Neighbouring Mennonite settlements are Fernheim Colony and Neuland Colony.
There also Mennonite settlements in Canada, mainly from the United States (Upstate New York and Pennsylvannia):
The area is an Augspurger Amish and Mennonite settlement.
In the 1890s, new German colonies opened in the Altay mountain area in Russian Asia (see Mennonite settlements of Altai).
It was the first of many Mennonite settlements in Russia.
Germans are the second-largest group, at about 2% (see Mennonite settlements of Altai).
Normanvillars was a Mennonite settlement on the border of the Sundgau (southern Alsace) and the Territory of Belfort in a forest area called by that name.
But after landing a part-time job in Kalona, the center of an Amish and Mennonite settlement, she gave small-town life a closer look.
It was originally founded as a Mennonite settlement, but has seen an influx of other backgrounds in recent years.
The Bergthal Colony was a Mennonite settlement in the southern part of the former Russian Empire, now Ukraine that emigrated to Manitoba, Canada.