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Finnmark

Finnmark[4] (Norwegian: [ˈfɪ̀nːmɑrk] (listen); Northern Sami: Finnmárku [ˈfinːmaːrku]; Kven: Finmarku; Finnish: Ruija [ˈrui̯jɑ]; Russian: Финнмарк) is a former county in the northern part of Norway, and it is scheduled to become a county again in 2024.

Finnmark fylke
Finnmárkku fylka (Northern Sami)
Finmarkun Fylkki (Kven)
Ruijan lääni (Finnish)
August 2009 view towards Váldatgohppi and Kunsavárri mountain in Porsanger, Norway
Finnmark fylke
Finnmark within Finnmark
Finnmark fylke
Finnmark fylke (Norway)
Coordinates: 70°N 25°E / 70°N 25°E / 70; 25Coordinates: 70°N 25°E / 70°N 25°E / 70; 25
CountryNorway
CountyFinnmark
DistrictNorthern Norway
Established1576
Disestablished1 Jan 2020
 • Succeeded byTroms og Finnmark county
Re-established1 Jan 2024 (planned dissolution)[1]
 • Preceded byTroms og Finnmark county
Administrative centreVadsø
Government
 • BodyFinnmark County Municipality
 • Governor (2016-2018)Ingvild Aleksandersen
 • County mayor
   (2007-2019)
Runar Sjåstad (Ap)
Area
 (upon dissolution)
 • Total48,618 km2 (18,772 sq mi)
 • Land45,757 km2 (17,667 sq mi)
 • Water2,861 km2 (1,105 sq mi)  5.9%
 • Rank#1 in Norway
Population
 (30 September 2019)
 • Total75,540
 • Rank#18 in Norway
 • Density1.55/km2 (4.0/sq mi)
 • Change (10 years)
 +2.73%
DemonymFinnmarking[2]
Official languages
 • Norwegian formBokmål
 • Sámi formNorthern Sami
 • Other language(s)Kven
Time zoneUTC+01:00 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+02:00 (CEST)
ISO 3166 codeNO-20
Income (per capita)128,300 kr (2001)
GDP (per capita)185,563 kr (2001)
GDP national rank#18 in Norway
(0.9% of country)
WebsiteOfficial website
Data from Statistics Norway

On 1 January 2020, Finnmark was merged with the neighbouring county of Troms to form the new Troms og Finnmark county. On 1 January 2024, the county will be demerged back to the counties Finnmark and Troms, after a decision made by parliament on 15 June 2022.[5][6][1]

By land, it bordered Troms county to the west, Finland (Lapland region) to the south, and Russia (Murmansk Oblast) to the east, and by water, the Norwegian Sea (Atlantic Ocean) to the northwest, and the Barents Sea (Arctic Ocean) to the north and northeast.

The county was formerly known as Finmarkens amt or Vardøhus amt. Starting in 2002, it had two official names: Finnmark (Norwegian) and Finnmárku (Northern Sami). It was part of the Sápmi region, which spans four countries, as well as the Barents Region, and is the largest and least populated county of Norway.

Situated at the northernmost part of continental Europe, where the Norwegian coastline swings eastward, Finnmark is an area "where East meets West," in culture as well as in nature and geography. Vardø, the easternmost municipality in Norway, is located farther east than the cities of Saint Petersburg and Istanbul.

Four municipalities (of the district's 18) had population increases during Q1 in 2021: Alta, Tana, Berlevåg, Loppa.[7]

Name

The name, Finnmark, derives from the Old Norse form of the name was Finnmǫrk. The first element is finn(ar), the Norse name for the Sámi people. The last element is mǫrk which means "woodland" or "borderland". In Norse times the name referred to the land of the Sami people, or any places where Sámi people were living.[8]

Coat of arms

The coat of arms is black with a gold-colored castle tower, technically described as "Sable, a single-towered castle Or". The design is from 1967 and shows the old Vardøhus Fortress, historically on the eastern border with Russia.[9]

Geography

 
Mountain landscape in Kvalsund, some 35 km (22 mi) south of Hammerfest
 

Finnmark is the northernmost and easternmost county in Norway (Svalbard is not considered a county). By area, Finnmark is Norway's largest county, even larger than the neighboring country of Denmark. However, with a population of about 75,000, it is also the least populated of all Norwegian counties. Finnmark has a total coastline of 6,844 kilometres (4,253 mi), including 3,155 kilometres (1,960 mi) of coastline on the islands. Nearly 12,300 people or 16.6 percent of the county's population in 2000 was living in the 100-meter belt along the coastline.

Knivskjellodden in Nordkapp Municipality (on the island of Magerøya) sometimes considered the northernmost point of Europe (on an island); Kinnarodden on Nordkinn Peninsula in Lebesby Municipality is the northernmost point on the European mainland. Honningsvåg in Finnmark claims to be the northernmost city of the world, and Vardø is the easternmost town in Norway and is farther east than Istanbul.

The coast is indented by large fjords, many of which (in a strict sense) are false fjords, as they are not carved out by glaciers. Some of Norway's largest sea bird colonies can be seen on the northern coast, the largest are Hjelmsøystauran on the island of Hjelmsøya in Måsøy Municipality and Gjesværstappan in Nordkapp Municipality. The highest point is located on the top of the glacier Øksfjordjøkelen, which has an area of 45 square kilometres (17 sq mi), and it is located in Loppa Municipality. Both Øksfjordjøkelen and Seiland Glacier are located in the western part of Finnmark.

The Øksfjord plateau glacier calved directly into the sea (Jøkelfjorden) until 1900, the last glacier in mainland Norway to do so. The central and eastern part of Finnmark is generally less mountainous, and has no glaciers. The land east of Nordkapp is mostly below 300 m (980 ft).

The nature varies from barren coastal areas facing the Barents Sea, to more sheltered fjord areas and river valleys with gullies and tree vegetation. About half of the county is above the tree line, and large parts of the other half is covered with small Downy birch.

The most lush areas are the Alta area and the Tana valleys, and in the east is the lowland area in the Pasvik valley in Sør-Varanger, where the pine and Siberian spruce forest is considered part of the Russian taiga vegetation. This valley has the highest density of Brown bears in Norway, and is the only location in the country with a population of musk-rats, stemming from their introduction from their native North America into Europe in the early 20th century which included their release in a total of 293 localities all over Finland from 1919 and onwards, and then of ca 1,000 muskrats on the Kola Peninsula during 1931–1936. The animal spread and the observations of first ‘possible’ muskrats in the river Alta area in Troms, northern Norway (Vik 1963) were made around 1960, though the first actual specimen was not recovered until 1969 when a muskrat was captured alive in Smalfjord [no] at Tana, Norway (Lund & Wikan 1995). In 1970, another specimen was collected from Jarfjorden in the Sør-Varanger district in Finnmark (Pedersen 1970). Between 1980 and 1988 there were very few observations of muskrats in Norway (Lund & Wikan 1995). Since 1988 there has been a rapid population increase in Sör-Varanger, and the muskrat has spread to almost every part of the municipality.[10] Lynx and moose are common in large parts of Finnmark, but rare on the coast.

 
Map showing coastline and rivers. The largest river, slightly to the right, is Tana, and slightly to the left is Alta-Kautokeino river. Down to the right is lake Inari (Finland) from which goes the Pasvik valley of the Pasvikelva river. Near the far left corner of the map is the green Målselv valley of Troms, with the Målselva river.

The interior parts of the county are part of the great Finnmarksvidda plateau, with an elevation of 300 to 400 m (980 to 1,310 ft), with numerous lakes and river valleys. The plateau is famous for its tens of thousands of reindeer owned by the Sami, and swarms of mosquitos in mid-summer. Finnmarksvidda makes up 36% of the county's area. Stabbursdalen National Park ensures protection for the world's most northern pine forest.

The Tana River, which partly defines the border with Finland, gives the largest catch of salmon of all rivers in Europe, and also has the world record for Atlantic salmon, 36 kg (79 lb). In the east, the Pasvikelva defines the border with Russia.

Climate

Alta airport/Alta (1961–90)
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
32
 
 
−5
−13
 
 
25
 
 
−5
−12
 
 
23
 
 
−1
−9
 
 
17
 
 
3
−4
 
 
20
 
 
8
2
 
 
33
 
 
14
7
 
 
54
 
 
17
10
 
 
49
 
 
15
9
 
 
38
 
 
10
4
 
 
39
 
 
4
−1
 
 
34
 
 
−1
−7
 
 
36
 
 
−3
−11
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: met.no/klimastatistikk/eklima
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
1.3
 
 
22
9
 
 
1
 
 
24
11
 
 
0.9
 
 
29
17
 
 
0.7
 
 
37
25
 
 
0.8
 
 
46
35
 
 
1.3
 
 
57
45
 
 
2.1
 
 
63
50
 
 
1.9
 
 
59
48
 
 
1.5
 
 
50
40
 
 
1.5
 
 
39
30
 
 
1.3
 
 
31
20
 
 
1.4
 
 
26
13
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

The Finnmarksvidda plateau in the interior of the county has a continental climate with the coldest winter temperatures in Norway: the coldest temperature ever recorded was −51.4 °C (−60.5 °F) in Karasjok on 1 January 1886. The 24-hour averages for January and July at the same location are −17.1 °C (1.2 °F) and 13.1 °C (55.6 °F), the annual average is −2.4 °C (27.7 °F), and precipitation is only 366 millimetres (14.4 in) per year with summer as the wettest season.[11] Karasjok has recorded up to 32.4 °C (90.3 °F) in July, giving a possible year amplitude of 84 °C (151 °F) (rare in Europe). Finnmarksvidda has annual mean temperatures down to −3 °C (27 °F) (Sihcajavri in Kautokeino), the coldest in mainland Norway (except for higher mountain areas) and even colder than Jan Mayen and Bear Island. However, Sihcajavri has also recorded 34.3 °C (93.7 °F) on 23 June 1920.

Due to the proximity to the ice-free ocean, winters are much milder in coastal areas (and more windy); Loppa Municipality has average January and July temperatures of −2 °C (28 °F) and 11.6 °C (52.9 °F) respectively, with an annual mean of 3.6 °C (38.5 °F),[12] despite being further north. Average annual precipitation is 914 millimetres (36.0 in) and the wettest season is September until December. The year average temperature difference between Loppa and Karasjok (6 °C) is comparable to the difference between Loppa and London.[13]

In the Köppen climate classification, the climate in Karasjok–and most of the lowland areas in Finnmark–corresponds to the Dfc category (subarctic climate), while the Loppa climate corresponds to the Cfc category. The northeastern coast, from Nordkapp east to Vardø, have arctic tundra climate (Köppen: ET), as the average July temperature is below 10 °C (50 °F).

 
Kjøllefjord on the northeastern coast

Furthermore, elevations exceeding approximately 100 to 200 metres (330 to 660 ft) in coastal areas in western Finnmark and 300 to 500 metres (980 to 1,640 ft) in the interior result in an alpine climate, and in the northeast this merges with the Arctic tundra climate.

The climate in sheltered parts of fjord areas (particularly the Altafjorden) is usually considered the most hospitable: winters are not as cold as in the interior, and summer warmth is comparable. Even if winter temperatures are milder in coastal areas, the coast is more exposed to winter storms, which often complicate or shut down road and air communications.

Midnight sun

 
Sunrise at 07:33 in February; Vadsø

Situated far north of the Arctic Circle, Finnmark has midnight sun from the middle of May until late July. Conversely, in two months of the winter, from late November to late January, the county experiences polar nights where the sun is always below the horizon. As a consequence, there is continuous daylight from early May to early August. At midwinter, there is only a bluish twilight for a couple of hours around noon, which can almost reach full daylight if there are clear skies to the south.

Northern lights

Finnmark is situated in the Aurora Borealis zone, and because of the dry climate with frequent clear skies, Alta Municipality was early chosen as a location for the study of this strange light phenomenon. For this reason, Alta is sometimes referred to as the city of the northern lights.

Economy

 
The Hammerfest suburb of Rypefjord

Fisheries have traditionally been the most important way of living along the coast, where the majority of the Norwegian population live. The red king crab, originally from the northern Pacific ocean but brought to the Barents sea by the Russians, have invaded from the east and are now being exploited commercially (especially in the Varangerfjord). To prevent the crab from spreading too far south, crab fishing west of Nordkapp is totally unregulated.

In more recent years, tourism has grown in importance, with the North Cape (in Nordkapp) and the towns of Alta and Hammerfest as the most important destinations.

As of 2001, one percent of the work force were employed in the oil industry and the mining industry.

There is some mining industry. However, the exploitation of the iron ores along the Kirkenes–Bjørnevatn Line was paused in 2015 and has not restarted (as of 2022).[14]

The slate industry in Alta is well known and have sold to customers as far away as Japan.

An irregular[15] procurement of a commuter boat [or ferry ] in 2020, priced at Norwegian kroner 83 million, is still (as of 2022) causing fear that Finnmark will alone get stuck with paying off the boat (when Finnmark becomes a county in 2024); the expense can lead to budget cuts.

The town of Hammerfest is experiencing an economic boom as a consequence of Statoil's construction of the large land-based LNG site on the island of Melkøya,[16][17] which gets natural gas from the Snøhvit undersea gas field. A new oil field was discovered in 2009 just 45 km (28 mi) off shore,[18][19] close to the Snøhvit field.

There is optimism in the eastern part of the county, as the growing petroleum activity in the Barents Sea is expected to generate increased economic activity on land as well.[20]

Some snow molds are prevalent and well adapted here, including Sclerotinia borealis and Typhula ishikariensis (especially T. i. group III). Both are pathogens of wheat, and S. b. also affects rye, barley, and some trees.[21]

Infrastructure

There are eleven airports, but only Alta Airport, Lakselv-Banak Airport, and Kirkenes-Høybuktmoen Airport have direct flights to Oslo. In addition, Lakselv-Banak Airport in Porsanger is used for training by the Royal Norwegian Air Force and other NATO allies, in conjunction with the nearby Halkavarre shooting range, which allows for practice with precision-guided munitions. Garnisonen i Porsanger is near the Halkavarre training area. There is also the Garnisonen i Sør-Varanger (Gsv) in the east, which guards the border with Russia.

Administration

 
Vadsø with the church, February 2004

The town of Vadsø was the administrative centre for the county of Finnmark, although Alta had the largest population. The Finnmark County Municipality was the governing body for the county. The county was generally divided into two districts: West-Finnmark (Vest-Finnmark) and East-Finnmark (Øst-Finnmark).

Until 2006, Statskog, the Norwegian state-owned agency responsible for the management of state owned forest and mountain real estate, owned about 95% of the land in Finnmark county. On 1 July 2006, the Finnmark Estate agency took over the ownership and management of that land in Finnmark. The Finnmark Estate was governed in tandem by the Finnmark County Municipality and the Sami Parliament of Norway. The Sami Parliament of Norway is based in the village of Karasjok.

The national government runs the Northern Norway Regional Health Authority which in turn owns and operates two hospitals in Finnmark, located in Kirkenes and Hammerfest.

Municipalities

There were 19 municipalities in Finnmark when the county merged into Troms og Finnmark. 18 of those exist as of 2021.

.

History

Historical population
YearPop.±%
195164,511—    
196172,104+11.8%
197176,311+5.8%
198178,331+2.6%
199174,590−4.8%
200174,087−0.7%
201173,417−0.9%
201675,758+3.2%
Source: Statistics Norway.[22]
Religion in Finnmark[23][24]
religion percent
Christianity
89.2%
Islam
0.32%
Buddhism
0.11%
Other
10.37%

People have lived in Finnmark for at least 10,000 years (see Komsa, Pit-Comb Ware culture and Rock carvings at Alta). The destiny of these early cultures is unknown. Three ethnic groups have a long history in Finnmark: the Sami people, the Norwegian people, and the Kven people. Of these, the Sami probably were the first people to explore Finnmark. Ohthere of Hålogaland was an adventurous Norwegian (Norseman) from Hålogaland, the area roughly corresponding to today's Nordland county. Around 890 AD, he claimed, according to historical sources (see Ohthere of Hålogaland) that he lived "north-most of all the Northmen", and that "no one [lived] to the north of him." Later, Norwegians in the 14th century, and Kvens in the 16th century, settled along the coast. See the articles on Kven people and Vardøhus Fortress for more details.

Sami

The Sami are the indigenous people of Finnmark, but Norwegians have lived for hundreds of years on the islands' outer parts, where they made up the majority. The Sami people still constitute the majority in Finnmark's interior parts, while the fjord areas have been ethnically mixed for a long time. This essentially holds true today.

The Sami were for many years victims of the Norwegianization policy, which in essence was an attempt by the government to make them "true Norwegians" and forget about their Sami way of life and religion, which was seen as inferior. As a result, the Sami living at the coast and in the fjords gradually lost much of their culture and often felt ashamed by their Sami inheritance. The Sami in the interior managed to preserve more of their culture. In the 1970s, instruction of the Sami language started in schools, and a new sense of consciousness started to grow among the Sami; today most are proud of their background and culture.

In the midst of this awakening (1979), Norway's government decided to build a dam in Alta to produce hydropower, provoking many Sami and environmentalists to demonstrations and civil disobedience—Alta Conflict. In the end, the dam was built on a much smaller scale than originally intended and the Sami culture was on the government's agenda. The Sami parliament (Sámediggi) was opened in Karasjok in 1989.

Norwegian

 
A Dutch map of Finnmark (1660), showing the border between Norway, Sweden and Russia.

Gjesvær in Nordkapp is mentioned in the Sagas (Heimskringla) as a northern harbor in the Viking Age, especially used by Vikings on the way to Bjarmaland (see Ottar from Hålogaland), and probably also for gathering food in the nearby seabird colony. Coastal areas of Finnmark were colonized by Norwegians beginning in the 10th century, and there are stories describing clashes with the Karelians. Border skirmishes between the Norwegians and Novgorodians continued until 1326, when the Treaty of Novgorod settled the issue.

The first known fortification in Finnmark is Vardøhus festning, first erected in 1306 by King Haakon V Magnusson. This is the world's most northern fortress. In the 17th century, 88 young women were burned as witches in Vardø, an extremely high number compared to the total population in this area at the time.[25] However, the first person burned as witch in Vardø in the 17th century was not a woman, but a man. [Vardø archives]

Finnmark first became subject to increased colonization in the 18th and 19th century. Norway, Sweden, and Russia all claimed control over this area. Finland was part of Russia at that time and had no independent representative. Finnmark was given the status of an Amt (county) in the 19th century. For a time, there was a vibrant trade with Russia (Pomor trade), and many Norwegians settled on the Kola Peninsula (see Kola Norwegians).

Kven

The Finnic Kven residents of Finnmark are largely descendants of Finnish-speaking immigrants who arrived in the area in the 18th century from Meänmaa, and later in the 19th century from Finland, suffering from famine and war.[26]

Brief summary

In 1576, the King of Norway established Vardøhus len as a new administrative unit for the kingdom. In 1660, it became Vardøhus amt, a subordinate to the large Trondhjems stiftamt, based in Trondheim. In 1787, the island of Senja and the Troms area were transferred from Nordlandenes amt to Vardøhus amt. In 1866, the island of Senja and the Troms area were separated from Vardøhus to form the new Tromsø amt. In 1919, the name was again changed to Finnmark fylke. In 2002, the Sami language name, Finnmárku, was added as a co-official name for the county.

Per Fugelli has said that World War II resulted in many persons acquiring psychiatric disorders (psykiske senskadene) which could be from experiencing "bombing, accidents involving mines, burning down of homes, forcible evacuation, illness and starvation during the war and liberation. But it was maybe in particular the treatment of Russian prisoners that left marks on the local population."[27]

World War II

Towards the end of World War II, with Operation Nordlicht, the Germans used the scorched earth tactic in Finnmark and northern Troms to halt the Red Army. As a consequence of this, few houses survived the war, and a large part of the population was forcefully evacuated further south (Tromsø was crowded), but many people avoided evacuation by hiding in caves and mountain huts and waited until the Germans were gone, then inspected their burned homes. There were 11,000 houses, 4,700 cow sheds, 106 schools, 27 churches, and 21 hospitals burned. There were 22,000 communications lines destroyed, roads were blown up, boats destroyed, animals killed, and 1,000 children separated from their parents.[28]

However, after taking the town of Kirkenes on 25 October 1944 (as the first town in Norway), the Red Army did not attempt further offensives in Norway. Free Norwegian forces arrived from Britain and liberated the rest of the county. When war was over, more than 70,000 people were left homeless in Finnmark. The government imposed a temporary ban on residents returning to Finnmark because of the danger of landmines. The ban lasted until the summer of 1945 when evacuees were told that they could finally return home.[citation needed]

 
Fra Hammerfest by Peder Balke (1851)
 
Neiden in Sør-Varanger

Cold War

The Cold War was a period with sometimes high tension in eastern Finnmark, at the 196-kilometre (122 mi) long border with the Soviet Union. To keep tensions from getting too high, Norway declared that no NATO exercises would take place in Finnmark.[29]

Demographics

The old Stone Age Komsa culture is very difficult to relate to the people living in Finnmark today. There are findings suggesting that the Sami people have been there for a long time, but exactly how long is unclear, some scholars[who?] claiming 8000 years but others[who?] only 2500 years. From the 10th century, the coastal areas have been populated and visited by ethnic Norwegians, and Finnmark became part of the kingdom.

The Sami core areas in Norway are in Finnmark, where they constitute about one quarter of the total population. The municipalities of Kautokeino, Karasjok, Tana, Nesseby, and Porsanger in Finnmark county; and the municipalities of Kåfjord (in Troms), Tysfjord (in Nordland), and Snåsa (in Nord-Trøndelag) also have official names in the Sami language. Most municipalities in Sápmi, however, have unofficial names in Sámi as well.

In the 18th century and the 19th century, many Finnish-speaking immigrants settled in Finnmark. Since 1996, they have had minority status as Kven people. The town of Vadsø (Kven: Vesisaari) is often seen as the "Kven capital" in Finnmark.[30]

Lakselv, in central Finnmark, is sometimes referred to as "meeting place for three tribes". After the collapse of the Soviet Union and severe economic troubles in the Russian economy during the 90s, Russian immigrants and shoppers arrived in Kirkenes. Since the beginning of the European migrant crisis many Syrian refugees arrived in Kirkenes via Russia.[31]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Lægland, Martin (29 October 2021). "Vedum: Startet prosessen med oppløsning av Troms og Finnmark". Verdens Gang. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Navn på steder og personer: Innbyggjarnamn" (in Norwegian). Språkrådet.
  3. ^ "Forskrift om målvedtak i kommunar og fylkeskommunar" (in Norwegian). Lovdata.no.
  4. ^ "Stadnamn og rettskriving" (in Norwegian). Kartverket. Retrieved 2018-07-13.
  5. ^ https://www.nrk.no/tromsogfinnmark/vedtatt-i-stortinget_-storfylkene-skal-splittes-igjen_-na-onsker-de-ansatte-ro-og-forutsigbarhet-1.16001790. NRK.no
  6. ^ "Jubel i nord etter skilsmissen: – Nå skal vi feire!" (in Norwegian). NRK. 13 October 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  7. ^ "Vi blir stadig færre i fylket: – Folk har en tendens til å flytte herfra når barna kommer i skolealder". 19 May 2021.
  8. ^ Rygh, Oluf (1924). Norske gaardnavne: Finmarkens amt (in Norwegian) (18 ed.). Kristiania, Norge: W. C. Fabritius & sønners bogtrikkeri. pp. 1–7.
  9. ^ Store norske leksikon. "Finnmark" (in Norwegian). from the original on 2013-02-06. Retrieved 2013-02-18.
  10. ^ Danell, Kjell. (1996). Introductions of aquatic rodents: lessons of the muskrat Ondatra zibethicus invasion. Wildlife Biology. 2. 213–220. 10.2981/wlb.1996.021.
  11. ^ . met.no. Archived from the original on 2007-11-20. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  12. ^ . met.no. Archived from the original on 2007-11-20. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  13. ^ "Meteorological data". worldclimate.com. 2007-02-04. from the original on 2008-06-19. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  14. ^ https://snl.no/Sydvaranger_-_gruveselskap. Store norske leksikon. Retrieved 2022-10-15
  15. ^ https://www.nrk.no/tromsogfinnmark/navaerende-statssekretaer-bestilte-hurtigbat-til-finnmark_-men-manglet-politisk-godkjenning-1.16137389. NRK.no. Retrieved 2022-20-15
  16. ^ Duval-Smith, Alex (2005-11-27). "Arctic booms as climate change melts polar ice cap". London: Observer.guardian.co.uk. from the original on 2008-01-09. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  17. ^ . Statoil.com. Archived from the original on December 14, 2007. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  18. ^ . Aftenposten.no. Archived from the original on 2009-12-14. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  19. ^ . Aftenposten.no. Archived from the original on 2009-01-26. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  20. ^ . Bellona.no. Archived from the original on 2005-09-20. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  21. ^ Hoshino, Tamotsu; Xiao, Nan; Xiao, Nan; Hoshino, Tamotsu; Tkachenko, Oleg B. (2009). "Cold adaptation in the phytopathogenic fungi causing snow molds". Mycoscience. Mycological Society of Japan (J-STAGE). 50 (1): 26–38. doi:10.1007/s10267-008-0452-2. ISSN 1340-3540. S2CID 85291046.
  22. ^ . ssb.no. 26 May 2012. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  23. ^ "Statistikkbanken". ssb.no. 16 July 2012. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  24. ^ Statistics Norway – Members of religious and life stance communities outside the Church of Norway, by religion/life stance. County. 2006–2010 November 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ "BioOne article". Bioone.org. 1970-01-01. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  26. ^ politidepartementet, Justis- og (1 August 1996). "NOU 1994: 21". Regjeringen.no. from the original on 7 November 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2018.
  27. ^ NRK (13 September 2013). "Den glemte krigen". NRK. from the original on 16 June 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2016.
  28. ^ Zimmerman, Susan (November–December 2010). "World War II Magazine". 25 (4): 31. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ German, Robert K. (1982). "Norway and the Bear: Soviet Coercive Diplomacy and Norwegian Security Policy". International Security. 7 (2): 70. doi:10.2307/2538433. JSTOR 2538433. S2CID 154321588.
  30. ^ "Den kvenske folkevandringen til Troms og Finnmark" (in Norwegian). nordlys.no. 2008-02-28. from the original on 2009-07-15. Retrieved 2009-02-12.
  31. ^ Haroon Siddique (18 November 2015). "Bicycles used by Syrian refugees to enter Norway from Russia to be destroyed". the Guardian. from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 20 May 2016.

Bibliography

  • Bjørbæk, Gustav (2003). Norsk Vær i 110 År. Oslo: Damm. ISBN 978-82-04-08695-2.
  • Haugan, Trygve B, ed. (1940). Det Nordlige Norge Fra Trondheim Til Midnattssolens Land. Trondheim: Reisetrafikkforeningen for Trondheim og Trøndelag.
  • Moen, Asbjørn (1998). Nasjonalatlas for Norge: Vegetasjon. Hønefoss: Statens Kartverk. ISBN 978-82-90408-26-3.
  • Norwegian Meteorological Institute (24-hr averages, 1961–90 base period)
  • Tollefsrud, Jan Inge; Tjørve, Even; Hermansen, Pål (1991). Perler i Norsk Natur – En Veiviser. Aschehoug. ISBN 978-82-03-16663-1.
  • Brooke, Arthur de Capell (1826). A winter in Lapland and Sweden, with various observations relating to Finmark and its inhabitants. John Murray.

External links

  • Stone age in Finnmark
  • Finnmark county administration
  • Finnmark at the official travel guide to Norway
  • Kampen vår mot Akersystemet og Staten blir som om Justin Bieber skulle møtt Mike Tyson til boksekamp. Hvor er sensasjonspressen? Hvor er VG, Aftenposten, NRK Dagsrevyen og TV2? Hvor er Dagsnytt atten? Er ikke landets nest største eksportnæring viktig nok? [Our struggle against Akersystemet and the government is as if Justin Bieber was to meet Mike Tyson for a smoker. Where is the press? Where is Verdens Gang, Aftenposten, NRK Dagsrevyen and TV"? Where is "Dagsnytt atten"? Is the country's second largest export industry, not important enough?]
  • "Finmark" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.

finnmark, obsolete, currency, finnish, markka, newspaper, norwegian, ˈfɪ, nːmɑrk, listen, northern, sami, finnmárku, ˈfinːmaːrku, kven, finmarku, finnish, ruija, ˈrui, russian, Финнмарк, former, county, northern, part, norway, scheduled, become, county, again,. For the obsolete currency see Finnish markka For the newspaper see Finnmarken Finnmark 4 Norwegian ˈfɪ nːmɑrk listen Northern Sami Finnmarku ˈfinːmaːrku Kven Finmarku Finnish Ruija ˈrui jɑ Russian Finnmark is a former county in the northern part of Norway and it is scheduled to become a county again in 2024 Finnmark fylke Finnmarkku fylka Northern Sami Finmarkun Fylkki Kven Ruijan laani Finnish Former CountyAugust 2009 view towards Valdatgohppi and Kunsavarri mountain in Porsanger NorwayFlagCoat of armsFinnmark within NorwayFinnmark fylkeFinnmark within FinnmarkShow map of FinnmarkFinnmark fylkeFinnmark fylke Norway Show map of NorwayCoordinates 70 N 25 E 70 N 25 E 70 25 Coordinates 70 N 25 E 70 N 25 E 70 25CountryNorwayCountyFinnmarkDistrictNorthern NorwayEstablished1576Disestablished1 Jan 2020 Succeeded byTroms og Finnmark countyRe established1 Jan 2024 planned dissolution 1 Preceded byTroms og Finnmark countyAdministrative centreVadsoGovernment BodyFinnmark County Municipality Governor 2016 2018 Ingvild Aleksandersen County mayor 2007 2019 Runar Sjastad Ap Area upon dissolution Total48 618 km2 18 772 sq mi Land45 757 km2 17 667 sq mi Water2 861 km2 1 105 sq mi 5 9 Rank 1 in NorwayPopulation 30 September 2019 Total75 540 Rank 18 in Norway Density1 55 km2 4 0 sq mi Change 10 years 2 73 DemonymFinnmarking 2 Official languages 3 Norwegian formBokmal Sami formNorthern Sami Other language s KvenTime zoneUTC 01 00 CET Summer DST UTC 02 00 CEST ISO 3166 codeNO 20Income per capita 128 300 kr 2001 GDP per capita 185 563 kr 2001 GDP national rank 18 in Norway 0 9 of country WebsiteOfficial websiteData from Statistics NorwayOn 1 January 2020 Finnmark was merged with the neighbouring county of Troms to form the new Troms og Finnmark county On 1 January 2024 the county will be demerged back to the counties Finnmark and Troms after a decision made by parliament on 15 June 2022 5 6 1 By land it bordered Troms county to the west Finland Lapland region to the south and Russia Murmansk Oblast to the east and by water the Norwegian Sea Atlantic Ocean to the northwest and the Barents Sea Arctic Ocean to the north and northeast The county was formerly known as Finmarkens amt or Vardohus amt Starting in 2002 it had two official names Finnmark Norwegian and Finnmarku Northern Sami It was part of the Sapmi region which spans four countries as well as the Barents Region and is the largest and least populated county of Norway Situated at the northernmost part of continental Europe where the Norwegian coastline swings eastward Finnmark is an area where East meets West in culture as well as in nature and geography Vardo the easternmost municipality in Norway is located farther east than the cities of Saint Petersburg and Istanbul Four municipalities of the district s 18 had population increases during Q1 in 2021 Alta Tana Berlevag Loppa 7 Contents 1 Name 2 Coat of arms 3 Geography 4 Climate 4 1 Midnight sun 4 2 Northern lights 5 Economy 5 1 Infrastructure 6 Administration 6 1 Municipalities 7 History 7 1 Sami 7 2 Norwegian 7 3 Kven 7 4 Brief summary 7 5 World War II 7 6 Cold War 8 Demographics 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksName EditSee also Hedmark Telemark and Marches The name Finnmark derives from the Old Norse form of the name was Finnmǫrk The first element is finn ar the Norse name for the Sami people The last element is mǫrk which means woodland or borderland In Norse times the name referred to the land of the Sami people or any places where Sami people were living 8 Coat of arms EditThe coat of arms is black with a gold colored castle tower technically described as Sable a single towered castle Or The design is from 1967 and shows the old Vardohus Fortress historically on the eastern border with Russia 9 Geography Edit Mountain landscape in Kvalsund some 35 km 22 mi south of Hammerfest Altafjorden Alta 2003 Finnmark is the northernmost and easternmost county in Norway Svalbard is not considered a county By area Finnmark is Norway s largest county even larger than the neighboring country of Denmark However with a population of about 75 000 it is also the least populated of all Norwegian counties Finnmark has a total coastline of 6 844 kilometres 4 253 mi including 3 155 kilometres 1 960 mi of coastline on the islands Nearly 12 300 people or 16 6 percent of the county s population in 2000 was living in the 100 meter belt along the coastline Knivskjellodden in Nordkapp Municipality on the island of Mageroya sometimes considered the northernmost point of Europe on an island Kinnarodden on Nordkinn Peninsula in Lebesby Municipality is the northernmost point on the European mainland Honningsvag in Finnmark claims to be the northernmost city of the world and Vardo is the easternmost town in Norway and is farther east than Istanbul The coast is indented by large fjords many of which in a strict sense are false fjords as they are not carved out by glaciers Some of Norway s largest sea bird colonies can be seen on the northern coast the largest are Hjelmsoystauran on the island of Hjelmsoya in Masoy Municipality and Gjesvaerstappan in Nordkapp Municipality The highest point is located on the top of the glacier Oksfjordjokelen which has an area of 45 square kilometres 17 sq mi and it is located in Loppa Municipality Both Oksfjordjokelen and Seiland Glacier are located in the western part of Finnmark The Oksfjord plateau glacier calved directly into the sea Jokelfjorden until 1900 the last glacier in mainland Norway to do so The central and eastern part of Finnmark is generally less mountainous and has no glaciers The land east of Nordkapp is mostly below 300 m 980 ft The nature varies from barren coastal areas facing the Barents Sea to more sheltered fjord areas and river valleys with gullies and tree vegetation About half of the county is above the tree line and large parts of the other half is covered with small Downy birch The most lush areas are the Alta area and the Tana valleys and in the east is the lowland area in the Pasvik valley in Sor Varanger where the pine and Siberian spruce forest is considered part of the Russian taiga vegetation This valley has the highest density of Brown bears in Norway and is the only location in the country with a population of musk rats stemming from their introduction from their native North America into Europe in the early 20th century which included their release in a total of 293 localities all over Finland from 1919 and onwards and then of ca 1 000 muskrats on the Kola Peninsula during 1931 1936 The animal spread and the observations of first possible muskrats in the river Alta area in Troms northern Norway Vik 1963 were made around 1960 though the first actual specimen was not recovered until 1969 when a muskrat was captured alive in Smalfjord no at Tana Norway Lund amp Wikan 1995 In 1970 another specimen was collected from Jarfjorden in the Sor Varanger district in Finnmark Pedersen 1970 Between 1980 and 1988 there were very few observations of muskrats in Norway Lund amp Wikan 1995 Since 1988 there has been a rapid population increase in Sor Varanger and the muskrat has spread to almost every part of the municipality 10 Lynx and moose are common in large parts of Finnmark but rare on the coast Map showing coastline and rivers The largest river slightly to the right is Tana and slightly to the left is Alta Kautokeino river Down to the right is lake Inari Finland from which goes the Pasvik valley of the Pasvikelva river Near the far left corner of the map is the green Malselv valley of Troms with the Malselva river The interior parts of the county are part of the great Finnmarksvidda plateau with an elevation of 300 to 400 m 980 to 1 310 ft with numerous lakes and river valleys The plateau is famous for its tens of thousands of reindeer owned by the Sami and swarms of mosquitos in mid summer Finnmarksvidda makes up 36 of the county s area Stabbursdalen National Park ensures protection for the world s most northern pine forest The Tana River which partly defines the border with Finland gives the largest catch of salmon of all rivers in Europe and also has the world record for Atlantic salmon 36 kg 79 lb In the east the Pasvikelva defines the border with Russia Climate EditAlta airport Alta 1961 90 Climate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 32 5 13 25 5 12 23 1 9 17 3 4 20 8 2 33 14 7 54 17 10 49 15 9 38 10 4 39 4 1 34 1 7 36 3 11Average max and min temperatures in CPrecipitation totals in mmSource met no klimastatistikk eklimaImperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 1 3 22 9 1 24 11 0 9 29 17 0 7 37 25 0 8 46 35 1 3 57 45 2 1 63 50 1 9 59 48 1 5 50 40 1 5 39 30 1 3 31 20 1 4 26 13Average max and min temperatures in FPrecipitation totals in inchesThe Finnmarksvidda plateau in the interior of the county has a continental climate with the coldest winter temperatures in Norway the coldest temperature ever recorded was 51 4 C 60 5 F in Karasjok on 1 January 1886 The 24 hour averages for January and July at the same location are 17 1 C 1 2 F and 13 1 C 55 6 F the annual average is 2 4 C 27 7 F and precipitation is only 366 millimetres 14 4 in per year with summer as the wettest season 11 Karasjok has recorded up to 32 4 C 90 3 F in July giving a possible year amplitude of 84 C 151 F rare in Europe Finnmarksvidda has annual mean temperatures down to 3 C 27 F Sihcajavri in Kautokeino the coldest in mainland Norway except for higher mountain areas and even colder than Jan Mayen and Bear Island However Sihcajavri has also recorded 34 3 C 93 7 F on 23 June 1920 Due to the proximity to the ice free ocean winters are much milder in coastal areas and more windy Loppa Municipality has average January and July temperatures of 2 C 28 F and 11 6 C 52 9 F respectively with an annual mean of 3 6 C 38 5 F 12 despite being further north Average annual precipitation is 914 millimetres 36 0 in and the wettest season is September until December The year average temperature difference between Loppa and Karasjok 6 C is comparable to the difference between Loppa and London 13 In the Koppen climate classification the climate in Karasjok and most of the lowland areas in Finnmark corresponds to the Dfc category subarctic climate while the Loppa climate corresponds to the Cfc category The northeastern coast from Nordkapp east to Vardo have arctic tundra climate Koppen ET as the average July temperature is below 10 C 50 F Kjollefjord on the northeastern coast Furthermore elevations exceeding approximately 100 to 200 metres 330 to 660 ft in coastal areas in western Finnmark and 300 to 500 metres 980 to 1 640 ft in the interior result in an alpine climate and in the northeast this merges with the Arctic tundra climate The climate in sheltered parts of fjord areas particularly the Altafjorden is usually considered the most hospitable winters are not as cold as in the interior and summer warmth is comparable Even if winter temperatures are milder in coastal areas the coast is more exposed to winter storms which often complicate or shut down road and air communications Midnight sun Edit Sunrise at 07 33 in February Vadso Situated far north of the Arctic Circle Finnmark has midnight sun from the middle of May until late July Conversely in two months of the winter from late November to late January the county experiences polar nights where the sun is always below the horizon As a consequence there is continuous daylight from early May to early August At midwinter there is only a bluish twilight for a couple of hours around noon which can almost reach full daylight if there are clear skies to the south Northern lights Edit Finnmark is situated in the Aurora Borealis zone and because of the dry climate with frequent clear skies Alta Municipality was early chosen as a location for the study of this strange light phenomenon For this reason Alta is sometimes referred to as the city of the northern lights Economy Edit The Hammerfest suburb of Rypefjord Fisheries have traditionally been the most important way of living along the coast where the majority of the Norwegian population live The red king crab originally from the northern Pacific ocean but brought to the Barents sea by the Russians have invaded from the east and are now being exploited commercially especially in the Varangerfjord To prevent the crab from spreading too far south crab fishing west of Nordkapp is totally unregulated In more recent years tourism has grown in importance with the North Cape in Nordkapp and the towns of Alta and Hammerfest as the most important destinations As of 2001 one percent of the work force were employed in the oil industry and the mining industry There is some mining industry However the exploitation of the iron ores along the Kirkenes Bjornevatn Line was paused in 2015 and has not restarted as of 2022 14 The slate industry in Alta is well known and have sold to customers as far away as Japan An irregular 15 procurement of a commuter boat or ferry in 2020 priced at Norwegian kroner 83 million is still as of 2022 causing fear that Finnmark will alone get stuck with paying off the boat when Finnmark becomes a county in 2024 the expense can lead to budget cuts The town of Hammerfest is experiencing an economic boom as a consequence of Statoil s construction of the large land based LNG site on the island of Melkoya 16 17 which gets natural gas from the Snohvit undersea gas field A new oil field was discovered in 2009 just 45 km 28 mi off shore 18 19 close to the Snohvit field There is optimism in the eastern part of the county as the growing petroleum activity in the Barents Sea is expected to generate increased economic activity on land as well 20 Some snow molds are prevalent and well adapted here including Sclerotinia borealis and Typhula ishikariensis especially T i group III Both are pathogens of wheat and S b also affects rye barley and some trees 21 Infrastructure Edit There are eleven airports but only Alta Airport Lakselv Banak Airport and Kirkenes Hoybuktmoen Airport have direct flights to Oslo In addition Lakselv Banak Airport in Porsanger is used for training by the Royal Norwegian Air Force and other NATO allies in conjunction with the nearby Halkavarre shooting range which allows for practice with precision guided munitions Garnisonen i Porsanger is near the Halkavarre training area There is also the Garnisonen i Sor Varanger Gsv in the east which guards the border with Russia Administration EditMain article Finnmark County Municipality Vadso with the church February 2004 The town of Vadso was the administrative centre for the county of Finnmark although Alta had the largest population The Finnmark County Municipality was the governing body for the county The county was generally divided into two districts West Finnmark Vest Finnmark and East Finnmark Ost Finnmark Until 2006 Statskog the Norwegian state owned agency responsible for the management of state owned forest and mountain real estate owned about 95 of the land in Finnmark county On 1 July 2006 the Finnmark Estate agency took over the ownership and management of that land in Finnmark The Finnmark Estate was governed in tandem by the Finnmark County Municipality and the Sami Parliament of Norway The Sami Parliament of Norway is based in the village of Karasjok The national government runs the Northern Norway Regional Health Authority which in turn owns and operates two hospitals in Finnmark located in Kirkenes and Hammerfest Municipalities Edit There were 19 municipalities in Finnmark when the county merged into Troms og Finnmark 18 of those exist as of 2021 Municipalities in FinnmarkKey Alta Berlevag Batsfjord Gamvik Hammerfest Hasvik Karasjohka or Karasjok Guovdageaidnu or Kautokeino Kvalsund Lebesby Loppa Masoy Unjarga or Nesseby Nordkapp Porsanger or Porsangu or Porsanki Sor Varanger Deatnu or Tana Vadso VardoHistory EditHistorical populationYearPop 195164 511 196172 104 11 8 197176 311 5 8 198178 331 2 6 199174 590 4 8 200174 087 0 7 201173 417 0 9 201675 758 3 2 Source Statistics Norway 22 Religion in Finnmark 23 24 religion percentChristianity 89 2 Islam 0 32 Buddhism 0 11 Other 10 37 People have lived in Finnmark for at least 10 000 years see Komsa Pit Comb Ware culture and Rock carvings at Alta The destiny of these early cultures is unknown Three ethnic groups have a long history in Finnmark the Sami people the Norwegian people and the Kven people Of these the Sami probably were the first people to explore Finnmark Ohthere of Halogaland was an adventurous Norwegian Norseman from Halogaland the area roughly corresponding to today s Nordland county Around 890 AD he claimed according to historical sources see Ohthere of Halogaland that he lived north most of all the Northmen and that no one lived to the north of him Later Norwegians in the 14th century and Kvens in the 16th century settled along the coast See the articles on Kven people and Vardohus Fortress for more details Sami Edit Main article Sami history The Sami are the indigenous people of Finnmark but Norwegians have lived for hundreds of years on the islands outer parts where they made up the majority The Sami people still constitute the majority in Finnmark s interior parts while the fjord areas have been ethnically mixed for a long time This essentially holds true today The Sami were for many years victims of the Norwegianization policy which in essence was an attempt by the government to make them true Norwegians and forget about their Sami way of life and religion which was seen as inferior As a result the Sami living at the coast and in the fjords gradually lost much of their culture and often felt ashamed by their Sami inheritance The Sami in the interior managed to preserve more of their culture In the 1970s instruction of the Sami language started in schools and a new sense of consciousness started to grow among the Sami today most are proud of their background and culture In the midst of this awakening 1979 Norway s government decided to build a dam in Alta to produce hydropower provoking many Sami and environmentalists to demonstrations and civil disobedience Alta Conflict In the end the dam was built on a much smaller scale than originally intended and the Sami culture was on the government s agenda The Sami parliament Samediggi was opened in Karasjok in 1989 Norwegian Edit A Dutch map of Finnmark 1660 showing the border between Norway Sweden and Russia Gjesvaer in Nordkapp is mentioned in the Sagas Heimskringla as a northern harbor in the Viking Age especially used by Vikings on the way to Bjarmaland see Ottar from Halogaland and probably also for gathering food in the nearby seabird colony Coastal areas of Finnmark were colonized by Norwegians beginning in the 10th century and there are stories describing clashes with the Karelians Border skirmishes between the Norwegians and Novgorodians continued until 1326 when the Treaty of Novgorod settled the issue The first known fortification in Finnmark is Vardohus festning first erected in 1306 by King Haakon V Magnusson This is the world s most northern fortress In the 17th century 88 young women were burned as witches in Vardo an extremely high number compared to the total population in this area at the time 25 However the first person burned as witch in Vardo in the 17th century was not a woman but a man Vardo archives Finnmark first became subject to increased colonization in the 18th and 19th century Norway Sweden and Russia all claimed control over this area Finland was part of Russia at that time and had no independent representative Finnmark was given the status of an Amt county in the 19th century For a time there was a vibrant trade with Russia Pomor trade and many Norwegians settled on the Kola Peninsula see Kola Norwegians Kven Edit Main article Kven people The Finnic Kven residents of Finnmark are largely descendants of Finnish speaking immigrants who arrived in the area in the 18th century from Meanmaa and later in the 19th century from Finland suffering from famine and war 26 Brief summary Edit In 1576 the King of Norway established Vardohus len as a new administrative unit for the kingdom In 1660 it became Vardohus amt a subordinate to the large Trondhjems stiftamt based in Trondheim In 1787 the island of Senja and the Troms area were transferred from Nordlandenes amt to Vardohus amt In 1866 the island of Senja and the Troms area were separated from Vardohus to form the new Tromso amt In 1919 the name was again changed to Finnmark fylke In 2002 the Sami language name Finnmarku was added as a co official name for the county Per Fugelli has said that World War II resulted in many persons acquiring psychiatric disorders psykiske senskadene which could be from experiencing bombing accidents involving mines burning down of homes forcible evacuation illness and starvation during the war and liberation But it was maybe in particular the treatment of Russian prisoners that left marks on the local population 27 World War II Edit Towards the end of World War II with Operation Nordlicht the Germans used the scorched earth tactic in Finnmark and northern Troms to halt the Red Army As a consequence of this few houses survived the war and a large part of the population was forcefully evacuated further south Tromso was crowded but many people avoided evacuation by hiding in caves and mountain huts and waited until the Germans were gone then inspected their burned homes There were 11 000 houses 4 700 cow sheds 106 schools 27 churches and 21 hospitals burned There were 22 000 communications lines destroyed roads were blown up boats destroyed animals killed and 1 000 children separated from their parents 28 However after taking the town of Kirkenes on 25 October 1944 as the first town in Norway the Red Army did not attempt further offensives in Norway Free Norwegian forces arrived from Britain and liberated the rest of the county When war was over more than 70 000 people were left homeless in Finnmark The government imposed a temporary ban on residents returning to Finnmark because of the danger of landmines The ban lasted until the summer of 1945 when evacuees were told that they could finally return home citation needed Fra Hammerfest by Peder Balke 1851 Neiden in Sor Varanger Cold War Edit The Cold War was a period with sometimes high tension in eastern Finnmark at the 196 kilometre 122 mi long border with the Soviet Union To keep tensions from getting too high Norway declared that no NATO exercises would take place in Finnmark 29 Demographics EditThe old Stone Age Komsa culture is very difficult to relate to the people living in Finnmark today There are findings suggesting that the Sami people have been there for a long time but exactly how long is unclear some scholars who claiming 8000 years but others who only 2500 years From the 10th century the coastal areas have been populated and visited by ethnic Norwegians and Finnmark became part of the kingdom The Sami core areas in Norway are in Finnmark where they constitute about one quarter of the total population The municipalities of Kautokeino Karasjok Tana Nesseby and Porsanger in Finnmark county and the municipalities of Kafjord in Troms Tysfjord in Nordland and Snasa in Nord Trondelag also have official names in the Sami language Most municipalities in Sapmi however have unofficial names in Sami as well In the 18th century and the 19th century many Finnish speaking immigrants settled in Finnmark Since 1996 they have had minority status as Kven people The town of Vadso Kven Vesisaari is often seen as the Kven capital in Finnmark 30 Lakselv in central Finnmark is sometimes referred to as meeting place for three tribes After the collapse of the Soviet Union and severe economic troubles in the Russian economy during the 90s Russian immigrants and shoppers arrived in Kirkenes Since the beginning of the European migrant crisis many Syrian refugees arrived in Kirkenes via Russia 31 References EditFootnotes Edit a b Laegland Martin 29 October 2021 Vedum Startet prosessen med opplosning av Troms og Finnmark Verdens Gang Retrieved 29 October 2021 Navn pa steder og personer Innbyggjarnamn in Norwegian Sprakradet Forskrift om malvedtak i kommunar og fylkeskommunar in Norwegian Lovdata no Stadnamn og rettskriving in Norwegian Kartverket Retrieved 2018 07 13 https www nrk no tromsogfinnmark vedtatt i stortinget storfylkene skal splittes igjen na onsker de ansatte ro og forutsigbarhet 1 16001790 NRK no Jubel i nord etter skilsmissen Na skal vi feire in Norwegian NRK 13 October 2021 Retrieved 2021 10 14 Vi blir stadig faerre i fylket Folk har en tendens til a flytte herfra nar barna kommer i skolealder 19 May 2021 Rygh Oluf 1924 Norske gaardnavne Finmarkens amt in Norwegian 18 ed Kristiania Norge W C Fabritius amp sonners bogtrikkeri pp 1 7 Store norske leksikon Finnmark in Norwegian Archived from the original on 2013 02 06 Retrieved 2013 02 18 Danell Kjell 1996 Introductions of aquatic rodents lessons of the muskrat Ondatra zibethicus invasion Wildlife Biology 2 213 220 10 2981 wlb 1996 021 Norwegian Meteorological Records met no Archived from the original on 2007 11 20 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Meteorological data met no Archived from the original on 2007 11 20 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Meteorological data worldclimate com 2007 02 04 Archived from the original on 2008 06 19 Retrieved 2009 02 12 https snl no Sydvaranger gruveselskap Store norske leksikon Retrieved 2022 10 15 https www nrk no tromsogfinnmark navaerende statssekretaer bestilte hurtigbat til finnmark men manglet politisk godkjenning 1 16137389 NRK no Retrieved 2022 20 15 Duval Smith Alex 2005 11 27 Arctic booms as climate change melts polar ice cap London Observer guardian co uk Archived from the original on 2008 01 09 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Snohvit Statoil com Archived from the original on December 14 2007 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Aftenpost article Aftenposten no Archived from the original on 2009 12 14 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Aftenpost article Aftenposten no Archived from the original on 2009 01 26 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Norwegian environmental group Bellona Bellona no Archived from the original on 2005 09 20 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Hoshino Tamotsu Xiao Nan Xiao Nan Hoshino Tamotsu Tkachenko Oleg B 2009 Cold adaptation in the phytopathogenic fungi causing snow molds Mycoscience Mycological Society of Japan J STAGE 50 1 26 38 doi 10 1007 s10267 008 0452 2 ISSN 1340 3540 S2CID 85291046 Statistikkbanken ssb no 26 May 2012 Archived from the original on 23 October 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2018 Statistikkbanken ssb no 16 July 2012 Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2018 Statistics Norway Members of religious and life stance communities outside the Church of Norway by religion life stance County 2006 2010 Archived November 2 2011 at the Wayback Machine BioOne article Bioone org 1970 01 01 Retrieved 2009 02 12 politidepartementet Justis og 1 August 1996 NOU 1994 21 Regjeringen no Archived from the original on 7 November 2017 Retrieved 28 April 2018 NRK 13 September 2013 Den glemte krigen NRK Archived from the original on 16 June 2015 Retrieved 20 May 2016 Zimmerman Susan November December 2010 World War II Magazine 25 4 31 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help German Robert K 1982 Norway and the Bear Soviet Coercive Diplomacy and Norwegian Security Policy International Security 7 2 70 doi 10 2307 2538433 JSTOR 2538433 S2CID 154321588 Den kvenske folkevandringen til Troms og Finnmark in Norwegian nordlys no 2008 02 28 Archived from the original on 2009 07 15 Retrieved 2009 02 12 Haroon Siddique 18 November 2015 Bicycles used by Syrian refugees to enter Norway from Russia to be destroyed the Guardian Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 20 May 2016 Bibliography Edit Bjorbaek Gustav 2003 Norsk Vaer i 110 Ar Oslo Damm ISBN 978 82 04 08695 2 Haugan Trygve B ed 1940 Det Nordlige Norge Fra Trondheim Til Midnattssolens Land Trondheim Reisetrafikkforeningen for Trondheim og Trondelag Moen Asbjorn 1998 Nasjonalatlas for Norge Vegetasjon Honefoss Statens Kartverk ISBN 978 82 90408 26 3 Norwegian Meteorological Institute 24 hr averages 1961 90 base period Tollefsrud Jan Inge Tjorve Even Hermansen Pal 1991 Perler i Norsk Natur En Veiviser Aschehoug ISBN 978 82 03 16663 1 Brooke Arthur de Capell 1826 A winter in Lapland and Sweden with various observations relating to Finmark and its inhabitants John Murray External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Finnmark Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Finnmark Stone age in Finnmark Finnmark county administration Finnmark at the official travel guide to Norway Kampen var mot Akersystemet og Staten blir som om Justin Bieber skulle mott Mike Tyson til boksekamp Hvor er sensasjonspressen Hvor er VG Aftenposten NRK Dagsrevyen og TV2 Hvor er Dagsnytt atten Er ikke landets nest storste eksportnaering viktig nok Our struggle against Akersystemet and the government is as if Justin Bieber was to meet Mike Tyson for a smoker Where is the press Where is Verdens Gang Aftenposten NRK Dagsrevyen and TV Where is Dagsnytt atten Is the country s second largest export industry not important enough Finmark The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Finnmark amp oldid 1132655795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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