The neighboring settlements include Bicsérd to the northeast, Pécsbagota to the southeast, Velény to the south, Gerde to the southwest, and Királyegyháza to the west.
[1] In 1681, they received a new deed from King Leopold I, which was announced at the county assembly of Baranya in 1697.
Seeking royal protection again, especially because the chapter forced them to perform serf duties, they turned to King Charles III.
In 1720, Charles III reaffirmed Leopold's deed and instructed the county to defend them against any violence.
In the 2011 census, 89.2% of the population identified as Hungarian, 9.9% as Roma, 1.3% as Croatian, 1% as German, and 0.3% as Romanian and Serbian each (10.8% did not declare; due to dual identities, the total percentage may exceed 100%).