ROGERIUS, the Communist Side of ORADEA 🇷🇴 | How Most People in Romania Live | 4K Walking Tour
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 20 ก.ค. 2024
- Visit Rogerius, Oradea in this 4K walking tour. 🎧 Use headphones for an immersive experience.
See where I went on Google Maps 👉 bit.ly/43hLV5p
Equipment I used:
DJI Osmo Action 3 Camera
EM272Z1 XLR Microphones
Zoom F3 Field Recorder
Rogerius / Rogériusz is a district or quarter of Oradea, the largest city of Bihor County, Romania. It was named after Rogerius of Apulia (or Master Roger), a bishop from the 13th century who lived through the Mongol Invasion and wrote a chronicle, the Carmen Miserabile about it.
Rogerius is usually regarded as a satellite-city in its own right, due in part to its location at the western end of the city proper, near the Hungarian border. It is city's largest and most populated district, home to 50-60.000 people. It is home to many blocks of flats built during the Communist era in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as a large farmer's market, many hospitals and a large playground.
The western area of Rogerius contains a series of factories from Communist times, but also recently created industrial parks, where a few corporations opened new offices, taking advantage of Oradea's proximity to the border.
00:00 Sovata Street
08:22 Lisabonei Street
11:54 Sf. Apostol Andrei Street
17:36 Nicolae Balcescu Street
21:36 Carpati Street
23:18 Dacia Boulevard
25:18 Iza Street
27:06 Olosig Park
36:00 Spartacus Street
39:38 Children's City Park
43:14 Corneliu Coposu Street
49:02 Rogerius Farmer's Market
51:54 Blaise Pascal Street
53:29 Transilvaniei Street
56:14 Magnolia Park
59:40 Rogerius Alley
1:01:28 Calugareni Street
1:05:00 Selimbarului Street
1:08:05 Dacia Boulevard
1:12:50 George Calinescu Street
1:15:43 Aluminei Street
1:17:15 Minerilor Street
1:19:00 Slatinei Street
1:21:15 Sovata Street
#rogerius #oradea #romania #transylvania #walkingtour #4k #nagyvarad
I thought I would show you where I live. No tourists here, just average, typical people. Turn on captions/subtitles for fun facts and commentary.
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I just like the ambience of the place.A typical residential area for moderate class.
This is my City too,feels very realistic and beautiful video,good luck in the future 💞
Europe is amazing indeed
Es un lugar tranquilo para hacer caminatas y pasarla bien
Lovely
Felicitari e minunat filmarea👍👍
I❤ORADEA
Multumesc!
👏👏👏👏👏 felicitari
i cant believe I found this ... i used to play in that cemetery when i was a kid ....it did not look like a cemetery more like a reservation with over grown plants ...
I have vague memories of it. A little more of the cemetary should have been kept.
Increíble 😮
It's a regular neighborhood... Ok a bit better than regular.
The name of ''Olosig'' come from Hungarian wrong translation,because that was a cemetery, Olaszi (Italian),i think at midle ages lived here some families from Italy and that place where is the park now,they making a cemetery,after years using by all city and few years ago maybe 10 or little more,become park,because the cemetery did not was in use from '70-'80. Rogerius is not nice like the city centre ,but is so practical,when you want to shop ,day or night is very good for workers and everything is close, in 500m around.I like Rogerius more then the rest of city parts like Nufarul.
I agree!
olaszi=olah=vlah=SPQR
Lovely. Would love to come one day
Facinantes todos los citios
Aici sta Rogojan
Lovely place
❤️❤️❤️
Nice place
That's impressive
Impressive.
❤
You've meant , The Ex-communist side !!
Wow
I'm flabbergasted
Podul mic de pontoane l-a luat apa se pare
A fost inlocuit.
too many parking lots, but other than that it's a really nice neighborhood
Task 2
Tigla vopsita cu lavabilb de apa imagina satelit armat de tot prastia blocurile
The Communist view of Oradea. Waoh!
Nu are UN disaun blocurile puse terponane imracate cu marmura blocurile
Imbracte blocurile cu placid de marmura acoperis rotund din sticla albastr cu lumini albastre
communism destroyed most of Romania (and other countries too); but current urbanisation and better standards of life are definitely noticeable; Oradea overall looks the same if not better than most western european cities; cleaner, less crime and an absolutely beautiful city centre
Communists built lots of things. The main reason 95% live in their own apartments and not rented ones (like in the West) is that Communists built so much. And that's just one thing... If I went on a rant it would look like that "what did the Romans give us" scene from Life of Brian. And yes, the current better standards are also a good thing.
In any case I prefer living in a post-Communist country rather than one that always had a western system.
@@walkandcamera i'd rather not own an apartment than living in an ugly communist neighbourhood, the only thing communists built was crap cities and and a crap industry that ultimately resulted in a giant economic failure, while those western societies strived and prospered to standards that our grandparents that worked for nothing in crap factories could not even dream of, well they did not even have the time considering they always had to hustle for the upmost basic necesties in the communist paradise that i hope it will remain a thing of the past forever.
@@walkandcamera post communist countries are the way they are today because they've embraced capitalism and right wing liberalism. Some better than others (Estonia, Poland, Slovenia, Czechia for example), some have embraced it but still struggle with corruption and the communist mentality of "the state needs to fix all my issues" (Romania, Bulgaria) and some cling on to communist thought and corruption too much (Moldova, most of former Yugoslavia). And then you have Russia, which is just a shithole that has been murdering and raping itself through Europe for hundreds of years. Hopefully someone turns them into a parking lot soon. Together with the middle east, NK and China..
@@walkandcamera You must be enjoying the post-communist public services, healthcare and bribery-based beaurocracy {joking}
I agree with your point about housing, nevertheless.
The communists built a lot of things, true, but all of substandard quality. I don't know if you actually lived in communist Romania; if you did, then perhaps you remember it with rose-tinted spectacles.
I do remember Communist times. I think every system and every era has its pluses and minuses. I'd rather suffer the minuses of Communism than the ones we have now... And I do enjoy the bribery-based bureaucracy (unironically) as it saved millions when a few years ago our bodily autonomy was questioned for no good reason. I think it's damn good thing that average people can also engage in corruption, vs. the West, where only rich people have that privilege.@@alexverdigris9939
That's impressive