Commune
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Commune can refer to various things:
- Municipality or townships in various European countries, including
- Gemeenten/Communes/Gemeinde of Belgium, the lowest level of administrative division. After several "fusion-operations", most of them include named cities or towns with formerly independent suburbs and villages.
- Communes of Chile, the third and lowest level administrative division of the country, comprising cities, towns, villages, hamlets, and unsettled areas.
- Kommuner of Denmark, introduced after a 2007 reorganization that replaced the amter
- Kommuner of Sweden, The lowest level administrative division of the country, comprising cities, towns, villages, hamlets, and unsettled areas.
- Kommuner of Norway
- Kommuner/Kunta of Finland
- Communes of France, the lowest level of administrative division, comprising cities, towns, and villages
- Comuni, the municipalities of Italy
- Communes of Luxembourg, the lowest uniform level of administrative division
- Communes (gminy) of Poland, the lowest uniform level of administrative division
- Communes (comună) of Romania, comprising villages
- Medieval commune, a social organization of the European Middle Ages
- Communes within socialist thought.
- Commune (intentional community) or a community in which resources are shared.
- Mir (social), a village community in czarist Russia
- Kibbutz, an Israeli collective community
- People's commune, an administrative division of the rural area in the People's Republic of China between 1958-1984
- The Paris Commune (French Revolution), the government of Paris from 1789 to 1795, especially from 1792 to 1795
- The Paris Commune, socialist reformist state in Paris in 1871
- The Shanghai Commune, organized by Zhang Chunqiao in 1967
- The Pinnacle Commune, founded by Rastafarian preacher Leonard Howell
- Commune, a 2005 documentary