Banat 2028
Banat is a historic cross-border region in southeastern Europe, today shared between Romania, Serbia, and Hungary. Romanian Banat, comprising the counties of Timiș, Caraș-Severin, and Arad, stretches between the Western Plain, the Banat Mountains, and the Danube Gorge, anchored by vibrant urban centres such as Timișoara (European Capital of Culture 2023), Arad, and Reșița. Covering nearly 25,000 km² and home to over 1.3 million inhabitants, it combines fertile lowlands, hilly vineyards (Recaș, Buziaș, Miniș), beech forests, karst landscapes, and the mighty Danube corridor.
Culturally, Banat is one of Europe’s most diverse mosaics. Romanians, Hungarians, Germans (Banat Swabians), Serbs, Bulgarians, Croats, Slovaks, Czechs, Jews, Italians, and others have lived side by side for centuries. Shaped by Byzantine, Ottoman, and Habsburg legacies, it became a laboratory of coexistence, multilingualism, and civic spirit, evident in its cuisine, festivals, architecture, and traditions.
Today, Banat blends agricultural strength, industrial innovation, and cultural creativity, a welcoming European region where heritage, multiculturalism, and gastronomy meet as one shared table.


















