7
Rare and Fascinating Color Photographs of Romania in the 1930s
Source: http://www.vintag.es/2016/11/27-rare...ing-color.html
The 1930s was the decade of crisis for Romanian democracy. The world depression exacerbated existing economic problems and sharpened social tensions and thus gave impetus to those forces hostile to the prevailing parliamentary system.
The crisis enhanced the appeal of anti-Semitism among certain elements of society, who used it to rally support for their particular brand of nationalism. Foremost among organizations that made anti-Semitism the ideological core of their new Romania was the Iron Guard, which reached the height of its popularity in the mid 1930s.
1930 - A group of Saxon and Romanian peasants gather at the market place.
1930 - A view of Peles Castle on the hill side (Sinaia).
1930 - A view of the harbor of Constanta.
1930 - A view of the palace of the Dowager Queen Marie (Sinaia).
1930 - A young Romanian family poses before they work in a field.
1930 - A view of Queen Marie's sitting room (Bran).
1930 - People sit around the Lido, an outdoor swimming pool (Bucharest).
1930 - People sit on the beach and swim in the water of the Black Sea.
1930 - People work in the gardens outside a beach side casino (Constanta).
1930 - Three teenage boys pose next to a fence in their Sunday costumes.
1930 - Two people stand and sit beside the Danube River.
1930 - Two people stand on a hill above an oil field (Moreni).
1930 - Two women stand and sit outside a tea house (Bran).
1930 - Young men stand in their traditional Saxon church outfits.
1930 - Young peasant boys saw wood outside of a farmhouse.
1934 - A man sits on a wall by a garden belonging to a Greek Orthodox church.
1934 - A priest stands beside a painted church built by Stephen the Great.
1934 - A man stands guard of Castle Peles, with mountains in the background (Sinaia).
1934 - A salesgirl stands by her clothing stand, selling embroidered attire (Bucharest).
1934 - A young man guards the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Carol Park (Bucharest).
Bookmarks