Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Pargas

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Country
  
Seat
  
Pargas

Area
  
476.7 km²

Charter
  
2009

Time zone
  
EET (UTC+2)

Local time
  
Thursday 8:50 AM

Pargas httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Sub-region
  
Åboland–Turunmaa sub-region

Area rank
  
88th largest in Finland

Weather
  
2°C, Wind W at 16 km/h, 74% Humidity

Pargas (Finnish: Parainen) (Finnish: Länsi-Turunmaa and Swedish: Väståboland in 2009–2011) is a municipality of Finland, in the Archipelago Sea. The big limestone mine in Pargas is the base of the main industry, while there are still significant rural areas. Except for the central parts of Pargas, the municipality is mostly rural.

Contents

Map of 21600 Pargas, Finland

Pargas is located in Åboland in the province of Western Finland and is part of the Southwest Finland region. It was created as Väståboland on January 1, 2009 in Southwest Finland, when the municipalities of Pargas, Nagu, Korpo, Houtskär and Iniö were united into a single municipality.

The municipality has a population of 15,456 (31 March 2016) and covers an area of 882.70 square kilometres (340.81 sq mi) of which 4,666.46 km2 (1,801.73 sq mi) is water. The population density is 17.53 inhabitants per square kilometre (45.4/sq mi).

The town is bilingual with a majority (7,001,576,000,000,000,000♠57.6%) speaking Swedish as their native language.

Economy

Pargas has a large limestone industry, with the industry and Nordkalk as an important local employer, agriculture employs many in the rural regions of the municipality. Furthermore, the shipping industry is a relevant industry in the region. The municipality is suffering from high debt.

History

Archaeological excavations revealed, that the vikings used to travel to the archipelago in the 9th century.

Karin Thomasdotter (1610–1697), who served as vogt in Pargas for over forty years, was one of the longest serving vogts, and also one of only two females to have the position in contemporary Finland.

Recent history

On 1 January 2009, Pargas, Nagu, Korpo, Houtskär and Iniö merged to Pargas municipality.

Name dispute

Shortly after the merge people started debating if the "Väståboland" name was the right name for the merged municipality, those arguing against the Väståboland name, proposed Pargas as a 'new' name. The former municipalities could not agree on a new name and Pargas insisted on a change, so the state had to step in and decided the name to be Väståboland/Länsi-Turunmaa. The debates became heated and a referendum was arranged to decide what name the municipality should have in May 2011. The result of the referendum showed that 57,7% of the voters supported "Pargas" and 40.1% of voters supported "Väståboland". Though the overall majority supported changing the name, there was an overwhelming support for the name "Väståboland" in 4 out of 5 of the former municipalities. In Iniö only 1 voter out of 173 total voted for "Pargas", in all the four 62 out of 2060, while in Pargas 74,5% voted for "Pargas".

The municipality council (Swedish: "Fullmäktige") decided on 14 June 2011 in favour of the majority population and decided to rename the municipality "Pargas" on 1 January 2012. Though there has been legal complications and the council decision to rename will be taken to court, the court might override the council decision. The Council considered to take this issue up again for debate and vote. The council made a re-vote on 6 September 2011 with 25 votes for "Pargas", 17 for "Väståboland" and 1 blank vote.

Merge with Kimitoön

There is debate about a possible merge with Kimitoön.

Twin towns — Sister cities

Pargas is twinned with:

  • Haninge Municipality, Sweden
  • References

    Pargas Wikipedia


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