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Râul Doamnei

Coordinates: 44°51′45″N 24°53′11″E / 44.8625°N 24.8863°E / 44.8625; 24.8863
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(Redirected from Jangu River (Râul Doamnei))

Râul Doamnei
Râul Doamnei is located in Romania
Râul Doamnei
Location
CountryRomania
CountiesArgeș County
Physical characteristics
SourceFăgăraș Mountains
MouthArgeș
 • location
Pitești
 • coordinates
44°51′45″N 24°53′11″E / 44.8625°N 24.8863°E / 44.8625; 24.8863
Length107 km (66 mi)
Basin size1,836 km2 (709 sq mi)
Basin features
ProgressionArgeșDanubeBlack Sea
Tributaries 
 • leftRâul Târgului

Râul Doamnei is a left tributary of the river Argeș in Romania.[1][2] Its source is on the eastern slope of Moldoveanu Peak (Făgăraș Mountains), the highest mountain peak in Romania. It discharges into the Argeș just north of Pitești. Its upper course, upstream from the confluence with the Zârna, is also called Valea Rea. Its length is 107 km (66 mi) and its basin size is 1,836 km2 (709 sq mi).[2] It frequently dries up in summer, owing to the works upstream that have redirected part of its water supply toward a reservoir serving the hydroelectric plant on the Argeș.

Râul Doamnei flows through a hilly region, forming narrow strips of fertile plain on both of its banks. The following towns and villages are situated along the river Râul Doamnei, from source to mouth: Slatina, Sboghițești, Corbi, Domnești, Pietroșani, Coșești, Dârmănești, Purcăreni, Colibași and Ștefănești.

Name

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The stream's name literally means "the lady's river", or "the princess's river". Râul is Romanian for "The river". As such, it may form part of the Romanian names given in full for virtually all rivers. However, since Doamnei is the genitive of Doamnă ("a lady"), Râul is part of the name itself in this case.

Tributaries

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The following rivers are tributaries to the Râul Doamnei (from source to mouth):[2]

History

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According to legend, the first wife of Wallachian Prince Vlad III the Impaler died during the 1462 siege of Poenari Castle by an Ottoman army led by Vlad's half-brother Radu cel Frumos.

A former servant of Vlad, held as a prisoner and servant to the Ottomans but still loyal to the Prince, having seen the shadow of Vlad's wife behind a window and shot an arrow in that direction, with a message informing that the Ottoman army was going to attack the castle the next morning. Upon reading the message, Vlad's wife flung herself off the castle's tower and into the stream below the castle, preferring death to Ottoman captivity. The stream was then named in recollection of the event. A fictionalized version of these events is depicted in the 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula, although in the film, the river the princess throws herself into is the Argeș itself.

The ecosystem of the river was affected by the building of the reservoir. Before its building, Romanichthys valsanicola, an endemic fish species, used to populate this river. Currently this species, listed as critically endangered, is only found along a 1 km stretch of the river Vâlsan.[3]

References

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  1. ^ "Planul național de management. Sinteza planurilor de management la nivel de bazine/spații hidrografice, anexa 7.1" (PDF, 5.1 MB). Administrația Națională Apele Române. 2010. pp. 797–798.
  2. ^ a b c Atlasul cadastrului apelor din România. Partea 1 (in Romanian). Bucharest: Ministerul Mediului. 1992. pp. 329–331. OCLC 895459847. River code: X.1.17
  3. ^ Freyhof, J. & Kottelat, M. (2008). "Romanichthys valsanicola". The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2008. IUCN: e.T19740A9008207. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2008.RLTS.T19740A9008207.en.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Listed as Critically Endangered