Estonia’s capital Tallinn ranks eighth among the 50 most cultured cities in Europe and number one in Northern Europe, in a list researched and compiled by Wanderu, a travel search platform and fare aggregator, writes Estonian World.
Using a specific methodology, the Boston, Massachusetts-based Wanderu calculated the density of culturally important sites across European cities to determine the “most cultured” cities in Europe. The platform said its research looked at every city in Europe with a population of more than 300,000 and it built its rankings based on the total number of cultural landmarks such as museums, universities, historic sites, theatres, and churches and cathedrals per capita.
According to the chart, Tallinn ranks at eight among all European cities and is the only city from Northern Europe in the top 10. The Estonian capital is also number four among European cities with most museums and number nine with most universities per capita.
“With two-thirds the population of Oslo, Tallinn has the same number of universities, one more historic site, and only five fewer museums,” Wanderu said. “If you haven’t already, then seriously, stop and Google Image Search ‘Tallinn’. It’s like Florence, Amsterdam, Barcelona and Moscow bundled up their most gorgeous aspects and sent them to this capital city by the Baltic Sea.”
Riga, the capital of Latvia, ranks third and Helsinki, the Finnish capital, comes in at six in the list of nine most cultured cities in Northern Europe. Overall, the most cultured city in Europe, according to the Wanderu’s research, is Florence, the capital of Italy’s Tuscany region.
Previously, Tallinn has also been the European “capital of culture” – an annual rotating honour under which a city designated by the European Union organises a series of cultural events with a strong pan-European dimension. Tallinn held the title with Turku, a Finnish city, in 2011.