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BトコトエAN PLAIN

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'The Bトビトトan Plain' (Romanian: ''Cテ「mpia Bトビトトanului'') is a steppe plain in south-central Romania, part of the Romanian Plain. It lies south of the River Cトネmトη」ui, a tributary of the Danube. It is mostly a cereal-growing area.

Contents
Climate
See also
References

Climate


The Bトビトトan Plain has hot and dry summers, and houses the location where the highest-ever temperature in Romania was recorded (44.5 ツーC, at Ion Sion). Winters are cold, and subject to the effects of a blizzard wind, known as "crivトη」" (this feature also gives the plain its name, derived from the Cuman language for "place where the blizzard is raging").
In his novel, ''Ciulinii Bトビトトanului'', the Romanian writer Panait Istrati describes the Bトビトトan Plain as follows:

No trees grow here, and it's so far from one water well to the next that you can die of thirst half-way. The inhabitant of Bトビトトan constantly hopes that one day someone will come and teach him how to live better in the Bトビトトan, in this dreadful wilderness where water is hidden in the deepest bowels of the earth and where nothing grows except thistles. They cover the land in less than a week. It's the only thing the Bトビトトan will tolerate, except for the sheep who lust after these thistles and devour them greedily. Come winter, the shepherd abandons this God forsaken land and returns home. Then the Bトビトトan dons its white fur coat and lays to rest for six months. Nothing lives here any more. That's the Bトビトトan.

Due to its climate, it is one of the most inhospitable areas in Romania. It was used as a depot for mass deportations by the Communist authorities during the 1950s.

See also



Chirpici

★ ''Ciulinii Bトビトトanului''

★ The Bトビトトan deportations

References



★ Panait Istrati, ''The Thistles of the Bトビトトan'', Vanguard Press, New York, 1930

[1], [2] Walther Konschitzky, Peter-Dietmar Leber and Walter Wolf, ''Deported to the Bトビトトan 1951窶1956'', Haus des Deutschen Ostens, Munchen, 2001

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