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European Capital of Culture
Cities recognized by the European Union as culturally significant for Europe
Cities recognized by the European Union as culturally significant for Europe


A European Capital of Culture is a city designated by the European Union (EU) for a period of one calendar year during which it organises a series of cultural events with a strong pan-European dimension. Being a European Capital of Culture can be an opportunity for a city to generate considerable cultural, social, and economic benefits, and it can help foster urban regeneration, change the city's image, and raise its visibility and profile on an international scale. Multiple cities can be a European Capital of Culture simultaneously.
In 1985, Melina Mercouri, Greece's Minister of Culture, and her French counterpart Jack Lang came up with the idea of designating an annual City of Culture to bring Europeans closer together by highlighting the richness and diversity of European cultures and raising awareness of their common history and values.
The Commission of the European Union manages the title, and each year the Council of Ministers of the European Union formally designates European Capitals of Culture: more than 60 cities have been designated so far. The current European Capitals of Culture for 2026 are Oulu in Finland and Trenčín in Slovakia.
Selection process
An international panel of cultural experts is in charge of assessing the proposals of cities for the title according to criteria specified by the European Union.
For two of the capitals each year, eligibility is open to cities in EU member states only. From 2021 and every three years thereafter, a third capital will be chosen from cities in countries that are candidates or potential candidates for membership, or in countries that are part of the European Economic Area (EEA)– an example of the latter being Stavanger, Norway, which was a European Capital of Culture in 2008.
A 2004 study conducted for the Commission, known as the "Palmer report", demonstrated that the choice of European Capital of Culture served as a catalyst for cultural development and the transformation of the city. Study prepared for the European Commission Consequently, the beneficial socio-economic development and impact for the chosen city are now also considered in determining the chosen cities.
Bids from five United Kingdom cities to be the 2023 Capital of Culture were disqualified in November 2017, because the UK was planning to leave the EU before 2023.
History
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The European Capital of Culture programme was initially called the European City of Culture and was conceived in 1983, by Melina Mercouri, then serving as minister of culture in Greece. Mercouri believed that at the time, culture was not given the same attention as politics and economics and a project for promoting European cultures within the member states should be pursued.
The European City of Culture programme was launched in the summer of 1985 with Athens being the first title-holder. In 1999, the European City of Culture program was renamed to European Capital of Culture.
List of European Capitals of Culture
| Year | City | Country | Notes/Links | Candidate cities | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1985 | Athens | Greece | ||||||||||
| 1986 | Florence | Italy | ||||||||||
| 1987 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | ||||||||||
| 1988 | West Berlin | West Germany | City under Western Allied occupation until 1990; territory was claimed by the Federal Republic of Germany. The name "European City of Culture" was used instead of "Capital" in order to not provoke the East German government. | |||||||||
| 1989 | Paris | France | ||||||||||
| 1990 | Glasgow | United Kingdom | Glasgow Garden Festival | |||||||||
| 1991 | Dublin | Ireland | ||||||||||
| 1992 | Madrid | Spain | ||||||||||
| 1993 | Antwerp | Belgium | ||||||||||
| 1994 | Lisbon | Portugal | ||||||||||
| 1995 | Luxembourg City | Luxembourg | ||||||||||
| 1996 | Copenhagen | Denmark | ||||||||||
| 1997 | Thessaloniki | Greece | ||||||||||
| 1998 | Stockholm | Sweden | ||||||||||
| 1999 | Weimar | Germany | ||||||||||
| 2000 | Avignon | France | The year 2000 was called the millennium year and treated in a special way, in order to emphasize the enduring heritage and contribution of European cities to world culture and civilization. Because of that, nine locations were chosen, including two cities of states that were to join the EU on 1 May 2004. | |||||||||
| Bergen | Norway | |||||||||||
| Bologna | Italy | |||||||||||
| Brussels | Belgium | |||||||||||
| Helsinki | Finland | |||||||||||
| Kraków | Poland | |||||||||||
| Prague | Czech Republic | |||||||||||
| Reykjavík | Iceland | |||||||||||
| Santiago de Compostela | Spain | |||||||||||
| 2001 | Porto | Portugal | ||||||||||
| Rotterdam | Netherlands | |||||||||||
| 2002 | Bruges | Belgium | ||||||||||
| Salamanca | Spain | |||||||||||
| 2003 | Graz | Austria | ||||||||||
| 2004 | Genoa | Italy | ||||||||||
| Lille | France | |||||||||||
| 2005 | Cork | Ireland | Cork Caucus | Galway, Limerick, Waterford{{cite web | title=Galway & Cork make culture shortlist | |||||||
| 2006 | Patras | Greece | ||||||||||
| 2007 | Luxembourg City | Luxembourg | ||||||||||
| Sibiu | Romania | |||||||||||
| 2008 | Liverpool | United Kingdom | Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Newcastle and Gateshead (joint bid), Oxford{{cite news | title=Liverpool named European capital of culture | ||||||||
| Stavanger | Norway | |||||||||||
| 2009 | Linz | Austria | Linz 2009 | |||||||||
| Vilnius | Lithuania | |||||||||||
| 2010 | Essen | Germany | Representing the whole Ruhr as Ruhr.2010. | Braunschweig, Bremen, Görlitz, Halle an der Saale, Karlsruhe, Kassel, Lübeck, Potsdam, Regensburg | ||||||||
| Istanbul | Turkey | |||||||||||
| Pécs | Hungary | |||||||||||
| 2011 | Tallinn | Estonia | ||||||||||
| Turku | Finland | Turku 2011 | ||||||||||
| 2012 | Guimarães | Portugal | ||||||||||
| Maribor | Slovenia | |||||||||||
| 2013 | Košice | Slovakia | ||||||||||
| Marseille | France | Marseille-Provence 2013 | Bordeaux, Lyon, Toulouse{{cite web | title=Marseille named Europe's culture capital for 2013 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=France24 | date=16 September 2008 }} | |||||
| 2014 | Riga | Latvia | ||||||||||
| Umeå | Sweden | |||||||||||
| 2015 | Mons | Belgium | Mons 2015 | |||||||||
| Plzeň | Czech Republic | |||||||||||
| 2016 | San Sebastián | Spain | Donostia/San Sebastián 2016 (Donostia 2016) | Burgos, Córdoba, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Segovia, Zaragoza{{cite web | title=The European Capital of Culture in Spain in 2016 will be San Sebastián | |||||||
| Wrocław | Poland | Gdańsk, Katowice, Lublin, Warsaw{{cite web | title=Wrocław Chosen as European Capital of Culture 2016 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=culture.pl | date=28 June 2011}} | ||||||
| 2017 | Aarhus | Denmark | Aarhus 2017 | Sønderborg{{cite web | title=Sønderborg, Denmark: EU Capital of Culture 2017? | |||||||
| Paphos | Cyprus | Pafos 2017 | Limassol, Nicosia | |||||||||
| 2018 | Leeuwarden | Netherlands | Eindhoven, Maastricht, The Hague, Utrecht | |||||||||
| Valletta | Malta | Valletta 2018 | ||||||||||
| 2019 | Matera | Matera 2019 | Cagliari, Lecce, Perugia, Ravenna, Siena | |||||||||
| Plovdiv | Plovdiv 2019 | Sofia, Varna, Veliko Turnovo | ||||||||||
| 2020 – April 2021 | Galway | Galway 2020 | Limerick, The Three Sisters (joint bid Waterford, Wexford, Kilkenny){{cite web | title=Galway to be European Capital of Culture 2020 | ||||||||
| Rijeka | Rijeka 2020 | Dubrovnik, Osijek, Pula | ||||||||||
| 2022 | Esch-sur-Alzette | Esch-sur-Alzette 2022 | ||||||||||
| Kaunas | Kaunas 2022 | Klaipėda{{cite web | title=Kaunas is shortlisted for the title of European Capital of Culture 2022 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=Kaunas City Municipal administration | date=27 June 2016 }} | ||||||
| Novi Sad | Novi Sad 2022 (Coronavirus postponement) | |||||||||||
| 20231 | Eleusis | Greece | Eleusis 2023 (Coronavirus postponement) | Kalamata, Rhodes{{cite web | title=Eleusis 2023 | |||||||
| Timișoara | Romania | Timișoara 2023 (Coronavirus postponement) | Baia Mare, Bucharest, Cluj-Napoca{{cite web | title=Timisoara 2021 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=European Capitals of Culture Ποιειν Και Πραττειν - create and do}} | ||||||
| Veszprém | Veszprém 2023 | Debrecen, Győr | ||||||||||
| 2024 | Bad Ischl | Salzkammergut 2024 | Dornbirn, St. Pölten | |||||||||
| Bodø2 | Bodø 2024 | Banja Luka, Mostar | ||||||||||
| Tartu | Tartu 2024 | Kuressaare, Narva | ||||||||||
| 2025 | Chemnitz | Chemnitz 2025 | Hannover, Hildesheim, Magdeburg, Nuremberg{{cite web | title=Chemnitz to be European Capital of Culture 2025 | ||||||||
| Nova Gorica/Gorizia joint bid | ||||||||||||
| GO! 2025 | Ljubljana, Piran, Ptuj{{cite web | title=GO! 2025 - European Capital of Culture Nova Gorica-Gorizia 2025 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=GECT GO / EZTS GO}} | ||||||||
| 2026 | Oulu | Oulu 2026 (Theme: "Cultural Climate Change") | Savonlinna, Tampere{{cite web | title=Oulu named European Capital of Culture 2026 | ||||||||
| Trenčín | Trenčín 2026 (Theme: "Cultivating Curiosity") | Nitra, Žilina | ||||||||||
| 2027 | Évora | Évora 2027 | Aveiro, Braga, Ponta Delgada | |||||||||
| Liepāja | Liepāja 2027 | Daugavpils, Valmiera{{cite web | title=Liepaja is the European Capital of culture for 2027 | access-date=1 November 2024 | website=EcocNews.com | date=10 May 2022}} | ||||||
| 2028 | Bourges | Bourges 2028 | Clermont-Ferrand, Montpellier, Rouen, Saint-Denis | |||||||||
| title=České Budějovice to be the European Capital of Culture 2028 in the Czech Republic | date=30 June 2023 | url=https://culture.ec.europa.eu/news/ceske-budejovice-to-be-the-european-capital-of-culture-2028-in-the-czech-republic | publisher=European Commission | access-date=1 July 2023}} | České Budějovice 2028 | Broumov, Brno, Liberec | ||||||
| Skopje2 | Skopje 2028 | Budva | ||||||||||
| 2029 | Kiruna{{Cite web | title=Kiruna becomes Europe's cultural capital: "Grateful" | language=English | work=Sweden Herald | date=6 December 2024 | access-date=7 December 2024}} | Kiruna 2029 | |||||
| Lublin | Lublin 2029 | Bielsko-Biała, Katowice, Kołobrzeg | ||||||||||
| 2030 | title=Larnaka to be 2030 European Capital of Culture in Cyprus | url=https://culture.ec.europa.eu/news/larnaka-to-be-2030-european-capital-of-culture-in-cyprus | work=European Commission | access-date=23 December 2025 | date=11 December 2025}} | Larnaca 2030 | title=Two cities shortlisted for the European Capital of Culture 2030 in Cyprus | url=https://culture.ec.europa.eu/news/two-cities-shortlisted-for-the-european-capital-of-culture-2030-in-cyprus | work=European Commission | access-date=28 March 2025 | date=27 February 2025}} Limassol | |
| Other applicants: Nicosia | ||||||||||||
| Leuven | Leuven 2030 | title=European Capital Of Culture 2030 Belgium | url=https://www.ecoc2030.be/ | access-date=25 October 2024 | website=ECOC2030BE}} | |||||||
| Nikšić | Nikšić 2030 | Lviv | ||||||||||
| 2031 | title=Timeline - ECoC 2031 | url=https://www.vca.gov.mt/en/timeline/ | work=vca.gov.mt | access-date=23 December 2025}} | shortlisted: Victoria | |||||||
| Birgu | ||||||||||||
| title=European Capital of Culture | url=https://www.cultura.gob.es/cultura/relaciones-internacionales/la-cultura-en-europa/capital-europea-cultura.html | work=Ministerio de Cultura | access-date=23 January 2026}} | candidates: | ||||||||
| Burgos, Cáceres, Granada, Jerez de la Frontera, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Oviedo, Palma, Potries, Toledo | ||||||||||||
| 2032 | TBA | |||||||||||
| TBA | potential candidate: Elsinore Næstved | |||||||||||
| 2033 | TBA | potential candidate: Heerlen | ||||||||||
| TBA | potential candidates: Turin, Pesaro/Urbino, Viterbo | |||||||||||
| TBA2 | TBA |
1 The European Capital of Culture was due to be in the UK in 2023. However, due to its decision to leave the European Union, UK cities would no longer be eligible to hold the title after 2019. The European Commission's Scotland office confirmed that this would be the case on 23 November 2017, only one week before the UK was due to announce which city would be put forward. The candidate cities were Dundee, Leeds, Milton Keynes, Nottingham and a joint bid from Northern Irish cities of Belfast and Derry and the town of Strabane.
2 A new framework makes it possible for cities in candidate countries (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Turkey, Ukraine), potential candidates for EU membership (Kosovo) or EFTA member states (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland) to hold the title every third year as of 2021. This will be selected through an open competition, meaning that cities from various countries may compete with each other.
Green designates current cities; red is for past cities; and blue for future cities. |places=
References
References
- "Oulu and Trenčín - Culture and Creativity".
- (3 May 2014). "Decision No 445/2014/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 April 2014".
- "European Capitals of Culture 2020 to 2033 — A guide for cities preparing to bid". European Commission.
- (23 November 2017). "Brexit blow to UK 2023 culture crown bids".
- Kiran Klaus Patel, ed., The Cultural Politics of Europe: European Capitals of Culture and European Union since the 1980s (London: Routledge, 2013)
- "History – UNeECC".
- Janet Merkel. (5 December 2016). "From a divided city to a capital city: Berlin's cultural policy frameworks between 1945 and 2015".
- "Tanz im August | International Festival Berlin | Berlin - European Capital of Culture 1988".
- "Association of European Cities of Culture of the Year 2000 – KRAKOW THE OPEN CITY".
- (22 June 2011). "Nicosia and Paphos outbid Limassol for European Capital of Culture 2017".
- (11 June 2018). "Who What When Where Why: LF2018".
- (20 October 2014). "Matera to be 2019 European Capital of Culture in Italy".
- (12 December 2013). "Four cities shortlisted for Bulgaria's European Capital of Culture 2019".
- (24 November 2015). "The Final Shortlist of European Capital of Culture Announced".
- (6 March 2019). "Veszprém formally named 2023 European Capital of Culture".
- "FAQs".
- (2 June 2022). "Bodø recommended for the European Capital of Culture 2024 title beyond the EU".
- (29 August 2019). "Tartu win not a 'unanimous' decision for European Capital of Culture 2024".
- (2021-12-10). "Trenčín to be the European Capital of Culture 2026 in Slovakia".
- (7 December 2022). "Évora named 2027 European Capital of Culture".
- (13 December 2023). "Bourges to be the European Capital of Culture 2028 in France". European Commission.
- (30 June 2023). "České Budějovice to be the European Capital of Culture 2028 in the Czech Republic". European Commission.
- (31 October 2023). "Skopje 2028, is online the Panel's Decision". ecocnews.com.
- "Kiruna och Uppsala vill bli kulturhuvudstad". Kulturrådet.
- (25 September 2024). "Lublin has been awarded the title of European Capital of Culture 2029!". White Mad.
- (25 September 2024). "Lublin has been awarded the title of European Capital of Culture 2029!". White Mad.
- (11 December 2025). "Larnaka to be 2030 European Capital of Culture in Cyprus". European Commission.
- (27 February 2025). "Two cities shortlisted for the European Capital of Culture 2030 in Cyprus". European Commission.
- (30 October 2023). "The race is on: Three cities bidding for EU cultural capital 2030".
- NWS, VRT. (2025-09-24). "Leuven wordt Culturele hoofdstad van Europa in 2030 {{!}} VRT NWS: nieuws".
- "European Capital Of Culture 2030 Belgium".
- "Ecoc 2030, in shortlist Lviv (Ukraine) and Nikšić (Montenegro)".
- "Timeline - ECoC 2031". vca.gov.mt.
- (4 November 2025). "Victoria shortlisted for the European Capital of Culture 2031 in Malta". European Commission.
- "European Capital of Culture 2031 Candidates".
- "European Capital of Culture". Ministerio de Cultura.
- (11 January 2022). "Vild plan: Vil gøre Næstved til europæisk kulturhovedstad".
- Steen, Paul van der. (8 March 2023). "Heerlen wil culturele hoofdstad van Europa worden". NRC.
- (19 April 2021). "Torino Capitale europea della Cultura nel 2033? Il Consiglio comunale dice "sì" alla candidatura". Torino Oggi.
- "Pesaro e Urbino insieme per la candidatura a Capitali europee della cultura 2033". Progress.
- (6 March 2024). "Viterbo candidata a Capitale Europea della Cultura 2033". Italia Economy.
- Brady, Jon. (23 November 2017). "Brexit destroys Dundee's hopes of being European Capital of Culture in 2023". Evening Telegraph.
- Lorimer, Scott. "The latest news and sport from Dundee, Tayside and Fife". Evening Telegraph.
- "European Capital of Culture". Milton Keynes Council.
- (5 July 2017). "NI councils make bid for European Capital of Culture title".
- (6 Feb 2021). "European Capitals of Culture". European Union.
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