Hennala

District of Lahti in Päijät-Häme, Finland
60°57′57″N 25°37′17″E / 60.965770°N 25.621269°E / 60.965770; 25.621269Country FinlandRegionPäijät-HämeMunicipalityLahtiPopulation
 (2019)
 • Total2,363 (approximate)Postal codes
15700
District number27Neighbouring districtsKeski-Lahti
Laune
Asemantausta
Sopenkorpi
Jokimaa
Okeroinen
Kärpänen

Hennala is a district in the city of Lahti, Finland. It is known of the Stora Enso packaging factory and the former Hennala Garrison which also worked as a concentration camp after the 1918 Finnish Civil War.

Together with the garrisons in Riihimäki, Dragsvik and Hämeenlinna, Hennala is one of the best preserved examples of the Russian military architecture in Finland. It is listed as one of the Cultural environments of national significance by the Finnish National Board of Antiquities.[1]

The combined population of the statistical areas of Hennala and Tornator, corresponding to the area of the district of Hennala, was 2,363 in 2019.[2]

History

The Hennala Garrison was completed in 1911–1913 when Finland was an autonomous part of the Russian Empire. As the Russian Army left Finland in early 1918 and the Finnish Civil War broke out, the garrison was occupied by the Red Guards. After the Battle of Lahti, Hennala was turned into a prison camp. Hennala camp was one of the most infamous camps the Whites established after the war. In few months, at least 1,100 of the 11,000 Red detainees died of executions, disease and malnutrition before the camp was closed in 1919. In 1920–2014 the garrison housed the Häme Regiment and 1940–1994 the Central Military Hospital No 2.[3]

During the 2015 European migrant crisis Hennala was turned into an immigrant reception center. In September, Hennala became the center of international attention after local anti-immigration activists threw stones and fireworks at the asylum seekers and Red Cross workers.[citation needed] One of the demonstrators was wearing a Ku Klux Klan outfit.[4]

Services

Two Lahti Region Transport bus lines run through Hennala: line 2 between Viuha and Metsä-Pietilä in Okeroinen, and line 12 between Ala-Okeroinen and the Market Square via Rykmentinkatu and Metsä-Hennala.[5]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hennala.
  1. ^ "Hennalan kasarmit" (in Finnish). Finnish National Board of Antiquities. 22 December 2009. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  2. ^ "Statistics service of the City of Lahti" (in Finnish). Retrieved 17 January 2021. (under Tilastokanta → Lahti → Väestö → Väkiluku ja ikärakenne → Lahden väkiluku ja ikärakenne alueittain 1999-)
  3. ^ Arkkitehtitoimisto Livady Oy (2015). Hennalan varuskunta-alue. Kulttuuriympäristöselvitys (PDF). Helsinki: Senaatti-kiinteistöt & City of Lahti. pp. 11–30. ISBN 978-952-70623-0-2.
  4. ^ "Finnish government condemns racist attack on asylum seekers in Lahti". The Telegraph. 25 September 2015. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  5. ^ "Reitit ja aikataulut ajalle 10.8.2020 – 6.6.2021" (in Finnish). Lahti Region Transport. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  • v
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  • e
  1. Keski-Lahti
  2. Kartano
  3. Paavola
  4. Niemi
  5. Kiveriö
  6. Kivimaa
  7. Mukkula
  8. Kilpiäinen
  9. Pesäkallio
  10. Kytölä
  11. Viuha
  12. Kunnas
  13. Ahtiala
  14. Koiskala
  15. Myllypohja
  16. Möysä
  17. Järvenpää
  18. Kolava
  19. Kujala
  20. Kerinkallio
  21. Ämmälä
  22. Renkomäki
  23. Nikkilä
  24. Laune
  25. Asemantausta
  26. Sopenkorpi
  27. Hennala
  28. Jokimaa
  29. Okeroinen
  30. Kärpänen
  31. Pirttiharju
  32. Salpausselkä
  33. Jalkaranta
  34. Villähde
  35. Nastola
  36. Uusikylä
  37. Seesta
  38. Ruuhijärvi
  39. Immilä
  40. Pyhäntaka
Coat of arms of Lahti