The Traditional Fishing Village of Tulcea
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About
Located on the edge of Tulcea, on the road toward Malcoci (in the Mahmudia–Murighiol direction), the Fishing Village Museum of Tulcea covers about 3 hectares and includes traditional houses, a village buffet, a fish-processing shed (cherhana), windmills, an information center, and various other buildings that form a organized open-air thematic park.
The three main alleys attempt to recreate the Danube’s branches, with representative buildings from delta villages placed along each. Each house is decorated in the style of the village it represents and displays an “identity card” panel in Romanian and English at the entrance, where visitors and locals can learn the village’s location, how to get there, what is characteristic for the place, what the locals do for a living, and other specific information when available. For example, the panel at the Periprava House notes the village’s grim past, where thousands were exterminated under the communists, aided by the community’s high degree of isolation. Alongside Periprava are the houses of Ceatalchioi, Chilia, Jurilovca, Mila 23, Crișan, Sulina, Sfântu Gheorghe, Murighiol, and Letea.
Admission fees are modest: 10 lei for adults, 5 lei for children up to 14, and free for children under 6. Especially in spring and summer, the site hosts a range of events, from painting workshops to themed workshops, bridal photo sessions, and various festivals (Scrumbii de Rusalii, Delta ART Camp, etc.).