Nokia | |
Official Name: | |
Settlement Type: | Town |
Coordinates: | 61.4767°N 23.5053°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Finland |
Subdivision Type1: | Region |
Subdivision Name1: | Pirkanmaa |
Subdivision Type2: | Sub-region |
Subdivision Name2: | Tampere sub-region |
Subdivision Type3: | Metropolitan area |
Subdivision Name3: | Tampere metropolitan area |
Leader Title: | Town manager |
Leader Name: | Markku Rahikkala |
Established Title: | Charter |
Established Date: | 1922 |
Established Title2: | Market town |
Established Date2: | 1937 |
Established Title3: | City rights |
Established Date3: | 1977 |
Population Blank1 Title: | Demonym |
Population Blank1: | Nokialainen (Finnish) |
Timezone: | EET |
Utc Offset: | +02:00 |
Timezone Dst: | EEST |
Utc Offset Dst: | +03:00 |
Nokia (in Finnish pronounced as /ˈnokiɑ/) is a town in the Pirkanmaa region of Finland. It lies on the banks of the Nokianvirta, a river of the Kokemäki River watershed, and is situated in the Tampere metropolitan area, about 15km (09miles) west of Tampere proper. The population of Nokia is approximately, while the Tampere metropolitan area has a population of approximately . It is the most populous municipality in Finland, and the second largest in the Pirkanmaa region after Tampere.
Nokia's neighbouring municipalities are Hämeenkyrö, Pirkkala, Sastamala, Tampere, Vesilahti and Ylöjärvi. The distance to Tampere Airport from Nokia is by road around Lake Pyhäjärvi.
The origin of the name Nokia is obscure. In modern Finnish, Finnish: noki means soot, and Finnish: nokia is an inflected plural, although this form of the word is rarely if ever used. The most common theory claims the name actually originates from the archaic Finnish word Finnish: nois (pl. Finnish: nokia) or Finnish: nokinäätä ("soot marten"), meaning sable.[1] After the sable was hunted to extinction in Finland, the word was applied to any dark-coated fur animal, such as the marten, which are found in the area to this day. The sable is enshrined on the Nokia coat of arms. However, later research has appeared to indicate that sables never inhabited Finland in the first place, and the name Finnish: nois may actually refer to the beaver.[2] [3] The coat of arms was designed by Gustaf von Numers and was confirmed on October 25, 1951.[4]
The first literary reference to Nokia is in a 1505 document, which mentions two farms Stoora och Lilla Nokia, Swedish for "Big and Little Nokia". The Nokia manor was formed out of these two farms. The area was a part of the Pirkkala parish.[5]
Nokia was the setting of one of the largest battles in the Club War, a 1596 peasant uprising against feudal lords. The peasants, armed with clubs, took up residence in Nokia Manor and won several skirmishes against the feudal cavalry, but were decisively defeated by Klaus Fleming on 1–2 January 1597. Thousands of clubmen were slain and their leader Jaakko Ilkka, who had fled, was captured a few weeks later and executed. The Club War was the last major peasant revolt in Finland, and it permanently consolidated the hold of the nation-state. Much later, in the Finnish Civil War (1918), Nokia (along with neighbouring Tampere) was a stronghold for the Red Guards and saw some combat.
In 1922, Suur-Pirkkala was split into Pohjois- and Etelä-Pirkkala (Northern and Southern). Nokia used to reach out to the current heart of Tampere, as the Pispala area was part of Nokia (Pohjois-Pirkkala) until 1937. In 1938 Pohjois-Pirkkala was renamed Nokia while Etelä-Pirkkala became simply Pirkkala. Two municipalities have been consolidated with Nokia: Suoniemi in 1973 and Tottijärvi in 1976. Nokia was designated as a city in 1977.
The early predecessor of eponymous telecommunications giant Nokia was (de facto) born when mining engineer Fredrik Idestam established his second groundwood pulp mill on the banks of Nokianvirta river near the town of Nokia in 1868 and his enterprises were named as Nokia Aktiebolag (Nokia Ltd) in 1871.[6] Suomen Gummitehdas Oy (Finnish Rubber Works Ltd) set up a factory in Nokia in 1904.[7] These two companies and Suomen Kaapelitehdas Oy (Finnish Cable Works Ltd)[8] [9] amalgamated in 1967 forming Nokia Corporation.[10] Different branches of this conglomerate were split into several companies or sold off between 1988 and 1996. The rubber works still operate in Nokia as Nokian Tyres[11] [12] and originally in 1880 established paper mill[13] as Essity.[14]
Despite the Nokia Corporation having its early roots in Nokia it no longer has any operations in the city. Telecommunications business get started in the early 1960s as an electronics division of Finnish Cable Works Ltd (later Nokia Cable Ltd)[15] in Helsinki and later also main office were moved to Capital Region. At this time the headquarters are situated in Espoo.[16] The only current presence of the company in the city is the Nokia mansion,[17] which is sometimes used for private parties for the company's executive staff. The city has repeatedly been asked to commemorate the company it gave birth to, but it has always declined, on the grounds that mobile phones were never produced there.[18]
Nokia does have SoC R&D unit 15km (09miles) away in nearby city of Tampere.[19]
Today's Nokia is famous for its spa, factory shops, waterways, and events. Nokia also enjoys good road and air connections. The largest companies are AGCO Power,[20] Nokian Tyres, Purso,[21] Patria Aviation[22] and Essity paper mill. From a religious perspective, Nokia is best known for the charismatic Nokia Revival which began in 1990. Nokia is also known for its own fast food cuisine, Kuuma koira and as a home town of Nokian Brewery.[23] Due to the closeness of Tampere studio facilities, Nokia has been also used as a filming location. For example, Eric Sykes' The Big Freeze and Finnish TV production Korpelan Kujanjuoksu have been prominently filmed there.
The following graph shows the population development of the town since 1964.
Entrepreneurs altogether | 954 | |
Higher officials | 1322 | |
Lower officials | 3137 | |
Farm workers | 49 | |
Industrial workers | 2731 | |
Other production workers | 802 |