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Blue: Areas of swedish speakers in Finland
Lightest blue: bi-lingual municipalities with Finnish majority
Middle blue: bi-lingual municipalities with Swedish majority
Darkest blue: unilingually Swedish municipalities
Beige: unilingually Finnish municipalities
The map shows a sketch of the swedish-speaking and swedish-finnish bilingual areas in Finland. Municipalities outside the blue marked area have less than 8% and less than 1000 individuals speaking Swedish. Blue areas are formally bi-lingual or swedish speaking. In Tampere (the gray dot) there are 0.5% of total population and about 1000 individuals speaking swedish in the year of 1999.
Kotka, Finnish municipality with only 1.1% swedish population (less than 600 swedish individuals in 1999, as much as there are foreigners in Kotka, also 1.1%) was changed to Finnish area
Dragsfjärd islands changed to islands
Added Hanko, the southernmost tip of Finland
Traditionally finnish speaking north Bothnic areas which are also unilingually finnish municipalities were changed to Finnish areas. These municipalities are:
Lohtaja with 0.7 per cent of population or 22 individuals being Swedish in the year of 1999
Kälviä with 1.4%/63 individuals
Kannus with 0.4%/25 individuals
Himanka with 0.6%/19 individuals
Kalajoki 0.3%/24 individuals
and Pyhäjoki with 0.2% or 7 individuals speaking Swedish [1]
Added Tampere with about 1000 swedish speakers, 0.5% of its total population, as a gray dot
Coloured swedish-majority municipalities with blue. Source[2] These include municipalities of Åland islands and and from continental Finland the following:
Liljendal and Pernaja from eastern Uusimaa
Tammisaari, Inkoo and Karjaa from Uusimaa
From Varsinaissuomi all the bilingual municipalities exept Turku (Särkisalo is too small to be shown with this pixel size)
Coloured bilingually swedish municipalities with darkest blue
From bothnia all the bilingual municipalities exept Vaasa and Kaskinen
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Inside blue areas are communities with more than 8 % or more than 3000 individuals of Swedish population. These areas are formally bilingual. Swedish speakers also exists sparsely at other areas. Source: [http://www.maanmittauslaitos.fi/Default.asp?id=122