Leivonmäki | |
Official Name: | Finnish: Leivonmäen kunta Swedish: Leivonmäki kommun |
Settlement Type: | Former municipality |
Mapsize: | 150px |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 150px |
Coordinates: | 61.9153°N 26.1236°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Finland |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Western Finland Province |
Subdivision Type2: | Region |
Subdivision Name2: | Central Finland |
Seat: | Leivonmäen kirkonkylä |
Established Title: | Established |
Established Date: | 1868 |
Extinct Title: | Merged into Joutsa |
Extinct Date: | 2008 |
Population Total: | 1135 |
Population As Of: | 2007-12-31 |
Area Land Km2: | 380.8 |
Leivonmäki is a former municipality of Finland in the Central Finland region. The municipality was consolidated with Joutsa in 2008. The population of Leivonmäki was 1,135 in 2007.
It is located south-east from Jyväskylä. It is known for its marshy grounds and its national park.
The municipality was unilingually Finnish.
Bogs and other wetlands make up roughly or 48% of the former municipality's area, the average in Central Finland being 25%. The largest wetlands are Kivisuo, Haapasuo, Havusuo, Rokasuo and Höystösensuo.[1] Leivonmäki has fewer lakes than the Central Finnish average as it is located on a drainage divide area within the Kymijoki basin. The largest lake is Rutajärvi, which discharges into the Päijänne.[2]
The following villages have or have had their own school district:[3]
A part of the municipality also belonged to the Vallaspelto school district, the village of Vallaspelto itself being part of Joutsa.[3] Kurkijärvi also had its own short-lived school between 1933–1937.[4]
The name of Leivonmäki was first attested in 1564 as Leijuomäki. Finnish: Mäki is Finnish for "hill" and the parish church is located by a hill called Kuhasenmäki, which therefore may have originally been called Leivonmäki or Leivomäki. According to Väinö Voionmaa, Leivonmäki may also have been named after the Leivonen farm in the village of Anajala in Sääksmäki.
The initial element is most likely the word Finnish: leivo "skylark", though linguist Terho Itkonen also considered the possibility of the dialectal variant Levonmäki being the original form of the name. According to this explanation, the initial element would be Finnish: lepo (genitive: Finnish: levon) meaning "rest", referring to a resting place for cattle. However, the name is written with an i in most documents from the Swedish era, and the name was in use before the area was settled permanently – before cattle could have been kept in the area. The form Levonmäki may also be due to the Savonian pronunciation of Finnish: leivo as "leevo".
Leivonmäki was twinned with the Estonian Haaslava Parish.