Lieşti, Galaţi

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Lieşti
Lieşti (Romania )
Lieşti
Lieşti
Location of Lieşti
Coordinates: 45°48′24″N 27°30′33″E / 45.80667, 27.50917
Country Flag of Romania Romania
County Galaţi County
Status Commune
Government
 - Mayor Mişu Nicolae (Social Democratic Party)
Area
 - Total 89.12 km² (34.4 sq mi)
Population (2005)
 - Total 11,138
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Website: www.liesti.oopis.ro
St Nicholas Church, Lieşti
St Nicholas Church, Lieşti

Lieşti (/lieshtʲ/) is a commune in eastern Romania, the largest commune of Galaţi County, on the confluence of the Siret and Bârlad rivers, very close to Tecuci (28 km) and Galaţi (52 km). It is composed from the villages of Lieşti and Şerbăneşti, which is the southernmost part of the commune and which also includes the seat of the local mayor.

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[edit] Name

The name of the commune appears to have derived from Ilie, which means Elijah, probably a local, which seams to be the brother of Şerban, the father of Şerbăneşti.

[edit] History

The first mention of the village dates from 1448, when in the prince of Moldavia, Petru II, who gives as a gift to the local nobleman Cernat Ploscarul and to his brother, Ştefu, 40 villages and fields among which appear Lieşti and Şerbăneşti.

[edit] Tourist sights

Lieşti has some fine Eastern Orthodox churches - St. Parascheva (c. 1886), Dormition of the Virgin (1889), and St. Nicolas (built after 1990)- the seat of the Protopopiate (vice-bishopric) of Nicoreşti. Other attractions include the acacia forests near the village (especially in May) and the picturesque valleys of the rivers Siret and Barlad.

[edit] Education

Lieşti has four schools: One which teaches until the tenth grade, and three that teach until the eighth grade. Lieşti also has 4 kindergartens and a 14,000 volume public library.

[edit] Economy

The village has a sugar factory (Lemarco Bucharest), but the majority of the population works in local agriculture or in siderurgy at the Siderurgical Combinate Mittal Steel from Galaţi. Beginning around 2000, many people from the region have gone to work in Italy or Spain, where wages are better.

[edit] External links