[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BlogPosting","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/umea-wikipedia-3\/#BlogPosting","mainEntityOfPage":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/umea-wikipedia-3\/","headline":"Ume\u00e5 – Wikipedia","name":"Ume\u00e5 – Wikipedia","description":"Not to be confused with Haumea. Place in Sweden Ume\u00e5 ( OO-m\u0259-aw,[2] OO-may-oh,[3]Swedish:\u00a0[\u02c8\u0289\u030c\u02d0m\u025b\u0254] (listen), locally [\u02c8\u0289\u030c\u02d0m\u025b] (listen); South Westrobothnian: [\u00b2\u0289\u02d0m];[a]Finnish:","datePublished":"2020-11-02","dateModified":"2020-11-02","author":{"@type":"Person","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/author\/lordneo\/#Person","name":"lordneo","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/author\/lordneo\/","image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","url":"https:\/\/secure.gravatar.com\/avatar\/c9645c498c9701c88b89b8537773dd7c?s=96&d=mm&r=g","height":96,"width":96}},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/wiki4\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/08\/download.jpg","width":600,"height":60}},"image":{"@type":"ImageObject","@id":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/8\/8a\/Loudspeaker.svg\/11px-Loudspeaker.svg.png","url":"https:\/\/upload.wikimedia.org\/wikipedia\/commons\/thumb\/8\/8a\/Loudspeaker.svg\/11px-Loudspeaker.svg.png","height":"11","width":"11"},"url":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/umea-wikipedia-3\/","wordCount":22330,"articleBody":"Not to be confused with Haumea.Place in SwedenUme\u00e5 ( OO-m\u0259-aw,[2] OO-may-oh,[3]Swedish:\u00a0[\u02c8\u0289\u030c\u02d0m\u025b\u0254] (listen), locally [\u02c8\u0289\u030c\u02d0m\u025b] (listen); South Westrobothnian: [\u00b2\u0289\u02d0m];[a]Finnish: Uumaja; Ume Sami: Ubmeje; Southern Sami: Upmeje; Northern Sami: Ubmi) is a city in northeast Sweden. It is the seat of Ume\u00e5 Municipality and the capital of V\u00e4sterbotten County.Situated on the Ume River, Ume\u00e5 is the largest locality in Norrland and the thirteenth largest in Sweden, with a wider municipal population of 130,224 inhabitants in 2020.[1][4] When Ume\u00e5 University was established in 1965, growth accelerated, and the amount of housing has doubled in 30 years from 1980 to 2010.[5] As of 2018[update], Ume\u00e5 was gaining around 1000 inhabitants per year and the municipality plans for having 200 000 inhabitants by 2050.[6] The projection of municipality size in 2050 has, however, been questioned as an overestimation in an independent study.[7]Ume\u00e5 is a university town and centre of education, technical and medical research in northern Sweden. The two universities located in the city, Ume\u00e5 University and one of the 3 main branches of SLU, host around 40,000 enrolled students,[8][9] which corresponds to around 30% of the total population.[b]CRISPR gene editing was developed by researchers at Ume\u00e5 University, being awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[10] Ume\u00e5 was the European Capital of Culture during 2014, along with Riga in Latvia.[11]Consulates from ten countries can be found in Ume\u00e5 (2021): Denmark (from 1848), Finland (from 1921), France (from 1989), Iceland (from 2002), Italy (from 2012), Latvia (1939\u20131940; again from 2014), Lithuania (from 2012), Norway (from 1963), and the Republic of Seychelles (from 2001).Ume\u00e5 has been the home of Rally Sweden since 2022.[12]Table of ContentsHistory[edit]Geography[edit]Residential areas and localities[edit]Climate[edit]Demography[edit]Transportation[edit]Culture[edit]Education and research[edit]Economy[edit]Notable people[edit]See also[edit]References[edit]External links[edit]History[edit]People have lived in the Ume\u00e5\u00a0river valley for at least three thousand years. The oldest rock carvings near Ume\u00e5, ten kilometers west of the city at Norrforsen, are from about 3,000 BCE.[13] In some places, there are remains of settlements and cultivation from the Bronze Age to the 11th century.[14][15] During that period the climate was mild, and barley and wheat were grown in the area, while moose and beaver were hunted further inland.[16]The first written mention of Ume\u00e5 is from the 14th century. The northern parts of Sweden, including the counties of V\u00e4sterbotten and Norrbotten, were mostly settled by nomadic Sami people before this time but not necessarily forming any permanent settlement in the city’s exact location. The name is believed to be derived from the Old Norse word \u00dama which means roaring. The name of the town would therefore mean “The Roaring River“.[17][18]The coast came to be permanently settled by Germanic peoples moving upwards on the Bothnian Bay by boat, hence the Germanic names of towns and villages on the Westrobothnian coast. Southern Westrobothnia (Ume\u00e5 and Skellefte\u00e5) has been a permanent Germanic settlement since at least the 14th century, but probably since the Viking ages or earlier.Ume\u00e5 in its first form was a parish with a wooden church and trade post located in the section of town now known as Backen (or Kyrkbacken). Its location near the coast and on a river was probably one of the reasons that people chose to settle there.[19]For the next couple of centuries, Ume\u00e5 was a place consisting of scattered parishes, where merchandise originating with the Sami people was traded, and was the last inhabited place before the northern wilderness took over. However, no real city was built at the location selected by the king, and it lost its town privileges in the 1590s.[19]In 1622, a city was again founded by Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden.[20] In 1638, it had about 40 houses.[19] It suffered from Russian attacks in 1714 and in 1720 when it was burnt to the ground during the Russian Pillage of 1719\u201321. At the close of the Finnish War in 1809 the Russian army under Barclay de Tolly took Ume\u00e5 and held it from June to August.[21]In 1874 the town improved the plans for its structure after it became a government requirement. Ume\u00e5 had already started making these changes[22] when on 25 June 1888, a fire devastated the eastern parts of Ume\u00e5 and at least 2,300 of the 3,000 inhabitants became homeless. In the restoration following the fire, almost 3,000 silver birch[23] trees were planted along wide avenues to prevent future fires from spreading. For this reason Ume\u00e5 is sometimes known as “Bj\u00f6rkarnas Stad”, the “City of Birches”.[24] The name of the Ume\u00e5 ice-hockey team, Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven, means “The Birch Leaves”.Geography[edit] Ume\u00e5 is situated on the inlet of the Gulf of Bothnia at the mouth of the Ume River, in the south of V\u00e4sterbotten. Ume\u00e5 is about 600\u00a0km (373\u00a0mi) north of Stockholm and about 400\u00a0km (249\u00a0mi) 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 its port. From here a ferry line connects it with the neighbouring city of Vaasa (Swedish: Vasa) in Finland. The near connections to Finland affects the population of the city \u2013 several Sweden Finns live in Ume\u00e5.Residential areas and localities[edit]Climate[edit]Ume\u00e5 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 \u22127\u00a0\u00b0C (19\u00a0\u00b0F), July is 16\u00a0\u00b0C (61\u00a0\u00b0F). Considering its proximity to a major water body and its latitude, summers are warmer than would be expected. The record high of 32.2\u00a0\u00b0C (90.0\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded on 23 July 2014, during a very warm summer in Sweden. The record low of \u221238.2\u00a0\u00b0C (\u221236.8\u00a0\u00b0F) was recorded on 15 February 1978.Climate data for Ume\u00e5 airport, 1991-2020 normals & extremes since 1991 (Precipitation from R\u00f6b\u00e4cksdalen)MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYearRecord high \u00b0C (\u00b0F)8.7(47.7)8.7(47.7)14.5(58.1)20.6(69.1)27.8(82.0)30.1(86.2)32.2(90.0)28.9(84.0)23.1(73.6)18.8(65.8)13.1(55.6)9.5(49.1)32.2(90.0)Mean maximum \u00b0C (\u00b0F)4.6(40.3)5.0(41.0)9.0(48.2)14.4(57.9)21.1(70.0)24.6(76.3)26.8(80.2)24.5(76.1)19.8(67.6)13.4(56.1)7.9(46.2)5.7(42.3)27.8(82.0)Average high \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u22122.6(27.3)\u22122.5(27.5)1.5(34.7)6.7(44.1)13.0(55.4)17.9(64.2)20.8(69.4)19.3(66.7)14.4(57.9)7.2(45.0)1.9(35.4)\u22120.8(30.6)8.1(46.5)Daily mean \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u22126.2(20.8)\u22126.5(20.3)\u22122.8(27.0)2.2(36.0)7.8(46.0)12.9(55.2)16.0(60.8)14.5(58.1)9.7(49.5)3.7(38.7)\u22120.8(30.6)\u22124.1(24.6)3.9(39.0)Average low \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221210.4(13.3)\u221211.0(12.2)\u22127.5(18.5)\u22122.5(27.5)2.1(35.8)7.2(45.0)10.7(51.3)9.5(49.1)5.1(41.2)0.0(32.0)\u22124.1(24.6)\u22127.9(17.8)\u22120.7(30.7)Mean minimum \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221223.7(\u221210.7)\u221223.9(\u221211.0)\u221219.8(\u22123.6)\u221210.1(13.8)\u22124.1(24.6)0.6(33.1)4.1(39.4)2.0(35.6)\u22122.7(27.1)\u221210.1(13.8)\u221215.3(4.5)\u221219.9(\u22123.8)\u221226.7(\u221216.1)Record low \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221235.1(\u221231.2)\u221232.6(\u221226.7)\u221228.9(\u221220.0)\u221219.2(\u22122.6)\u22127.0(19.4)\u22123.6(25.5)1.1(34.0)\u22121.2(29.8)\u22128.5(16.7)\u221220.2(\u22124.4)\u221223.5(\u221210.3)\u221229.9(\u221221.8)\u221235.1(\u221231.2)Average precipitation mm (inches)46.4(1.83)35.5(1.40)33.8(1.33)31.8(1.25)42.0(1.65)48.7(1.92)68.7(2.70)75.7(2.98)56.3(2.22)69.0(2.72)66.8(2.63)59.9(2.36)634.6(24.99)Mean monthly sunshine hours35811562132702872762211539543231,853Source 1: SMHI Open Data [25]Source 2: SMHI 1991-2020 normals [26]Climate data for Ume\u00e5 Airport (2002\u20132018 averages & extremes for the city since 1882)MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYearRecord high \u00b0C (\u00b0F)12.0(53.6)9.0(48.2)14.5(58.1)21.5(70.7)27.8(82.0)33.5(92.3)32.2(90.0)30.2(86.4)25.5(77.9)18.8(65.8)13.4(56.1)9.5(49.1)33.5(92.3)Mean maximum \u00b0C (\u00b0F)4.1(39.4)4.9(40.8)9.4(48.9)14.9(58.8)22.4(72.3)24.8(76.6)27.0(80.6)25.2(77.4)20.0(68.0)13.6(56.5)8.4(47.1)5.5(41.9)28.0(82.4)Average high \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u22123.2(26.2)\u22122.6(27.3)1.8(35.2)7.2(45.0)13.6(56.5)18.0(64.4)21.4(70.5)19.8(67.6)14.9(58.8)7.4(45.3)2.3(36.1)\u22120.6(30.9)8.3(47.0)Daily mean \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u22127.2(19.0)\u22126.9(19.6)\u22123.0(26.6)2.4(36.3)8.1(46.6)12.5(54.5)16.2(61.2)14.8(58.6)10.1(50.2)3.6(38.5)\u22120.9(30.4)\u22124.4(24.1)3.8(38.8)Average low \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221211.1(12.0)\u221211.1(12.0)\u22127.7(18.1)\u22122.4(27.7)2.5(36.5)7.0(44.6)10.9(51.6)9.7(49.5)5.2(41.4)\u22120.2(31.6)\u22124.0(24.8)\u22128.1(17.4)\u22120.8(30.6)Mean minimum \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221224.9(\u221212.8)\u221224.3(\u221211.7)\u221220.4(\u22124.7)\u221210.0(14.0)\u22124.3(24.3)\u22120.2(31.6)3.8(38.8)1.5(34.7)\u22122.8(27.0)\u221210.5(13.1)\u221214.9(5.2)\u221219.8(\u22123.6)\u221227.5(\u221217.5)Record low \u00b0C (\u00b0F)\u221238.0(\u221236.4)\u221238.2(\u221236.8)\u221232.4(\u221226.3)\u221225.5(\u221213.9)\u22129.0(15.8)\u22124.5(23.9)\u22121.0(30.2)\u22122.5(27.5)\u22127.5(18.5)\u221220.2(\u22124.4)\u221229.0(\u221220.2)\u221234.0(\u221229.2)\u221238.2(\u221236.8)Average precipitation mm (inches)37.3(1.47)29.8(1.17)27.7(1.09)28.7(1.13)45.0(1.77)63.5(2.50)76.2(3.00)71.1(2.80)38.9(1.53)51.9(2.04)52.3(2.06)44.4(1.75)566.8(22.31)Mean monthly sunshine hours30.873.8166.9212.2271.3285.2287.9223.9157.1103.447.926.01,886.4Source: [27][28]Demography[edit]Population of Ume\u00e5YearPop. 1960 32,492 1965 39,889 1970 47,692 1975 49,715 1980 52,719 1990 60,305YearPop. 1995 68,494 2000 70,959 2005 75,645 2010 79,594 2015 83,249Source: SCBThe population of Ume\u00e5 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 Ume\u00e5 were foreign-born. The largest national origin group is from Finland, followed by Iraq, Iran and Somalia.[29]In April 2017 the Jewish association in Ume\u00e5 closed after receiving multiple threats from neo-Nazis, allegedly associated with the Nordic Resistance Movement.[30][31]Transportation[edit] The central bus stop Vasaplan in Ume\u00e5.The road infrastructure includes two European highways (E4 and E12) which pass the city.[32] The local bus system is centred at Vasaplan in the city centre, and has multiple routes travelling throughout the city.[33] About 4 kilometres (2 miles) from the city centre is Ume\u00e5 Airport. It is the 7th largest airport in Sweden by number of passengers, with 844,932 passengers in 2010.[34][35]The Bothnia Line (Botniabanan) connects to Ume\u00e5 from the south, it runs along the High Coast via \u00d6rnsk\u00f6ldsvik to Ume\u00e5. This railway was opened on 28 August 2010. The new railway line is 190\u00a0km (118\u00a0mi) long, containing 140 bridges and 25 kilometres (16 miles) of tunnels. It provides Ume\u00e5 with a fast train connection to Stockholm (6+1\u20442 hours). A new railway station, Ume\u00e5 East Station, was built in connection to Norrland’s University Hospital and Ume\u00e5 University.The Wasaline ferry takes four hours to arrive at Vaasa, Finland.[36]Ume\u00e5 is located along the Blue Highway, which is an international tourist route from Mo i Rana, Norway to Pudozh, Russia via Finland.Culture[edit]The Opera of northern Sweden, the Norrland Opera, is based in the city, as is the English-language non-profit Ume\u00e5 Theatre Company and the Museum of Contemporary Art and Visual Culture. The annual Ume\u00e5 Jazz Festival is one of the larger Scandinavian festivals for modern jazz.Well-known metal bands from Ume\u00e5 include Cult of Luna, Gotham City, Hollow, Meshuggah, Mexicoma, Nocturnal Rites and Persuader. During the 1990s, the influence of Ume\u00e5 hardcore punk bands such as Final Exit, Step Forward, Refused, Abhinanda, Shield and Doughnuts and the local labels Desperate Fight Records and Busted Heads Records led to the growth of Ume\u00e5’s hardcore scene. Independent record label Ny V\u00e5g is headquartered in Ume\u00e5, and have released records of Ume\u00e5 artists such as AC4, Masshysteri and Invasionen.In 2009 the town was designated European Capital of Culture for 2014, along with Riga.[37][11]Ume\u00e5 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 V\u00e4sterbotten, V\u00e4sterbottens-Kuriren and V\u00e4sterbottens Folkblad are also based in Ume\u00e5.The background and setting for the video game Unravel are based on landscapes around Ume\u00e5. The city of Ume\u00e5 currently hosts four major sports clubs. The women’s football club is Ume\u00e5 IK. The men’s hockey team IF Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven was very successful in the 1980s but has been less successful in recent years. Bj\u00f6rkl\u00f6ven are currently playing in the Swedish second-tier league HockeyAllsvenskan while Ume\u00e5 IK plays in the top Swedish women’s football league Damallsvenskan. IBK Dalen and IKSU are among the major floorball teams in Sweden; both teams has been in the Swedish Championships finals two years in a row (as of 2013[update]).Other sports clubs include IFK Ume\u00e5, Mariehem SK, Ume\u00e5 FC, and Umedalens IF.In 2018 and 2020, Ume\u00e5 was named Sweden’s best sports city by SVT Sport.In 2011, a baseball and softball team, Ume\u00e5 Baseboll & Softbol|klubb, was founded. The team has 2 former national team players as coaches and currently plays in Norra Regionserien.[38]Education and research[edit]In 1951 the city’s library was recognised as important for northern Sweden. The library is given a copy of every new book printed in Sweden.[39]Ume\u00e5 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,[40] and has made Ume\u00e5 a modern, somewhat intellectual city to add to the traditional basis of heavy industry for cities along the coast of northern Sweden (Norrland).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 Ume\u00e5. 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.Economy[edit]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 Ume\u00e5 University works collaboratively with companies such as ABB, Volvo, Skanska, Ericsson, and \u00d6hrlings PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).[citation needed]The Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) in Ume\u00e5, with Ume\u00e5 Plant Science Centre, is another major site of research and education.Notable companies based in Ume\u00e5 include:Notable people[edit]See also[edit]^ The \u27e8\u00b2\u27e9 indicates a tone similar to the Ancient Greek circumflex accent (Swedish: tv\u00e5toppsaccent).^ SLU provides statistics only for the whole university, not distinguished by the location in which the study programme is held,[8] which might be unclear for many courses provided. Therefore the number is not exact. However, only the at the Ume\u00e5 University there are 37,985 students,[9] which is more than 29% of the total population of Ume\u00e5.References[edit]^ a b c “Statistiska t\u00e4torter 2018, befolkning och landareal per t\u00e4tort och kommun”. Statistics Sweden (Statistiska Centralbyr\u00e5n) (in Swedish). 24 March 2020. Retrieved 18 May 2020.^ “Ume\u00e5”. Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 2 September 2022.^ “Ume\u00e5”. Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 14 April 2019.^ “Folkm\u00e4ngd i riket, l\u00e4n och kommuner 31 mars 2020 och befolkningsf\u00f6r\u00e4ndringar 1 januari – 31 mars 2020. Totalt”. Statistiska Centralbyr\u00e5n (Statistics Sweden) (In Swedish) (in Swedish). 31 March 2020. Retrieved 18 May 2020.^ “More about Ume\u00e5”. Ume\u00e5 Municipality. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.^ “Comprehensive Plan for Ume\u00e5 Municipality \u2013 Guide to the parts of the plan, its themes and relevance” (PDF).^ “Ume\u00e5 200 000 inv\u00e5nare” (PDF).^ a b “Facts and figures”. SLU.SE.^ a b “Key figures”. www.umu.se.^ “Discovery at Ume\u00e5 University awarded 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry”.^ a b “European Capitals of Culture – Creative Europe – European Commission”. Creative Europe. Retrieved 7 November 2017.^ “Rally Sweden moves north to Umea”.^ “Ume\u00e5, Norrfors”. Europreart.net. Retrieved 10 April 2023.^ Jan F\u00e4ring\u00f6 (11 April 2017). “Fynd fr\u00e5n brons\u00e5ldern hittat i Ume\u00e5”. Sveriges Television.^ Lars-Erik Edlund (2001). “K\u00e5ddis, Hj\u00e5ggb\u00f6le och Hej”. Svenska Turistf\u00f6reningens \u00e5rsbok. p.\u00a031.^ “Ume\u00e5s historia \u2013 forntid”. Ume\u00e5 kommun. 30 January 2023.^ Lars-Erik Edlund, “K\u00e5ddis, Hj\u00e5ggb\u00f6le och Hej” i Svenska Turistf\u00f6reningens \u00e5rsbok 2001, s.31^ Mats Wahlberg: Svenskt ortnamnslexikon, Spr\u00e5k- och folkminnesinstitutet. Uppsala 2003. p. 143.^ a b c (in Swedish) 1300-1652 Ume\u00e5 kommun – Ume\u00e5 official website. Retrieved 26 August 2008^ “living in Ume\u00e5 – International Office”. Umu.se. 9 February 2014. Retrieved 30 April 2014.^ (in Swedish) 1714-1809 – Ume\u00e5 kommun – Ume\u00e5 official website. Retrieved 26 August 2008^ Hall, Thomas (2003). Planning Europe’s Capital Cities. p.\u00a0contents. ISBN\u00a01135829020.^ “Living in Ume\u00e5”. www.umu.se.^ “Data” (PDF). umearegionen.se.^ “Ladda ner meteorologiska observationer | SMHI”.^ “Dataserier med normalv\u00e4rden f\u00f6r perioden 1991-2020 | SMHI”.^ “SMHI Open Data for Ume\u00e5 Flygplats” (in Swedish). Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute.^ “Statistik fr\u00e5n V\u00e4der och Vatten – SMHI – SMHI”. smhi.se.^ “Utrikes f\u00f6dda (Foreign born)”. Ume\u00e5 kommun. Retrieved 14 July 2016.^ “Neo-Nazi threats force Jewish group in Sweden to close”. BBC News. 3 April 2017. Retrieved 11 April 2017.^ “Judisk f\u00f6rening l\u00e4gger ner efter nazisthot”. Dagens Nyheter. 2 April 2017. Retrieved 4 April 2017.^ Sweden Tourism. Map of Sweden. Accessed 14 April 2010.^ Ume\u00e5 University. Bus Transportation. Accessed 24 September 2014.^ “Fakta om flygplatsen” (in Swedish). Swedavia. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.^ “Pressinformation” (in Swedish). Swedavia. Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2011.^ “Wasaline \u2013 The ferry connection between Vaasa and Ume\u00e5”. wasaline.com.^ “Ume\u00e52014”. umea2014.se. Archived from the original on 24 February 2008.^ “Ume\u00e5 Baseboll och Softbollklubb \u2013 Baseboll och Softboll \u2013 IdrottOnline Klubb \u2013 Ume\u00e5 Baseboll och SoftbollPress site”. Archived from the original on 17 September 2012.^ “Ume\u00e5’s history”. umea.se.^ “Facts about Ume\u00e5 \u2013 Ume\u00e52014”.^ Archived 2018-11-15 at the Wayback MachineExternal links[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ume\u00e5.Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ume\u00e5.Links to related articles\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 1. Stockholm 1,617,407 (2020)\u00a0 2. Gothenburg 607,882 (2020)\u00a0 3. Malm\u00f6 325,069 (2020)\u00a0 4. Uppsala 166,698 (2020)\u00a0 5. Upplands V\u00e4sby 149,701 (2020)\u00a0 6. V\u00e4ster\u00e5s 128,660 (2020)\u00a0 7. \u00d6rebro 126,604 (2020)\u00a0 8. Link\u00f6ping 115,682 (2020)\u00a0 9. Helsingborg 113,828 (2020)\u00a0 10. J\u00f6nk\u00f6ping 100,579 (2020)\u00a0 11. Norrk\u00f6ping 98,088 (2020)\u00a0 12. Lund 94,393 (2020)\u00a0 13. Ume\u00e5 91,916 (2020)\u00a0 14. G\u00e4vle 79,004 (2020)\u00a0 15. S\u00f6dert\u00e4lje 76,320 (2020)\u00a0 16. Bor\u00e5s 74,042 (2020)\u00a0 17. Halmstad 71,422 (2020)\u00a0 18. V\u00e4xj\u00f6 71,282 (2020)\u00a0 19. Eskilstuna 69,948 (2020)\u00a0 20. Karlstad 67,122 (2020)\u00a0 21. Sundsvall 58,813 (2020)\u00a0 22. \u00d6stersund 52,980 (2020)\u00a0 23. Trollh\u00e4ttan 50,502 (2020)\u00a0 24. Lule\u00e5 49,123 (2020)\u00a0 25. North-east Gothenburg 47,211 (2020)\u00a0 26. Tumba 46,014 (2020)\u00a0 27. Liding\u00f6 44,091 (2020)\u00a0 28. Borl\u00e4nge 44,898 (2020)\u00a0 29. Kalmar 41,852 (2020)\u00a0 30. Kristianstad 41,299 (2020)\u00a0 31. Sk\u00f6vde 39,580 (2020)\u00a0 32. Karlskrona 36,904 (2020)\u00a0 33. Falun 39,492 (2020)\u00a0 34. Skellefte\u00e5 36,388 (2020)\u00a0 35. Varberg 36,327 (2020)\u00a0 36. Uddevalla 35,916 (2020)\u00a0 37. \u00c5kersberga 35,747 (2020)\u00a0 38. Nyk\u00f6ping 38,780 (2020)\u00a0 39. Landskrona 33,466 (2020)\u00a0 40. \u00d6rnsk\u00f6ldsvik 33,348 (2020)\u00a0 41. Vallentuna 33,336 (2020)\u00a0 42. Motala 31,340 (2020)\u00a0 43. Trelleborg 30,808 (2020)\u00a0 44. \u00c4ngelholm 29,490 (2020)\u00a0 45. M\u00e4rsta 29,815 (2020)\u00a0 46. Falkenberg 28,747 (2020)\u00a0 47. Lerum 28,520 (2020)\u00a0 48. Alings\u00e5s 27,433 (2020)\u00a0 49. Karlskoga 27,360 (2020)\u00a0 50. Kung\u00e4lv 26,960 (2020)\u00a0 1. Stockholm 1,605,030 2. Copenhagen 1,330,993 3. Helsinki 1,268,296 4. Oslo 1,019,513 5. Gothenburg 599,011 6. Malm\u00f6 339,313 7. Tampere 334,112 8. Aarhus 280,534 9. Bergen 259,958 10. Turku 252,468 11. Stavanger\/Sandnes 237,369 12. Reykjav\u00edk 228,231 13. Oulu 208,939 14. Trondheim 186,364 15. Odense 180,302 16. Uppsala 177,074 17. Upplands V\u00e4sby och Sollentuna 149,461 18. Aalborg 140,897 19. V\u00e4ster\u00e5s 128,534 20. \u00d6rebro 126,009 21. Lahti 119,068 22. Jyv\u00e4skyl\u00e4 117,974 23. Fredrikstad\/Sarpsborg 116,373 24. Link\u00f6ping 115,672 25. Helsingborg 113,816 26. Kristiansand 111,633 27. Drammen 109,416 28. J\u00f6nk\u00f6ping 100,259 29. Norrk\u00f6ping 97,854 30. Lund 94,393 31. Porsgrunn\/Skien 93,778 32. Ume\u00e5 90,412 33. Kuopio 88,520 34. Pori 84,026 35. G\u00e4vle 77,586 36. S\u00f6dert\u00e4lje 75,773 37. Bor\u00e5s 73,980 38. Esbjerg 72,398 39. Halmstad 71,316 40. V\u00e4xj\u00f6 71,009 41. Eskilstuna 70,342 42. Joensuu 67,811 43. Karlstad 65,856 44. Vaasa 65,414 45. Randers 62,482 46. Kolding 61,121 47. Horsens 59,449 48. Sundsvall 58,807 49. Vejle 57,655 50. Lappeenranta 55,743"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki43\/umea-wikipedia-3\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Ume\u00e5 – Wikipedia"}}]}]