although its population increased steadily. It was also through Tornio that Vladimir Lenin returned to Russia from exile in Switzerland in March 1917.Īfter the independence of Finland in 1917 Tornio lost its garrison and experienced further decline. During the First World War Tornio and Haparanda had the only rail link connecting the Russians to their Western allies. Trade only livened up during the Åland War (part of the Crimean War) and the First World War, when Tornio became an important border crossing for goods and people. The Swedes developed the village of Haaparanta (present day Haparanda) on their side of the border, to balance the loss of Tornio, and Tornio became unilingually Finnish.ĭuring the Russian period Tornio was a sleepy garrison town.
![mauno saari mauno saari](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-I2TaN4qmD84/TV36TvemJ7I/AAAAAAAAFQg/XDWi4ge6Xk0/s1600/mauno%2Bkoivisto%2B001.jpg)
Tornio ended up on the Russian side of the border by special request of the Russian czar. The border was drawn through the deepest channel of the Muonio and Tornio rivers, splitting Lapland into two parts, with deleterious effects on trade.
![mauno saari mauno saari](https://img.csfd.cz/files/images/film/photos/161/603/161603973_d9709f.jpg)
However, the greatest blow to the wealth of the town came in the last war between Sweden and Russia in 1808, which saw the Russians capture and annex Finland. The Lapland trade on which Tornio depended started to decline in the 18th century, and the harbour had to be moved downriver twice as a result of the rising of the land (post-glacial rebound), which made the river too shallow for navigation. The most notable expedition (1736–1737) was led by a member of the Académie française, Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis, who came to take meridian arc measurements along the Meänmaa which would show that the globe is flattened towards the poles. Despite the lively trade with Lapland and overseas, the population of the town remained stable for hundreds of years at little over 500.ĭuring the 18th century Tornio was visited by several expeditions from Central Europe which came to explore the Arctic. It was the largest merchant town in the North at the time and for some years ranked as the richest town in the Swedish realm. The charter was granted in recognition of Tornio being the hub of all trade in Lapland throughout the 16th century. The town received its charter from the King of Sweden in 1621 and was officially founded on the island of Suensaari (possibly named after one of the main landowners of the past). To Swedish it was borrowed as Torneå after Torne å, an alternative name of the river. The name 'Tornio' is an old Finnish word meaning war spear: the city is named after the river. Until the 19th century, inhabitants of the surrounding countryside spoke Finnish, and Kemi Sami, a language of the Eastern Sami group similar to Finnish, while those of the town were mainly Swedish-speaking. The church was constructed in 1686 by Matti Joosepinpoika Härmä. The church spire at Tornio was one of the landmarks used by de Maupertuis in his measurements. A former hypothesis that this region was uninhabited and "colonised" from the Viking Age onward has now been abandoned. The Swedish part of the region is not far from the oldest permanent settlement site found in Scandinavia. The delta of the Torne river has been inhabited since the end of the last ice age, and there are currently (1995) 16 settlement sites ( boplatsvallar) known in the area, similar to those found in Vuollerim (c. In spite of being a border city Tornio is unilingually Finnish with a negligible number of native Swedish speakers, although this does not count vast numbers of bilinguals who speak Swedish as a second language, with an official target of universal working bilingualism for both border municipalities. It borders the Swedish municipality of Haparanda (in Finnish: Haaparanta). The population density is, with a total population of ().
![mauno saari mauno saari](https://kirja.elisa.fi/sites/default/files/imagecache/webshop_product/bookcovers/951_0_39526_9.455.jpg)
![mauno saari mauno saari](https://otsustamine.ee/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/tandem-kaja-ja-leivo-sepp-1200x619.jpg)
The municipality covers an area of, of which is water. The city forms a cross-border twin city together with Haparanda on the Swedish side. Tornio (Swedish: Torneå ) is a city and municipality in Lapland, Finland.