Kyyjärvi

Municipality in Central Finland, Finland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kyyjärvi (Finnish pronunciation: [ˈkyːˌjærʋi]; lit.'adder lake') is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the Central Finland region, about 120 kilometres (75 mi) northwest of Jyväskylä. The municipality has a population of 1,129 (31 December 2025)[4] and covers an area of 469.61 square kilometres (181.32 sq mi) of which 21.39 km2 (8.26 sq mi) is water.[3] The population density is 2.52 inhabitants per square kilometre (6.5/sq mi). The municipality is unilingually Finnish.

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Kyyjärvi
Municipality
Kyyjärven kunta
Kyyjärvi kommun
Kyyjärvi church
Kyyjärvi church
Coat of arms of Kyyjärvi
Nickname: 
Kyy York[1][2]
Location of Kyyjärvi in Finland
Location of Kyyjärvi in Finland
Interactive map of Kyyjärvi
Coordinates: 63°03′N 024°33.8′E
Country Finland
RegionCentral Finland
Sub-regionSaarijärvi–Viitasaari sub-region
Charter1929
SeatNopola
Government
  Municipal managerRaisa Kinnunen
Area
 (2018-01-01)[3]
  Total
469.61 km2 (181.32 sq mi)
  Land448.22 km2 (173.06 sq mi)
  Water21.39 km2 (8.26 sq mi)
  Rank193rd largest in Finland
Population
 (2025-12-31)[4]
  Total
1,129
  Rank288th largest in Finland
  Density2.52/km2 (6.5/sq mi)
Population by native language
  Finnish97.3% (official)
  Others2.7%
Population by age
  0 to 1415.4%
  15 to 6450.2%
  65 or older34.4%
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
Websitewww.kyyjarvi.fi Edit this at Wikidata
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Neighbouring municipalities are Alajärvi, Karstula, Kivijärvi, Perho and Soini. The municipality centre is located on the shores of Lake Kyyjärvi. Little villages Hokkala, Koskimäki-Huhtala, Kumpula, Noposenaho, Hokkasenaho, Nurmijoki, Oikari, Peuralinna, Pölkki, Saunakylä and Vehkaperä are living mostly from primary production (farming and forestry). Due to its location on the crossroads of two main Finnish roads (Valtatie 13 and 16) the municipality has also a remarkable number of services and little companies compared to its size.

Etymology

The origin of the name of Kyyjärvi is unknown but there are few theories of it. The first part of the name, "kyy", is Finnish word for adder (Vipera berus), a venomous snake. Järvi is Finnish word for lake. Adders can be found in Kyyjärvi, as everywhere in Finland. Another theory is that the first citizens moved to the area from the lake Kyyvesi and gave the name Kyyjärvi for their new home area and lake.[citation needed]

Among the locals, the municipality is playfully nicknamed "Kyy York", which is a reference to New York.[1] Because of this, the municipality has adopted the following slogan: Kyy York – pieni kylä, suuri sydän ("small village, big heart").[2]

History

The area of modern Kyyjärvi was originally hunting grounds for Tavastian people. The village of Kyyjärvi was first mentioned in 1565 as Kÿierffuj, when it was a part of the parish of Rautalampi. In 1628, the parish of Laukaa, including Kyyjärvi, was split off from Rautalampi while in 1639, Kyyjärvi became a part of the new Saarijärvi parish established during this year.

In 1775, Kyyjärvi became one of the villages in the new chapel community of Karstula, which became its own parish in 1858. In 1913, it was decided that the territory of the Kyyjärvi school district should become its own municipality and parish. The municipality was established in 1929 while the parish was established in 1944.[6]

Proposed Suomenselkä municipality

Kannonkoski, Karstula, Kivijärvi and Kyyjärvi planned to merge into the Suomenselkä municipality [fi] from January 1, 2022.[7][8] Karstula, Kivijärvi and Kyyjärvi accepted the merger proposal, but Kannonkoski did not.[9] After Kannonkoski left out of the planned merger, Kivijärvi also left out. The merger project of the remaining Karstula and Kyyjärvi failed at the Kyyjärvi municipal council meeting held on May 17, 2021, and the Ministry of Finance does not propose a forced merger either.[10]

Nature

There are all together 46 lakes in Kyyjärvi. Biggest lakes in Kyyjärvi are Lake Kyyjärvi, Heinuanjärvi and Kirvesjärvi.[11]

Transport

Kyyjärvi is served by Onnibus route Helsinki—Jyväskylä—Kokkola.

Culture

Events

Every year in August, Kyyjärvi Camping organizes the Nopola Pop Festival, which features many Finnish music artists.[12]

Food

In the 1980s, the local traditional dishes of Kyyjärvi were ryynirokka, a meat soup seasoned with pearled barley, and a blodpalt called lepikäs.[13]

Notable individuals

Twin towns

References

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