Lingiades () is a settlement in Ioannina regional unit, Epirus, Greece. The village is located on the southern part of the south western side of Mount Mitsikeli, above Lake Ioannina.
Earlier interpretations of the toponym associated it with the ancient oronym of Lygos or the ancient Epirote city of Lygos, although linguist Kostas Oikonomou describes it as untenable. Oikonomou states the toponym is derived from the Albanian word lëngat/ë, -a meaning 'serious long-term illness, contagious disease, epidemic'. Within the toponym, the sounds g and l underwent palatalisation in their pronunciation, while the Albanian ë became i through Greek. The Greek suffix ades is used in the formation of several placenames to indicate a place where a familial unit referred to in the subject is settled.
The village was established following a plague event at a previous location and resettlement of its inhabitants to the new site. Oikonomou states the suffix's etymological role in the toponym's formation verifies historical memories preserved in oral tradition about the village.
The village of Lingiades was established prior to 1683, nearby the Monastery of Agios Georgios. Dispersed people settled in the village, later others came from Tsamouria (Chameria).
Local traditions describe the village was originally located at the site of Alogomantri. The village was composed of 59 houses and had five churches: Agios Georgios, Agios Dimitrios, Agios Nikolaos, Prophet Elias and Agios Minas in several locations. The village was destroyed after it was affected by plague and many inhabitants died. Of the six remaining houses, the inhabitants due to their experiences of devastation left the village and established one house each in several locations: Katsoufli, Kravari, Marmaralona, Amygdalia, Lakko Krania, Rachi Lai and Perperi separated by some distance to avoid contact with each other. The plague devastated these houses, their inhabitants and most of the livestock. Known as Paliochora 'old village', its inhabitants later left and settled at the site of the present village. In the same year, Vissarion, a native of Ioannina arrived in the area and chose a site to build the church of Agios Georgios and in the process gathered the houses to be close to the church. Vissarion was assisted by the villagers to construct the church and later they rebuilt their houses, while their population and livestock numbers increased over time.
The village is inhabited by Greeks.