Category
page 1Former villages

Panmunjom
Panmunjom (also spelled Panmunjeom) was a village just north of the de facto border between North Korea and South Korea, where the 1953 Korean Armistice Agreement that ended the Korean War was signed. It was located in what is now Paju, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, and Panmun-guyok, Kaesong, North Korea. The building where the armistice was signed still stands.
Pisky
rural settlement in Pokrovsk Raion, Donetsk Oblast (province), Ukraine
abandoned village
village that has been deserted
Sääre
village in Saaremaa Rural Municipality, Saare County, Estonia
Väkra
Väkra is an uninhabited village in Saaremaa Parish, Saare County, Estonia, on the island of Saaremaa.
Hüti
village in Hiiumaa Rural Municipality, Hiiu County, Estonia
list of French villages destroyed in World War I
Wikimedia list article
Aabra
Aabra is an uninhabited village in Rõuge Parish, Võru County, in southeastern Estonia. It is located on the territory of Haanja Nature Park, about southeast of Rõuge, the administrative centre of the municipality, and about south of the nearest town Võru.
Sõrve-Hindu
Sõrve-Hindu (Hindu until 2017) is a village in Saaremaa Parish, Saare County, Estonia, on the island of Saaremaa. As of the 2011 census, the settlement's population was 0.

Vilarinho da Furna
village in Portugal
Koeri
village in Lääneranna Rural Municipality, Pärnu County, Estonia
Diklići
village in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Prečani
village in Federation B&H, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Houtouwan Village
Houtouwan () is an abandoned fishing village and tourist attraction on the northern side of Shengshan Island (), one of the Shengsi Islands, a chain of nearly 400 islands located east of Shanghai, China.
Sukurčy
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Sukurčy () (polish : Sukurcze) near Lida in Belarus is a former village and the estate of Witold Pilecki. It was destroyed by communists after the Second World War.
Siegenthal
Siegenthal was a village (a colony) in the vicinity of what is now Brzegi Dolne, in the administrative district of Gmina Ustrzyki Dolne, within Bieszczady County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland.
Ehrenbach
Ehrenbach is a village, first mentioned in 1371, that became in 1971 part of Idstein, Hesse, Germany.