The town administers one village, Chiuruș (Hungarian: Csomakőrös). The village has a population of 451 and has an absolute SzékelyHungarian majority.
Before Orbaiszék merged with Sepsiszék and Kézdiszék to create Háromszék County, in 1876, Covasna was the capital village of Orbaiszék.
Name origin
There are several theories regarding the origin of the city's name, the most recognized one being that it originates from the Slavic kvas, which means "bitter", referring to the taste of the mineral water springs located in the city.[citation needed]
According to Szabó Gyula (1914–1984), some legends suggest that the name of Kovászna might have been the result of a fusion between the name of "Kó" and the word "vászon" (it means canvas in Hungarian), thus meaning "Kó's canvas". Theories suggest that the individual of "Kó" might have been a knight, a craftsman or even the last monarch of the Fairies Fortress.[citation needed]
Demographics
At the 2021 census, Covasna had a population of 9,208; of those, 60.34% were Hungarians and 31.14% were Romanians.[3] At the 2011 census, the town had 10,265 inhabitants, of which 7,549 or 66.4% were Hungarians and 3,672 or 32.3% were Romanians.
Demographic movement according to the censuses:
History
1548 – First mentioned as Kowazna.
1567 – Mentioned in a document, as a prestigious locality, having 61 registered homes.
1756 – Gets destroyed by conflagration.
1840 – Gets the right to hold its own market.
1880 – Covasna has flourished as a health resort since the 1880s.
1837, 1856, 1885 – The Pokolsár [hu] ( in Romanian: Balta Dracului; in English: Devil's Lake) mud volcano erupts.
The Hungarian explorer and linguist Sándor Kőrösi Csoma was born in Chiuruș/Csomakőrös in 1784. Kőrösi is widely seen as the founder of Tibetology, he was the compiler and author of the first Tibetan-English dictionary and grammar book. He died in Darjeeling, India in 1842.
A statue in his honour was erected in the centre of the village in 1972 and there is an exhibition in the cultural centre.