Русские в Финляндии Suomenvenäläiset Finlandsryssar | |
---|---|
Total population | |
up to 93,535 depending on the definition (2022) (1.7% of the population)[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Uusimaa, Turku, Tampere, Eastern Finland | |
Languages | |
Finnish, Russian | |
Religion | |
predominantly Finnish Orthodox Church, Russian Orthodox Church, Atheism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Russian people, Jews in Finland |
Russians in Finland or Russian Finns are a linguistic and ethnic minority in Finland. As of 2022[update], there are 93,535 Russian-speaking people, or 1.7% of population, in Finland. It is the second largest linguistic minority in the country.[1] However, many of Russian-speaking immigrants are ethnically Ingrian Finns and other Finno-Ugric peoples.[2]
There are 33,428 people, or 0.6% of population, who hold Russian citizenship residing in Finland – dual citizens included. The dissolution of the Soviet Union has influenced how Statistics Finland defines a person's country of birth in their statistical data. Before 1991, individuals born in what is now Russia, Latvia, Belarus, Ukraine, or in other Post-Soviet states, are considered to have been born in the Soviet Union. 20,499 people were born in Russia and whereas 63,885 people come from the former Soviet Union.[1]
Furthermore, there are people with Russian-background who have received only Finnish citizenship, and Estonian Russians. Two common reasons for immigration were marriage, and descendant from Ingrian Finns.[3]
Russian citizens who moved before the Second World War are called "Old Russians". The next immigration wave happened after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, as Ingrian Finns re-migrated to Finland. At present, marriage and family ties are two other common reasons for Russians to immigrate to Finland.[4]
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