Hausjärvi
Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox settlement Hausjärvi is a municipality of Finland. Its seat is in Oitti.
It is part of the Kanta-Häme region. The municipality has a population of Template:Data Finland municipality/population count ({{#time: j F Y|Template:Data Finland municipality/population count }})<ref name="population_count" /> and covers an area of Template:Convert of which Template:Convert is water.<ref name="total_area" /> The population density is Template:Convert.
Geographically, and to some extent politically, Hausjärvi is characterized by its three population centres, Hikiä (population 1,055), Oitti (population 1,855) and Ryttylä (population 1,595). The administrative center of the municipality is Oitti, but politically there sometimes emerges debate on which centres should be developed and/or made targets of public investment.
The municipality is unilingually Finnish.
History
The establishment of permanent settlement in what is now Hausjärvi is presumed to have begun around the 1300s by hunters from Janakkala. The first estates in Hausjärvi sprung up around river Puujoki, and the inhabitants were known to practice hunting as well as slash-and-burn agriculture. Metsäkansa - as Hausjärvi was known in the era around and preceding the Greater Wrath - was made a distinct chapel parish of the mother parish of Janakkala in 1611, which also prompted the construction of its first church in the same year. Hausjärvi was elevated to the status of an independent parish by imperial proclamation in 1855.<ref name="finlandia">Template:Cite book</ref>
The Helsinki–Hämeenlinna and Riihimäki–Saint Petersburg railways marked a turning point for the sparsely populated municipality. The villages of Hyvinkää and Riihimäki, in particular, benefited heavily from becoming junction stations, and they were granted independence from Hausjärvi as market towns in 1918 and 1922, respectively. Later on, the village of Oitti, aided by its station on the Riihimäki–Lahti section, became the administrative center of the remaining parts of Hausjärvi.<ref name="finlandia"/>
Geography
The first Salpausselkä cuts through Hausjärvi from the southeast to the northeast. It manifests as a wide ridge in the southeast, and reaches a height of Template:Convert above sea level around lake Erkylänjärvi. Progressing towards the east, the ridge narrows down around Hikiä and splits in two around Oitti. The southern branch is known as Patastenmäki and reaches Template:Convert above sea level. The ridge then decreases in height as it reaches the municipality of Kärkölä in the east. In addition, a fragmented esker reaches from Hikiä to the parish village, Lavinto, Turkhauta and Hämeenlinna, where it is known as Hattelmalanharju.<ref name="finlandia"/>
The most notable river in Hausjärvi is the Puujoki, into which drains lake Pääjärvi in Lammi and Hämeenkoski.<ref name="finlandia"/>
Villages
In 1967, Hausjärvi had 19 legally recognized villages (henkikirjakylät):<ref name="suomenmaa">Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Div col
- Erkylä
- Hamina
- Hausjärvi
- Hikiä
- Kara
- Karhi
- Kuru
- Lavinto
- Maitonen
- Oitti
- Puujaa
- Rastila
- Rutajärvi
- Ryttylä
- Selänoja
- Syvänoja
- Torhola
- Turkhauta
- Vantaa
Demographics
In 2020, 17.1% of the population of Hausjärvi was under the age of 15, 60.3% were aged 15 to 64, and 22.6% were over the age of 65. The average age was 44.6, over the national average of 43.4 but under the regional average of 45.4. Speakers of Finnish made up 96.4% of the population and speakers of Swedish made up 0.4%, while the share of speakers of foreign languages was 3.2%. Foreign nationals made up 2.5% of the total population.<ref name="population key figures">Template:Cite web</ref>
The chart below, describing the development of the total population of Hausjärvi from 1975-2020, encompasses the municipality's area as of 2021.
Template:Historical populations
Urban areas
In 2019, out of the total population of 8,260, 5,292 people lived in urban areas and 2,897 in sparsely populated areas, while the coordinates of 71 people were unknown. This made Hausjärvi's degree of urbanization 64.6%.<ref name="urbanization">Template:Cite web</ref> The urban population in the municipality was divided between five urban areas as follows:<ref name="urban population">Template:Cite web</ref>
| # | Urban area | Population |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Oitti | 1,855 |
| 2 | Ryttylä | 1,595 |
| 3 | Hikiä | 1,055 |
| 4 | Hyvinkää central locality | 766Template:Efn |
| 5 | Riihimäki central locality | 21Template:Efn |
Economy
In 2018, 9.1% of the workforce of Hausjärvi worked in primary production (agriculture, forestry and fishing), 28.5% in secondary production (e.g. manufacturing, construction and infrastructure), and 60.0% in services. In 2019, the unemployment rate was 5.6%, and the share of pensioners in the population was 26.2%.<ref name="municipal key figures">Template:Cite web (2018 and 2019)</ref>
The ten largest employers in Hausjärvi in 2019 were as follows:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Columns-list
International relations
Twin towns – Sister cities
- Template:Flagicon Naie, Japan (since 1995)Template:Citation needed
- Template:Flagicon Väike-Maarja Parish, Estonia (since 1989)<ref name=vaike-maarja>Template:Cite web</ref>
Notes
References
External links
Template:Commons category-inline Template:Wikivoyage-inline
- Municipality of Hausjärvi – Official website Template:In lang
- Hyrinet – Hyvinkää–Riihimäki area portal Template:In lang