Ivanda
Ivanda is a village in Giulvăz, Timiș County and has about 539 residents. Ivanda is situated nearby to the village Sânmartinu Sârbesc, as well as near Iohanisfeld.| Tap on a place to explore it |
- Type: Village with 539 residents
- Description: village in Giulvăz, Timiș County, Romania
- Also known as: “Iwanda”
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Giulvăz and Foeni.
Giulvăz
Village
Photo: Andrei Stroe, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Giulvăz is a village, which is situated 4 km southeast of Ivanda.
Foeni
Village
Photo: Radufan, Public domain.
Foeni is a village, which is situated 9 km southwest of Ivanda.
Cebza
Village
Photo: Radufan, Public domain.
Cebza is a village, which is situated 10 km east of Ivanda.
Ivanda
- Category: locality
- Location: Giulvăz, Timiș County, Romania, Balkans, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
45.56578° or 45° 33′ 57″ northLongitude
20.94172° or 20° 56′ 30″ eastPopulation
539Elevation
76 metres (249 feet)Open location code
8GQ2HW8R+8MOpenStreetMap ID
node 463256575OpenStreetMap feature
place=villageGeoNames ID
675435Wikidata ID
Q18897
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, and Wikimedia Commons.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Ivanda from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Achinese to Zulu—“Ivanda” goes by many names.
- Achinese: “Ivanda”
- Afar: “Ivanda”
- Afrikaans: “Ivanda”
- Albanian: “Ivanda”
- Aragonese: “Ivanda”
- Arpitan: “Ivanda”
- Asturian: “Ivanda”
- Atayal: “Ivanda”
- Atikamekw: “Ivanda”
- Aymara: “Ivanda”
- Azerbaijani: “Ivanda”
- Bambara: “Ivanda”
- Banjar: “Ivanda”
- Basque: “Ivanda”
- Bavarian: “Ivanda”
- Bislama: “Ivanda”
- Breton: “Ivanda”
- Bulgarian: “Иванда”
- Cajun French: “Ivanda”
- Catalan: “Ivanda”
- Cebuano: “Ivanda”
- Chamorro: “Ivanda”
- Chavacano: “Ivanda”
- Chechen: “Иванда”
- Cheyenne: “Ivanda”
- Choctaw: “Ivanda”
- Cornish: “Ivanda”
- Corsican: “Ivanda”
- Creek: “Ivanda”
- Crimean Tatar: “Ivanda”
- Czech: “Ivanda”
- Danish: “Ivanda”
- Dinka: “Ivanda”
- Dutch: “Ivanda”
- Egyptian Arabic: “يڤاندا”
- Esperanto: “Ivánd”
- Esperanto: “Ivanda”
- Estonian: “Ivanda”
- Ewe: “Ivanda”
- Extremaduran: “Ivanda”
- Faroese: “Ivanda”
- Fijian: “Ivanda”
- Finnish: “Ivanda”
- French: “Ivanda”
- Friulian: “Ivanda”
- Fulah: “Ivanda”
- Gagauz: “Ivanda”
- Galician: “Ivanda”
- German: “Ivanda”
- Gheg Albanian: “Ivanda”
- Gorontalo: “Ivanda”
- Guarani: “Ivanda”
- Guianese Creole French: “Ivanda”
- Haitian: “Ivanda”
- Hausa: “Ivanda”
- Herero: “Ivanda”
- Hiligaynon: “Ivanda”
- Hiri Motu: “Ivanda”
- Hungarian: “Ivánd”
- Icelandic: “Ivanda”
- Ido: “Ivanda”
- Igbo: “Ivanda”
- Indonesian: “Ivanda”
- Interlingua: “Ivanda”
- Interlingue: “Ivanda”
- Inupiaq: “Ivanda”
- Irish: “Ivanda”
- Jamaican Creole English: “Ivanda”
- Javanese: “Ivanda”
- Jutish: “Ivanda”
- Kabiyè: “Ivanda”
- Kabyle: “Ivanda”
- Kalaallisut: “Ivanda”
- Kara-Kalpak: “Ivanda”
- Kashubian: “Ivanda”
- Kikuyu: “Ivanda”
- Kinaray-A: “Ivanda”
- Kinyarwanda: “Ivanda”
- Kölsch: “Ivanda”
- Kongo: “Ivanda”
- Krio: “Ivanda”
- Kurdish: “Ivanda”
- Ladino: “Ivanda”
- Latgalian: “Ivanda”
- Latin: “Ivanda”
- Latvian: “Ivanda”
- Ligurian: “Ivanda”
- Limburgan: “Ivanda”
- Lingala: “Ivanda”
- Lingua Franca Nova: “Ivanda”
- Lithuanian: “Ivanda”
- Liv: “Ivanda”
- Livvi: “Ivanda”
- Lojban: “Ivanda”
- Lombard: “Ivanda”
- Low German: “Ivanda”
- Lower Sorbian: “Ivanda”
- Luxembourgish: “Ivanda”
- Macedo-Romanian: “Ivanda”
- Mainfränkisch: “Ivanda”
- Malagasy: “Ivanda”
- Malay: “Ivanda”
- Maltese: “Ivanda”
- Manx: “Ivanda”
- Maori: “Ivanda”
- Mapudungun: “Ivanda”
- Marshallese: “Ivanda”
- Megleno Romanian: “Ivanda”
- Minangkabau: “Ivanda”
- Mirandese: “Ivanda”
- Narom: “Ivanda”
- Nauru: “Ivanda”
- Navajo: “Ivanda”
- Neapolitan: “Ivanda”
- Northern Frisian: “Ivanda”
- Northern Sami: “Ivanda”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Ivanda”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Ivanda”
- Novial: “Ivanda”
- Nyanja: “Ivanda”
- Occitan (post 1500): “Ivanda”
- Old English (ca. 450-1100): “Ivanda”
- Oromo: “Ivanda”
- Pampanga: “Ivanda”
- Pangasinan: “Ivanda”
- Papiamento: “Ivanda”
- Pedi: “Ivanda”
- Pennsylvania German: “Ivanda”
- Pfaelzisch: “Ivanda”
- Picard: “Ivanda”
- Piemontese: “Ivanda”
- Pitcairn-Norfolk: “Ivanda”
- Plautdietsch: “Ivanda”
- Prussian: “Ivanda”
- Quechua: “Ivanda”
- Romanian: “Ivanda, Timiș”
- Romanian: “Ivanda”
- Romansh: “Ivanda”
- Rundi: “Ivanda”
- Samoan: “Ivanda”
- Samogitian: “Ivanda”
- Sango: “Ivanda”
- Santali: “Ivanda”
- Sardinian: “Ivanda”
- Saterfriesisch: “Ivanda”
- Scots: “Ivanda”
- Scottish Gaelic: “Ivanda”
- Serbian: “Ivanda”
- Serbian: “Иванда”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Ivanda, Giulvăz”
- Serbo-Croatian: “Ivanda”
- Shona: “Ivanda”
- Sicilian: “Ivanda”
- Silesian: “Ivanda”
- Slovak: “Ivanda”
- Slovenian: “Ivanda”
- Somali: “Ivanda”
- Southern Sami: “Ivanda”
- Southern Sotho: “Ivanda”
- Spanish: “Ivanda”
- Sranan Tongo: “Ivanda”
- Sundanese: “Ivanda”
- Swahili: “Ivanda”
- Swati: “Ivanda”
- Swedish: “Ivanda”
- Swiss German: “Ivanda”
- Tagalog: “Ivanda”
- Tatar: “Ivanda”
- Tatar: “Иванда”
- Tetum: “Ivanda”
- Tok Pisin: “Ivanda”
- Tonga (Tonga Islands): “Ivanda”
- Tsonga: “Ivanda”
- Tswana: “Ivanda”
- Tumbuka: “Ivanda”
- Turkmen: “Ivanda”
- Twi: “Ivanda”
- Ukrainian: “Іванда”
- Upper Sorbian: “Ivanda”
- Venda: “Ivanda”
- Venetian: “Ivanda”
- Veps: “Ivanda”
- Vlax Romani: “Ivanda”
- Volapük: “Ivanda”
- Võro: “Ivanda”
- Votic: “Ivanda”
- Walloon: “Ivanda”
- Waray (Philippines): “Ivanda”
- Welsh: “Ivanda”
- Western Frisian: “Ivanda”
- Wolof: “Ivanda”
- Xhosa: “Ivanda”
- Yoruba: “Ivanda”
- Zeeuws: “Ivanda”
- Zhuang: “Ivanda”
- Zulu: “Ivanda”
- “Ivanda”
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as Sânmartinu Sârbesc and Iohanisfeld.
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Katolikus Templom and Staţia Ionel.
Romania: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca, Timișoara, and Constanța.
Curious Places to Discover
Uncover intriguing places from every corner of the globe.
About Mapcarta. Data © OpenStreetMap contributors and available under the Open Database License". Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license, except for photos, directions, and the map. Photo: El bes, CC BY 3.0.