Gherla prison

Gherla

Detail from the Icon of the New Martyrs of the Romanian Land, Diaconești monastery (Bacău county) showing political detainees being tortured at Gherla prison by torturers of the Communist regime.
Location Gherla
Coordinates Coordinates: 47°1′12″N 23°54′0″E / 47.02000°N 23.90000°E / 47.02000; 23.90000
Status Operational
Security class Maximum
Population 15,000 (as of 1960s)
Opened October 20, 1785
Country Romania

Gherla prison is a penitentiary located in the Romanian city of Gherla. In Romanian slang the generic word for a prison is "gherlǎ", after the institution.

Location

The prison is located adjacent to the city of Gherla near the Someș River (called Szamos in Hungarian).

History

The basic structure came from the fortress of Gherla or "Szamos-uj-var" (equivalent to transliteration from Hungarian, meaning "New castle on the Szamos") built around 1540 by George Martinuzzi, archbishop, cardinal and Imperial Treasurer of the Habsburg Empire.

Through the Imperial Decree of Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor, dated October 20, 1785 this fortress was transformed into "Carcer Magni Principatus Transilvanie" (i.e.: The Major Prison of Transylvanian Principality).

Gherla prison has a very large underground area. During the 1960s it was reported that the prison was housing over 15,000 inmates.

Throughout its history under the Austrian Empire, then Austro-Hungarian Empire, Hungary and finally Romania the penitentiary also hosted various industrial activities.

Many Romanian military officers who had initially fought against the Soviet Army in World War II were locked into the Gherla Prison by the Communist regime after the end of the war.

Many of the Anti-Communist opposition figures spent jail time or disappeared forever into this prison.

Cemetery

Near the prison a large cemetery holds the bodies of many inmates, including Sándor Rózsa, a well-known local "Robin Hood".

Current use

The penitentiary is in service today as a "Maximum Security Penitentiary". It also houses a museum.

Sources

References

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