Sysmä

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Sysmä (Script error: No such module "IPA".) is a municipality of Finland. It is situated in the Päijät-Häme region. The municipality has a population of Template:Data Finland municipality/population count (Error: Invalid time.)[1] and covers an area of Template:Convert of which Template:Convert is water.[2] The population density is Template:Convert. Neighbouring municipalities are Asikkala, Hartola, Heinola, Kuhmoinen, Luhanka, and Padasjoki. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.

Itä-Häme newspaper is established in Sysmä.

According to historians, the word sysmä means either a "dark forest" or an "uninhabited wilderness."[3] Sysmä is also a lake in Joroinen and another lake in Ilomantsi.

History

The first settlers in the area came from Sääksmäki, as evidenced by village names such as Voipala in Sysmä, which is named after Voipaala in Sääksmäki. Rapala may also be named after Rapola.

Sysmä was first mentioned in 1442, when it was already a separate parish. Jämsä was separated from it on the same year. Sysmä was a large parish, though most of its northern lands lacked a permanent population. The northern parts were eventually settled by Savonians and in 1561, the area became the Rautalampi parish which included most of modern Central Finland north of the Päijänne; from Toivakka to Pihtipudas.

The original dialect spoken in Sysmä was a Tavastian dialect. It was replaced by a Savonian dialect soon after Ivar Tawast killed 400 peasants from Sysmä, Jämsä and Kuhmoinen in Padasjoki during the Cudgel War. Many farms in Sysmä were left without owners, so they were taken by Savonian settlers.[4]

Sysmä was also occasionally known in documents as Sysmäki due to association with the word mäki (hill), compare Kärsämäki which used to be Kärsämä.

Hartola was a part of Sysmä until 1784. At the time, the Hartola parish also included Joutsa, Luhanka, Leivonmäki and the western part of Pertunmaa.

[5]

Population

Sysmä has suffered chronic, steady population decline over the last 50 years. It has many alternative homes, used principally as holiday homes.[6]

Villages

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Attractions

Many summer events are held in Sysmä during which the population could even triple seasonally.

  • One of the most popular events is called Sysmän suvisoitto.[7]
  • Kammiovuori mountain where is seven meters high glacial erratic Sysmän Linta[8]
  • Another glacial erratic in Sysmä is Onkiniemen liikkuva kivi.[9]

Notable people

References

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External links

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  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named population_count
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  3. Lähilehti (no 46), 21 October 2020. Retrieved 6 April 2022. (in Finnish)
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  6. Sysmä Community Currency : An Analysis of its Success from the Perspectives of Purposes, Stakeholders and Promotion|https://research.fi/en/results/publication/0363734219
  7. http://www.suvisoitto.fi/ Sysmän Suvisoitto
  8. Facta2001, WSOY, 1981. (in Finnish)
  9. Maailman ja Suomen Suuratlas, p. 315. WSOY, Instituto Geografico Agostini, Novara, Igda, 1985. ISBN 951-0-12598-9. (in Finnish)