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Enontekiö

Enontekiö (Finnish: [ˈenontekiø]; Northern Sami: Eanodat [ˈe̯anotah(t)]; Swedish: Enontekis; Inari Sami: Iänudâh; Skolt Sami: Jeänõk) is a municipality in the Finnish part of Lapland with approx. 1,800[2] inhabitants. It is situated in the outermost northwest of the country and occupies a large and very sparsely populated area of about 8,400 square kilometres (3,200 sq mi)[1] between the Swedish and Norwegian border. Finland's highest point, the Halti fell, with a height of 1,324 metres (4,344 ft) above the mean sea level, is situated in the north of Enontekiö. The municipality shares borders with regions of Sweden and Norway that encompass the Scandinavian Mountains. The administrative centre of Enontekiö is the village of Hetta. About one fifth of the community's population are Sami people. Enontekiö's main industries are tourism and reindeer husbandry.

Enontekiö
Enontekiö (Finnish)
Eanodat (Northern Sami)
Iänudâh (Inari Sami)
Jeänõk (Skolt Sami)
Enontekis (Swedish)
Municipality
Enontekiön kunta (Finnish)
Eanodaga gielda (Northern Sami)
Enontekis kommun (Swedish)
Nickname: 
Arm of Finland
Location of Enontekiö in Finland
Coordinates: 68°23′05″N 023°38′20″E / 68.38472°N 23.63889°E / 68.38472; 23.63889
Country Finland
RegionLapland
Sub-regionFell Lapland
Founded (parish)1747
Charter1877
SeatHetta
Government
 • Municipality managerPentti Keskitalo
Area
 (2018-01-01)[1]
 • Total8,391.35 km2 (3,239.92 sq mi)
 • Land7,953.42 km2 (3,070.83 sq mi)
 • Water445.84 km2 (172.14 sq mi)
 • Rank4th largest in Finland
Population
 (2023-12-31)[2]
 • Total1,771
 • Rank268th largest in Finland
 • Density0.22/km2 (0.6/sq mi)
 1
Population by native language
 • Finnish85.6% (official)
 • Swedish0.8%
 • Sami10.3%
 • Others3.3%
Population by age
 • 0 to 1412.5%
 • 15 to 6458.3%
 • 65 or older29.2%
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
Websitewww.enontekio.fi

Geography edit

Location and dimensions edit

 
Kilpisjärvi Lake

Enontekiö is located in the region of Lapland in the outermost northwest tip of Finland. The salient between the Swedish and Norwegian borders, which is occupied by the municipality of Enontekiö, is called Käsivarsi (Finnish for "arm"), because before World War II, Finland's borders had the shape of a woman's figure (Suomi-neito) and the area looked like her raised right arm. The municipality occupies a large and sparsely populated area of 8,391.35 km2 (3,239.92 sq mi)[1] (more than three times the area of Luxembourg). Thus Enontekiö is Finland's third-largest municipality in size, after Inari and Sodankylä, and with a population density of only 0.22/km2 (0.57/sq mi), it is the second-most sparsely populated municipality, after Savukoski.

Enontekiö's neighbouring municipalities are Inari in the east, Kittilä in the southeast, and Muonio in the south; on the Swedish side in the west, there is the municipality of Kiruna and on the Norwegian side in the north, there are Storfjord, Gáivuotna (Kåfjord), Nordreisa, and Kautokeino. Enontekiö shares a border of more than 450 kilometres (280 mi) with the two adjacent states. The border to Sweden is formed by the river Muonionjoki and its tributary, Könkämäeno.

Villages edit

The main village of Enontekiö is the settlement of Hetta in the south, with approx. 530 inhabitants. There is no village with the name of Enontekiö, but Hetta is often called the municipality's name. Other important places are the village of Kilpisjärvi, which is located near the border triangle of Finland-Sweden-Norway, as well as Karesuvanto and Palojoensuu, both of which are located at the Muonionjoki at the Swedish border. Enontekiö's villages are concentrated in the southern area and along the banks of the rivers Könkämäeno and Muonionjoki in the west of the municipality. Often, there is a corresponding village on the Swedish side of the river, bearing the same name (or the Swedish form of the name), e.g. Karesuvanto/Karesuando. In contrast, the part of the Käsivarsi Mountains away from the rivers is almost completely uninhabited.

The following villages belong to Enontekiö (Sami name, if available, in parentheses):

  • Hetta (Heahttá)
  • Jatuni (Jáhton)
  • Karesuvanto (Gárasavvon)
  • Kelottijärvi (Gelojávri)
  • Ketomella
  • Kilpisjärvi (Gilbbesjávri)
  • Kultima (Gulddán)
  • Kuttanen (Guhttás)
  • Leppäjärvi (Leaibejávri)
  • Luspa (Luspi)
  • Markkina (Boaresmárkan)
  • Maunu (Mávdna)
  • Muotkajärvi (Muotkejávri)
  • Näkkälä (Neahčil)
  • Nartteli
  • Nunnanen (Njunnás)
  • Palojärvi (Bálojávri)
  • Palojoensuu (Bálojohnjálbmi)
  • Peltovuoma (Bealdovuopmi)
  • Raittijärvi
  • Ropinsalmi
  • Saivomuotka (Sáivomuotki)
  • Sonkamuotka
  • Vähäniva
  • Vuontisjärvi (Vuottesjávri)
  • Yli-Kyrö

Topography edit

 
Pitsusköngäs, a plunge-type waterfall in Enontekiö.

In its northern region, Enontekiö shares borders with areas of Sweden and Norway in which segments of the Scandinavian Mountains are located. Through that and through its location in the far north of Finland, it is geologically and scenically very different from the rest of the country. Halti, the highest mountain of Finland with a height of 1,324 m, is located in Enontekiö, together with all 21 other mountains higher than 1,000 m (3,281 ft) in the country. Besides Haltitunturi, probably the best known and scenically most distinctive mountain is the Saana with a height of 1,029 metres (3,376 ft), which rises above the village of Kilpisjärvi. The southern part of the municipality is less mountainous, but some single fjells (tunturi, which means hills towering above the timber line) rise above the otherwise rather flat surrounding area. Below, a part of the PallastunturiOunastunturi-massif extends into Enontekiö's territory.

A little more than 5% of the municipality's area consists of water. Several large rivers originate in Enontekiö: The Muonionjoki, Ounasjoki, Ivalojoki, and one of the headstreams of the Tenojoki have their sources in the municipality. Enontekiö owes its name to them: Eno is an old Finnish word for "major river" cognate with the Northern Sámi word Eatnu or "large river, largest river (in a specific region)" and tekiö is derived from the Northern Sámi derivational suffix -dat which forms abstract nouns. All of the 825 lakes in the area are rather small. The largest lakes are the Pöyrisjärvi, the Kilpisjärvi near the village with the same name, and the Ounasjärvi near Hetta.

Flora and fauna edit

 
In the northern area of the municipality, the vegetation is very sparse.

The vegetation of Enontekiö is very meagre, due to the extreme northern latitude. The northern border of the natural geographic range of the spruce approx. matches the southern border of the municipality; the range of the pine ends only 20 km (12 mi) north of Hetta, too. North of that, only birches grow. The timber line is approximately 600 m (2,000 ft); above that, a tundra-like vegetation predominates. Heaths extends above timber line.

The lower heathlands are dominated by shrubs such as Betula nana, Vaccinium myrtillus and Empetrum hermaphroditum, whereas in the fjell heaths at higher elevations Salix herbacea, Empetrum and alpine grasses with lichens and mosses occur. In the mountains of the north-west Cassiope tetragona is abundant. [5] The largest part of the municipal area consists of these plateaus or bogs, which mainly predominate at the rivers. Only 19% of Enontekiö's area is afforested. About 70% of the total area is conservation area of various grades.[6] Enontekiö contains parts of the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park, as well as the wilderness areas of Käsivarsi, Pulju, Pöyrisjärvi and Tarvantovaara.

Due to the harsh climatic conditions, there are not especially many species among Enontekiö's fauna; however, there are Arctic species that are unknown to southern Finland, e.g. Norway lemming, Arctic fox, snowy owl, Eurasian dotterel, ptarmigan, and ring ouzel. Besides the semi-domesticated reindeer, there are a lot of small mammals and bird species.

Climate edit

Enontekiö's climate is characterised by the extreme northern location, the high altitude compared to the rest of Finland and the closeness of the Arctic Ocean. Due to the moderating influence of the Gulf Stream, the winters are not quite as harsh as in central Lapland, which is characterised by the continental climate, but the summers are shorter and cooler.

The annual average temperatures of Enontekiö are the lowest of Finland. In Kilpisjärvi, in the north of the municipal area, the long-term average is −2.3 °C (compared to Helsinki: approx. +5 °C; Berlin approx. +9 °C). July is the warmest month, with an average temperature of +10.9 °C, the coldest is January with −13.6 °C. Due to these extreme climatic conditions, the growing season only lasts a little over 100 days. Thus, the winter, with its 200 days, is very long. The annual average precipitation is 459 millimetres (18.1 in).[7] In the cold season, enormous amounts of snow can fall: The highest snow depth ever recorded in Finland was measured on April 19, 1997, in Kilpisjärvi: 190 centimetres (75 in).[8] Normally, a permanent snow cover is generally formed in October and does not melt again until the end of May.[9] In sheltered places, snow can remain even longer; thus a ski race is traditionally held for Midsummer's night in Kilpisjärvi.

Enontekiö's municipal area is located between 200 and 300 km north of the Arctic Circle. Accordingly, there are extreme seasonal differences in the length of daylight. In Kilpisjärvi, the Midnight Sun shines between May 22 and July 23. Accordingly, Polar night (kaamos) prevails between December 2 and January 11. Enontekiö has the highest rate of occurrence of Polar lights in Finland: In the region around Kilpisjärvi, this natural spectacle can be observed on average three out of four nights during the dark season in clear weather.[10]

Climate data for Enontekiö Kilpisjärvi kyläkeskus (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1979- present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 6.2
(43.2)
6.4
(43.5)
8.2
(46.8)
12.7
(54.9)
26.1
(79.0)
26.6
(79.9)
28.3
(82.9)
26.7
(80.1)
20.2
(68.4)
12.9
(55.2)
9.4
(48.9)
6.8
(44.2)
28.3
(82.9)
Mean maximum °C (°F) 2.1
(35.8)
2.1
(35.8)
3.6
(38.5)
7.5
(45.5)
14.0
(57.2)
20.3
(68.5)
23.0
(73.4)
21.4
(70.5)
16.1
(61.0)
9.1
(48.4)
4.2
(39.6)
3.4
(38.1)
24.1
(75.4)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) −7.7
(18.1)
−7.9
(17.8)
−4.2
(24.4)
0.9
(33.6)
6.2
(43.2)
12.2
(54.0)
16.2
(61.2)
14.3
(57.7)
9.1
(48.4)
2.0
(35.6)
−3.2
(26.2)
−5.8
(21.6)
2.7
(36.9)
Daily mean °C (°F) −12.2
(10.0)
−12.3
(9.9)
−8.8
(16.2)
−3.5
(25.7)
2.3
(36.1)
7.7
(45.9)
11.6
(52.9)
10.1
(50.2)
5.7
(42.3)
−0.5
(31.1)
−6.5
(20.3)
−10.1
(13.8)
−1.4
(29.5)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −17.3
(0.9)
−17.4
(0.7)
−14.1
(6.6)
−8.3
(17.1)
−1.4
(29.5)
3.8
(38.8)
7.9
(46.2)
6.8
(44.2)
2.9
(37.2)
−3.0
(26.6)
−10.0
(14.0)
−14.7
(5.5)
−5.4
(22.3)
Mean minimum °C (°F) −33.0
(−27.4)
−32.1
(−25.8)
−29.1
(−20.4)
−22.8
(−9.0)
−9.6
(14.7)
−0.8
(30.6)
2.7
(36.9)
0.7
(33.3)
−3.1
(26.4)
−11.7
(10.9)
−22.3
(−8.1)
−29.3
(−20.7)
−36.0
(−32.8)
Record low °C (°F) −40.2
(−40.4)
−41.0
(−41.8)
−37.7
(−35.9)
−31.0
(−23.8)
−22.0
(−7.6)
−4.2
(24.4)
−0.7
(30.7)
−1.9
(28.6)
−8.5
(16.7)
−24.0
(−11.2)
−34.6
(−30.3)
−39.1
(−38.4)
−41.0
(−41.8)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 52
(2.0)
39
(1.5)
37
(1.5)
27
(1.1)
28
(1.1)
49
(1.9)
73
(2.9)
50
(2.0)
38
(1.5)
37
(1.5)
36
(1.4)
49
(1.9)
516
(20.3)
Average precipitation days 11 10 8 6 7 8 10 8 8 9 9 11 105
Source 1: FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991-2020[11]
Source 2: Record highs and lows 1979- present[12]

History edit

Prehistory and Swedish age edit

The first human settlement in Enontekiö emerged after the retreat of the glaciers at the end of the last ice age, when people of the Komsa culture migrated from the coast of the Arctic Ocean. The oldest traces of settlement were found at the shores of the Ounasjärvi Lake and are dated to a time 6,000 BC.[13] Later, the Sami population of Lapland, which predominated for a long time in Enontekiö, developed by the blending of this stone-age ancestral population with speakers of Uralic languages, who immigrated after the 3rd millennium BC. Initially, the inhabitants of Enontekiö made their living from hunting and fishing, and they had only a few reindeer as draught animals.

In early modern times, Enontekiö came under Swedish influence during the course of the Christianisation of the shamanistic Sami. In the 16th century, Enontekiö's first church was built. It was a small wooden building in the village of Rounala on the right shore (today in Sweden) of the Könkämäeno river. According to tradition, the church was erected by three Sami brothers who had converted to Christianity. It was a central meeting point, where Sami people gathered for religious ceremonies, where merchants travelled to sell their wares, and where Swedish officials held judicial courts at particular times. In 1611, a new church was built in the village of Markkina. After the destruction of this church, another one was erected in the same place in 1661.

Since the end of the 17th century, the reindeer-Sami culture, which was based on keeping large herds of reindeer, spread from Norwegian and Swedish Lapland to Enontekiö. The reindeer-Sami of Enontekiö had a nomadic way of life; they moved with their animals between the coniferous forests in the south to Kåfjord, Kvænangen, and Nordreisa on the coast of the Arctic Ocean following the annual cycle of summer and winter grazing land. Enontekiö's last nomads did not settle down until the 1960s, but the culture of the reindeer-Sami is still preserved in the large-scale herding of reindeer. As of the 17th century, the first Finnish people settled down in the south of Enontekiö and introduced the culture of settled agriculture. Due to the Finnish immigration and the assimilation of the old-established Sami population, a Finnish majority emerged over the years.

Period of Russian sovereignty edit

In 1809 when Sweden ceded the region of today's Finland to Russia in the Treaty of Fredrikshamn, Enontekiö became a part of the newly founded Grand Duchy of Finland, too. Because the church of Markkina stood on the Swedish—and therefore wrong—side of the river after the Swedish-Russian demarcation, it was torn down in 1826. Its beams were shipped down the Muoniojoki to Palojoensuu, where the church was rebuilt as henceforth the fourth church of Enontekiö. Already in 1864, the church was again moved to Hetta, which had in the meantime became the largest settlement of the region. The closing of the Russian-Norwegian border in 1852 and of the Russian-Swedish border in 1889 had severe consequences for Enontekiö's reindeer-nomads, because they could no longer move with their herds to the coast of the Arctic Ocean. As a result, they transferred their grazing areas inland to the southeast and helped spread the culture of reindeer-herding to the remaining parts of Lapland. Due to the separation of the administration of the municipality from the church administration, the political municipality of Enontekiö came into existence in 1877.

After independence edit

 
Finnish soldiers hoist a flag at the Norwegian border after the last German soldiers were expelled.

With the Finnish declaration of independence in 1917, Enontekiö became a part of the independent republic of Finland, too.

During the Continuation War (1941–1944), where Finland allied with Germany in fighting against the Soviet Union, Enontekiö, together with all of northern Finland, was part of the operational region of the Wehrmacht. In 1942, the Germans in Enontekiö started to establish the Sturmbock emplacement in occupied Norway and in Petsamo in order to protect the harbours on the Arctic Ocean. When Finland concluded the Moscow Armistice with the Soviet Union on September 4, 1944, committing themselves to expel the German troops, the Finnish-German Lapland War broke out. Lapland's civilian population had to be moved to a safe place in a very short time. Enontekiö's population was evacuated to neutral Sweden together with all of western Lapland's inhabitants. After the Germans quickly left southern Lapland, the 12,000 soldiers of the 7th Gebirgsdivision (Mountain Division) of the Wehrmacht occupied the Sturmbock emplacement at the end of October. During their fallback, the German applied the tactics of scorched earth and devastated Enontekiö, too. During the cold winter, a war of attrition was maintained between German troops, barricaded in their fortifications, and Finnish troops, who took a stand in Markkina. After the Wehrmacht had abandoned Petsamo and northern Norway, the Sturmbock emplacement was no longer of strategic value and was cleared without a struggle at the beginning of January in 1945. In order to secure the flank of Lyngen, their last emplacement in northern Norway, the Germans still operated in the north of the Käsivarsi region, where minor combat operations took place, before the last Wehrmacht soldiers left Finnish soil on April 27 at Kilpisjärvi.

Population edit

Population development and structure edit

Enontekiö currently has nearly 2,000 inhabitants. In the beginning 1990s, there were still 2,500 inhabitants. Because the structurally weak Lapland was hit harder by the Finnish economic crisis than the south, a wave of migration to expansion centers in the south started in the middle of the decade. Initially, the number of inhabitants also rapidly decreased in Enontekiö, but it now has consolidated at a lower level. Enontekiö's population consists of 12.5% under the age of 15, 58.3% between 15 and 64, and 29.2% older than 64.[3] The excess of men is conspicuous. They account for 53.2% of the population.[14]

Population development[15]
Year 1980 1985 1990 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
Inhabitants 2,286 2,415 2,472 2,413 2,378 2,365 2,324 2,225 2,145 2,100 2,073 2,022 1,998 2,000 1,997

Sami edit

 
Boundary sign at Kilpisjärvi, entering Finland on the E8 road at the border with Norway. The top, bilingual sign in Finnish and Northern Sami is in the Lapland Region.

Enontekiö is part of the native settlement area of the indigenous Sami people. Nineteen percent of the municipality's population are ethnic Sami,[16] but only 10.3% speak Sami as their native language.[2] The municipality is part of the Sami "homeland" (kotiseutualue), which is defined by law and where Sami have special minority rights. Thus Northern Sami, the particular Sami language used in Enontekiö, has official status in the municipality besides the Finnish language, and therefore is allowed to be used in contact with the authorities. Well-known Sami from Enontekiö are the artist, Nils-Aslak Valkeapää and the Joik-singer Wimme.

Religion edit

Enontekiö's Evangelical Lutherans are part of the parish of Enontekiö, which is subordinate to the diocese of Oulu. It has been an independent parish since 1916, it had previously been a chapel parish of Muonio. As in the rest of Lapland, the Laestadianism, a conservative Lutheran movement of the Great Awakening, is strongly represented in Enontekiö. The Laestadian are organised within the Evangelical Lutheran Church. From 1826 to 1849, Lars Levi Laestadius, the founder of the Laestadianism, was pastor in Karesuando in Sweden, from where his doctrine quickly spread to the adjacent Enontekiö. The first awakening in Finland took place in the winter of 1846/47 in Enontekiö and Muonio.

Politics edit

Parliamentary elections edit

Results of the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election in Enontekiö:[17]

Administration edit

After some contested decisions have been made during the 2017-2021 election period, some members of the formerly dominating Centre Party established the independent list Enontekiöläisten ääni ("Voice of the people of Enontekiö"). In the 2021 elections of the municipal council, which is the highest instance for local affairs, the new list Enontekiöläisten ääni gained the most votes and now provides five out of 17 representatives to the municipal council. Both of the large parties in rural Finland, the National Coalition Party and the Centre Party have three seats in the municipal council each. The Green league and the local Sami list of Johtti Sápmelaččat have two representatives each. Like Enontekiöläisten ääni, also the Finns Party is new to the municipal council. The Finns Party as well as the Christian Democrats provide one representative to the municipal council each. Since 2017 the National Coalition Party and the Christian Democrats have been in a local alliance. The number of seats in the local municipal council is 17.

Composition of the municipal council (2021–2025)[18]
Party Election results 2021 Seats
Enontekiöläisten ääni 29.6% 5
National Coalition Party 19.8% 3
Centre Party 17.2% 3
Greens 9.9% 2
Johtti Sápmelaččat 9.9% 2
Finns Party 8.9% 1
Christian Democrats 2.8% 1

Coat of arms edit

 
Enontekiö's coat of arms

Enontekiö's coat of arms was designed by Olof Eriksson. It depicts a silver, red-armoured Willow grouse in a blue field. The willow grouse is a very prevalent bird in Northern Lapland and was an important food for Enontekiö's inhabitants in the past, which is why it is also called the "bird of life".

Twin municipalities edit

Enontekiö is a twin municipality with three of its neighbouring municipalities, Kiruna in Sweden, Storfjord and Kautokeino in Norway.

Economy and infrastructure edit

Economy edit

 
Reindeer run free in Enontekiö.

Enontekiö's economic structure has a large percentage involved in the service sector: 76% of the gainfully employed population work in the tertiary sector, 45% of these work in civil service. Agriculture and forestry employ 13% of Enontekiö's inhabitants, the manufacturing sector 6%.[19] As is usual in the structurally weak Lapland, the unemployment in Enontekiö is a big problem: In January 2007 with 24.7%, the municipality had the second highest unemployment rate of all Finnish municipalities.[20] In 1996 at the peak of the Finnish economic crisis, the unemployment rate was near 40%.[21]

Reindeer husbandry was the dominant branch of business in Enontekiö for a long time. In the northwest of Lapland, reindeer husbandry has already been done for centuries, in contrast to the other regions of the Finnish reindeer husbandry area, where it was only introduced on a large scale in the 19th century after the eradication of the wild Finnish forest reindeer (Rangifer tarandus fennicus). Reindeer husbandry plays an important role even today. The herders are organised in the cooperatives (paliskunta) of Näkkälä and Käsivarsi and have a total of 20,000 semi-domesticated reindeer.[22] Due to the climatic conditions, agriculture is scarcely possible, but dairy farming is operated on a small scale. Due to the sparse vegetation, forestry plays only a minor role.

Tourism is a major branch of business in Enontekiö, even if there are fewer visitors than in those municipalities of Lapland which have big skiing centres. Enontekiö mostly attracts nature tourists, who travel to Lapland for hiking, fishing, canoeing, skiing or snowmobiling, as well as automobile tourists, such as those on their way to the North Cape. Annually, more than 100,000 overnight stays are registered. Twenty percent of the tourists are from abroad. The largest group are the Norwegians, followed by the Germans, Swedes, Dutch, and British.[23] The Norwegians visit Enontekiö mainly for its low prices. The Norwegian shopping tourism made up 40% of the retail business volume in all of Enontekiö, and even 60–70% in Kilpisjärvi, near the border.[24]

Transportation edit

 
Highway 21 in the north of Enontekiö

Enontekiö's most important traffic connection is highway 21 (E8). Along its entire route, starting in Tornio at the Gulf of Bothnia, it follows the line of the Finnish–Swedish border and ends in Kilpisjärvi at the Norwegian border. The main road 93 branches off highway 21 at Palojoensuu and at first leads in an eastward direction to the municipal centre of Hetta and then further in a northward direction to the Norwegian border. The villages of the southern part of the municipality are connected to each other by small roads. But in the northern part of Enontekiö, highway 21 is the only road, taking a course next to the banks of the Muonionjoki and Könkämäeno; the uninhabited area between the river valley and the Norwegian border has no roads at all. There are three border crossings in Enontekiö: The village of Karesuvanto is connected by a bridge with the Swedish bank and there are border crossings to Norway in Kilpisjärvi and Kivilompolo.

The municipality has its own airport, (Enontekiö Airport), west of Hetta. It is mainly approached by charter flights, whose passengers account for 95% of the airport's passenger volume. Regular flights to Enontekiö are established only in the spring. The company Finncomm Airlines provides direct flights to Enontekiö from Helsinki-Vantaa between March and May. The passenger volume of 13,700 passengers per year[25] is relatively low.

Enontekiö is not connected to the railroad network. The next railroad station is in Kolari, approximately 150 kilometres (93 mi) to the south.

Education and social affairs edit

There are five primary schools in Enontekiö: In the Kilpisjärvi primary school, pupils are taught from preschool to 9th grade, in the schools of Karesuvanto, Hetta, and Peltojärvi, from preschool to 6th grade. Enontekiö's upper school is attended by pupils of the 7th to 9th grade. The higher education entrance qualification can be obtained after graduating from the upper school at the secondary school of Enontekiö. The primary schools of Kilpisjärvi and Karesuvanto and the upper school of Enontekiö offer native language education to Sami pupils. Adult education takes place at an adult education centre. The municipality's library is located in the main village of Hetta, more remote regions are supplied by a mobile library. The University of Helsinki runs a biological research station in Kilpisjärvi. The University of Oulu runs the KAIRA radio telescope facility at Kilpisjärvi as well.

Healthcare is organised together with the neighbouring municipality of Muonio. In Enontekiö, there are two health centres for inpatient treatment, one in Hetta and one in Karesuvanto. Beds are available in Muonio's health centre.

Culture and sightseeing edit

Buildings edit

 
The church of Enontekiö

The church of Enontekiö was built in the central village of Hetta in 1951/52 as a replacement for its predecessor, which was destroyed during the Lapland war; it is the sixth church of the municipality. It is a modern building made from brick and concrete and designed by the architect, Veikko Larkas. The slender church tower is 30 m high and is connected to the nave by a porch. The artist Uuno Eskola made the altarpiece of the church with a combination of fresco and mosaic techniques. It depicts the resurrected Jesus Christ, who is blessing Lapland and its people. The church's organ was a gift from Germany from 1958.

Due to their preserved old building structure, the villages of Kultima, Näkkälä, Nunnanen, Peltovuoma, Pöyrisjärvi, and Raittijärvi are officially listed cultural monuments. The stone bridge of Ahdaskuru, erected in 1943 near the Norwegian border, is also listed; it is the only bridge in Lapland which was not destroyed during the Lapland War.[26]

Museums edit

There are three museums in Enontekiö: The buildings of the museum of local history, which opened in 1991, were moved to Hetta from different villages in the municipality. They are a farmhouse from Raattama from the end of the 19th century, a living room from Ylikyrö from the 1920s, a storehouse also from Ylikyrö from the 18th century, a sauna from Muotkajärvi built in 1937, and a cattle shed from Kaukonen in the neighbouring municipality of Kittilä. The nature and culture centre of Fjell-Lapland is maintained by the Finnish Forest Office (Metsähallitus) and is located in Hetta, too. With its exhibitions, it shows the nature of northern Lapland and the culture of the reindeer-Sami. In Järämä, approximately 20 km north of Karesuvanto, a part of the Sturmbock emplacement from the Lapland War was restored. Since 1997, there is an annexed museum, dealing with the history of the Lapland War in Enontekiö.

Regular events edit

Since 1971, a Sami cultural event, the Mary's Days of Hetta (Hetan Marianpäivät), is held at the beginning of March. It continues the old Sami tradition of meeting in the church village on special holidays. Today, Mary's Days include performances of Sami music, art exhibitions, contests of riding a reindeer sleigh and roping. At Easter, a church and chamber music festival, the Music Days of Hetta (Hetan musiikkipäivät), is held in Enontekiö. From the end of April to the beginning of May, a contest of ice fishing (Kilpisjärven pilkkiviikot) attracts fishermen. In late summer, a tournament of orienteering (Suomen tunturisuunnistus) is held on the fells near Kilpisjärvi.

Notable individuals edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Area of Finnish Municipalities 1.1.2018" (PDF). National Land Survey of Finland. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d "Population growth biggest in nearly 70 years". Population structure. Statistics Finland. 26 April 2024. ISSN 1797-5395. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Population according to age (1-year) and sex by area and the regional division of each statistical reference year, 2003–2020". StatFin. Statistics Finland. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Luettelo kuntien ja seurakuntien tuloveroprosenteista vuonna 2023". Tax Administration of Finland. 14 November 2022. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  5. ^ King, Lorenz; Seppälä, Matti (1988). "Permafrost sites in Finnish Lapland and their environment". Permafrost Fifth International Conference, Trondheim, Proceedings. 1: 183–188.
  6. ^ Finnish Museum of Natural History: Enontekiön kasvillisuuden erityispiirteitä 2007-06-10 at the Wayback Machine (in Finnish)
  7. ^ Website of the Kilpisjärvi biological station of the University Helsinki: Basic climatological data on Kilpisjärvi, according to data of the Finnish Institute of Meteorology 2007-10-29 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Finnish Institute of Meteorology: Suomen ja maapallon sääennätyksiä (in Finnish)
  9. ^ Finnish Institute of Meteorology: Talven lumista ja lumisuudesta (in Finnish)
  10. ^ Finnish Institute of Meteorology: Where and when are the Northern Lights most seen? 2008-01-02 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "FMI normals 1991-2020" (PDF). fmi.fi. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  12. ^ "FMI open data". FMI. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  13. ^ Tourism portal of Enontekiö municipality: Prehistory
  14. ^ Website of Enontekiö municipality: Tilastotietoa Enontekiön kunnasta 2008-01-04 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ Tilastokeskus (Finnish Office of Statistics)[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ As of 2000, Finnish Ministry of Social Affairs and Health 2008-01-17 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ "Yle - Tulospalvelu - Enontekiö - Lapin vaalipiiri - Eduskuntavaalit 2019 - Yle.fi". vaalit.yle.fi (in Finnish). Retrieved 22 August 2020.
  18. ^ "Enontekiö, results by party". Ministry of Justice of Finland. 16 June 2021. Retrieved 18 June 2021.
  19. ^ As of 2001, Municipality Enontekiö: Enontekiön kehittämisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003–2008[permanent dead link], p. 12. (in Finnish)
  20. ^ Kuntalehti: Työvoiman riittävyys mielenkiinnon kohteeksi, 7/3/2007 Archived 2014-09-30 at archive.today (in Finnish)
  21. ^ Municipality Enontekiö: Enontekiön kehittämisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003–2008[permanent dead link], p. 12. (in Finnish)
  22. ^ Tourism Portal of Municipality Enontekiö: Poronhoito ja muut luontaiselinkeinot 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (in Finnish)
  23. ^ As of 2002, Municipality Enontekiö: Enontekiön kehittämisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003–2008[permanent dead link], p. 34. (in Finnish)
  24. ^ Municipality Enontekiö: Enontekiön kehittämisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003–2008[permanent dead link], p. 30. (in Finnish)
  25. ^ As of 2005, Finavia (Finnish Office of Aviation) 2007-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Finnish Preservation List 1993: Kultiman kylä, Näkkälän kylä, Nunnasen kylä, Peltovuoman kylä, Pöyrisjärven kesäkylä, Raittijärven kylä, Ahdaskurun silta (in Finnish)

External links edit

  •   Enontekiö travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • – Official website
  • Tourism portal of the municipality

enontekiö, finnish, ˈenontekiø, northern, sami, eanodat, anotah, swedish, enontekis, inari, sami, iänudâh, skolt, sami, jeänõk, municipality, finnish, part, lapland, with, approx, inhabitants, situated, outermost, northwest, country, occupies, large, very, spa. Enontekio Finnish ˈenontekio Northern Sami Eanodat ˈe anotah t Swedish Enontekis Inari Sami Ianudah Skolt Sami Jeanok is a municipality in the Finnish part of Lapland with approx 1 800 2 inhabitants It is situated in the outermost northwest of the country and occupies a large and very sparsely populated area of about 8 400 square kilometres 3 200 sq mi 1 between the Swedish and Norwegian border Finland s highest point the Halti fell with a height of 1 324 metres 4 344 ft above the mean sea level is situated in the north of Enontekio The municipality shares borders with regions of Sweden and Norway that encompass the Scandinavian Mountains The administrative centre of Enontekio is the village of Hetta About one fifth of the community s population are Sami people Enontekio s main industries are tourism and reindeer husbandry Enontekio Enontekio Finnish Eanodat Northern Sami Ianudah Inari Sami Jeanok Skolt Sami Enontekis Swedish MunicipalityEnontekion kunta Finnish Eanodaga gielda Northern Sami Enontekis kommun Swedish Coat of armsNickname Arm of FinlandLocation of Enontekio in FinlandCoordinates 68 23 05 N 023 38 20 E 68 38472 N 23 63889 E 68 38472 23 63889Country FinlandRegionLaplandSub regionFell LaplandFounded parish 1747Charter1877SeatHettaGovernment Municipality managerPentti KeskitaloArea 2018 01 01 1 Total8 391 35 km2 3 239 92 sq mi Land7 953 42 km2 3 070 83 sq mi Water445 84 km2 172 14 sq mi Rank4th largest in FinlandPopulation 2023 12 31 2 Total1 771 Rank268th largest in Finland Density0 22 km2 0 6 sq mi 1Population by native language 2 Finnish85 6 official Swedish0 8 Sami10 3 Others3 3 Population by age 3 0 to 1412 5 15 to 6458 3 65 or older29 2 Time zoneUTC 02 00 EET Summer DST UTC 03 00 EEST Websitewww enontekio fi Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Location and dimensions 1 2 Villages 1 3 Topography 1 4 Flora and fauna 1 5 Climate 2 History 2 1 Prehistory and Swedish age 2 2 Period of Russian sovereignty 2 3 After independence 3 Population 3 1 Population development and structure 3 2 Sami 3 3 Religion 4 Politics 4 1 Parliamentary elections 4 2 Administration 4 3 Coat of arms 4 4 Twin municipalities 5 Economy and infrastructure 5 1 Economy 5 2 Transportation 5 3 Education and social affairs 6 Culture and sightseeing 6 1 Buildings 6 2 Museums 6 3 Regular events 7 Notable individuals 8 References 9 External linksGeography editLocation and dimensions edit nbsp Kilpisjarvi Lake Enontekio is located in the region of Lapland in the outermost northwest tip of Finland The salient between the Swedish and Norwegian borders which is occupied by the municipality of Enontekio is called Kasivarsi Finnish for arm because before World War II Finland s borders had the shape of a woman s figure Suomi neito and the area looked like her raised right arm The municipality occupies a large and sparsely populated area of 8 391 35 km2 3 239 92 sq mi 1 more than three times the area of Luxembourg Thus Enontekio is Finland s third largest municipality in size after Inari and Sodankyla and with a population density of only 0 22 km2 0 57 sq mi it is the second most sparsely populated municipality after Savukoski Enontekio s neighbouring municipalities are Inari in the east Kittila in the southeast and Muonio in the south on the Swedish side in the west there is the municipality of Kiruna and on the Norwegian side in the north there are Storfjord Gaivuotna Kafjord Nordreisa and Kautokeino Enontekio shares a border of more than 450 kilometres 280 mi with the two adjacent states The border to Sweden is formed by the river Muonionjoki and its tributary Konkamaeno Villages edit The main village of Enontekio is the settlement of Hetta in the south with approx 530 inhabitants There is no village with the name of Enontekio but Hetta is often called the municipality s name Other important places are the village of Kilpisjarvi which is located near the border triangle of Finland Sweden Norway as well as Karesuvanto and Palojoensuu both of which are located at the Muonionjoki at the Swedish border Enontekio s villages are concentrated in the southern area and along the banks of the rivers Konkamaeno and Muonionjoki in the west of the municipality Often there is a corresponding village on the Swedish side of the river bearing the same name or the Swedish form of the name e g Karesuvanto Karesuando In contrast the part of the Kasivarsi Mountains away from the rivers is almost completely uninhabited The following villages belong to Enontekio Sami name if available in parentheses Hetta Heahtta Jatuni Jahton Karesuvanto Garasavvon Kelottijarvi Gelojavri Ketomella Kilpisjarvi Gilbbesjavri Kultima Gulddan Kuttanen Guhttas Leppajarvi Leaibejavri Luspa Luspi Markkina Boaresmarkan Maunu Mavdna Muotkajarvi Muotkejavri Nakkala Neahcil Nartteli Nunnanen Njunnas Palojarvi Balojavri Palojoensuu Balojohnjalbmi Peltovuoma Bealdovuopmi Raittijarvi Ropinsalmi Saivomuotka Saivomuotki Sonkamuotka Vahaniva Vuontisjarvi Vuottesjavri Yli Kyro Topography edit nbsp Pitsuskongas a plunge type waterfall in Enontekio In its northern region Enontekio shares borders with areas of Sweden and Norway in which segments of the Scandinavian Mountains are located Through that and through its location in the far north of Finland it is geologically and scenically very different from the rest of the country Halti the highest mountain of Finland with a height of 1 324 m is located in Enontekio together with all 21 other mountains higher than 1 000 m 3 281 ft in the country Besides Haltitunturi probably the best known and scenically most distinctive mountain is the Saana with a height of 1 029 metres 3 376 ft which rises above the village of Kilpisjarvi The southern part of the municipality is less mountainous but some single fjells tunturi which means hills towering above the timber line rise above the otherwise rather flat surrounding area Below a part of the Pallastunturi Ounastunturi massif extends into Enontekio s territory A little more than 5 of the municipality s area consists of water Several large rivers originate in Enontekio The Muonionjoki Ounasjoki Ivalojoki and one of the headstreams of the Tenojoki have their sources in the municipality Enontekio owes its name to them Eno is an old Finnish word for major river cognate with the Northern Sami word Eatnu or large river largest river in a specific region and tekio is derived from the Northern Sami derivational suffix dat which forms abstract nouns All of the 825 lakes in the area are rather small The largest lakes are the Poyrisjarvi the Kilpisjarvi near the village with the same name and the Ounasjarvi near Hetta Flora and fauna edit nbsp In the northern area of the municipality the vegetation is very sparse The vegetation of Enontekio is very meagre due to the extreme northern latitude The northern border of the natural geographic range of the spruce approx matches the southern border of the municipality the range of the pine ends only 20 km 12 mi north of Hetta too North of that only birches grow The timber line is approximately 600 m 2 000 ft above that a tundra like vegetation predominates Heaths extends above timber line The lower heathlands are dominated by shrubs such as Betula nana Vaccinium myrtillus and Empetrum hermaphroditum whereas in the fjell heaths at higher elevations Salix herbacea Empetrum and alpine grasses with lichens and mosses occur In the mountains of the north west Cassiope tetragona is abundant 5 The largest part of the municipal area consists of these plateaus or bogs which mainly predominate at the rivers Only 19 of Enontekio s area is afforested About 70 of the total area is conservation area of various grades 6 Enontekio contains parts of the Pallas Yllastunturi National Park as well as the wilderness areas of Kasivarsi Pulju Poyrisjarvi and Tarvantovaara Due to the harsh climatic conditions there are not especially many species among Enontekio s fauna however there are Arctic species that are unknown to southern Finland e g Norway lemming Arctic fox snowy owl Eurasian dotterel ptarmigan and ring ouzel Besides the semi domesticated reindeer there are a lot of small mammals and bird species Climate edit Enontekio s climate is characterised by the extreme northern location the high altitude compared to the rest of Finland and the closeness of the Arctic Ocean Due to the moderating influence of the Gulf Stream the winters are not quite as harsh as in central Lapland which is characterised by the continental climate but the summers are shorter and cooler The annual average temperatures of Enontekio are the lowest of Finland In Kilpisjarvi in the north of the municipal area the long term average is 2 3 C compared to Helsinki approx 5 C Berlin approx 9 C July is the warmest month with an average temperature of 10 9 C the coldest is January with 13 6 C Due to these extreme climatic conditions the growing season only lasts a little over 100 days Thus the winter with its 200 days is very long The annual average precipitation is 459 millimetres 18 1 in 7 In the cold season enormous amounts of snow can fall The highest snow depth ever recorded in Finland was measured on April 19 1997 in Kilpisjarvi 190 centimetres 75 in 8 Normally a permanent snow cover is generally formed in October and does not melt again until the end of May 9 In sheltered places snow can remain even longer thus a ski race is traditionally held for Midsummer s night in Kilpisjarvi Enontekio s municipal area is located between 200 and 300 km north of the Arctic Circle Accordingly there are extreme seasonal differences in the length of daylight In Kilpisjarvi the Midnight Sun shines between May 22 and July 23 Accordingly Polar night kaamos prevails between December 2 and January 11 Enontekio has the highest rate of occurrence of Polar lights in Finland In the region around Kilpisjarvi this natural spectacle can be observed on average three out of four nights during the dark season in clear weather 10 Climate data for Enontekio Kilpisjarvi kylakeskus 1991 2020 normals extremes 1979 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high C F 6 2 43 2 6 4 43 5 8 2 46 8 12 7 54 9 26 1 79 0 26 6 79 9 28 3 82 9 26 7 80 1 20 2 68 4 12 9 55 2 9 4 48 9 6 8 44 2 28 3 82 9 Mean maximum C F 2 1 35 8 2 1 35 8 3 6 38 5 7 5 45 5 14 0 57 2 20 3 68 5 23 0 73 4 21 4 70 5 16 1 61 0 9 1 48 4 4 2 39 6 3 4 38 1 24 1 75 4 Mean daily maximum C F 7 7 18 1 7 9 17 8 4 2 24 4 0 9 33 6 6 2 43 2 12 2 54 0 16 2 61 2 14 3 57 7 9 1 48 4 2 0 35 6 3 2 26 2 5 8 21 6 2 7 36 9 Daily mean C F 12 2 10 0 12 3 9 9 8 8 16 2 3 5 25 7 2 3 36 1 7 7 45 9 11 6 52 9 10 1 50 2 5 7 42 3 0 5 31 1 6 5 20 3 10 1 13 8 1 4 29 5 Mean daily minimum C F 17 3 0 9 17 4 0 7 14 1 6 6 8 3 17 1 1 4 29 5 3 8 38 8 7 9 46 2 6 8 44 2 2 9 37 2 3 0 26 6 10 0 14 0 14 7 5 5 5 4 22 3 Mean minimum C F 33 0 27 4 32 1 25 8 29 1 20 4 22 8 9 0 9 6 14 7 0 8 30 6 2 7 36 9 0 7 33 3 3 1 26 4 11 7 10 9 22 3 8 1 29 3 20 7 36 0 32 8 Record low C F 40 2 40 4 41 0 41 8 37 7 35 9 31 0 23 8 22 0 7 6 4 2 24 4 0 7 30 7 1 9 28 6 8 5 16 7 24 0 11 2 34 6 30 3 39 1 38 4 41 0 41 8 Average precipitation mm inches 52 2 0 39 1 5 37 1 5 27 1 1 28 1 1 49 1 9 73 2 9 50 2 0 38 1 5 37 1 5 36 1 4 49 1 9 516 20 3 Average precipitation days 11 10 8 6 7 8 10 8 8 9 9 11 105 Source 1 FMI climatological normals for Finland 1991 2020 11 Source 2 Record highs and lows 1979 present 12 History editPrehistory and Swedish age edit The first human settlement in Enontekio emerged after the retreat of the glaciers at the end of the last ice age when people of the Komsa culture migrated from the coast of the Arctic Ocean The oldest traces of settlement were found at the shores of the Ounasjarvi Lake and are dated to a time 6 000 BC 13 Later the Sami population of Lapland which predominated for a long time in Enontekio developed by the blending of this stone age ancestral population with speakers of Uralic languages who immigrated after the 3rd millennium BC Initially the inhabitants of Enontekio made their living from hunting and fishing and they had only a few reindeer as draught animals In early modern times Enontekio came under Swedish influence during the course of the Christianisation of the shamanistic Sami In the 16th century Enontekio s first church was built It was a small wooden building in the village of Rounala on the right shore today in Sweden of the Konkamaeno river According to tradition the church was erected by three Sami brothers who had converted to Christianity It was a central meeting point where Sami people gathered for religious ceremonies where merchants travelled to sell their wares and where Swedish officials held judicial courts at particular times In 1611 a new church was built in the village of Markkina After the destruction of this church another one was erected in the same place in 1661 Since the end of the 17th century the reindeer Sami culture which was based on keeping large herds of reindeer spread from Norwegian and Swedish Lapland to Enontekio The reindeer Sami of Enontekio had a nomadic way of life they moved with their animals between the coniferous forests in the south to Kafjord Kvaenangen and Nordreisa on the coast of the Arctic Ocean following the annual cycle of summer and winter grazing land Enontekio s last nomads did not settle down until the 1960s but the culture of the reindeer Sami is still preserved in the large scale herding of reindeer As of the 17th century the first Finnish people settled down in the south of Enontekio and introduced the culture of settled agriculture Due to the Finnish immigration and the assimilation of the old established Sami population a Finnish majority emerged over the years Period of Russian sovereignty edit In 1809 when Sweden ceded the region of today s Finland to Russia in the Treaty of Fredrikshamn Enontekio became a part of the newly founded Grand Duchy of Finland too Because the church of Markkina stood on the Swedish and therefore wrong side of the river after the Swedish Russian demarcation it was torn down in 1826 Its beams were shipped down the Muoniojoki to Palojoensuu where the church was rebuilt as henceforth the fourth church of Enontekio Already in 1864 the church was again moved to Hetta which had in the meantime became the largest settlement of the region The closing of the Russian Norwegian border in 1852 and of the Russian Swedish border in 1889 had severe consequences for Enontekio s reindeer nomads because they could no longer move with their herds to the coast of the Arctic Ocean As a result they transferred their grazing areas inland to the southeast and helped spread the culture of reindeer herding to the remaining parts of Lapland Due to the separation of the administration of the municipality from the church administration the political municipality of Enontekio came into existence in 1877 After independence edit nbsp Finnish soldiers hoist a flag at the Norwegian border after the last German soldiers were expelled With the Finnish declaration of independence in 1917 Enontekio became a part of the independent republic of Finland too During the Continuation War 1941 1944 where Finland allied with Germany in fighting against the Soviet Union Enontekio together with all of northern Finland was part of the operational region of the Wehrmacht In 1942 the Germans in Enontekio started to establish the Sturmbock emplacement in occupied Norway and in Petsamo in order to protect the harbours on the Arctic Ocean When Finland concluded the Moscow Armistice with the Soviet Union on September 4 1944 committing themselves to expel the German troops the Finnish German Lapland War broke out Lapland s civilian population had to be moved to a safe place in a very short time Enontekio s population was evacuated to neutral Sweden together with all of western Lapland s inhabitants After the Germans quickly left southern Lapland the 12 000 soldiers of the 7th Gebirgsdivision Mountain Division of the Wehrmacht occupied the Sturmbock emplacement at the end of October During their fallback the German applied the tactics of scorched earth and devastated Enontekio too During the cold winter a war of attrition was maintained between German troops barricaded in their fortifications and Finnish troops who took a stand in Markkina After the Wehrmacht had abandoned Petsamo and northern Norway the Sturmbock emplacement was no longer of strategic value and was cleared without a struggle at the beginning of January in 1945 In order to secure the flank of Lyngen their last emplacement in northern Norway the Germans still operated in the north of the Kasivarsi region where minor combat operations took place before the last Wehrmacht soldiers left Finnish soil on April 27 at Kilpisjarvi Population editPopulation development and structure edit Enontekio currently has nearly 2 000 inhabitants In the beginning 1990s there were still 2 500 inhabitants Because the structurally weak Lapland was hit harder by the Finnish economic crisis than the south a wave of migration to expansion centers in the south started in the middle of the decade Initially the number of inhabitants also rapidly decreased in Enontekio but it now has consolidated at a lower level Enontekio s population consists of 12 5 under the age of 15 58 3 between 15 and 64 and 29 2 older than 64 3 The excess of men is conspicuous They account for 53 2 of the population 14 Population development 15 Year 1980 1985 1990 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Inhabitants 2 286 2 415 2 472 2 413 2 378 2 365 2 324 2 225 2 145 2 100 2 073 2 022 1 998 2 000 1 997 Sami edit nbsp Boundary sign at Kilpisjarvi entering Finland on the E8 road at the border with Norway The top bilingual sign in Finnish and Northern Sami is in the Lapland Region Enontekio is part of the native settlement area of the indigenous Sami people Nineteen percent of the municipality s population are ethnic Sami 16 but only 10 3 speak Sami as their native language 2 The municipality is part of the Sami homeland kotiseutualue which is defined by law and where Sami have special minority rights Thus Northern Sami the particular Sami language used in Enontekio has official status in the municipality besides the Finnish language and therefore is allowed to be used in contact with the authorities Well known Sami from Enontekio are the artist Nils Aslak Valkeapaa and the Joik singer Wimme Religion edit Enontekio s Evangelical Lutherans are part of the parish of Enontekio which is subordinate to the diocese of Oulu It has been an independent parish since 1916 it had previously been a chapel parish of Muonio As in the rest of Lapland the Laestadianism a conservative Lutheran movement of the Great Awakening is strongly represented in Enontekio The Laestadian are organised within the Evangelical Lutheran Church From 1826 to 1849 Lars Levi Laestadius the founder of the Laestadianism was pastor in Karesuando in Sweden from where his doctrine quickly spread to the adjacent Enontekio The first awakening in Finland took place in the winter of 1846 47 in Enontekio and Muonio Politics editParliamentary elections edit Results of the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election in Enontekio 17 Centre Party 38 2 True Finns 15 2 National Coalition Party 14 7 Social Democratic Party 12 7 Swedish People s Party 0 3 Left Alliance 4 8 Green League 9 0 Christian Democrats 3 4 Administration edit After some contested decisions have been made during the 2017 2021 election period some members of the formerly dominating Centre Party established the independent list Enontekiolaisten aani Voice of the people of Enontekio In the 2021 elections of the municipal council which is the highest instance for local affairs the new list Enontekiolaisten aani gained the most votes and now provides five out of 17 representatives to the municipal council Both of the large parties in rural Finland the National Coalition Party and the Centre Party have three seats in the municipal council each The Green league and the local Sami list of Johtti Sapmelaccat have two representatives each Like Enontekiolaisten aani also the Finns Party is new to the municipal council The Finns Party as well as the Christian Democrats provide one representative to the municipal council each Since 2017 the National Coalition Party and the Christian Democrats have been in a local alliance The number of seats in the local municipal council is 17 Composition of the municipal council 2021 2025 18 Party Election results 2021 Seats Enontekiolaisten aani 29 6 5 National Coalition Party 19 8 3 Centre Party 17 2 3 Greens 9 9 2 Johtti Sapmelaccat 9 9 2 Finns Party 8 9 1 Christian Democrats 2 8 1 Coat of arms edit nbsp Enontekio s coat of arms Enontekio s coat of arms was designed by Olof Eriksson It depicts a silver red armoured Willow grouse in a blue field The willow grouse is a very prevalent bird in Northern Lapland and was an important food for Enontekio s inhabitants in the past which is why it is also called the bird of life Twin municipalities edit Enontekio is a twin municipality with three of its neighbouring municipalities Kiruna in Sweden Storfjord and Kautokeino in Norway Economy and infrastructure editEconomy edit nbsp Reindeer run free in Enontekio Enontekio s economic structure has a large percentage involved in the service sector 76 of the gainfully employed population work in the tertiary sector 45 of these work in civil service Agriculture and forestry employ 13 of Enontekio s inhabitants the manufacturing sector 6 19 As is usual in the structurally weak Lapland the unemployment in Enontekio is a big problem In January 2007 with 24 7 the municipality had the second highest unemployment rate of all Finnish municipalities 20 In 1996 at the peak of the Finnish economic crisis the unemployment rate was near 40 21 Reindeer husbandry was the dominant branch of business in Enontekio for a long time In the northwest of Lapland reindeer husbandry has already been done for centuries in contrast to the other regions of the Finnish reindeer husbandry area where it was only introduced on a large scale in the 19th century after the eradication of the wild Finnish forest reindeer Rangifer tarandus fennicus Reindeer husbandry plays an important role even today The herders are organised in the cooperatives paliskunta of Nakkala and Kasivarsi and have a total of 20 000 semi domesticated reindeer 22 Due to the climatic conditions agriculture is scarcely possible but dairy farming is operated on a small scale Due to the sparse vegetation forestry plays only a minor role Tourism is a major branch of business in Enontekio even if there are fewer visitors than in those municipalities of Lapland which have big skiing centres Enontekio mostly attracts nature tourists who travel to Lapland for hiking fishing canoeing skiing or snowmobiling as well as automobile tourists such as those on their way to the North Cape Annually more than 100 000 overnight stays are registered Twenty percent of the tourists are from abroad The largest group are the Norwegians followed by the Germans Swedes Dutch and British 23 The Norwegians visit Enontekio mainly for its low prices The Norwegian shopping tourism made up 40 of the retail business volume in all of Enontekio and even 60 70 in Kilpisjarvi near the border 24 Transportation edit nbsp Highway 21 in the north of Enontekio Enontekio s most important traffic connection is highway 21 E8 Along its entire route starting in Tornio at the Gulf of Bothnia it follows the line of the Finnish Swedish border and ends in Kilpisjarvi at the Norwegian border The main road 93 branches off highway 21 at Palojoensuu and at first leads in an eastward direction to the municipal centre of Hetta and then further in a northward direction to the Norwegian border The villages of the southern part of the municipality are connected to each other by small roads But in the northern part of Enontekio highway 21 is the only road taking a course next to the banks of the Muonionjoki and Konkamaeno the uninhabited area between the river valley and the Norwegian border has no roads at all There are three border crossings in Enontekio The village of Karesuvanto is connected by a bridge with the Swedish bank and there are border crossings to Norway in Kilpisjarvi and Kivilompolo The municipality has its own airport Enontekio Airport west of Hetta It is mainly approached by charter flights whose passengers account for 95 of the airport s passenger volume Regular flights to Enontekio are established only in the spring The company Finncomm Airlines provides direct flights to Enontekio from Helsinki Vantaa between March and May The passenger volume of 13 700 passengers per year 25 is relatively low Enontekio is not connected to the railroad network The next railroad station is in Kolari approximately 150 kilometres 93 mi to the south Education and social affairs edit There are five primary schools in Enontekio In the Kilpisjarvi primary school pupils are taught from preschool to 9th grade in the schools of Karesuvanto Hetta and Peltojarvi from preschool to 6th grade Enontekio s upper school is attended by pupils of the 7th to 9th grade The higher education entrance qualification can be obtained after graduating from the upper school at the secondary school of Enontekio The primary schools of Kilpisjarvi and Karesuvanto and the upper school of Enontekio offer native language education to Sami pupils Adult education takes place at an adult education centre The municipality s library is located in the main village of Hetta more remote regions are supplied by a mobile library The University of Helsinki runs a biological research station in Kilpisjarvi The University of Oulu runs the KAIRA radio telescope facility at Kilpisjarvi as well Healthcare is organised together with the neighbouring municipality of Muonio In Enontekio there are two health centres for inpatient treatment one in Hetta and one in Karesuvanto Beds are available in Muonio s health centre Culture and sightseeing editBuildings edit nbsp The church of Enontekio The church of Enontekio was built in the central village of Hetta in 1951 52 as a replacement for its predecessor which was destroyed during the Lapland war it is the sixth church of the municipality It is a modern building made from brick and concrete and designed by the architect Veikko Larkas The slender church tower is 30 m high and is connected to the nave by a porch The artist Uuno Eskola made the altarpiece of the church with a combination of fresco and mosaic techniques It depicts the resurrected Jesus Christ who is blessing Lapland and its people The church s organ was a gift from Germany from 1958 Due to their preserved old building structure the villages of Kultima Nakkala Nunnanen Peltovuoma Poyrisjarvi and Raittijarvi are officially listed cultural monuments The stone bridge of Ahdaskuru erected in 1943 near the Norwegian border is also listed it is the only bridge in Lapland which was not destroyed during the Lapland War 26 Museums edit There are three museums in Enontekio The buildings of the museum of local history which opened in 1991 were moved to Hetta from different villages in the municipality They are a farmhouse from Raattama from the end of the 19th century a living room from Ylikyro from the 1920s a storehouse also from Ylikyro from the 18th century a sauna from Muotkajarvi built in 1937 and a cattle shed from Kaukonen in the neighbouring municipality of Kittila The nature and culture centre of Fjell Lapland is maintained by the Finnish Forest Office Metsahallitus and is located in Hetta too With its exhibitions it shows the nature of northern Lapland and the culture of the reindeer Sami In Jarama approximately 20 km north of Karesuvanto a part of the Sturmbock emplacement from the Lapland War was restored Since 1997 there is an annexed museum dealing with the history of the Lapland War in Enontekio Regular events edit Since 1971 a Sami cultural event the Mary s Days of Hetta Hetan Marianpaivat is held at the beginning of March It continues the old Sami tradition of meeting in the church village on special holidays Today Mary s Days include performances of Sami music art exhibitions contests of riding a reindeer sleigh and roping At Easter a church and chamber music festival the Music Days of Hetta Hetan musiikkipaivat is held in Enontekio From the end of April to the beginning of May a contest of ice fishing Kilpisjarven pilkkiviikot attracts fishermen In late summer a tournament of orienteering Suomen tunturisuunnistus is held on the fells near Kilpisjarvi Notable individuals editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Andte Gaupe Juuso Big Brother 2014 winner Kai Hyttinen musician and a former Kilpisjarvi wilderness guide Anni Kristiina Juuso actress Aslak Juuso a herder Pigga Keskitalo Sami politician and academic Yrjo Kokko writer Ilmari Mattila actress Juhani Raattamaa lay preacher Wimme Saari singer Nils Aslak Valkeapaa writer artist and musician Niko Valkeapaa musician Vuontis Kalle storytellerReferences edit a b c Area of Finnish Municipalities 1 1 2018 PDF National Land Survey of Finland Retrieved 30 January 2018 a b c d Population growth biggest in nearly 70 years Population structure Statistics Finland 26 April 2024 ISSN 1797 5395 Retrieved 29 April 2024 a b Population according to age 1 year and sex by area and the regional division of each statistical reference year 2003 2020 StatFin Statistics Finland Retrieved 2 May 2021 a b Luettelo kuntien ja seurakuntien tuloveroprosenteista vuonna 2023 Tax Administration of Finland 14 November 2022 Retrieved 7 May 2023 King Lorenz Seppala Matti 1988 Permafrost sites in Finnish Lapland and their environment Permafrost Fifth International Conference Trondheim Proceedings 1 183 188 Finnish Museum of Natural History Enontekion kasvillisuuden erityispiirteita Archived 2007 06 10 at the Wayback Machine in Finnish Website of the Kilpisjarvi biological station of the University Helsinki Basic climatological data on Kilpisjarvi according to data of the Finnish Institute of Meteorology Archived 2007 10 29 at the Wayback Machine Finnish Institute of Meteorology Suomen ja maapallon saaennatyksia in Finnish Finnish Institute of Meteorology Talven lumista ja lumisuudesta in Finnish Finnish Institute of Meteorology Where and when are the Northern Lights most seen Archived 2008 01 02 at the Wayback Machine FMI normals 1991 2020 PDF fmi fi Retrieved 20 April 2023 FMI open data FMI Retrieved 20 April 2023 Tourism portal of Enontekio municipality Prehistory Website of Enontekio municipality Tilastotietoa Enontekion kunnasta Archived 2008 01 04 at the Wayback Machine Tilastokeskus Finnish Office of Statistics permanent dead link As of 2000 Finnish Ministry of Social Affairs and Health Archived 2008 01 17 at the Wayback Machine Yle Tulospalvelu Enontekio Lapin vaalipiiri Eduskuntavaalit 2019 Yle fi vaalit yle fi in Finnish Retrieved 22 August 2020 Enontekio results by party Ministry of Justice of Finland 16 June 2021 Retrieved 18 June 2021 As of 2001 Municipality Enontekio Enontekion kehittamisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003 2008 permanent dead link p 12 in Finnish Kuntalehti Tyovoiman riittavyys mielenkiinnon kohteeksi 7 3 2007 Archived 2014 09 30 at archive today in Finnish Municipality Enontekio Enontekion kehittamisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003 2008 permanent dead link p 12 in Finnish Tourism Portal of Municipality Enontekio Poronhoito ja muut luontaiselinkeinot Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine in Finnish As of 2002 Municipality Enontekio Enontekion kehittamisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003 2008 permanent dead link p 34 in Finnish Municipality Enontekio Enontekion kehittamisstrategia ja toimepideohjelma 2003 2008 permanent dead link p 30 in Finnish As of 2005 Finavia Finnish Office of Aviation Archived 2007 10 08 at the Wayback Machine Finnish Preservation List 1993 Kultiman kyla Nakkalan kyla Nunnasen kyla Peltovuoman kyla Poyrisjarven kesakyla Raittijarven kyla Ahdaskurun silta in Finnish External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Enontekio nbsp Enontekio travel guide from Wikivoyage Municipality of Enontekio Official website Tourism portal of the municipality Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enontekio amp oldid 1221783186, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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