RRI Live!

Listen to Radio Romania International Live

The 23 August Works

The 23 August Works were some of the largest industrial platforms of socialist Romania.

The History Show
The History Show

, 15.09.2025, 12:00

The newly installed communist regime in Romania in the wake of WWII issued a law in 1948, no. 119 of 11th June to nationalise all industrial, banking, insurance, mining and transport enterprises. In other words, the state was confiscating the means of production. Some of the factories seized at the time included the factories founded by the industrialist Nicolae Malaxa at the beginning of the 1920’s. They would be renamed the 23 August Works and, together with anther large factory, Republica, located in the south-east of Bucharest, would form one of biggest industrial platforms of socialist Romania. For almost 80 years, the 23 August Works made rolling stock, engines and armament parts.

Engineer Pamfil Iliescu joined the 23 August Works in 1958. Interviewed by Radio Romania’s Oral History Centre in 2002, he recalled that at the end of the 1950s the factories were still operating thanks to the skill of the older workers:

“The director of 23 August Works was someone called Putinica, a former worker himself. He was a very smart guy and very kind. He had special relations with Prime Minister Chivu Stoica, maybe they were related, and he pursued a policy that was good for the factory. He decided to retain some of the old specialists in management positions. For example, even the technical director was a former owner of the enterprise, whom he kept on because he was really a good organiser and good at his job. He also kept on engineers trained during Malaxa’s time”

The economic ideology of communism was based, from its very beginnings, on copying products from industrialized capitalist countries. Pamfil Iliescu explains:

“At that time, there was an intense activity of assimilating new products. It was about assimilating the manufacture of compressors under an English license and the problem of assimilating new engines arose. The engines had been made since the war after a Hungarian model which was itself a copy of a German one. Starting from 1963 or 1964, we began buying the licenses, instead of copying them. Copying meant you took an engine, dismantled it, analysed it, saw how you could make each component and that was it. But you couldn’t export it.”

But it needed much more than that for a big factory to become profitable. Pamfil Iliescu:

“When the Romanian market opened itself to exports, everything had to be regulated. So we had to buy foreign licences. We bought the licence for compressors made in England and talks began to buy a licence for the engines. Other licences referred to hydraulic parts for engines from an Austrian company. This allowed our products to be exported. The locomotives were made initially after the Russian model. Then we began negotiations with the Swiss. The carriages were Russian-made. We had our own tradition of making carriages, but it was a combination with the SovRoms, joint Soviet-Romanian enterprises, from which we could copy without restrictions. A licence was renewed for breakage parts, the engines were bought from the Germans following direct negotiations. They only gave us the right to make and design them. For example, the engines for tanks were assimilated without a licence. The Germans kept coming to check up on us, they were suspecting something. Some of the specific parts for tank engines we had assimilated clandestinely, as it were.”

The crisis undergone by the regime also had an effect on the running of the works during the big crisis of the 1980s. Pamfil Iliescu:

“The sectors were supposed to reach a certain size, but that simply couldn’t be achieved in some cases. It became clear, for example, that 23 August Works was capable of making the main parts, but not the small parts, which it couldn’t even supply 35% of the demand. That was the situation at a given time. It would never work and never did. The target was to produce 15,000 engines a year, but we never made more than 12,000, that was the peak.”

Renamed Faur after the fall of communism in 1989, the factory went downwards and was eventually dismantled. Stretching over a surface area of 90 hectares, industrial halls, labs, outbuildings and other facilities are awaiting better times.

Tags:
Union Day (Photo: facebook.com/mapn.ro)
The History Show Monday, 16 February 2026

Union of Romanians

The union of the Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia on January 24, 1859, was one of the three great moments of Romanian history in the 19th...

Union of Romanians
History Show
The History Show Monday, 09 February 2026

Christian fellowship and survival in prison

The Romanian Church United with Rome, or the Greek Catholic Church, was established in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, during Austria’s...

Christian fellowship and survival in prison
History Show
The History Show Monday, 02 February 2026

Romania and Third World national liberation movements 

  The trends in international relations after World War II were decidedly oriented towards decolonisation and encouraging former colonies to...

Romania and Third World national liberation movements 
Радио NOREA
The History Show Monday, 26 January 2026

The war in Transnistria

The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 opened the way for the independence of all its former members, with the Republic of Moldova becoming an...

The war in Transnistria
The History Show Monday, 19 January 2026

The 1960s and the revival of the Romanian diplomatic service

After 1945, Romania entered a period of profound political, economic and social turmoil. Defeated in the war and occupied militarily, it was forced...

The 1960s and the revival of the Romanian diplomatic service
The History Show Monday, 29 December 2025

Women – The Enemy of the People

The expression “enemy of the people” entered Romanian public life with the establishment of the communist regime imposed by the Soviet army....

Women – The Enemy of the People
The History Show Monday, 22 December 2025

December 22, 1989 or the First Day

  After about a week of large-scale protests, which started on the evening of December 15, 1989, on December 22 the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime no...

December 22, 1989 or the First Day
The History Show Monday, 15 December 2025

Dennis Deletant and Romania’s history seen from Great Britain

The History Show: Dennis Deletant and Romania’s history seen from Great Britain Among the foreign historians who have studied the history of...

Dennis Deletant and Romania’s history seen from Great Britain

Partners

Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român Muzeul Național al Țăranului Român
Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS Liga Studentilor Romani din Strainatate - LSRS
Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online Modernism | The Leading Romanian Art Magazine Online
Institului European din România Institului European din România
Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti Institutul Francez din România – Bucureşti
Muzeul Național de Artă al României Muzeul Național de Artă al României
Le petit Journal Le petit Journal
Radio Prague International Radio Prague International
Muzeul Național de Istorie a României Muzeul Național de Istorie a României
ARCUB ARCUB
Radio Canada International Radio Canada International
Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti” Muzeul Național al Satului „Dimitrie Gusti”
SWI swissinfo.ch SWI swissinfo.ch
UBB Radio ONLINE UBB Radio ONLINE
Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl Strona główna - English Section - polskieradio.pl
creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti creart - Centrul de Creație Artă și Tradiție al Municipiului Bucuresti
italradio italradio
Institutul Confucius Institutul Confucius
BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți BUCPRESS - știri din Cernăuți

Affiliates

Euranet Plus Euranet Plus
AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters AIB | the trade association for international broadcasters
Digital Radio Mondiale Digital Radio Mondiale
News and current affairs from Germany and around the world News and current affairs from Germany and around the world
Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona Comunità radiotelevisiva italofona

Providers

RADIOCOM RADIOCOM
Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company Zeno Media - The Everything Audio Company