1952 Regional Championship
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1952 Regional Championship
The 1952 Regional Championship was the 11th season of the Regional Championship, 2nd as the third tier of Romanian football. Thirty-two teams was participate at the promotion play-off to 1953 Divizia B, twenty-eight regional champions and four city champions teams (Galați, București, Timișoara and Stalin), one from each geographical group. The thirty-two teams were divided into four groups of eight each, based on geographical criteria. The play-off was played in eliminatory rounds over two-legs and the fixtures ending in a tie was replayed in a third game on neutral grounds. The winners of each groups were promoted. However, after the end of the season, the Romanian Football Federation decided to increase the number of promoted teams, as the two series of the second division was expanded from 12 to 16, and the third round losers were promoted as well. Regional championships ;East * Bacău (BC) * Bârlad (BD) * Botoșani (BT) * Galați (GL) * Iași (IS) * Putna ( ...
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Liga IV
Liga IV is the fourth level of the Romanian football league system and is run in all 41 counties and in the Municipality of Bucharest. It was known as the Regional Championship, County Championship, Divizia C – County Phase and Divizia D. Its name was changed into Liga IV before the start of the 2006–07 season. History Football in Romania has its origins in 1909, when the country's first football competition was founded. In the beginning, matches were played in a cup-style system, with participating teams primarily coming from the Muntenia region, especially from Bucharest and Ploiești. In the 1920–21 season, in addition to the Harwester Cup, the Jean Luca P. Niculescu Cup, and the Maior Zorileanu Cup in Bucharest, district championships were also held in Timișoara/Arad, Cluj, Oradea, Târgu Mureș, and Cernăuți. For unclear reasons, however, no national tournament was held between the district champions. Starting with the 1921–22 season, the Football Associatio ...
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Putna Region
Putna can refer to the following places in Romania: * Putna, Suceava, a commune in Suceava County * Putna, a village in Prigor Commune, Caraș-Severin County * Putna, a village in Bolotești Commune, Vrancea County * Putna Seacă, a village in Garoafa Commune, Vrancea County * Putna Monastery, in Suceava County * Putna County, a former county in the interwar Romania, now part of Vrancea County * Putna (Bistricioara), tributary of the Bistricioara (Siret basin) in Harghita County * Putna (Moldova), tributary of the Moldova in Suceava County * Putna, another name for the river Prigor in Caraș-Severin County * Putna (Siret) The Putna is a right tributary of the river Siret in Vrancea County in Romania, in the historical region of Moldavia. It discharges into the Siret in Călienii Noi, near Vulturu.
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Severin Region
Severin, Séverin or Severinus may refer to: People * Severin (given name) * Severin (surname) Places * Caraș-Severin County, a county in Romania * Severin County, a defunct county in Romania that was merged into the present Caraş-Severin County * Drobeta-Turnu Severin, a city in Romania, capital of the Mehedinţi County * Severin, Bjelovar-Bilogora County, Croatia * Severin na Kupi, Primorje-Gorski Kotar County, Croatia * Severin, Germany, a village and former municipality in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany * Banate of Severin, a territory in the Kingdom of Hungary Other * Severin Elektro GmbH, a German electric appliance manufacturer * Severin Training Center, a subsidiary of the Danish cooperative FDB * Severin Films, an American film production and distribution company See also

* Saint Severin (other) * Severian (other) * Severina (other) * Severine (other) * Severino, an Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese variant of the name, sometime ...
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Hunedoara Region
Hunedoara (; ; ) is a municipiu, city in Hunedoara County, Transylvania, Romania. It is located in southwestern Transylvania near the Poiana Ruscă Mountains, and administers five villages: Boș (''Bós''), Groș (''Grós''), Hășdat (''Hosdát''; ''Hochstätten''), Peștișu Mare (''Alpestes''), and Răcăștia (''Rákosd''). The city includes the most important Gothic architecture, Gothic-style secular building in Transylvania: the Hunyad Castle, which is closely connected with the Hunyadi family. The castle was destroyed by fire five times, but underwent many reconstructions from Austro-Hungarian and later Romanian authorities. Besides the castle, the town developed as a production center for iron and a market for the mountain regions nearby. During the 20th century, Hunedoara's population increased to 86,000 inhabitants. The city contained Hunedoara steel works, the largest steel works in Romania (until Galați took the lead), but activity gradually diminished after the Roma ...
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Gorj Region
Gorj County () is a county () of Romania, in Oltenia, with its capital city at Târgu Jiu. ''Gorj'' comes from the Slavic ''Gornji'' Jiu (“upper Jiu”), in contrast with Dolnji (“lower Jiu”). Demographics At the 2011 census, the county had a population of 334,238 and its population density was . * Romanians – over 98% * Roma, others – 2% At the 2021 census, Gorj County had a population of 314,685. Geography Gorj County has a total area of . The North side of the county consists of various mountains from the Southern Carpathians group. In the West there are the Vâlcan Mountains, and in the East there are the Parâng Mountains and the Negoveanu Mountains. The two groups are split by the Jiu River. To the South, the heights decrease through the hills to a high plain at the Western end of the Wallachian Plain. The main river, which collects all the smaller rivers, is the Jiu River; its tributaries include the Tismana, Gilort, and Motru rivers. Neighbours * V ...
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Dolj Region
''Regiunea'' Dolj (Dolj Region) was one of the newly established (in 1950) administrative divisions of the People's Republic of Romania, copied after the Soviet style of territorial organisation. History The capital of the region was Craiova, and its territory comprised what is today Dolj County. In 1952 it merged with Gorj Region to form the Craiova Region. Neighbours Dolj Region had as neighbours: *East: Teleorman Region and Argeș Region. *South: People's Republic of Bulgaria. *West: People's Republic of Bulgaria and Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia *North: Gorj Region and Vâlcea Region. Raions Dolj Region comprised the following raion A raion (also spelt rayon) is a type of administrative unit of several post-Soviet states. The term is used for both a type of subnational entity and a division of a city. The word is from the French (meaning 'honeycomb, department'), and is c ...s: Craiova, Cujmir, Plenița, Calfat, Băilești, Segarcea, Gura Jiului, Corabia, ...
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Arad Region
Arad Region (Regiunea Arad) was one of the newly established (in 1950) administrative divisions of the People's Republic of Romania, copied after the Soviet style of territorial organisation. It existed until 1956, when its territory was divided between the Timișoara Region and Oradea Region. History The capital of the region was Arad, and its territory comprised an area only a bit larger than the nowadays Arad County. Initially the region didn't comprise the area of Sânnicolau Mare which it was attributed by the 1952 administrative reorganisation. Neighbors Arad region had as neighbors: *1950–1952: East: Hunedoara Region; South: Timișoara Region; West: Hungarian People's Republic; North: Cluj Region and Bihor Region. *1952–1956: East: Hunedoara Region; South: Timișoara Region; West: Hungarian People's Republic The Hungarian People's Republic (HPR) was a landlocked country in Central Europe from its formation on 20 August 1949 until the establishment ...
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Teleorman Region
Teleorman may refer to: * Teleorman County, a county of Romania * Teleorman (river), a river in southern Romania * The ''Teleorman'', a Romanian navy longboat lost in the Sinking of the Teleorman See also * Diocese of Alexandria and Teleorman * Teleormanu, a village in Mârzănești, Romania {{disambiguation, geo ...
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Ploiești Region
Ploiești ( , , ), formerly spelled Ploești, is a city and county seat in Prahova County, Romania. Part of the historical region of Muntenia, it is located north of Bucharest. The area of Ploiești is around , and it borders the Blejoi commune in the north, Bărcănești and Brazi communes in the south, Târgșoru Vechi commune in the west, and Bucov and Berceni communes in the east. According to the 2021 census, Ploiești is the tenth most populous city in the country with a population of 180,540. The city grew beginning with the 17th century on an estate bought by ruler Michael the Brave from the local landlords, gradually replacing nearby Wallachian fairs of Târgșor, Gherghița, and Bucov. Its development was accelerated by heavy industrialisation during the mid-19th century, with the world's first large-scale petroleum refinery being opened between 1856 and 1857. Following massive exploitation of the oil deposits in the area, Ploiești earned the nickname of "the Capi ...
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Ialomița Region
Ialomița may refer to: * Ialomița County, Romania * Ialomița (river) The Ialomița ( ) is a river of Southern Romania. It rises from the Bucegi Mountains in the Carpathians. It discharges into the Borcea branch of the Danube in Giurgeni.
, Romania


See also

*
Ialomicioara River (other) {{geodis ...
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Constanța Region
''Regiunea'' Constanța (Constanța Region) was one of the 1950 new administrative Soviet-style Regions of the RPR, divisions of the Communist Romania, People's Republic of Romania. History The seat of the region was Constanța, and at first, its territory comprised an area a bit larger than the nowadays Constanța County. In 1952, it included the Fetești raion of the dissolved Regiunea Ialomița, Ialomița region, that was later (1960) incorporated into the Regiunea București, București region. In 1960 it merged with the South-Eastern raions of the Regiunea Galați, Galați region to form Dobrogea region, comprising the area of the nowadays Constanța County, Constanța and Tulcea County, Tulcea counties (Northern Dobruja). Neighbors Constanța region had as neighbors: * 1950–1952: East: Black Sea, the Black Sea; South: People's Republic of Bulgaria; West: Regiunea Ialomița, Ialomița region; North: Regiunea Galați, Galați region; * 1952–1960: East: Black Sea, the Bla ...
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