Transalpina road Romania 2020

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  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2019
  • Transalpina is known as the highest road in Romania, connecting Transilvania and Muntenia regions.
    With a length of 148 km, Transalpina road, has the highest point in the Urdele Pass at 2145 m. Transalpina is one of the most important tourist road in Romania, next to Transfăgărăşan. The road is also known as the "King's Road", because it was built at the request of King Carol II in 1939. The landscapes that can be seen on Transalpina are spectacular. The road is open from June until October so if you plan to see it make shore it is opened.
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Komentáře • 32

  • @elenabuznean8106
    @elenabuznean8106 Před 5 měsíci

    Minunat !!!❤

  • @maciek9207
    @maciek9207 Před 4 lety +22

    I had the great pleasure to ride this route during my last holiday. It was a good experience. I wonder which route is prettier: Transalpina or Transfăgărășan. Transfăgărășan has spectacular entry from DN1, but I think both are beautiful. I feel that in the future I will spend my holidays in this beautiful country again.
    Greetings,
    tourist from Poland.

  • @florinflorin2168
    @florinflorin2168 Před 2 lety +1

    Foarte frumos ! ( un vampir din Brașov) Transilvania, România!

  • @inapetrisor2874
    @inapetrisor2874 Před 4 lety +6

    Welcome to Romania! ... and , .. yes , wonderfull Trasnalpina !

  • @ArtofNatureChannel
    @ArtofNatureChannel Před 3 lety

    Foarte frumos, Love it ! Thanks for share!

  • @gbmn1263
    @gbmn1263 Před 4 lety +1

    Spectacular views 😳

  • @velo-funmotor8010
    @velo-funmotor8010 Před 2 lety

    c'est très beau .. on aimerait en voir plus ;)

  • @chababannour
    @chababannour Před 3 lety

    Nice video thank you for sharing.

  • @WestCoastWanderer
    @WestCoastWanderer Před 3 lety +1

    Beautiful capture of Transylvania!! Very very nice :) You did it well my friend :)

  • @TheTravellingFoot
    @TheTravellingFoot  Před 4 lety +1

    Comment below if you want to see more videos from the trip in Romania.

  • @acimpoca
    @acimpoca Před 4 lety +3

    Beautiful images but please update the name because the images are not from 2020.

  • @eyecred4153
    @eyecred4153 Před 4 lety +3

    Those fucken donkeys :))!They blocked the road for quite a long time when I first went there, tho Transalpina is amazing and worth it 100%!

  • @balazsnagy3912
    @balazsnagy3912 Před 2 lety +1

    WOW this is WHAT the first Romanian shepherds saw when they first arrived in Transylvania in the 13th century! No wonder they didn't want to go back to the Balkans!

    • @nkem-2194
      @nkem-2194 Před 2 lety

      Typical for Hungarians to show how uneducated they are. We are in the 21st century and you still behave like you just arrived from the Mongolian land.
      It is time to let the lies go and integrate yourself into European culture.
      Take care !

    • @TheTravellingFoot
      @TheTravellingFoot  Před 2 lety

      :))

    • @ppn194
      @ppn194 Před rokem

      In the 13th century BC

    • @balazsnagy3912
      @balazsnagy3912 Před rokem

      @@ppn194 Chapter 2 in Noel Malcolm's Kosovo, a short history (Macmilan, London, 1998, p. 22-40):
      "Only the remnants of a Latin-speaking population survived in parts of the central and west-central Balkans; when it re-emerges into the historical record in the tenth and eleventh centuries, we find its members leading a semi-nomadic life as shepherds, horse-breeders and travelling muleteers. These were the Vlachs, who can still be seen tending their flocks in the mountains of northern Greece, Macedonia and Albania today. [14] The name 'Vlach' was a word used by the Slavs for those they encountered who spoke a strange, usually Latinate, language; the Vlachs' own name for themselves is 'Aromanians' (Aromani). As this name suggests, the Vlachs are closely linked to the Romanians: their two languages (which, with a little practice, are mutually intelligible) diverged only in the ninth or tenth century. [15] While Romanian historians have tried to argue that the Romanian-speakers have always lived in the territory of Romania (originating, it is claimed, from Romanized Dacian tribes and/or Roman legionaries), there is compelling evidence to show that the Romanian-speakers were originally part of the same population as the Vlachs, whose language and way of life were developed somewhere to the south of the Danube. Only in the twelfth century did the early Romanian-speakers move northwards into Romanian territory. [16]"

  • @ppn194
    @ppn194 Před rokem +1

    Keine Transalpina, keine Alpen. Drumul Regelui oder, seie, Transparâng.