Omgång 5 Torslanda IK - Vinbergs IF Division 2 Västra Götaland Herr 2021.
Hittarps IK is a Swedish football club located in Helsingborg.
Torslanda IK is a local sports club in Torslanda, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Torslandavallen is a football stadium in Torslanda, Sweden and the home stadium for the football team Torslanda IK. Torslandavallen has a total capacity of 1,500 spectators.
Hittarp is a locality situated in Helsingborg Municipality, Skåne County, Sweden with 4,075 inhabitants in 2010.
Hitar Petar or Itar Pejo is a character of Bulgarian and Macedonian folklore. He is a poor village farmhand, but possesses remarkable slyness, wit and wile.
Hattar is one of the 44 union councils, administrative subdivisions, of Haripur District in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. It is located south of the district capital, Haripur, at 33°51'1N 72°51'8E and borders Taxila Tehsil of Punjab province.
Melchior Hittorp was a German Roman Catholic theologian and liturgical writer.
Hitar Petar Nunatak is the rocky hill rising to 462 m on the coast of Prince Gustav Channel, facing Alectoria Island and next south of the terminus of Aitkenhead Glacier on Trinity Peninsula in Graham Land, Antarctica. The nunatak is "named after the Bulgarian folkloric hero Hitar Petar (‘Sly Peter’)".
Torslanda is an urban district situated in Gothenburg Municipality, Västra Götaland County, Sweden. It had 10,129 inhabitants in 2005.
The Torslanda Works , is one of the largest production facilities of Volvo Cars and is located in Torslanda on the island of Hisingen, about 12 km north west of Gothenburg city centre. The plant turned 50 on April 24, 2014.
Torslanda Airport — served the city of Gothenburg, Sweden, as its main airport from 1923 to 1977, when the Göteborg Landvetter Airport was opened. The airport closed soon afterwards.
The Torslanda Church is a medieval church in Gothenburg, Sweden. It is located on the island of Hisingen, in the Torslanda borough, and it belongs to the parish of Torslanda-Björlanda in the Diocese of Gothenburg.
The Torslunda plates are four cast bronze dies found in the Torslunda parish on the Swedish island Öland. They display figures in relief, representing what are presumed to be traditional scenes from Germanic mythology.