Ileanda


title: "Ileanda" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["communes-in-sălaj-county", "localities-in-transylvania"] topic_path: "general/communes-in-salaj-county" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ileanda" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox Romanian subdivision"]

FieldValue
typecommune
countySălaj
population_totalauto
map_captionLocation in Sălaj County
nameIleanda
image_mapIleanda jud Salaj.png
image_skylineBiserica din Ileanda.jpg
image_captionWooden Church in Ileanda
leader_nameDănuț-Ioan Pop
leader_partyPNL
leader_term2020–2024
area_total_km287.59
coordinates
website
::

|type = commune |county = Sălaj |population_total = auto |map_caption = Location in Sălaj County |name = Ileanda |image_map = Ileanda jud Salaj.png |image_skyline = Biserica din Ileanda.jpg |image_caption = Wooden Church in Ileanda |leader_name = Dănuț-Ioan Pop |leader_party = PNL |leader_term = 2020–2024 |area_total_km2 = 87.59 |coordinates = |website = Ileanda () is a commune located in Sălaj County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of thirteen villages: Bizușa-Băi (Büdöspataka), Bârsăuța (Kisborszó), Dăbiceni (Kisdoboka), Dolheni (Ilondapatak), Ileanda, Luminișu (Szakadás), Măleni (Kisilonda), Negreni (Konkolyfalva), Perii Vadului (Révkörtvélyes), Podișu (Csömény), Răstoci (Hosszúrév), Rogna (Kornislaka) and Șasa (Sasfalu).

History

Human settlement began in Dacian times.

In the 1830s, Jews began to arrive in Ileanda, and by the end of the century, the community ran nearly all commerce and small industry in the village and its surroundings. In the interwar period, there was a yeshiva with 30 to 40 students, while Zionist activity started in the 1920s. In 1930, there were 308 Jews or 26% of the population. In June 1942, 11 Jews were drafted into labor battalions in Reichskommissariat Ukraine, of whom two survived. In May 1944, 900 Jews were sent by the authorities of the Kingdom of Hungary to the Dej ghetto and then to the Auschwitz concentration camp. József Paneth, who became the local rabbi in 1926, escaped deportation to Romania with his family. Following World War II, he served the surviving Jews until the community dispersed in 1950.

Sights

  • Wooden Church in Ileanda, built in the 17th century, historic monument
  • Wooden Church in Negreni, built in the 17th century, historic monument
  • Wooden Church in Răstoci, built in the 19th century (1828), historic monument
  • Wooden Church in Podișu, built in the 18th century, historic monument
  • Forest “La Castani”, Natural reserve
  • Măgurici Cave, Natural reserve

References

Image gallery

File:Biserica de lemn din Negreni101.jpg|Wooden Church in Negreni File:Biserica din Rastoci.jpg|Wooden Church in Răstoci File:Biserica de lemn din Podisu101.jpg|Wooden Church in Podişu

References

  1. "Results of the 2020 local elections". Central Electoral Bureau.
  2. {{in lang. ro [http://www.ileanda.ro/Istoric.html "Short history"] at the Ileanda Town Hall site; accessed October 25, 2013
  3. {{in lang. ro [http://www.mmhtn.org/ghetouri.php "Ghettoes"] at the [[Northern Transylvania Holocaust Memorial Museum]] site; accessed October 25, 2013
  4. Shmuel Spector, Geoffrey Wigoder (eds.), "Ileanda" in ''The Encyclopedia of Jewish Life Before and During the Holocaust: A-J'', p.544-545. NYU Press, 2001, {{ISBN. 0814793762
  5. [http://www.welcometoromania.ro/DN1h/DN1h_Negreni_Biserica_lemn_r.htm welcometoromania.ro - Wooden Church in Negreni, Sălaj County], retrieved on May 17, 2012
  6. [http://www.welcometoromania.ro/DN1h/DN1h_Rastoci_Biserica_lemn_r.htm welcometoromania - Wooden Church in Răstoci, Sălaj County], retrieved on May 17, 2012

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communes-in-sălaj-countylocalities-in-transylvania