Petrila | |
|---|---|
Catholic Church in Lonea | |
Location in Hunedoara County | |
| Coordinates:45°27′0″N23°25′12″E / 45.45000°N 23.42000°E /45.45000; 23.42000 | |
| Country | Romania |
| County | Hunedoara |
| Government | |
| • Mayor(2020–2024) | Vasile Jurca[2] (PSD) |
Area | 308.68 km2 (119.18 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 675 m (2,215 ft) |
| Population (2021-12-01)[1] | 19,600 |
| • Density | 63.5/km2 (164/sq mi) |
| Time zone | UTC+02:00 (EET) |
| • Summer (DST) | UTC+03:00 (EEST) |
| Postal code | 335800 |
| Area code | +40 x54 |
| Vehicle reg. | HD |
| Website | www |
Petrila (Romanian pronunciation:[peˈtrila];Hungarian:Petrilla) is a town in theJiu Valley,Hunedoara County,Transylvania,Romania. It is located near the confluence of the riversJiul de Est,Taia, andJieț.
The town administers four villages: Cimpa (Csimpa), Jieț (Zsiec), Răscoala (Reszkola), and Tirici.
A Romanian town in theCarpathian Mountains, Petrila is an ancient settlement, but its existence was not documented until 1493 in a donation letter betweenVladislav the First, King of Hungary and a Romanian prince named Mihai Cande.
The name of the town was noted in 1733 as coming from the Latin word “petrinus” ("pietros" in Romanian), which can be translated into English to mean “of stone”, a reference to the largecoal deposits in the area that would become a profitable export in theIndustrial Revolution. The exploitation of coal deposits in and around Petrila made the town grow as asingle-industry town, revolving either around the mining of coal or the processing of the coal mined there, which is listed under the grade “Pitcoal”. Mining operations began in 1840, but the town would remain sparsely populated until the arrival ofWestern Moldavian workers forced to relocate by the former president of RomaniaNicolae Ceaușescu underCommunist rule. The restructuring of the economy since theRomanian Revolution of 1989 has led to a decrease in production and supply for the region, including Petrila.
It was the site in recent times of the Petrila Mine disaster, wherein two methane gas explosions in a coal mine on November 15, 2008 killed at least 12 miners and/or rescue workers. This is not the first time this millennium a coal mine in Petrila has suffered such an incident; another similar incident occurred in 2001.[3]
The mining in the town began in 1840 and the peak production of coal was in 1984 1,255,240 tonnes, since then it decreased to 504,000 tonnes.
| Year | Pop. | ±% |
|---|---|---|
| 1956 | 19,955 | — |
| 1966 | 24,796 | +24.3% |
| 1977 | 25,173 | +1.5% |
| 1992 | 29,302 | +16.4% |
| 2002 | 28,742 | −1.9% |
| 2011 | 21,373 | −25.6% |
| 2021 | 19,600 | −8.3% |
| Source: Census data | ||
At the2011 census, Petrila had a population of 21,373; of these, 93.97% wereRomanians, 4.9%Hungarians, and 0.73%Roma. At the2021 census, the town had a population of 19,600.[4]
