Jurilovca


Jurilovca is a commune in Tulcea County, Northern Dobruja, Romania. It is composed of three villages: Jurilovca, Vișina, and Sălcioara.
It was founded by Lipovans at the beginning of the 19th century; the first documentary attestation is from 1826. Although at its beginnings it was a small village, the settlement grew and become, at the end of the 19th century, an important fishing centre in Danube Delta area. Nowadays it has the biggest community of fishermen in Romania, and it has the most modern fish processing factory in the country and Eastern Europe.
Jurilovca is also a tourist center. At about 15 km across the Lake Golovița is Gura Portiței, a beach resort at Black Sea. You can reach there by little vessel and by boat. Other tourist attractions are Argamum Citadel and Cape Doloșman. The entire area is a part of Danube Delta Biosphere Reservation.

Demographics

At the 2011 census, Jurilovca had 3,935 inhabitants; 60.7% were Romanians and 38.8% Russian Lipovans. At the 2021 census, the commune had a population of 3,694; of those, 52.9% were Romanians and 39.66% Lipovans.
The Lipovans are Russians by ethnicity and Old Believers Orthodox by confession. This confession is the result of Nikonite Reform. In 1652, Nikon, the Patriarch of Russian Orthodox Church, initiated a religious reform which had in view adaptation of Russian Church at the rest of the Orthodox Churches, in fact a formal reform. The result was the division of Russian society in two: Nikonites, those who accepted the Reform, and Starovers, those who did not accept the Reform. The last ones, being chased, emigrated outside Russia, a part of them arriving on Romanian territory, north of Moldavia and Dobruja.

Natives