Sodankylä
Sodankylä is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the region of Lapland, and lies at the northern end of Highway 5 and along Highway 4. The Kitinen River flows near the center of Sodankylä. Its neighbouring municipalities are Inari, Kemijärvi, Kittilä, Pelkosenniemi, Rovaniemi, and Savukoski. The municipality has two official languages: Finnish and Northern Sami.
The municipality has a population of, which makes it the fourth largest municipality in Lapland after Rovaniemi, Tornio and Kemi, and at the same time the largest municipality in population that does not use the title of city or town. It covers an area of of which is water, making it the second largest municipality in Finland in terms of area, right after its neighboring municipality of Inari. The population density is.
Sodankylä has an airfield. Also, one of EISCAT's scientific radar receiver stations is located outside Sodankylä, at the site of the Sodankylä Geophysical Observatory. The urban area around the observatory is known as "Tähtelä", which translates as "Place of Stars", although the observatory does not observe stars. The Jaeger Brigade of the Finnish Army is also located in Sodankylä. There is also much mining in Sodankylä, as the Pahtavaara mine, which was opened in 1996 and focused on gold, and the Kevitsa mine, which started commercial nickel mining production in 2012, operates in the municipality's territory. Although the name "Sodankylä" and directly translate to "Village of War", the etymology of the name is from a surname Sova rather than the word "war".
Since 1986, Sodankylä has been home to the Midnight Sun Film Festival.
Key sights, events and destinations
- Sodankylä Local History Museum
- The Old Church, The New Church
- Tankavaara, gold museum, gold village
- Ilmakkiaapa peatland protection area
- Urho Kekkonen National Park
- Luosto – a hill home to the only open amethyst mine in Europe
- Hotel Sodankylä and Hotel Bear Inn
- Midnight Sun Film Festival
- Museum-Gallery Alariesto
- Pappilanniemi walking trail
- Igloo village of Kakslauttanen
The old church
The statue "A reindeer and a Lapp"
Sculptor Ensio Seppänen designed this statue in 1970, located in the center of Sodankylä. The bronze statue presents reindeer husbandry, which still is one of the most important trades in Sodankylä.Tankavaara Gold Museum
The International Gold Museum of Tankavaara presents the history of Finnish gold, as well as the history of the world's major gold rushes. A display called Golden world, tells the story of gold in more than 20 countries. The outdoor museum is housed within several historic buildings and the courtyard is decorated with a large bronze statue of a gold prospector, by the artist professor Ensio Seppänen. The museum's stone and mineral collection has more than 2500 samples on display from around the world.Museum-gallery Alariesto
was a painter from Sodankylä.Museum-gallery Alariesto was opened in July 1986. The museum's permanent exhibition displays artist Andreas Alariesto's life and works. It was maintained by Riikka and Andreas Alariesto's Lapinkuvat Foundation and the Municipality of Sodankylä. The foundation's main goal was to take care of Alariesto's collected works and to preserve the Sami cultural traditions of the historical Sompio area. In 2020, the foundation was merged with Kauko Sorjonen Foundation.
Geography
Sodankylä lies just north of the Arctic Circle.Climate
Sodankylä has a subarctic climate, with short, mild summers and long, freezing, extremely snowy winters. However global warming has brought more extreme snowfalls, typically an increase. Its extreme northerly location combined with frequent overcast skies leads to very low amounts of sunshine in the winter months; December will average just under two minutes of sunshine daily. Sodankylä experiences polar night between 20 and 23 December and polar day between 31 May and 14 July. The temperature is usually between and, but the all-time temperature range is between recorded on 28 January 1999 and recorded on 18 July 2018.Twin towns
- Kola, Russia, since 1968
- Berlevåg, Norway, since 1971
- Norsjö, Sweden, since 1977
- Heiligenblut, Austria, since 1979
- Révfülöp, Hungary
- Szigethalom, Hungary
Notable people
- Andreas Alariesto, painter
- Benjamin Anneberg, lawyer and politician
- Aleksi Hihnavaara, frontiersman and reindeer herder
- Kaija Kärkinen, singer and actress
- Maria Lähteenmäki, history researcher and university professor
- Lasse Näsi, politician
- Katja Riipi, retired ice hockey player
- Johanna Sinisalo, science fiction and fantasy writer
- Pertti Ukkola, wrestler and Olympic champion