- Corund
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For the village in Satu Mare County, see Bogdand.
- For the character from The Worm Ouroboros, see The Worm Ouroboros#Characters.
Corund
Korond— Commune —
Coat of armsCoordinates: 46°28′0″N 25°11′0″E / 46.466667°N 25.183333°ECoordinates: 46°28′0″N 25°11′0″E / 46.466667°N 25.183333°E Country Romania County Harghita County Status Commune Government - Mayor Mihály Katona (Democratic Union of Hungarians in Romania) Area - Total 113.51 km2 (43.8 sq mi) Population (2002) - Total 6,180 - Density 54.44/km2 (141/sq mi) Ethnicity[1] - Hungarians 95.4% - Gypsies 4.2% Time zone EET (UTC+2) - Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3) Postal Code 537060 Area code(s) +40 266 Website www.korond.ro Corund (Hungarian: Korond, Hungarian pronunciation: [’korond] ) is a commune in Harghita County, Romania. It lies in the Székely Land, an ethno-cultural region in eastern Transylvania, and is the centre of the "Salt region" (Ţinutului Sării or Sóvidék). Corund is famous for its porcelain and pottery.
Contents
Component villages
The commune is composed of five villages:
In Romanian In Hungarian Atia Atyha Calonda Kalonda Corund Korond Fântâna Brazilor Fenyőkút Valea lui Pavel Pálpataka Governance
The village formed historically part of the Székely Land region of Transylvania province. It belonged to Udvarhelyszék, then, from 1876 until 1918 to the Udvarhely County in the Kingdom of Hungary. After WWI, by the terms of the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, it became part of Romania. As a result of the Second Vienna Award, it belonged again to Hungary between 1940 and 1944. After WWII, it came under Romanian administration and became part of Romania in 1947. Between 1952 and 1960, it formed part of the Hungarian Autonomous Province, then, of the Mureş-Hungarian Autonomous Province until it was abolished in 1968. Since then, the commune has been part of Harghita County.
Demographics
The commune has an absolute Székely (Hungarian) majority. According to the 2002 census it has a population of 6,180 of which 95.4% or 5,896 are ethnic Hungarians.
Gallery
References
- ^ Romanian Census 2002; retrieved on May 6, 2010
Harghita County, Romania Cities Miercurea-Ciuc (county seat) · Gheorgheni · Italic text Odorheiu Secuiesc · Topliţa
Towns Băile Tuşnad · Bălan · Borsec · Cristuru Secuiesc · Vlăhiţa
Communes Atid · Avrămeşti · Bilbor · Brădeşti · Căpâlniţa · Cârţa · Ciceu · Ciucsângeorgiu · Ciumani · Corbu · Corund · Cozmeni · Dăneşti · Dârjiu · Dealu · Ditrău · Feliceni · Frumoasa · Gălăuţaş · Joseni · Lăzarea · Leliceni · Lueta · Lunca de Jos · Lunca de Sus · Lupeni · Mădăraş · Mărtiniş · Mereşti · Mihăileni · Mugeni · Ocland · Păuleni-Ciuc · Plăieşii de Jos · Porumbeni · Praid · Racu · Remetea · Săcel · Sâncrăieni · Sândominic · Sânmartin · Sânsimion · Sântimbru · Sărmaş · Satu Mare · Secuieni · Siculeni · Şimoneşti · Subcetate · Suseni · Tomeşti · Tulgheş · Tuşnad · Ulieş · Vărşag · Voşlăbeni · Zetea
Categories:- Communes in Harghita County
- Székely communities
- Harghita County geography stubs
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