Cotnari
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Cotnari
Cotnari is a village and the center of the eponymous commune in Ia?i County, Romania, in the informal region of Moldova; the commune also includes the village of Cârjoaia. It is located north-west of Ia?i and south of Hârl?u, in a major wine-producing region of Romania, and is famous for the wine variety known as Gras? de Cotnari. Cârjoaia, the forest of Dumbrava Ro?ie, and other sites in Cotnari are regional tourist spots. HistoryProofs of habitation in the area go back to the Cucuteni culture; a fortress dating from the 5th or 6th century BC was discovered on the nearby C?t?lina Hill (nowadays a nature reserve). First attested in 1448, Cotnari was the site of a strong Roman Catholic community mainly comprised of Germans and Magyars. The establishmment of vineyards is attributed by local tradition to an initiative of Moldavian Prince Stephen the Great, under whose rule the village rose to the status of alternate residence, while stone structures and roads to serve the wine trade were built in the area. Its Catholic tradition made the village a target for Reformation in the 1560s, under the rule of the Protestant Prince Ioan Iacob Heraclid: Heraclid built a Latin Renaissance academy (Schola Latina), placed under the leadership of Ioannes Sommerus; the church he built on the site was re-established as a Catholic place of worship after Heraclid's death, and served the community until 1873, when it burned down. In 1641, Cotnari became the regional center of Catholic education, until being replaced 60 years later by the Jesuit school in Ia?i. External links
de:Cotnari it:Cotnari hu:Cotnari pl:Cotnari ro:Cotnari, Ia?i vo:Cotnari
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