Máriakéménd

Máriakéménd (German: Mariakemend or Kemend; Croatian: Kemed) is a village and municipality (Hungarian: község) in Baranya County, Hungary.

Until the end of World War II, the inhabitants' majority was Danube Swabian, whose ancestors arrived from Stift Fulda (district) and named in the Danube Swabian dialect, Stiffuller.

Most of the former German settlers were expelled to Germany and Austria in 1945-1948, following the Potsdam Agreement.

The municipality lies within the Southern Transdanubia Region of Hungary.

The village lies near the junction of motorways M6 and M60, both of which opened in the area in 2010 and currently provide links north to Budapest and west to Pécs, and will eventually provide links to the Croatian border at Ivándárda and Barcs.

An engraving of the Máriakéménd statue and the Church of our Lady, János Fülöp Binder, 1774.