Lake Bodom Explained

Lake Bodom
Bodominjärvi
Bodom träsk
Image Bathymetry:Bodominjärvi.png
Location:Espoo, Finland
Coords:60.2564°N 24.6667°W
Pushpin Map:Finland
Basin Countries:Finland
Length:3km (02miles)
Width:1km (01miles)
Area:3km2

Lake Bodom (Finnish: Bodominjärvi; Swedish: Bodom träsk) is a Finnish lake located in the city of Espoo, not far from Helsinki. The lake measures approximately three kilometres in length and one kilometre in width. It is surrounded by five districts in Espoo: Kunnarla in the west, Röylä in the north, Bodom in the northeast, Högnäs in the southeast, and Karhusuo in the southwest.

The lake is notorious for being the scene of a triple homicide that occurred in the early morning hours of 5 June 1960, when four teenagers (two boys, Nils Gustafsson and Seppo Boisman and two girls, Tuulikki Mäki and Irmeli Björklund) went on a camping trip to the lake and were mysteriously attacked while sleeping in their tent.[1] Three were killed and one survived. In June 2005, the only survivor, Gustafsson, was charged with murdering his friends. On 7 October 2005, the district court found him not guilty of all charges.

The Finnish melodic death metal band Children of Bodom, who are also from Espoo, derive their name from the lake.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Palo, Jorma. Bodomin arvoitus. Helsinki: WSOY, 2003. – p.8. – .
  2. Web site: Band Name Origin Wednesday: Children of Bodom . metalriot.com . 18 May 2011 . 2 April 2021.