exterior decorations sculptured out of the wood.

I then drove on to Surdesti. The church here is on a hill at the end of a tiny road. The rain had started pouring again, but I had come at the right time: there was a service going on (it was Sunday morning). The singing could be heard from afar. Dozens of people had to stay and pray outside. I sheltered beneath the gate, together with a begging boy and some latecomers. After the service ended, surely about 200 people came past us. I then could enter the church. The interior amazed me: it was like a warm home! Woolen blankets covered the benches and the floors. The interior walls are completely covered in vague, naïve paintings.

Afterward, I went back to Baia Mare waiting for the rain to end. I took along the young beggar from …

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First published: 01/05/05.

Anonymous

Wooden Churches Of Maramures

Wooden Churches of Maramures (Inscribed)

Wooden Churches of Maramures by Els Slots

Great wooden churches built in 17th and 18th centuries in Northern Romanian region of Maramures, close to Ukraine and Hungary borders.

These churches are always in small villages. In order to get them you should head for the towns of Baia Mare or Sighetul Marmatiei. Churches of Surdesti and Plopis are not far from Baia Mare but I recommend you to rent a car as public transport is not very reliable there. Same with churches of Desesti and Budesti that can be reached from Sighetul Marmatiei.

Churches are not always open but sometimes the key can be found somewhere in the villages. You should get till there and ask about it.

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