
Coat of Arms of Hamina

The Town Hall in Hamina
'Hamina' (;
Swedish: ''Fredrikshamn'' ) is one of
Finland's most important harbours. The town was chartered in
1653 at the proposal of Count
Peter Brahe, Governor-General of Finland. Its original name was Veckelax Nystad (Newtown of Veckelax), according to the surrounding countryside, but in 1720s the town was renamed after King
Frederick I of Sweden, Landgrave of Hesse.
The population of the main town is approximately 5,000. The municipality of Hamina
includes the town and
has a population of about 22,000 inhabitants in an area of 630.65 km². Hamina is unilingually
Finnish speaking.
The port specialises in forest products and transit cargo to
Russia.
The town of Hamina is surrounded by a star-shaped
fortress. Construction of the fortress began in
1723 after the
Great Northern War, when the territories east of Hamina had been ceded to Russia, and completed after the
Finnish War at the beginning of the
19th century.
As the important foreign trade town of
Viipuri was surrendered to Russians in
1721, this town (newly renamed in honour of the King) was intended to replace it. The town, thus far a small domestic trade port with restricted trade, was granted extensive privileges including foreign trade.
In
1743 Hamina was surrendered to Russians, after the
Russo-Swedish War, 1741-1743, and the town of
Loviisa was the next Swedish candidate for an Eastern-Finnish trade centre. Hamina became a Russian frontier town, for which a fortress was desirable.
The corners of the fortress form six
bastions, named after towns in Finland. The Central Bastion was added at the end of the
18th century, and is currently used for cultural events.
The
Treaty of Fredrikshamn (
1809), by which Sweden ceded
Finland, along with parts of the provinces of
Lappland and
Västerbotten and the
Ã…land Islands, was signed in Hamina. Thus Sweden was split and the eastern half, along with previously conquered territories including Hamina (''
Old Finland''), was formed into the
Grand Duchy of Finland, an
autonomous part of the
Russian Empire.
External links
★
Official website of Hamina
★
Map of Hamina