Fabric (Hungarian: Gyárváros; German: Fabrikstadt;[4] Serbian: Фабрик, romanizedFabrik)[5] is one of the oldest historic districts of Timișoara, Romania. It is located in the central-eastern part of Timișoara, in the vicinity of the Cetate district, being a continuation of the historical city centre. Its name comes from the factories that were built here since its appearance in the 18th century.[1]

Fabric
Gyárváros (Hungarian)
Fabrikstadt (German)
Фабрик (Serbian)
District of Timișoara
Trajan Square in Fabric
Trajan Square in Fabric
Nickname: 
The merchants' district[1]
Map
Coordinates: 45°45′26″N 21°14′56″E / 45.75722°N 21.24889°E / 45.75722; 21.24889
CountryRomania
CountyTimiș
CityTimișoara
Established1744
Founded byClaude Florimond de Mercy[2]
Area
 • Total
10.17 km2 (3.93 sq mi)

History

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Fabric (Fabrique) in the Josephinian Land Survey of 1769–1772
 
3 August 1919 Boulevard, former Hunyadi út, in 1904

Until after 1716, the present-day Fabric, located east of the Cetate district, was not inhabited. In 1716 there were only two water mills in this area.[6] The northern one may have served as a powder keg in the 1660s.[7]

A so-called "esplanade" surrounded the fortress of Timișoara until 1892. It was a 948-meter-wide strip of land on which building was forbidden, so that a possible enemy could not hide behind the buildings that would have been built here. Therefore, Fabric was built outside the esplanade.[7] The first manufactories were built east of the fortress, in the present-day Fabric, starting with 1732 (according to other sources 1727).[7] The construction of the district was approved in 1744.[7] Its outline was determined by the sinuous shapes of the surrounding swamps and water arms. Fabric was at that time an incipient industrial suburb, with many manufactories, workshops and guilds located here. The most important guilds in Fabric in the 18th and 19th centuries were those of the shoemakers, saddlers, furriers, coopers, boilermakers and fishermen.[8] The bakers, butchers, locksmiths, watchmakers, millers, wig makers and tailors were also well represented. The individual trades united to form societies with their own festive days, patron saints and flags.[8] In the 18th century there were eight mills, a cloth factory (1725), a silk factory, a tobacco factory, a brewery (1718) and a waterworks.[8] The waterworks was depicted on the city's coat of arms in 1781 and was built in 1726 by engineer Karl Schindler on the orders of Count Claude Florimond de Mercy.[8] In 1850 there was an oil factory that produced rapeseed and sunflower oil. Agricultural and handicraft tools as well as bells, organs, vinegar, alcohol, soap, towels, silk, gunpowder, bricks, pencils and pasta were manufactured in Fabric in the 18th century.[8]

Initially, Fabric consisted of two distinct districts: the "Rascian Fabric", inhabited by Orthodox and the smaller "German Fabric", inhabited mainly by Germans.[9] After Timișoara was proclaimed a royal free city (1781), these districts were united into one.[10] Fabric experienced a remarkable development in the first half of the 19th century. In the middle of that century, 53.04% of the entire civilian population of Timișoara lived in Fabric.[7]

The entire district was restructured between 1901 and 1903, following university professor László Szesztay's plans, thus proposing the connections between Fabric and Cetate districts.[7] The old bridges made of wood or iron from the 19th century were replaced by reinforced concrete bridges at the beginning of the 20th century. This is how the Decebal, Dacilor and Mihai Viteazul bridges were built. The Bega Canal received a new course by 1910 as well.[7]

Even if the district initially enjoyed a particular multiculturalism, this was removed when the communist regime came to power. Most of the district's ethnic groups, largely represented by wealthy people, emigrated, while their housing was nationalized and then transformed into social housing, offered to the poor social class with limited financial resources.[11] As such, many of the historic buildings in the Fabric district have deteriorated over time, with only 10% of the buildings having been restored as of 2020.[12]

Multiculturalism

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During the Habsburg rule, Fabric was divided by ethnicity: Romanians lived in Vlașca Mare, Serbs in Old Fabric and Germans in German Fabric.[8] Gypsies, called Neuen Banater (lit. "new Banat people"), settled in the so-called "New World" (German: Neuen Welt) in 1753, near the present-day East Station.[13] Italians, French and Spaniards, who traded in rice, silk and wine, also worked in Fabric.[13] Greeks, Armenians, Jews and Czechs settled here in the Belle Époque.[13]

Historical monuments

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The built-up areas that border the main squares of the district – Trajan Square and Romans' Square – are protected urban sites of national importance.[14] Most of the buildings in the Fabric district are monumental buildings with a considerable cultural-historical heritage, with commercial services generally located on the ground floor.[11] Some of the representative buildings include:

References

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  1. ^ a b "Fabric". Heritage of Timișoara.
  2. ^ "Fabrikstadt". DVHH.org.
  3. ^ Rieser, Hans-Heinrich (1992). Temeswar: geographische Beschreibung der Banater Hauptstadt. Sigmaringen: Thorbecke. p. 101. ISBN 3-7995-2501-7.
  4. ^ "Fabric". Erdély, Bánság és Partium történeti és közigazgatási helységnévtára. Arcanum.
  5. ^ "Serbische und kroatische Ortsnamen in Rumänien // Srpski i hrvatski imena mesta u Rumuniji". Exonyme – Vergessene Ortsnamen NG. Archived from the original on 2013-06-29.
  6. ^ Ionescu, Marius (25 October 2023). "Cum a ajuns să se răspândească în Timișoara zicala "Tot ce e bun vine din Fabric"". Ghidul Banatului.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Junie, Aurelia; Opriș, Mihai (2011). "Zone construite protejate" (PDF). Primăria municipiului Timișoara.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Fabrikstadt (II. Bezirk von Temeswar)". Banaterra. Archived from the original on 2016-06-11.
  9. ^ Berkeszi, István (1900). Temesvár szabad királyi város kis monographiája (PDF). Timișoara: Henrik Uhrmann. p. 44.
  10. ^ Hațegan, Ioan; Petroman, Cornel (2008). Istoria Timișoarei. Vol. I. Banatul.
  11. ^ a b Tuță, Adelina Camelia; Dragan, Alexandru; Crețan, Remus (2023). "From degradation to potential urban regeneration? Residents' perspectives on a historical neighbourhood in Timișoara, Romania" (PDF). E3S Web of Conferences. 435 (4002): 04002. doi:10.1051/e3sconf/202343504002.
  12. ^ Mosoarca, Marius; Onescu, Iasmina; Onescu, Eugen; Anastasiadis, Anthimos (2020). "Seismic vulnerability assessment methodology for historic masonry buildings in the near-field areas". Engineering Failure Analysis. 115 (104662). doi:10.1016/j.engfailanal.2020.104662.
  13. ^ a b c Buruleanu, Dan N.; Medeleț, Florin (2004). Timișoara: povestea orașelor sale. Editura Mirton. ISBN 9736612740.
  14. ^ "Lista monumentelor istorice" (PDF). Ministerul Culturii. 2015. pp. 2476–2477. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-23. Retrieved 2021-02-02.