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perjantai 9. heinäkuuta 2010

KOKKOLA-FINLAND

Kokkola



Kokkola
KokkolaKarleby
City
Kokkolan kaupunki
Karleby stad
Kokkola town hall

Coat of arms
Location of Kokkola in Finland
Coordinates: 63°50.2′N 023°08′E / 63.8367°N 23.133°E / 63.8367; 23.133Coordinates: 63°50.2′N 023°08′E / 63.8367°N 23.133°E / 63.8367; 23.133
Country Finland
Region Central Ostrobothnia
Sub-region Kokkola sub-region
Charter 1620
Government
- City manager Antti Isotalus
Area(2010-01-01)[1]
- Total 2,730.89 km2 (1,054.4 sq mi)
- Land 1,444.36 km2 (557.7 sq mi)
- Water 1,286.53 km2 (496.7 sq mi)
Area rank 25th largest in Finland
Population (2010-03-31)[2]
- Total 46,040
- Rank 22nd largest in Finland
- Density 31.88/km2 (82.6/sq mi)
Population by native language[3]
- Finnish 84.2% (official)
- Swedish 13.9% (official)
- Others 1.9%
Population by age[4]
- 0 to 14 18.8%
- 15 to 64 65%
- 65 or older 16.2%
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
- Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Municipal tax rate[5] 19.75%
Website www.kokkola.fi
Kaarlela church

Kokkola (Swedish: Karleby) is a town and municipality of Finland. The town is located in the province of Western Finland and is part of the Central Ostrobothnia region. The town has a population of 46,040 (31 March 2010)[2] and covers an area of 2,730.89 square kilometres (1,054.40 sq mi) of which 1,286.53 km2 (496.73 sq mi) is water.[1] The population density is 31.88 inhabitants per square kilometre (82.6 /sq mi). The municipality is bilingual with 84.2% being Finnish and 13.9% Swedish speakers.

Contents

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[edit] Getting there

  • By bus: The town of Kokkola lies in the middle of Finland on the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia. There are main roads from Turku, Jyväskylä, Kajaani and Oulu to Kokkola. Between Kokkola and Jakobstad along the coast is also the scenic '7 Bridges Archipelago Road' road 749.
  • By air: From Helsinki there are daily Finnair flights to Kokkola-Pietarsaari Airport, which is situated 22 kilometres (14 mi) from Kokkola. There is a bus connection to the departures, 60 min before from Mannerheiminaukio.
  • By train: Kokkola railway station is in the very centre of the town. Express trains from Helsinki to Kokkola take seven hours, with faster InterCity2 trains taking five hours and Pendolino trains taking four hours.
  • By ferry: The nearest ferry connection (120 km/75 mi) to Sweden is via VaasaUmeå.

[edit] History

The town of Kokkola was chartered in 1620 by king Gustav II Adolf of Sweden (Finland at that time being a part of Sweden). Kokkola was founded as a shipping port for the tar trade. It also became an important shipbuilding centre in Finland. As a result of tar trade and shipbuilding industry Kokkola was for a time the richest town in Finland.

An interesting historical affair, known as the Skirmish of Halkokari, occurred at the town of Kokkola in May 1854 during the Crimean War. British marines from HMS Vulture and HMS Odin tried to come ashore to ransack the town, but were repelled by local defenders, of which many were civilians armed with hunting rifles. One of the 9 smaller British craft (a gunboat) fell into the hands of the defenders. As such, this boat was the only Royal Navy vessel still in foreign possession in 1914. The boat is still today a museum-object and can be seen in Kokkola's English Park. The town council has refused to return the boat despite several requests by the United Kingdom, most recently by John Stuttard, the Lord Mayor of London. The British Treasury annually pay a small sum for the maintenance of nine graves of nine marines killed in action during the skirmish to the local church congregation.[6]

The city had a Swedish-speaking majority until 1933.

In 1977, the surrounding municipality of Kaarlela (Swedish: Karleby) was consolidated into Kokkola (Swedish until then: Gamlakarleby). In 2009, the municipalities of Lohtaja, Kälviä and Ullava were consolidated with Kokkola.

[edit] The name of the town

The Finnish name Kokkola means 'The place of bonfire' or 'The place of eagle' since the Finnish word kokko has two meanings: bonfire and white-tailed eagle (the suffix '-la' denotes a location). The town was known in Swedish by the name Gamlakarleby until January 1, 1977 when the surrounding land municipality of Kaarlela (Swedish: Karleby) was consolidated with Kokkola, and the town took over the Swedish name of Karleby. Gamla means 'old', Karl means 'man' or 'peasant' and by means 'village'. So it literally means Old village of peasants. The Latin name was Carolina Vetus.

[edit] Economy

Kokkola market place

Kokkola is the capital and only city in the region of Central Ostrobothnia. The chemical industryOMG has a cobaltBoliden has a zinc plant in there. Kemira, a chemical conglomerate, built an industrial park that is now divided between several corporations. The area has Kemira's own sulfuric acidKemira GrowHow site, KemFine's fine chemicals plant, Tetra Chemicals calcium chlorideNordkalk plant. In addition, industries represented in the town include metalworking, casting, textiles, plastics, food and carpentry. Largest employers are as follows:[7] is a major employer. An industrial area and a port is located in Ykspihlaja. plant and plant, a plant and a

  • The city of Kokkola approx. 2,080
  • Regional Central Hospital 1,140
  • Boliden Kokkola (zinc) 640
  • Health care centre 450
  • OMG (cobalt) 375
  • KPO group (retail) 355
  • Halpa-Halli (retail) 300
  • KemFine (fine chemicals) 170

The port of Kokkola is located in Ykspihlaja, approximately 5 km (3 mi) from the city center, and it is one of the most trafficked ports in Finland. Oil, ore and limestone are imported, refined products and timber are exported, and iron ore is transited. Kokkola is located on the main railway connecting Oulu and Helsinki via Seinäjoki and Tampere.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b "Area by municipality as of 1 January 2010" (in Finnish and Swedish) (PDF). Land Survey of Finland. http://www.maanmittauslaitos.fi/Pintaalat_kunnittain_1.1.2010.pdf. Retrieved 27 March 2010.
  2. ^ a b "Population by municipality as of 31 March 2010" (in Finnish and Swedish). Population Information System. Population Register Center of Finland. http://www.vrk.fi/vrk/files.nsf/files/ACFC13B2F489698CC22577030039BD73/$file/20100331.htm. Retrieved 13 April 2010.
  3. ^ "Population according to language and the number of foreigners and land area km2 by area as of 31 December 2008". Statistics Finland's PX-Web databases. Statistics Finland. http://pxweb2.stat.fi/Dialog/varval.asp?ma=060_vaerak_tau_107_fi&ti=V%E4est%F6+kielen+mukaan+sek%E4+ulkomaan+kansalaisten+m%E4%E4r%E4+ja+maa%2Dpinta%2Dala+alueittain++1980+%2D+2008&path=../Database/StatFin/vrm/vaerak/&lang=3&multilang=fi. Retrieved 29 March 2009.
  4. ^ "Population according to age and gender by area as of 31 December 2008". Statistics Finland's PX-Web databases. Statistics Finland. http://pxweb2.stat.fi/Dialog/varval.asp?ma=050_vaerak_tau_104_fi&ti=V%E4est%F6+i%E4n+%281%2Dv%2E%29+ja+sukupuolen+mukaan+alueittain+1980+%2D+2008&path=../Database/StatFin/vrm/vaerak/&lang=3&multilang=fi. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  5. ^ "List of municipal and parish tax rates in 2010". Tax Administration of Finland. 24 November 2009. http://www.vero.fi/download.asp?id=5853;25512. Retrieved 13 January 2010.
  6. ^ Jakobstads Tidning
  7. ^ http://www.kokkola.fi/uutta/taskutietoa_kokkolasta_2007_en.pdf

[edit] External links

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