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Kuusamo

Kuusamo
Town and municipality
Kuusamon kaupunki
Snow-covered trees in Kuusamo
Snow-covered trees in Kuusamo
Coat of arms of Kuusamo
Coat of arms
Location of Kuusamo in Finland
Location of Kuusamo in Finland
Coordinates: 65°58′N 029°11′E / 65.967°N 29.183°E / 65.967; 29.183Coordinates: 65°58′N 029°11′E / 65.967°N 29.183°E / 65.967; 29.183
Country  Finland
Region Northern Ostrobothnia
Sub-region Koillismaa sub-region
Charter 1868
Government
 • Town manager Jouko Manninen
Area (2016-01-01)
 • Total 4,977.13 km2 (1,921.68 sq mi)
 • Land 4,978.11 km2 (1,922.06 sq mi)
 • Water 830.81 km2 (320.78 sq mi)
Area rank 11th largest in Finland
Population (2016-03-31)
 • Total 15,673
 • Rank 73rd largest in Finland
 • Density 3.15/km2 (8.2/sq mi)
Population by native language
 • Finnish 98.9% (official)
 • Swedish 0.1%
 • Others 1%
Population by age
 • 0 to 14 17.3%
 • 15 to 64 64.4%
 • 65 or older 18.3%
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Municipal tax rate 19.5%
Website www.kuusamo.fi

Kuusamo is a town and municipality in Finland. It is located in the Northern Ostrobothnia region. The municipality has a population of 15,673 (31 March 2016) and covers an area of 4,977.13 square kilometres (1,921.68 sq mi) of which 830.81 km2 (320.78 sq mi) is water. The population density is 3.15 inhabitants per square kilometre (8.2/sq mi).

The municipality is unilingually Finnish.

Kuusamo is a major center for winter sports and receives approximately a million tourists every year. One of the largest ski resorts in Finland, Ruka, is situated in Kuusamo. Ruka is also the host of many international competitions in ski jumping, cross country skiing and Nordic combined. The 2005 World Championships of Freestyle Skiing was held in Kuusamo. Kuusamo Airport is located 6 kilometres (4 mi) north-east from Kuusamo town centre.

Until the 17th century, the area of Kuusamo was inhabited by the semi-nomadic Sami. During the cold season they lived in the villages Maanselkä and Kitka. In spring they moved to the rivers and in summer, after the melting of the ice, to the lakes; there they fished and gathered berries and mushrooms; in autumn they hunted reindeer, bears and beavers in the forest. Apart from fishing and hunting the Sami earned their living by trading fur with the Finns settled on the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia and the Karelians of the White Sea coast.

As a Sami settlement the area belonged to Kuusamo Kemi-Lappmark at the time. Nominally it belonged to the territory of the Swedish province of Västerbotten, but the Swedish rule was limited to the collection of taxes. At the same time Russia collected taxes in the territory it deemed state-less.


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