Sărmașu


title: "Sărmașu" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["populated-places-in-mureș-county", "localities-in-transylvania", "towns-in-romania"] topic_path: "general/populated-places-in-mures-county" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sărmașu" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox Romanian subdivision"]

FieldValue
typetown
countyMureș
official_nameSărmașu
image_shieldROU MS Sarmasu CoA.png
image_skylineWooden church sarmasu.jpg
image_captionWooden church in Sărmașu
image_mapSarmasu jud Mures.png
map_captionLocation in Mureș County
leader_nameValer Botezan
leader_term2024–2028
leader_partyPSD
coordinates
elevation347
elevation_max500
area_total61.75
population_totalauto
postal_code547515
area_code(+40) 02 65
website
::

|type = town |county = Mureș |official_name = Sărmașu |image_flag = |image_shield = ROU MS Sarmasu CoA.png |image_skyline = Wooden church sarmasu.jpg |image_caption = Wooden church in Sărmașu |image_location = |image_map = Sarmasu jud Mures.png |map_caption = Location in Mureș County |leader_name = Valer Botezan |leader_term = 2024–2028 |leader_party = PSD |coordinates = |elevation = 347 |elevation_min = |elevation_max = 500 |area_total = 61.75 |area_footnotes = |population_as_of = |population_total = auto |population_footnotes = |postal_code = 547515 |area_code = (+40) 02 65 |website = Sărmașu (; Hungarian pronunciation: ) is a town in Mureș County, central Transylvania, Romania. It administers seven villages: Balda (Báld), Larga (Lárga), Moruț (Marocháza), Sărmășel (Kissármás), Sărmășel-Gară (Bánffytanya), Titiana (Titiána), and Vișinelu (Csehtelke).

Geography

The town lies in the Transylvanian Plain, at an altitude of 347 m, on the banks of the rivers Pârâul de Câmpie and Frata. It is located in the western part of Mureș County, 47 km northwest of the county seat, Târgu Mureș, on the border with Cluj and Bistrița-Năsăud counties.

Sărmașu is bordered to the north by Budești, Bistrița-Năsăud; to the east by Sânpetru de Câmpie and to the southeast by Miheșu de Câmpie (both in Mureș County); to the west by Cămărașu and to the northwest by Mociu (both in Cluj County).

Sărmășel-Gară village is crossed by national road , which connects it to Cluj-Napoca, 53 km to the west, and to Reghin, 48 km to the east. The town has two train stations ( and Sărmășel), both serving the CFR Line 405, which starts in Deda, Mureș and ends in Ocna Mureș, Alba County.

History

The town is the site of the Sărmașu massacre, which occurred between 5 September and 10 October 1944, when Sărmașu came under the occupation of the Nazi-aligned Hungarian troops. During this period, Hungarian gendarmes and members of the Hungarian National Guard killed 126 local Jews (out of 142 who were living in the city at the time), as well as 39 Romanians, the latter primarily prisoners of war captured during the Battle of Turda.

Demographics

|source = Census data | 1850 | 2274 | 1880 | 2079 | 1900 | 3661 | 1910 | 4390 | 1930 | 5918 | 1956 | 8204 | 1977 | 8439 | 1992 | 7206 | 2002 | 7493 | 2011 | 6833 | 2021 | 6186

At the 2021 census, Sărmașu had a population of 6,186, of which 63.32% were Romanians, 17.73% Hungarians, and 12.38% Roma. According to the 2011 census, the town had 6,833 inhabitants, divided among the following ethnic groups: Romanians (67.24%), Hungarians (22.36%), and Roma (10.2%).

The Sărmașel gas field

On the present-day territory of Romania, the first natural gas deposit was discovered in 1909, in Sărmășel (then in Austria-Hungary). The Sărmașel gas field was developed by Romgaz. The first gas production was used to power the steam boilers in Sărmășel and the gas lighting of the alleys in Bazna resort. In 1914 the first gas pipe was finished, spanning from Sărmășel to Turda and on to Ocna Mureș, with a length of 55 km and 153 mm diameter; in 1916, Turda became the first city in Europe to have public street lights fueled by natural gas. In 1927 the first natural gas compression station in Europe was built in Sărmășel.

Natives

References

|File:RO MS Sarmasu 63.jpg|Sărmașu |File:RO MS Sarmasel Gara church 1.jpg|Church in Sărmășel-Gară |File:RO MS Visinelu 24.jpg|Wooden church in Vișinelu |File:Saramas cemetery - בית עלמין ליד סרמאשו.JPG|Graves of those killed in the Sărmașu massacre

References

  1. "Results of the 2024 local elections". Central Electoral Bureau.
  2. (19 October 2008). "Crimă colectivă cu autori cunoscuți". Gazeta de Cluj.
  3. (31 May 2023). "Populația rezidentă după grupa de vârstă, pe județe și municipii, orașe, comune, la 1 decembrie 2021". [[National Institute of Statistics (Romania).
  4. [http://www.mures.insse.ro/phpfiles/COMUNICAT_DATE_PROVIZORII_RPL_2011_judetul_MURES.pdf 2011 census data] {{Webarchive. link. (2013-11-26)
  5. (June 2018). "Industrial activities in Mureș County". Analele Universității din Oradea, Seria Geografie.
  6. "100 de ani de la descoperirea si utilizarea gazelor naturale pe teritoriul României". Asociația Generală a Inginerilor din România.

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populated-places-in-mureș-countylocalities-in-transylvaniatowns-in-romania