Everything about Saaremaa totally explained
Saaremaa is the largest
island belonging to
Estonia. The main island of
Saare County, it's located in the
Baltic Sea, south of
Hiiumaa island, and belongs to the west Estonian
archipelago (
Moonsund archipelago). The capital of Saaremaa is
Kuressaare, which has about 15,000 inhabitants; the whole island has over 39,000 inhabitants.
Etymology
The island is called
Saaremaa in
Estonian, and in
Finnish Saarenmaa — literally "isle's land". In old Scandinavian sagas, Saarema is called
Eysysla, which means exactly the same as the name of the island in Estonian: "the district (land) of island". This is the origin of the island's name in
German and
Swedish,
Ösel,
Danish,
Øsel,
Gutnish Oysl, and in
Latin,
Osilia. The name
Eysysla appears sometimes together with
Adalsysla, "the big land", perhaps 'Suuremaa' or 'Suur Maa' in Estonian, which refers to mainland Estonia.
History
According to archaeological finds, the territory of Saaremaa has been inhabited for at least five thousand years. Sagas talk about numerous skirmishes between islanders and
Vikings. Saaremaa was the wealthiest county of ancient Estonia and the home of notorious
Estonian pirates, sometimes called the Eastern Vikings. The Chronicle of
Henry of Livonia describes a fleet of sixteen ships and five hundred Osilians ravaging the area that's now
southern Sweden, then belonging to
Denmark. In 1206, the King
Valdemar II of Denmark built a fortress on the island but they found no volunteers to man it. They burned it themselves and left.
In 1227, Saaremaa was conquered by the
Livonian Brothers of the Sword during the
Livonian Crusade, but remained a hotbed of Estonian resistance. The crusaders founded the
Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek there. When the Order was defeated by the
Lithuanian army in the
Battle of Saule in 1236, the Saaremaa islanders rebelled. The conflict was ended by a treaty that was signed by the Osilians and the Master of the Order. In the following year, the Sword-Brothers were absorbed into the
Teutonic Order.
Most of Saaremaa was ruled directly by the Bishopric of Ösel-Wiek, while some parts were enfeoffed to the Livonian Order. In 1559, the bishopric and Saaremaa were sold to Denmark, becoming part of
Danish Estonia. From 1570 until 1645 the entire island was under Danish possession.
In 1645, Saaremaa was ceded from Denmark to
Sweden by the
Treaty of Brömsebro. In 1721, along with the rest of
Swedish Livonia, Saaremaa (then known by its Swedish name of Ösel) was ceded to the
Russian Empire by the
Treaty of Nystad, becoming a part of the
Governorate of Livonia.
In
World War I, the Estonian islands were conquered by
Imperial German Army in October 1917 and occupied (
Operation Albion) until the end of hostilities. Estonia became independent after the
October Revolution and the collapse of the Russian Empire. As a result of the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the new state was incorporated into the
Soviet Union in June 1940 as the
Estonian Soviet Socialist Republic. The island was occupied by
Nazi Germany in 1941 (
Operation Beowulf); German troops remained there until expelled by the
Red Army in the
Moonzund Landing Operation of November 1944.
Estonian independence was regained on
August 20 1991, in the
collapse of the Soviet Union.
Geography
The island forms the main barrier between the
Gulf of Riga and the Baltic Sea. To the south of it's the main passage out of the gulf, the
Irbe Strait, next to
Sõrve Peninsula, the southernmost portion of the island. The highest point on the island is 54 m above sea level. One particularly interesting feature found on the island is the
Kaali crater. The island has lots of forested terrain. One of the symbols of the island is the
juniper.
Nature
More than 10,000 years ago the first parts of Saaremaa arose from the
Baltic Ice Dam Lake. The uplift of the earth's crust is continuing even today - 2mm per year. The West - Estonian islands are lowlying plains resting on limestone, their average elevation being about 15 meters above sea level.
Limestone has become denuded in a great number of places, resulting in cliffs, limestone pits and quarries at
Mustjala,
Ninase,
Pulli,
Uugu and
Kaugatuma. Because of its mild maritime climate and a variety of soils, Saaremaa has a rich
flora, illustrated by the fact that 80% of the plant species found in Estonia are represented here. Altogether 1200 species of vascular plants can be found in Saaremaa. About 120 of the local plant species are rare ones which have received special protection status. The most famous endemic species is
Rhinanthus osiliensis - a rare little flower growing mostly in spring fens; rare and beautiful flowers are widespread - out of the 36 species found in Estonia, 35 of them are found on Saaremaa and neighbouring islands. Over 40% of Saaremaa is covered with forests. They are mostly mixed forests but in some areas one can also find broad - leaved (deciduous), which are relict plant communities of former milder climatic periods. Wooded meadows were still common in Saaremaa before
World War II, but many of these unique natural complexes have gradually become overgrown and thus turned into the ordinary forest. The same is true for
alvars (limestone areas covered with thin soil and stunted vegetation). Once a typical and exclusive landscape element in Saaremaa alvars are now in decline. Nature conservation planning for Saaremaa now includes protection of the largest and most unusual alvar areas.
Saaremaa has a wide variety of rare wildlife species - ranging from insects to seals. The smallest protected wildlife species include Cloude Apolle butterflies and Roman snails.
The coastal areas of Saaremaa are famous seal habitats. The gray seal which is common here can be found in three large permanent resting areas on the islets off the coast in the western and southern parts of Saaremaa. The local population of grey seal is slightly increasing Ringed seals can also be encountered everywhere in the coastal waters of Saaremaa, but because of their timidity it hasn't been possible to make an estimation of their number. The islands lie within the East -
Atlantic flyway, which is the migration path of waterfowl. This "bird - road" connects northeastern Europe with Arctic regions and each year hundreds of thousands of migratory birds visit Saaremaa in spring and autumn. The
barnacle goose,
mute swan,
whooper swan,
eider,
shelduck and a great many other
bird species have been given protection status. But on the whole, the islands are somewhat poorer in wildlife species than the mainland. Neither
mole,
mink, nor
otter can be found here, the
lynx and the
brown bear are but infrequent guests.
Kaali
Kaali is a small group of nine unique
meteorite craters on Saaremaa. The largest of the craters measures 110
meters in
diameter and contains a small lake (known as
Kaali järv (Lake Kaali)). The meteor cluster had an impact velocity of 10-20 km/s and a mass of 20-80 tons. At the altitude of 5-10 km the meteor broke into pieces. The largest fragment produced the main crater with a depth of 22 m. Eight smaller craters with diameters ranging from 12 to 40 m and depths varying from 1 to 4 m are all within 1 kilometer of the main crater. The explosion that caused the craters is estimated to have happened 660 ± 85
B.C. (
Holocene). The energy of the impact (about 80
TJ (20 kilotons of TNT), comparable with the
Hiroshima bomb) burned forests within a radius of 6 km.
Resources
Dolomite,
limestone,
curative mud,
mineral water,
sand and
gravel,
ceramic clay are the major local minerals. Of these local resources the dolomite is perhaps the most famous above all.
Characteristics
The majority of the population is
Estonian (97%). The biggest minority nationality is
Russian, equaling 2% of the inhabitants. Compared to the Republic of Estonia on the whole, the population of
Saaremaa County and particularly of
Kuressaare town is younger, whereas the number of the retired people is considerably smaller. Saaremaa is located in the centre of the Baltic region with the most rapidly growing market in Europe containing 70 million consumers. Gates to the West include not only the newly reconstructed
Kuressaare Airport and
Roomassaare Port, the operation of modern ferries between Saaremaa and the mainland but also the rapid development of the telecommunications, highly important for the island. Saaremaa is a tourist destination, revisited by 35% of foreign and 95% of domestic tourists. Saaremaa has an entrepreneur-friendly, safe, and strain-free economic environment.
Transportation
It is possible to reach Saaremaa by
ferry from
Virtsu on the Estonian mainland to
Muhu island, which is itself connected to Saaremaa via a
causeway. Saaremaa can also be reached using a ferry from
Sõru on the island of
Hiiumaa. It is also possible to reach Saaremaa by ferry from
Ventspils in
Latvia. This service started in 2005 and is run by
SSC Ferries
. There are regular bus services from
Tallinn,
Pärnu and
Tartu on the mainland. An airfield exists at
Kuressaare Airport. It is possible to fly from Kuressaare to Tallinn, and there are also seasonal flights to Pärnu and Stockholm.
airBaltic part of
SAS Group as well as
Finnair subsidiary
Aero Airlines (External Link
) operate seasonal flights to
Riga and
Helsinki respectively during the summer season. There was an airfield at
Asta (air base) during the
Cold War.
Plans to connect Saaremaa to the mainland either by the
Saaremaa Bridge or
Saaremaa Tunnel are being studied. The project will cost at least 175 million euros and will be ready no sooner than 2014. The Latvian airline
AirBaltic has launched a direct flight to from
Riga to Kuressaare, directed mostly at health and spa tourists. The airline
Estonian Air has also a flight line from
Tallinn to Kuressaare.
Gallery
Image:Panga-pank.jpg|The cliffs near the village Panga on the north coast of Saaremaa, Estonia. Aug 7, 2007.
Image:NorthSaaremaaCoast.JPG|Beach ridges on the northern coast of Saaremaa, Estonia. July 27, 2007.
Image:KuressaareCastle.JPG|Kuressaare Castle, Saaremaa, Estonia. July 27, 2007.
Image:SovietMemorialSaaremaa.JPG|Soviet WWII memorial, Saaremaa, Estonia. July 27, 2007.
Image:SovietGravesSaaremaa.JPG|Soviet WWII graves, Saaremaa, Estonia. July 27, 2007.
Image:Saaremaa Countryside.JPG|Saaremaa countryside
Image:Kaali Meteorite Crater.JPG|Kaali meteorite crater
Further Information
Get more info on 'Saaremaa'.
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