Lappi, Tampere
The Lappi district got its name from Lapinniemi, which piers Lake Näsijärvi. The name may refer to early Lappish settlement. Part of the Lappi district is called Käpylä, which refers to the first inhabitant of the area, August Käpynen, a worker who moved there in 1915. The town plan for Lappi was confirmed in 1933. The Naistenlahti area, which officially forms one district of Tampere together with the old factory area of Tampella, became the property of the city of Tampere in 1877, at the same time as the city bought the Kyttälä area from Hatanpää Manor. Behind the name of Naistenlahti is a story according to which women on their way from Teisko to Messukylä Church got ashore here to continue their final journey.
The Finnish Heritage Agency has classified Lappi's detached house area as a nationally significant built cultural environment.
See also
Sources
- Maija Louhivaara: Tampereen kadunnimet. Tampereen museoiden julkaisuja 51, 1999, Tampere. ISBN 951-609-105-9. (in Finnish)
References
- ^ Louhivaara 1999, p. 99. (in Finnish)
- ^ Louhivaara 1999, p. 76. (in Finnish)
- ^ Lapin pientaloalue (Tampere, Pirkanmaa) - Finnish Heritage Agency (in Finnish)
External links
Media related to Lappi, Tampere at Wikimedia Commons
- Pictures of Naistenlahti area at Arjenhistoria.fi (in Finnish)
61°30′32.17817″N 23°46′40.01333″E / 61.5089383806°N 23.7777814806°E