CÃÂuaà(, <small>Hungarian pronunciation</small>: ) is a commune of 2,259 inhabitants situated in Satu Mare County, CriÃÂana, Romania. It is composed of six villages: Ady Endre (ÃÂrmindszent or Adyfalva), CÃÂuaÃÂ, Ghenci (Gencs), GhileÃÂti (Illéd), Hotoan (ÃÂrhatvan), and RÃÂduleÃÂti (ÃÂjtanya).
At the 2011 census, the commune had a population of 2,388, of which 46.7% were Romanians, 35.1% Hungarians, and 17.9% Roma. At the 2021 census, there were 2,259 inhabitants, of which 42.54% were Romanians, 26.25% Hungarians, and 21.91% Roma.
In July 2011, a Thracian settlement dating to 1050âÂÂ1750 BC was discovered in CÃÂuaàby a joint research group formed by Romanian and German archaeologists.
Three kilometres from CÃÂuaÃÂ there is a small village with the name of the poet Endre Ady, one of the most important Hungarian poets. In 1957, the Ady Endre Memorial House was founded and in the same year the name of the small village MecenÃÂiu was changed to Ady Endre. Among the important documents, books, and manuscripts, there is also the parish transcript of the Protestant Church with the registered birth date of the poet in it. In the opposite part of the courtyard there is the Ady Endre family peasant house, where the original furniture items are displayed.