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・ HID Manager
・ Hida
・ Hida (region)
・ Hida (surname)
・ Hida (train)
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・ Hida Minzoku Mura Folk Village
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Hida, Sălaj
・ Hida-class patrol vessel
・ Hida-Furukawa Station
・ Hida-Hagiwara Station
・ Hida-Hosoe Station
・ Hida-Ichinomiya Station
・ Hida-Kanayama Station
・ Hida-Kisogawa Quasi-National Park
・ Hida-Kokufu Station
・ Hida-Miyada Station
・ Hida-Osaka Station
・ Hida-Takayama Domain
・ Hidaard
・ Hidabu Abote
・ Hidaj


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Hida, Sălaj : ウィキペディア英語版
Hida, Sălaj

Hida ((ハンガリー語:Hidalmás); (イディッシュ語:הידאלמאש ''(Hidalmash)'')) is a commune located in Sălaj County, Romania. It is composed of eight villages: Baica (''Bányika''), Hida, Miluani (''Milvány''), Păduriş (''Tyikló''), Racâş (''Almásrákos''), Sânpetru Almaşului (''Füzesszentpéter''), Stupini (''Füzes'') and Trestia (''Komlósújfalu'').
==Miluani==
The village of Miluani had 112 inhabitants in 2002 and is famous for its grain and sunflower production.
The settlement was first mentioned in Hungarian documents in 1320 as ''Miluad''. From the 13th century the area was property of the Hungarian Zsombor clan. In the 14th century it was donated to the Elefánthy family. A Romanian Orthodox church was built in the 16th century and a new one in 1920. Miluani is the filia of the Roman Catholic parish of Chidea; traditionally its vicars were Franciscans until 1897. Local Unitarians also belongs to Chidea. Miluani was also a center of the Greek-Catholic arch-deaconry. ()
Miluani historically was part of Transylvania within the Kingdom of Hungary. It belonged to Doboka County until 1876, when it was incorporated into Kolozs county. In 1920, after World War I and the Treaty of Trianon, the village, as part of Transylvania, was handed over to Romania.
In 1940, by the Second Vienna Arbitration, it was again annexed by Hungary. In 1944 ethnic Romanian rebels of Miluani burnt up the Hungarian Reformed Church's archive in Hida. ()
The Jewish population of Hidalmás (26.0% in 1910) was deported to Auschwitz by the Hungarian government in May 1944.

Among those who have resided in the village include Sándor Kendi, a Hungarian magnate and József Nyírő, a Hungarian writer and politician, and vicar in Miluani.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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