UmeÃÂ¥ ( , ; Finnish and ; ) is a city in northeast Sweden. It is the seat of UmeÃÂ¥ Municipality and the capital of Västerbotten County.
Situated on the Ume River, UmeÃÂ¥ is the largest locality in Norrland and the thirteenth largest in Sweden, with a wider municipal population of 132,235 inhabitants in the beginning of 2023. When UmeÃÂ¥ University was established in 1965, growth accelerated, and the amount of housing has doubled in 30 years from 1980 to 2010. , UmeÃÂ¥ was gaining around 1,000 inhabitants per year and the municipality plans for having 200,000 inhabitants by 2050. The projection of municipality size in 2050 has, however, been questioned as an overestimation in an independent study.
UmeÃÂ¥ is a university town and centre of education, technical and medical research in northern Sweden. The two universities located in the city, UmeÃÂ¥ University and one of the three main branches of SLU, host around 40,000 enrolled students, which corresponds to around 30% of the total population. CRISPR gene editing was developed by researchers, headed by Emmanuelle Charpentier at UmeÃÂ¥ University, being awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. UmeÃÂ¥ was the European Capital of Culture during 2014, along with Riga in Latvia. UmeÃÂ¥ is certified by the EarthCheck Sustainable Destinations program.
Consulates from ten countries can be found in UmeÃÂ¥ (2021): Denmark (from 1848), Finland (from 1921), France (from 1989), Iceland (from 2002), Italy (from 2012), Latvia (1939âÂÂ1940; again from 2014), Lithuania (from 2012), Norway (from 1963), and the Republic of Seychelles (from 2001).
UmeÃÂ¥ has been the home of Rally Sweden since 2022.
People have lived in the UmeÃ¥àriver valley for at least three thousand years. The oldest rock carvings near UmeÃÂ¥, ten kilometers west of the city at Norrforsen, are from about 3,000 BCE. In some places, there are remains of settlements and cultivation from the Bronze Age to the 11th century. During that period, the climate was mild, allowing for the cultivation of barley and wheat, while moose and beaver were hunted further inland.
The first written mention of UmeÃÂ¥ dates from the 14th century. Before this time, the northern parts of Sweden, including the counties of Västerbotten County and Norrbotten County, were mostly settled by nomadic Sami people, though there is no evidence of a permanent settlement at the exact location of the city. The name is believed to derive from the Old Norse word ÃÂma, meaning 'roaring'. The name of the town would therefore mean "The Roaring River".
The coast was permanently settled by Germanic peoples who traveled north along the Bothnian Bay by boat, which explains the Germanic names of towns and villages along the coast. Southern Västerbotten (including UmeÃÂ¥ and SkellefteÃÂ¥) has had permanent Germanic settlements since at least the 14th century, and possibly since the Viking Age, or even earlier.
UmeÃÂ¥ initially developed as a parish, with a wooden church and a trading post located in what is now known as Backen (or Kyrkbacken). Its location near the coast and by a river was probably one of the reasons that people chose to settle there.
For the next few centuries, UmeÃÂ¥ remained a collection of scattered parishes where merchandise originating from the Sami people was traded. It was the last inhabited area before the northern wilderness. However, no proper town was built at the location selected by the king, and UmeÃÂ¥ lost its town privileges in the 1590s.
In 1622, Gustavus Adolphus re-established the town. By 1638, it had about 40 houses. It suffered from Russian attacks in 1714 and in 1720, when it was burnt to the ground during the Russian Pillage of 1719âÂÂ21. At the close of the Finnish War in 1809, a Russian army under Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly captured UmeÃÂ¥ and occupied it from June to August.
In 1874, the town plans were improved following a government mandate. UmeÃÂ¥ had already begun making structural changes when, on 25 June 1888, a fire devastated the eastern parts of the town, leaving at least 2,300 of its 3,000 inhabitants homeless. During the restoration, almost 3,000 silver birch trees were planted along wide avenues to prevent future fires from spreading. For this reason UmeÃÂ¥ is sometimes known as "Björkarnas Stad", the "City of Birches". The name of the UmeÃÂ¥ ice-hockey team, Björklöven, translates to "The Birch Leaves".
UmeÃÂ¥ is situated on the inlet of the Gulf of Bothnia at the mouth of the Ume River, in the south of Västerbotten. UmeÃÂ¥ is about north of Stockholm and about south of the Arctic Circle. It is the largest city north of the Stockholm-Uppsala region, and is sometimes referred to as the regional centre of northern Sweden.
The nearby community of Holmsund serves as UmeÃÂ¥'s port, with a ferry line connecting it to Vaasa () in Finland. This close connection to Finland influences UmeÃÂ¥'s population, with many Sweden Finns residing in the city.
UmeÃÂ¥ has a subarctic climate (Dfc), bordering on a humid continental climate (Dfb) with short and fairly warm summers. Winters are lengthy and freezing but usually milder than in areas at the same latitude with a more continental climate.
Average January temperature is about , July is . Considering its proximity to a major water body and its latitude, summers are warmer than would be expected. The record high of was recorded on 23 July 2014, during a very warm summer in Sweden. The record low of was recorded on 15 February 1978.
The population of UmeÃÂ¥ has grown consistently since the 1960s, when the university was built. In part because of the university, the town has attracted many residents from outside of Sweden, as well as students from other regions of Sweden.
As of 2015, 10.4% of the population in the municipality of UmeÃÂ¥ were foreign-born. The largest national origin group is from Finland, followed by Iraq, Iran and Somalia.
In April 2017, the Jewish association in UmeÃÂ¥ closed after receiving multiple threats from neo-Nazis, allegedly associated with the Nordic Resistance Movement.
The road infrastructure includes two European highways (E4 and E12) which pass the city. UmeÃÂ¥ is located along the Blue Highway, which is an international tourist route from Mo i Rana, Norway to Pudozh, Russia via Finland.
The local bus system is centred at Vasaplan in the city centre, and has multiple routes travelling throughout the city. About from the city centre is UmeÃÂ¥ Airport. It is the 7th largest airport in Sweden by number of passengers, with 844,932 passengers in 2010.
The Bothnia Line (Botniabanan) connects to UmeÃÂ¥ from the south, it runs along the High Coast via ÃÂrnsköldsvik to UmeÃÂ¥. This railway was opened on 28 August 2010. The new railway line is long, containing 140 bridges and of tunnels. It provides UmeÃÂ¥ with a fast train connection to Stockholm ( hours). A new railway station, UmeÃÂ¥ East Station, was built in connection to Norrland's University Hospital and UmeÃÂ¥ University.
The Wasaline ferry takes four hours to arrive in Vaasa, Finland.
The Opera of northern Sweden, the Norrland Opera, is based in the city, as is the English-language non-profit UmeÃÂ¥ Theatre Company and the Museum of Contemporary Art and Visual Culture. The annual UmeÃÂ¥ Jazz Festival is one of the larger Scandinavian festivals for modern jazz.
Well-known metal bands from UmeÃÂ¥ include Cult of Luna, Gotham City, Bewitched, Meshuggah, Naglfar, Nocturnal Rites and Persuader. During the 1990s, the influence of UmeÃÂ¥ hardcore punk bands such as Final Exit, Step Forward, Refused, Abhinanda, DS-13, Shield and Doughnuts and the local labels Desperate Fight Records and Busted Heads Records led to the growth of UmeÃÂ¥'s hardcore scene. During the 90's the town were the European center of Straight Edge culture housing hardcore and straight edge shows on a weekly basis for many years. This youth culture was documented in an exhibition called "UmeÃ¥âÂÂthe European Capital of Hardcore 1989âÂÂ2000." at Västerbottens Museum in 2013. Independent record label Ny VÃÂ¥g was headquartered in UmeÃÂ¥, and have released records of UmeÃÂ¥ artists such as AC4, Masshysteri and Invasionen.
In 2009, the town was designated European Capital of Culture for 2014, along with Riga.
UmeÃÂ¥ is the centre of television in northern Sweden; SVT Nord and TV4's northern region office are both based in the city. The main newspapers of the county of Västerbotten, Västerbottens-Kuriren and Västerbottens Folkblad are also based in UmeÃÂ¥.
The background and setting for the video game Unravel are based on landscapes around UmeÃÂ¥.
The city of UmeÃÂ¥ currently hosts four major sports clubs. The women's football club is UmeÃÂ¥ IK. The men's hockey team IF Björklöven was very successful in the 1980s but has been less successful in recent years. Björklöven are currently playing in the Swedish second-tier league HockeyAllsvenskan while UmeÃÂ¥ IK plays in the top Swedish women's football league Damallsvenskan. IBK Dalen and Team Thorengruppen are among the major floorball teams in Sweden. Other sports clubs include IFK UmeÃÂ¥, BK Ume-Trixa, Mariehem SK, UmeÃÂ¥ FC, and Umedalens IF.
In 2018 and 2020, UmeÃÂ¥ was named Sweden's best sports city by SVT Sport.
In 2011, a baseball and softball team, UmeÃÂ¥ Baseboll & Softbol|klubb, was founded. The team has 2 former national team players as coaches and currently plays in Norra Regionserien.
Umea is also the host city of the FIA World Rally Championship's Rally Sweden. In 2022 Rally Sweden officially relocated to the northern Swedish city of UmeÃÂ¥ after being held in the province of Värmland since its foundation in 1950. The primary reason for its relocation was that UmeÃÂ¥ is considered a more snow safe region.
UmeÃÂ¥ University has about 37,000 students and 4,200 staff. The establishment of the university in the mid-1960s led to a population expansion from about 50,000 inhabitants to today's 121,032. The expansion continues, with about 1100 new inhabitants every year, and has made UmeÃÂ¥ a modern, somewhat intellectual city to add to the traditional basis of heavy industry for cities along the coast of northern Sweden (Norrland). In 1951 the university's library was recognised as important for northern Sweden. The library is given a copy of every new book printed in Sweden.
The Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences or Sveriges Lantbruksuniversitet is a university in Sweden. Although its head office is located in Uppsala (Ultuna), the university has several campuses in different parts of Sweden, including UmeÃÂ¥. Unlike other government-run universities in Sweden, it is funded through the budget for the Ministry of Enterprise and Innovation.
The university hospital serves the entire region of northern Sweden.
Key research fields of the University are life sciences (especially medical and cell and the molecular biology of plants), human-technology interaction, social welfare, ecology and gender perspectives.
The UmeÃÂ¥ University works collaboratively with companies such as ABB, Volvo, Skanska, Ericsson, and ÃÂhrlings PwC.
The Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) in UmeÃÂ¥, with UmeÃÂ¥ Plant Science Centre, is another major site of research and education.
Notable companies based in UmeÃÂ¥ include:
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