Vaasa Vaasa – Vasa |
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City | |||
Vaasan kaupunki Vasa stad |
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Location of Vaasa in Finland |
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Coordinates: 63°06′N 021°37′E / 63.100°N 21.617°ECoordinates: 63°06′N 021°37′E / 63.100°N 21.617°E | |||
Country | Finland | ||
Region | Ostrobothnia (Finnish: Pohjanmaa) (Swedish: Österbotten) | ||
Sub-region | Vaasa sub-region | ||
Charter | 1606 | ||
Government | |||
• City manager | Tomas Häyry | ||
Area (2011-01-01) | |||
• City | 397.44 km2 (153.45 sq mi) | ||
• Land | 188.81 km2 (72.90 sq mi) | ||
• Water | 208.63 km2 (80.55 sq mi) | ||
• Urban | 66.65 km2 (25.73 sq mi) | ||
Area rank | 251st largest in Finland | ||
Population (2016-03-31) | |||
• City | 67,495 | ||
• Rank | 15th largest in Finland | ||
• Density | 357.48/km2 (925.9/sq mi) | ||
• Urban | 65,414 | ||
• Urban density | 981.5/km2 (2,542/sq mi) | ||
Population by native language | |||
• Finnish | 69.8% (official) | ||
• Swedish | 24.8% (official) | ||
• Others | 5.4% | ||
Population by age | |||
• 0 to 14 | 16% | ||
• 15 to 64 | 67.4% | ||
• 65 or older | 16.7% | ||
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) | ||
• Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) | ||
Municipal tax rate | 19.5% | ||
Website | www.vaasa.fi |
Vaasa (Finnish: [ˈʋɑːsɑ]; Swedish: Vasa, IPA: [ˈvɑːsa]) is a city on the west coast of Finland. It received its charter in 1606, during the reign of Charles IX of Sweden and is named after the Royal House of Vasa. Today, Vaasa has a population of 67,495 (31 March 2016) (approximately 90,000 in the Vaasa sub-region), and is the regional capital of Ostrobothnia (Swedish: Österbotten, Finnish: Pohjanmaa).
The city is bilingual with Finnish as their first language and 24.8% speaking Swedish. The surrounding Ostrobothnia municipalities have a Swedish-speaking majority.
69.8% of the population speakingOver the years, Vaasa has changed its name several times, due to alternative spellings, political decisions and language condition changes. At first it was called Mustasaari or Mussor after the village where it was founded in 1606, but just a few years later the name was changed to Wasa to honor the royal Swedish lineage. Mustasaari (Finnish) or Korsholm (Swedish) remains as the name of the surrounding mostly rural municipality, which since 1973 surrounds the city. The city was known as Wasa between 1606 and 1855, Nikolaistad (Swedish) and Nikolainkaupunki (Finnish) between 1855 and 1917, Vasa (Swedish) and Vaasa (Finnish) beginning from 1917, with the Finnish spelling of the name being the primary one from ca 1930 when Finnish speakers became the majority in the city.