Jump to content

European Capital of Culture

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revision as of 19:12, 3 January 2025 by Acediscovery (talk | changes) (Future years: Updated heading for Future years.)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

The European Capital of Culture is a city (or multiple cities) chosen by the European Union for a period of one calendar year. The city is given a chance to show its cultural life and cultural development. Most of the cities are very popular and are known internationally (by people around the world).

The idea to have a European Capital of Culture came from Melina Mercouri who was the Minster for Culture in Greece. It began in 1985. It was originally known as the 'European City of Culture' until 1999, when it was re-named 'European Capital of Culture'.[1]

The European Capitals of Culture for 2025 are Chemnitz in Germany, and Nova Gorica in Slovenia (with Gorizia in Italy).[2]

List of by year

[change | change source]

Past years

[change | change source]
List of capitals chosen by year
Year Cities Image Details
1985 Greece Athens
1986 Italy Florence
1987 Netherlands Amsterdam
1988 Germany West Berlin
1989 France Paris Lyon
1990 United Kingdom Glasgow
1991 Republic of Ireland Dublin
1992 Spain Madrid
1993 Belgium Antwerp
1994 Portugal Lisbon
1995 Luxembourg Luxembourg
1996 Denmark Copenhagen
1997 Greece Thessaloniki
1998 Sweden Stockholm
1999 Germany Weimar
2000 France Avignon
Norway Bergen
Italy Bologna
Belgium Brussels
Finland Helsinki
Poland Krakow
Czech Republic Prague
Iceland Reykjavík
Spain Zaragoza
2001 Portugal Porto
Netherlands Rotterdam
2002 Belgium Bruges
Spain Salamanca
2003 Austria Graz
2004 Italy Genoa
France Lille
2005 Republic of Ireland Cork, Limerick
2006 Greece Patras
2007 Romania Sibiu
Luxembourg Luxembourg
Greater Region
Sibiu 2007 Archived 2004-08-30 at the Wayback Machine
2008 United Kingdom Liverpool
Norway Stavanger
Norway Sandnes
Liverpool 2008 Archived 2007-04-05 at the Wayback Machine
Stavanger 2008
2009 Austria Linz
Lithuania Vilnius
Vilnius 2009
Linz 2009
2010 Germany Essen
Bosnia and Herzegovina Sarajevo
Hungary Pécs

Essen 2010
Pecs 2010 Archived 2018-10-01 at the Wayback Machine
2011 Finland Turku
Estonia Tallinn
Turku 2011
Tallinn 2011
2012 Portugal Guimarães
Slovenia Maribor
Guimarães 2012 Archived 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
Maribor 2012
2013 France Marseille
Slovakia Košice
Marseille Provence 2013 Archived 2010-08-26 at the Wayback Machine
Košice 2013 Archived 2008-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
2014 Latvia Riga
Sweden Umeå
2015 Belgium Mons
Czech Republic Plzeň
2016 Spain San Sebastián
Poland Wrocław
2017 Denmark Aarhus
Cyprus Paphos
2018 Netherlands Leeuwarden
Malta Valletta
2019 Italy Matera
Bulgaria Plovdiv
2020-2021 Republic of Ireland Galway
Croatia Rijeka
2022 Luxembourg Esch-sur-Alzette
Lithuania Kaunus
Serbia Novi Sad
2023 Greece Eleusis
Romania Timișoara
Hungary Veszprém
2024 Austria Bad Ischl
Norway Bodø
Estonia Tartu
2025 Germany Chemnitz
Slovenia Nova Gorica with Italy Gorizia

Future years

[change | change source]

These are the planned European Capitals of Culture, according to the official EU website.[3]

Future years
Year City Details
2026 Finland Oulu
Slovakia Trenčín
2027 Portugal Évora
Latvia Liepāja
2028 France Bourges
Czech Republic České Budějovice
North Macedonia Skopje
2029 Sweden Kiruna
Poland Lublin
2030 Belgium
Cyprus
TBA
2031 Malta
Spain
2032 Bulgaria
Denmark

References

[change | change source]
  1. "What it Means to be the European Capital of Culture".
  2. "From division to unity: European Capitals of Culture 2025".
  3. "Official EU website". Archived from the original on 2006-10-19. Retrieved 2009-01-01.
  • García, B. (2005) “De-constructing the City of Culture: The long term cultural legacies of Glasgow 1990” in: Review Issue of Urban Studies (vol 42, n5/6) (pp. 1–28)
  • García, B. (2004) “Cultural Policy in European Cities: Lessons from Experience, Prospects for the Future” in: Special edition on Cultural Policy and Regeneration, Local Economy (vol 19, n4) (pp. 312–326)
  • García, B. (2004) “Urban Regeneration, Arts Programming and Major events: Glasgow 1990, Sydney 2000 and Barcelona 2004” in: Gibson, L. & Stevenson, D. (Eds) Special Issue of the International Journal of Cultural Policy: Urban Space and the Uses of Culture (vol 10, n 1) (pp. 103–118)

Other websites

[change | change source]