Republic of Karelia
This article is about an autonomous republic of Russia. For other meanings, see Karelia (disambiguation)
The Republic of Karelia is an autonomous republic in the Northwestern Russia federal district of Russia. The capital is Petrozavodsk. It borders the Leningrad Oblast and Vologda Oblast of Russia, Finland, the Murmansk Oblast (Kola peninsula), the White Sea, and the Arkhangelsk Oblast. Karelia is called Karjala in Finnish.
History
Main article: History of Karelia
Historically Karelia was a region to the northwest of Russia, east of present-day Finland. From the 13th century and onwards various parts were conquered by Sweden, and incorporated into Swedish Karelia until they were lost to Russia by the Treaty of Åbo in the middle or the 18th century.
In 1923 the province became the Karelian ASSR (Karelian Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic). From 1940 it was made into the Karelo-Finnish SSR, incorporating the Finnish Democratic Republic created during the Winter War, but was changed back to a ASSR in 1956. During the Continuation War in 1941 Finland occupied parts of the area but was forced to withdraw in 1944.
Politics
Main article: Politics of Karelia
The autonomous Republic of Karelia was formed on November 13, 1991.
Geography
Main article: Geography of Karelia
- List of cities:
- *Petrozavodsk
- *Medvezhegorsk
- *Kondopoga
- *Segezha
- *Unitsa
Present-day Karelia is situated between Lake Ladoga in the southwest and the White Sea in the northeast.
Culture
Main article: Culture of Karelia
The Karelian language is close to Finnish, and has in recent years become considered a dialect of Finnish. Finnish and Russian are the official languages of the republic.
Demographics
Main article: Demographics of Karelia
Karelia is populated by Karelians (karjalaiset) and Russians. There are about 780,000 inhabitants in the Republic of Karelia, of whom 73% are registered as Russians, 11% as Karelians, and 3% as ethnic Finns.
See also: Saami music, Pegrema
External links
Referenced By
Concentration Camp | Historic province Karelia | Historical province Karelia | Internment Camp | Karelen | Karelia | Karelian (language) | Karelian language | Karelians | Karjala
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