Ozun

Ozun (Hungarian: Uzon, Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈuzon]) is a commune in Covasna County, Transylvania, Romania composed of seven villages:

  • Bicfalău / Bikfalva
  • Lisnău / Lisznyó
  • Lisnău-Vale / Lisznyópatak
  • Lunca Ozunului / Vesszőstelep
  • Măgheruș / Sepsimagyarós
  • Ozun
  • Sântionlunca / Szentivánlaborfalva
Ozun

Uzon
Reformed church
Location in Covasna County
Ozun
Location in Romania
Coordinates: 45°48′N 25°51′E
Country Romania
CountyCovasna
Government
  MayorIstván Ráduly (UDMR)
Population
 (2011)[1]
4,430
Time zoneEET/EEST (UTC+2/+3)
Vehicle reg.CV
Websitewww.uzon.ro

Demographics

The commune has an absolute Székely Hungarian majority. According to the 2011 census, it has a population of 4,430 of which 82.71% or 3,664 are Hungarian, 11.6% or 514 are Romanian, 2.93% or 130 are Roma, and 0.11% or 5 are part of another ethnic group.[2]

History

It formed part of the Székely Land region of the historical Transylvania province. Until 1918, the village belonged to the Háromszék County of the Kingdom of Hungary. After the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, it became part of Romania.

Catholic Church
gollark: No, my issue is that it isn't very good charity.
gollark: I am fine with people using land for community things. I just don't think it makes much sense to randomly rent out land cheaply if you have an issue with local land pricing.
gollark: I don't even know what economic system would actually work at this point but some markety thing seems to be the best available in a lot of domains.
gollark: Convince other people with money to give you land?
gollark: It sounds like one of those "technically accurate, but not very useful except maybe in a really specific context" definitions.

References

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