Ițcani (German: Itzkany) is a neighborhood of Suceava, the town-residence of Suceava County in Bukovina, northeastern Romania, located some 5 km northwest of the town center. Ițcani was initially established in the 15th century, following a 1453 document issued by Alexăndrel, Prince of Moldavia.
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| - Ițcani (German: Itzkany) is a neighborhood of Suceava, the town-residence of Suceava County in Bukovina, northeastern Romania, located some 5 km northwest of the town center. Ițcani was initially established in the 15th century, following a 1453 document issued by Alexăndrel, Prince of Moldavia. (en)
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| - Distribution of ethnic groups in Ițcani in 1930: (en)
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| - green (en)
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| - Ițcani (German: Itzkany) is a neighborhood of Suceava, the town-residence of Suceava County in Bukovina, northeastern Romania, located some 5 km northwest of the town center. Ițcani was initially established in the 15th century, following a 1453 document issued by Alexăndrel, Prince of Moldavia. Along with the rest of Bukovina, it became part of the Habsburg monarchy during the late 18th century and then, gradually, of the Austrian Empire and Austria-Hungary (pertaining to Cisleithania or the Austrian-ruled realms of the former Central European dual monarchy). During the 1780s, 8 ethnic German families settled here in the course of the Josephine colonization. After the unification of Bukovina with the Kingdom of Romania in 1918, Ițcani was subsequently recorded on official population censuses by the Romanian authorities as a commune composed of two separate villages, more specifically Ițcanii Noi (German: Neu Itzkany) and Ițcani Gară (German: Itzkany Bahnhof). Furthermore, according to the Romanian 1930 census, as much as 45% of the commune's population was composed of ethnic Germans, many of whom were later re-settled in occupied Poland during World War II as part of the Heim ins Reich policy plan initiated by Hitler's national socialists. Suceava North railway station is located in Ițcani. (en)
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