The memorial “Shot Pillars” honours the martyrs from the December 1989 Revolution in Cluj, Transylvania, an artwork that delights both eye and the mind.
The clock museum, unique among the museums in Romania, introduces the visitor in the world of clocks, whatever their type might be.
The most well kept and the strongest medieval church in Eastern Europe, a UNESCO site since 1999.
This giant human head rock on top of the Bucegi Mountains has sparked the interest of the curious along the years.
Voronet Monastery is one of the most famous off all Romanian monasteries, because of its unique blue colour.
Constantin Brancusi is a name with a strong resonance in the world, whenever Romania in mentioned in a discussion.
Another monastery that will impress you with the beauty of its paintings, among the finest of all.
The waters of the Danube, which flow into the Black Sea, form the largest and best preserved of Europe's deltas.
An impressive palace in Bucharest, and since 1956, a museum dedicated to the famous musician George Enescu.
Thirty hectares of dry and arid soil, dotted with miniature volcanoes- this is the scenery of the natural geological reservation from Buzau.
The Parâng mountain group is a subgroup of mountains in the Southern Carpathians and it is the second highest in Romania, after Fagaras Mountains.
It is the first monastery built by Stefan the Great (1457-1504) one of the greatest leaders of Romania, and the most important.
Sighisoara is an old fortress-city in the center of Romania, founded by German craftsmen and merchants, the Saxons of Transylvania.
The role of these fortresses was purely a protection one, but nowadays they represent a part of history.
Romania has the second largest building in the world after the Pentagon.