Laihia

Municipality in Ostrobothnia, Finland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Laihia (Swedish: Laihela) is a municipality of Finland, founded in 1576 through a separation from Isokyrö and Korsholm.

Quick facts Laihela, Country ...
Laihia
Laihela
Municipality
Laihian kunta
Laihela kommun
Laihia Church
Laihia Church
Coat of arms of Laihia
Location of Laihia in Finland
Location of Laihia in Finland
Interactive map of Laihia
Coordinates: 62°58.5′N 022°00.5′E
Country Finland
RegionOstrobothnia
Sub-regionVaasa
Charter1576
Government
  Municipal managerJari Rantala
Area
 (2018-01-01)[1]
  Total
508.44 km2 (196.31 sq mi)
  Land505.16 km2 (195.04 sq mi)
  Water4.14 km2 (1.60 sq mi)
  Rank172nd largest in Finland
Population
 (2025-12-31)[2]
  Total
8,020
  Rank122nd largest in Finland
  Density14.91/km2 (38.6/sq mi)
Population by native language
  Finnish96.6% (official)
  Swedish1.2%
  Others2.2%
Population by age
  0 to 1419.8%
  15 to 6456.7%
  65 or older23.5%
Time zoneUTC+02:00 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+03:00 (EEST)
Websitelaihia.fi
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It is located in the Ostrobothnia region. The municipality has a population of 8,020 (Jul 31, 2020) and covers an area of 508.44 square kilometres (196.31 sq mi) of which 4.14 km2 (1.60 sq mi) is water.[1] The population density is 14.91 inhabitants per square kilometre (38.6/sq mi). Laihia consists of 37 villages.

Laihia is within the economical region of the neighbouring city Vaasa. The municipality is unilingually Finnish. Only 93 people speak Swedish as a native language. Most inhabitants speak Finnish or a dialect typical of this region.[5] The municipal manager is Juha Rikala. There are a total of 469 farms in the municipality.[citation needed].

Laihia is located along the international tourist route Blue Highway, which goes from Norway to Russia via Sweden and Finland.

Landscape in Laihia

People

In Finland, Laihians are renowned for their stinginess (Finnish: nuukuus, saituus, itaruus, piheys or kitsaus) and there are hundreds of jokes told about them. However, Laihians are not usually offended by it. To the contrary, they are proud of their frugality and even have a Museum of Stinginess (Nuukuuren museo).[6] In any case, Laihia has high-level public services for education, health, sports, seniors etc.

Notable people

Surnames

The most common surnames in Laihia and their frequencies as of 2014:[8]

Transport

The private coach company OnniBus route Helsinki—Seinäjoki—Vaasa has a stop at Laihia.

References

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