6 min read
Published on: Mar 10, 2023
Last updated on: Aug 13, 2025
In Romanian culture, "Curva Veche" is rarely used to describe a place; instead, it is a sharp social label.
: It is frequently used to describe a "seasoned" or "slippery" politician who has survived multiple regimes through cunning and shifting loyalties (e.g., "a veteran of the political beltway").
: The phrase evokes the atmosphere of Mateiu Caragiale's famous novel, Craii de Curtea-Veche ( The Kings of the Old Court ), which depicts a decadent, twilight world of noblemen and rogues in old Bucharest.
: Originally a defensive bulwark against the Ottoman Empire, it was expanded by later rulers like Mircea Ciobanul and Constantin Brâncoveanu , who added elegant marble staircases and columns. The Cultural Metaphor: "Curva Veche"
: The term has also been popularized in modern folk and party music (Manele), appearing in titles and lyrics by artists like Sorinel de la Plopeni as a trope for a treacherous or worldly woman. Visiting the Real Site
: It was established as a fortress and residence by Vlad III Dracula (Vlad the Impaler) in 1459.
: The Curtea Veche Church (Saint Anthony’s), built in 1559, remains the oldest religious building in Bucharest still in its original form. Expand map Situația din Iran, săptămâna a IV-a - Romania Military
: A document signed here in 1459 is the first official mention of the name "Bucharest," making Vlad the Impaler the city's symbolic founder.
In Romanian culture, "Curva Veche" is rarely used to describe a place; instead, it is a sharp social label.
: It is frequently used to describe a "seasoned" or "slippery" politician who has survived multiple regimes through cunning and shifting loyalties (e.g., "a veteran of the political beltway").
: The phrase evokes the atmosphere of Mateiu Caragiale's famous novel, Craii de Curtea-Veche ( The Kings of the Old Court ), which depicts a decadent, twilight world of noblemen and rogues in old Bucharest.
: Originally a defensive bulwark against the Ottoman Empire, it was expanded by later rulers like Mircea Ciobanul and Constantin Brâncoveanu , who added elegant marble staircases and columns. The Cultural Metaphor: "Curva Veche"
: The term has also been popularized in modern folk and party music (Manele), appearing in titles and lyrics by artists like Sorinel de la Plopeni as a trope for a treacherous or worldly woman. Visiting the Real Site
: It was established as a fortress and residence by Vlad III Dracula (Vlad the Impaler) in 1459.
: The Curtea Veche Church (Saint Anthony’s), built in 1559, remains the oldest religious building in Bucharest still in its original form. Expand map Situația din Iran, săptămâna a IV-a - Romania Military
: A document signed here in 1459 is the first official mention of the name "Bucharest," making Vlad the Impaler the city's symbolic founder.