Distrato (, before 1928: ÃÂÃÂùìöñ, Vriaza; ) is a village and a former community in the Ioannina regional unit, Epirus, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Konitsa, of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 53.837 km<sup>2</sup>. Population 207 (2021). The village is located in a ravine on the right side of the river Vjosa.
Linguist Max Vasmer says the placename Briaza stems from the Slavic Bulgarian word brÃÂza meaning 'birch' with a rendering of the Slavic ÃÂ and as ia in Greek. Linguist Yordan Zaimov wrote apart from the possibility of etymologically deriving the toponym from brÃÂza, it is possible it originates from the etymologically related form brÃÂza stemming from berza, in Slavic the word's adjectives are brjaz (masculine) and brjaza (feminine) 'white'.
Linguist Kostas Oikonomou states the location of the village in an Aromanian speaking area increases the likelihood the toponym is derived from the Aromanian noun vreaza, also vreaje meaning 'the dry branch', borrowed from the Bulgarian brÃÂza meaning 'birch'.
Distrato was under Italian control during the Second World War and in late 1941 the Aromanians of the village opposed the local Greek school being reopened.
Distrato has an Aromanian population and is an Aromanian speaking village. In the early 21st century, elderly people were bilingual in the community language and Greek, whereas younger residents under 40 might have understood the community language but did not use it.