Ruhnu
Ruhnu Parish (Estonian: Ruhnu vald) is a rural municipality in Saare County, Estonia, encompassing Ruhnu Island in the Gulf of Riga, which measures 11.9 km² in area and maintains approximately 60 permanent residents in winter, swelling to 150 during summer.[1][2]
The island has evidence of human settlement dating to the Stone Age around 5200 BCE and was first documented in 1341, with its population predominantly consisting of Estonian Coastal Swedes from the 14th century until 1944, when Soviet occupation prompted the mass repatriation of Swedes to Sweden, after which Estonian settlers predominated.[2][1]
Ruhnu features the wooden St. Magdalene's Church, built in 1644 and recognized as one of Estonia's oldest surviving wooden structures, alongside a stone church from 1912 and an operational metal lighthouse assembled in 1877 to designs by Gustave Eiffel, perched on Haubjerre Hill.[1][2]