Encyclopedia

Baile Herculane

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Băile Herculane

 

a balneological health resort in Rumania, 40 km north of Turnu Severin. The climate is mild, with Mediterranean elements. The summers are very warm (average July temperature, 22.5° C), and the winters are mild (average January temperature, -0.9° C); annual precipitation is about 800 mm. Therapeutic resources include chloride-sodium-calcium thermal mineral springs (temperature, 24°-50° C), with 46 g/m3 or g/l hydrogen sulfide. These waters are used for bathing, inhalation, and irrigation; the water of springs with a low hydrogen sulfide content is used for drinking. The resort treats patients with motor-supportive and peripheral nervous disorders, gynecological diseases, and diseases of the gastrointestinal tract and the upper respiratory tract, as well as persons with chronic poisoning from heavy metals. There are sanatoriums, bathhouses, boarding houses, hotels, and athletic installations.

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Almost two millennia later, the same spa, Baile Herculane, continues to welcome its tourists.
Actually, the Romans visited us to use the mineral waters from the west part of the country (Baile Herculane or Sangeorz Bai), and Napoleon III used to send his people to bring to him mineral waters from Calimanesti-Caciulata, because he thought that this waters were magical.
The most important health resorts are Baile Felix, Baile Herculane, Calimanesti-Caciulata, Eforie Nord, Sovata, Sangeorz Bai, Vatra Dornei, Covasna, Baile Tusnad, Mangalia etc.
(MGAB); 1[female] Caras-Severin: Baile Herculane (44[degrees]52'00"N, 22[degrees]26'05"E) hand collecting, 10 May 2007, Ioan Duma leg.
Leaving the boat at Orsova, an excursion visits the Romanian resort spa at Baile Herculane where the present 19th century medicinal baths were built next to the early Roman site.
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