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Grand Duchy of Finland

The Grand Duchy of Finland, also translated as Grand Principality of Finland,[a] was the predecessor state of modern Finland. It existed between 1809 and 1917 as an autonomous state within the former Russian Empire.

Grand Duchy of Finland
  • Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta (Finnish)
  • Storfurstendömet Finland (Swedish)
  • Великое княжество Финляндское (Russian)
1809–1917
The Grand Duchy of Finland in 1914
StatusGrand Duchy within the Russian Empire
CapitalTurku (1809–1812)
Helsinki (1812–1917)
Common languages
Religion
Official religions:
Evangelical Lutheran (until 1867)
Russian Orthodox (until 1917)
Demonym(s)Finnish, Finn
GovernmentMonarchy
Grand Duke 
• 1809–1825
Alexander I
• 1825–1855
Nicholas I
• 1855–1881
Alexander II
• 1881–1894
Alexander III
• 1894–1917
Nicholas II
Governor-General 
• 1809 (first)
Georg Sprengtporten
• 1917 (last)
Nikolai Nekrasov
Vice Chairman 
• 1822–1826 (first)
Carl Erik Mannerheim
• 1917 (last)
Anders Wirenius
LegislatureDiet (1809–1906)
Parliament (1906–1917)
History 
29 March 1809
17 September 1809
6 December 1917
CurrencySwedish riksdaler
(1809–1840)
Russian ruble
(1840–1860)
Finnish markka
(1860–1917)
ISO 3166 codeFI
Today part ofFinland
Russia

Originating in the 16th century as a titular grand duchy held by the King of Sweden, the country became autonomous after its annexation by Russia in the Finnish War of 1808–1809. The Grand Duke of Finland was the Romanov Emperor of Russia, represented by the Governor-General. Due to the governmental structure of the Russian Empire and Finnish initiative, the Grand Duchy's autonomy expanded until the end of the 19th century. The Senate of Finland, founded in 1809, became the most important governmental organ and the precursor to the modern Government of Finland, the Supreme Court of Finland, and the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland.[1]

Economic, social and political changes in the Grand Duchy of Finland closely paralleled those in the rest of the Russian Empire and in the rest of Europe. The economy grew slowly during the first half of the 19th century. The reign of Alexander II (1855–1881) saw significant cultural, social and intellectual progress, and an industrializing economy. Tensions increased after Saint Petersburg adopted Russification policies in 1898; the new circumstances saw the reduction of Finnish autonomy and cultural expression. Unrest in Russia and Finland during the First World War (1914–1918) and the subsequent collapse of the Russian Empire in 1917 resulted in the Finnish Declaration of Independence and the end of the Grand Duchy.[2]

History edit

An extended Southwest Finland was made a titular grand duchy in 1581, when King Johan III of Sweden, who as a Prince had been the Duke of Finland (1556–1561/63), extended the list of subsidiary titles of the Kings of Sweden considerably.[3] The new title Grand Duke of Finland did not result in any Finnish autonomy, as Finland was an integrated part of the Kingdom of Sweden with full parliamentary representation for its counties. During the next two centuries, the title was used by some of Johan's successors on the throne, but not all. Usually, it was just a subsidiary title of the King, used only on very formal occasions. However, in 1802, as an indication of his resolve to keep Finland within Sweden in the face of increased Russian pressure, King Gustav IV Adolf gave the title to his new-born son, Prince Carl Gustaf, who died three years later.

During the Finnish War between Sweden and Russia, the four Estates of occupied Finland were assembled at the Diet of Porvoo on 29 March 1809 to pledge allegiance to Tsar Alexander I of Russia, who in return guaranteed that the area's laws and liberties, as well as religion, would be left unchanged. Following the Swedish defeat in the war and the signing of the Treaty of Fredrikshamn on 17 September 1809, Finland became a true autonomous grand duchy within the autocratic Russian Empire; but the usual balance of power between monarch and diet resting on taxation was not in place, since the emperor could rely on the rest of his vast empire. The title "Grand Duke of Finland" was added to the long list of titles of the Russian tsar.

After his return to Finland in 1812, the Finnish-born Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt became counsellor to the Russian emperor. Armfelt was instrumental in securing the grand duchy as an entity with relatively greater autonomy within the Russian realm, and acquiring so-called Old Finland that Russia had annexed from Sweden in the Treaty of Nystad (1721) and the Treaty of Åbo (1743).[4]

Beginning of the Grand Duchy edit

 
Georg Magnus Sprengtporten was as the first who served Governor-General of Finland.

The formation of the grand duchy stems from the Treaty of Tilsit between Tsar Alexander I of Russia and Emperor Napoleon I of the French. The treaty mediated peace between Russia and France and allied the two countries against Napoleon's remaining threats: the United Kingdom and Sweden. Russia invaded Finland in February 1808, claimed as an effort to impose military sanctions against Sweden, but not a war of conquest, and that Russia decided to only temporarily control Finland. Collectively, the Finns were predominately anti-Russian, and Finnish guerrillas and peasant uprisings were a large obstacles for the Russians, forcing Russia to use various tactics to quash armed Finnish rebellion. Thus, in the beginning of the war, General roda Voysk Friedrich Wilhelm von Buxhoeveden, with permission of the tsar, imposed an oath of fealty on Finland, in which Russia would honour Finland's Lutheran faith, the Diet of Finland, and the Finnish estates as long as the Finns would remain loyal to the Russian imperial crown. The oath also dubbed anyone person who gave aid to the Swedish or Finnish armies a rebel.[5]

The Finns complied, bitter over Sweden abandoning the country for their war against Denmark and France, and begrudgingly embraced Russian conquest. The Diet of Finland was now to only meet whenever requested, and was never mentioned in the manifesto published by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Further on, Alexander I requested a deputation of the four Finnish estates, as he expressed concern over continued Finnish resistance. The deputation refused to act without the Diet, to which Alexander agreed with, and promised the Diet would shortly be summoned. By 1809, all of Finland had been conquered and the Diet was summoned in March. Finland was then united through Russia via the crown, and Finland was able to keep the majority of its own laws, giving it autonomy.[6][7]

Instead of the newly acquired territory being subjected to direct rule by an imperial governor-general, a novel administrative system was established in Finland, drafted in part by the liberal Mikhail Speransky. The new grand duchy would be governed by a Government Council, later the Senate of Finland, a body made up of Finnish citizens. The governor-general would accordingly have a relatively diminished role. Further, the emperor would deal with matters relating to Finland directly through a dedicated Secretary of State, without the involvement of his Russian cabinet or administration. This laid the foundation for the considerable autonomy enjoyed by Finland for most of the period of Russian rule.

Early years edit

 
Finnish 20 Kopeks Banknote from 1814

The earlier years of the grand duchy can be seen as uneventful. In 1812, the area of Old Finland (known as Viipuri Province from 1812 to 1945) was gifted to Finland. Russia had annexed this territory from Sweden in the Great Northern War and the Russo-Swedish War (1741–1743). This surprising action by the tsar was met with anger from certain parts of the Russian government and aristocracy, who wished to either return to the previous border or annex the communities west of St. Petersburg. Despite the outcry, the borders remained set until 1940. The gesture can be seen as Alexander's concern for Finland and his attempts of appeasement of the Finns, in attempts to gain their loyalty which would come from passive appeasement, compared to the vigorous Russification later in the nineteenth-century. Moreover, Alexander moved the capital from Turku to Helsinki, a small fortified town protected by Suomenlinna. Finland's main university also transferred to Helsinki after a fire broke out in Turku, destroying most of the building.

Despite promises of a Finnish Diet, the Diet was not called to meet until 1863 and many new laws going through the legislature were laws that would have required the approval of the Diet while under Swedish rule. Alexander went a step further to demand a Finnish House of Nobles, which organised in 1818. The house was designed to register all noble families in Finland so that the highest Finnish estate would be representative of the next Finnish Diet. As for Sweden, the majority did not think too much about Finland's conquest, as Sweden itself annexed Norway from Denmark in 1814 and entered a personal union with the nation. Whether or not Alexander purposely ignored the existence of the Diet is debatable, with notable factors such as the fall of Napoleon and the creation of the Holy Alliance, newfound religious mysticism of the Russian crown, and the negative experience with the Polish Sejm. Despite this, Alexander I ceased to give in to Finnish affairs and returned to governing Russia.[8]

Alexander's death and the assimilation of Finland: 1820s–1850s edit

 
Central Helsinki in 1820
 
Finnish Guards' Rifle Battalion in the middle of the 19th century
 
Fredrik Cygnaeus giving a speech at the Flora Day celebration on 13 May 1848. Author of the drawing is Alex Federley.

In 1823, Count Arseny Zakrevsky was made Governor-General of Finland and quickly became unpopular among both Finns and Swedes alike. Zakrevsky abolished the Committee for Finnish Affairs and managed to obtain the right to submit Finnish affairs to the Russian emperor, bypassing the Finnish Secretary of State. Two years later, Alexander I died ( 1 December  [O.S. 19 November]  1825). Zakrevsky seized the opportunity to require Finland to swear an oath of fealty which would refer to the emperor as the absolute ruler of Finland – expecting that emperor would be Constantine, Alexander's next-eldest brother. However, Nicholas, younger brother of Constantine and Alexander, became emperor despite the Decembrist revolt against him in December 1825. Nicholas assured Finland's secretary of state, Robert Henrik Rehbinder, that he (Nicholas) would continue to uphold Alexander's liberal policies regarding Finland.

In 1830 Europe became a hotbed of revolution and reform as a result of the July Revolution in France. Poland, another Russian client state, saw a massive uprising against Saint Petersburg during the November Uprising of 1830–1831. Finland made no such move, as Russia had already won over Finnish loyalty. Thus, Russia continued its policies respecting Finnish autonomy and the quiet assimilation of the Finns into the empire. Zakrevsky died in 1831; Knyaz Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov succeeded him as Governor-General of Finland and continued Finnish appeasement. The appeasement of the Finns could be seen[by whom?] as a prototype of the later Russification, as educated Finns moved to Russia in mass, seeking jobs within the imperial government to rise within Russian imperial society. The Russian language was studied increasingly as well, with more Finns seeking to learn Russian language, politics, culture, and to assimilate into Russian society. Even though Nicholas had no intentions on doing this[clarification needed], his inner office, specifically Nicholas's Interior Minister, Lev Perovski (in office: 1841–1852), advocated for Count Zakrevsky's ideas and further pushed the ideas of subtle Russification during the 1840s.[9]

However, Finland did experience a nationalistic revolution in the 1830s – one based around literature. This marked the beginning of the Fennoman movement, a nationalistic movement that would operate in Finland until its independence. In 1831, the Finnish Literature Society was founded, which formed on the basis of appreciation of the Finnish language. Finnish was not represented as language of the scholarly elite, as most printed academic works, novels, and poetry was written in either Swedish or Russian. Copying the German reading rage, Lesewut, and subsequent Swedish mania, Finland entered the reading craze by the 1830s. This fad peaked in 1835 with the publication of The Kalevala, the Finnish epic. The Kalevala's influence on Finland was massive, and strengthened Finnish nationalism and unity, despite the epic being poetry or stories about Finnish folklore. The quest for literature expanded into the 1840s and 1850s and caught the eye of the Finnish church and the Russian crown. Finnish newspapers, such as Maamiehen Ystävä (The Farmer's Friend), began publication in both urban and rural areas of Finland. However, the Swedish academic elite, the church, and the Russian government opposed Finland's literature movement. Edvard Bergenheim, Archbishop of Turku from 1850 to 1884, called for double censorship on works opposing the church and works appearing socialist or communist. The reactionary policies of the Lutheran Church convinced the also reactionary Nicholas I (r. 1825–1855) to prohibit (1850) the publishing of all Finnish works that were not religious or economic in nature, as such works would have been considered revolutionary and might encourage the Finnish majority to revolt against the church and crown. However, the censorship only fueled Finland's language strife and the Fennomanian movement.[10][11][12]

Crimean War and 1860s–1870s edit

 
Ball in Helsinki in honour of Alexander II, 1863

The works of Johan Snellman and other Fennoman authors combined literature and nationalism and increased the calls for language recognition and education reforms in Finland. This heightened during the Crimean War in which Finnish ports and fortresses on the Baltic Sea became subject for Allied attacks, specifically Suomenlinna and Bomarsund in Åland during the Åland War. As newspapers were printed in Swedish and Russian due to the censorship, many Finns could not read about the events of the Battle of Bomarsund and the Battle of Suomenlinna. Moreover, Nicholas I died in 1855, and the new emperor, Alexander II, had already planned educational reforms in outlying territories in Russia, including Finland.[13] Alexander II also planned to call on the Diet of the Estates once more. Under Alexander's rule, Finland experiences a period of liberalization in education, the arts, and economic desires. In 1858, Finnish was made the official language of local self-government, such as provinces, where Finnish was the majority of the language spoken. However, the Finns feared that St. Petersburg would prevent the Diet from meeting on the basis that Polish and Russian citizens did not receive the same liberties and that the Diet would be eradicated. It was misinterpreted, as it only added a few extra steps to how the lawmaking process worked; the Diet was allowed to stay.

In 1863, Alexander called the Diet and issued that the Finnish language was to be on par with Swedish and Russian in the Grand Duchy, while also passing laws regarding infrastructure and currency. Alexander came to favor the Finnish working class over the Swedish elite, due to Swedish propaganda during the Crimean War urging revolt against the Russians. Alexander also passed a law regarding language ordinance in August 1863, requiring that the Finnish language must be introduced to all public businesses within twenty years. The law was expanded in 1865 to require that state offices must serve the public in Finnish if requested. Despite this, the language laws took time to be fully implemented due to the interference of the Swedish elite, who owned most of these offices and businesses. Despite this, the education laws pushed through and the first secondary schools instructed in Finnish began in the 1870s. [14][15] The power of the Diet was also expanded in 1869, as it allowed the Diet more power and the ability to initiate various legislation; the act also called the tsar to call upon the Diet every five years. An act passed regarding religion was also passed in 1869 which prevented the power of the state over the church. Moreover, Finland also received its own monetary system, the Finnish markka, and its own army.[16] Finland's first railway line was opened between Helsinki and Hämeenlinna on March 17, 1862.[17][18]

Russification edit

 
Folk musician Kreeta Haapasalo plays kantele in a Peasant Cottage (1868).
 
Managers and directors of Walkiakoski Oy, a sulphate pulp mill in Valkeakoski, 1899
 
Svenska Folkpartiet (Swedish People's Party) election advertising in Helsinki during the first unicameral parliamentary elections in 1907

The policies of Russification under Alexander III and Nicholas II easily sum up the time period from 1881 to 1917. In 1881, Alexander III took the throne after the death of his father and began a rule of staunch conservative, yet peaceful, rule of Russia. Finland, as well as many other outlying Russian territories, faced the burden of Russification, the cultural, social, economical, and political absorption into Russia. Compared to the early Russification of the 1830s and 1840s, the Russification of the late 19th-early 20th century was much more vigorous in its policies. Moreover, Finland faced political turmoil within its nation between various factions such as liberals, Social Democrats, Young Finns, and communists. Finland became a target for the Pan-Slavist movement, which called for Slavic unity in eastern Europe. Finland was viewed as conquered territory, and that as subjects, Finland was to respect the tsar. Finland was also viewed as a land of settlement and that the "alien race" of the Finns were to be assimilated and protected from Western interference, thereby "blessing" the Finns with their presence. Moreover, Finnish representatives to the tsar were replaced with Pan-Slavist advocates.[19]

 
Salo railway station in 1900
 
Numismatic postcard from the early 1900's – Finnish markka

Russification only increased from there, but from the 1880s on, the conflict between the Swedish minority halted. Compared to the Baltic States, the Finnish majority was far better educated and more keen in Russian politics. The reactionary policies of Russification, which aimed to combine secular nationalism and a divine right monarchy, infiltrated the Finnish economy in 1885. Finland had managed to create a thriving modern industry based around textiles and timber that managed to rival the Russian economy at the time. Russian bureaucrats, out of both shock and jealousy, called for the revision of the Russo-Finnish Tariff. Russification had taken an economic turn as well, as the basis of the reformed tariff was economic uniformity, which only furthered economic difficulties of Finland. The tariff's revision in 1885, and subsequently 1897, was formed out of spite of Finland's commercial success and working-class unity. Russification policies continued into 1890, with the addition of the Imperial Post System in Finland, replacing the Finnish post. It was not until the mid-1890s, that the Finnish people realized the true intentions of the Russian crown.

 
Helsinki in 1907
 
The first session of the Parliament of Finland in 1907

Nicholas II ascended to the throne in 1894 after Alexander's death, and with him came General Nikolay Bobrikov, who was appointed governor-general. Under Bobrikov, the Finns had a near collective hatred of him, whose reactionary policies gave rise to socialism and communism among the Finnish working class. The Party of Active Resistance and Kagal, in particular, became very popular in Finland for the former's tactics of violence and the latter's tactic of propaganda and persuasion. At the beginning of this reign, Bobrikov almost immediately introduced a mandatory five-year military service, in which Finns had the possibility of being drafted into Russian units. Furthermore, he instituted that Russians be given the opportunity to serve in public office and that Russian be made the administrative language of Finland. In 1899, the February Manifesto under Nicholas II declared that Russian law was the law of the land, and Finland was to pledge allegiance to Russian law. The Diet was essentially downgraded to a state assembly and that Finland was a province of Russia, ignoring its autonomy. The Finnish Army as a whole was dissolved in 1901.[20][21]

 
Governor-General Bobrikov assassinated by Eugen Schauman on 16 June 1904, in Helsinki.[22] A drawing of the assassination by an unknown author.

Bobrikov unintentionally united both Finns and Swedes against Russia, which only angered him more. With churches refusing to proclaim the law, judges refusing to carry it out, and conscripts refusing service, Bobrikov went on a frenzy with the current state of Finland. Bobrikov found little support in Finland, mainly from the Russian minority and members of the Old Finnish Party. Bobrikov brought in Russian officials to take government and state spots and, in an extreme act of anger, suspended the Finnish Constitution in 1903. His actions were met with extreme anger from Finns and Swedes, in which the moderate parties, the Young Finns and the Swedish Party combined to collectively fight Bobrikov. The Social Democratic Party of Finland, a Marxist party popular among peasants was also extremely hostile and advocated class warfare and took arms, in contrast to the Social Democrats elsewhere in Europe. Finally, the Party of Active Resistance, a nationalist party that advocated an armed struggle and guerilla tactics, received fame when member Eugen Schauman assassinated Bobrikov in Helsinki on 16 June 1904.[21]

In 1905, Russia faced a humiliating defeat in the Russo-Japanese War and amidst the turmoil in St. Petersburg, Finns remade their constitution and formed a new parliament whose representation was based on universal suffrage, giving women full suffrage before any other European nation after the short-lived Republic of Corsica. However, the parliament was quickly destroyed by Pyotr Stolypin, Nicholas II's prime minister. Stolypin proved to be even more vigorous than Bobrikov, as he believed every subject should be a stoic patriot to the crown and uphold undying loyalty to Russia. Stolypin wished to destroy Finland's autonomy and disregarded native tongues and cultures of non-Russian subjects, believing them to be traditional and ritualistic at best. The Finnish parliament once again formed to combat Stolypin, but Stolypin was bent on quashing Finnish insurrection and permanently disbanded the parliament in 1909. As with Bobrikov before him, Stolypin was unaware that such actions only fanned the flames and was subsequently assassinated by Dmitry Bogrov, a Jewish member of the far-left. From Stolypin's death henceforward, the Russian crown ruled Finland as a monarchist dictatorship until Russia's collapse during the Russian Revolution, from which Finland declared independence, a war of independence that soon transformed into a civil war.[23][24][25]

Government and politics edit

 
Map of Finland, about 1900. The map is in Russian and uses the Swedish place names written in Cyrillic.
 
Provinces of the Grand Duchy of Finland

The Russian emperor ruled as the Grand Duke of Finland and was represented in Finland by the Governor-General. The Senate of Finland was the highest governing body of the Grand Duchy and was composed of native Finns. In St. Petersburg Finnish matters were represented by the Minister–Secretary of State for Finland. The Senate had a primarily advisory role until it got the right to representation in 1886. On top of having its own central, regional and local administration, Finland had its own stamps, currency and army.

 
Statue of Alexander II at the Senate Square in Helsinki was built to commemorate his re-establishment of the Diet of Finland in 1863.

Alexander I did not want the Grand Duchy to be a constitutional monarchy but the governmental institutions born during the Swedish rule offered him a more efficient form of government than the absolute monarchy in Russia. This evolved into a high level of autonomy by the end of the 19th century. There were a total of twenty Governors-General from the Finnish War until independence:[26]

Provinces edit

The administrative division of the Grand Duchy followed the Russian imperial model with provinces (Russian: губерния governorate, Swedish: län, Finnish: lääni) headed by governors. Few changes were made however, and as the language of the administrators was still Swedish the old terminology from the Swedish time continued in local use. The Viipuri Province was not initially part of the Grand Duchy, but in 1812 it was transferred by Tsar Alexander I from Russia proper to Finland. After 1831 there were eight provinces in the Grand Duchy until the end and that continued in the independent Finland:

Flags edit

 
A variant of the Finnish merchant flag, 1809–1821
 
A variant of the Finnish merchant flag used by the Swedish-speaking population, 1905
 
A Finnish-speaker version of the above flag

The Grand Duchy of Finland had no official flag, but different types of flags were used in different occasions. An official flag was debated even in the Diet of Finland in the 1860s, but one was never officially chosen.[27]

An official maritime flag was chosen in 1812 for governmental use. It was a white flag, with the Russian flag in the upper corner and a compass rose in the middle. In 1883 it was replaced with a blue cross flag with the compass rose in the upper corner. A post flag (a white flag with the Russian flag in the upper corner and a post horn in the middle) was also used in the Grand Duchy, along with a customs flag (a blue flag, with the Russian flag on the upper corner and the logo of the customs agency in the middle).

Originally, there were no regulations regarding merchant flags until 3 October 1821, when Finnish ships were given the right to fly the Russian flag without permission. White, blue and red flags with the Russian flag in the corner were also used. Later on six and nine-striped flags with the colors of the Russian flag twice or thrice saw some use.[28]

A blue cross flag similar to that of the modern flag of Finland was first used by the yacht club Nyländska Jaktklubben in 1861, equipped with the coat of arms of Uusimaa in the upper corner. It was inspired by the similar flag used by the Neva Yacht Club. The flag of the yacht club was made official by the Senate in 1890 when the Swedish-speaking Östra Nylands Segelförening adopted the Flag of Sweden.[29]

At the end of the 19th century, flags with the coat of arms were used in unofficial contexts such as private estates and protests. In official contexts, the Russian white-blue-red tricolour was primarily used.[30]

The Grand Duchy of Finland participated in the 1912 Summer Olympics with their own team. In the opening ceremony, the Finnish team marched behind the Russian team with a Finland-sign. In the medal ceremonies, the Russian flag above a white-blue pennant reading "Finland" was raised for the Finnish athletes.[31]

Historical population of the Grand Duchy edit

1810: 863,000[32]
1830: 1,372,000
1850: 1,637,000
1870: 1,769,000
1890: 2,380,000
1910: 2,943,000
1920: 3,148,000 (independent Finland, since 1917)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Finnish: Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta; Swedish: Storfurstendömet Finland; Russian: Великое княжество Финляндское, Velikoye knyazhestvo Finlyandskoye (all of which literally translate as Grand Principality of Finland)

References edit

  1. ^ Klinge 1997, Jutikkala & Pirinen 2002, Pulma 2003a, Zetterberg 2003, Jussila 2004, Ylikangas 2007.
  2. ^ Haapala 1995, Jussila 2004 ja 2007, Ylikangas 2007.
  3. ^ Leif Tengström: "Muschoviten...Turcken icke olijk" II, 1997, s. 104
  4. ^ Knapas, Rainer (2014). "Ajankohtainen Armfelt". Tieteessä tapahtuu (in Finnish). Retrieved 2016-04-30.
  5. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 178–79, 183.
  6. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, p. 185.
  7. ^ Seton-Watson 1967, pp. 114–15.
  8. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 191–92, 194.
  9. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 195–96.
  10. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 199–206.
  11. ^ Hall 1953, pp. 127–28.
  12. ^ Mäkinen 2015, pp. 292–95.
  13. ^ Mäkinen 2015, pp. 295–96.
  14. ^ Hall 1953, p. 128.
  15. ^ Seton-Watson 1967, pp. 415–16.
  16. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 215–16, 222.
  17. ^ Neil Kent: Helsinki: A Cultural History, p. 18. Interlink Books, 2014. ISBN 978-1566565448.
  18. ^ "Tulihevonen saapui ensi kerran Hämeenlinnaan 150 vuotta sitten" [The "fire horse" arrived first time in Hämeenlinna 150 years ago]. Yle Häme (in Finnish). Yle. January 31, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  19. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 222–24.
  20. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 229–32.
  21. ^ a b Seton-Watson 1967, pp. 498–99.
  22. ^ Kauffman, George B.; Niinistö, Lauri (1998). "Chemistry and Politics: Edvard Immanuel Hjelt (1855–1921)". The Chemical Educator. 3 (5): 1–15. doi:10.1007/s00897980247a. S2CID 97163876.
  23. ^ Seton-Watson 1967, pp. 668–69.
  24. ^ Jutikkala & Pirinen 1962, pp. 242–55.
  25. ^ Hall 1953, p. 129.
  26. ^ Apunen 1987, Jutikkala & Pirinen 2002, Pulma 2003a, Jussila 2004
  27. ^ Kajanti 1997 p. 110–140
  28. ^ Kajanti 1997 ss. 88–90
  29. ^ Kajanti 1997 s. 79–80
  30. ^ Kajanti 1997 p. 164
  31. ^ Kajanti 1997 p. 176–178
  32. ^ B. R. Mitchell, European Historical Statistics, 1750–1970 (Columbia U.P., 1978), p. 4

Bibliography edit

  • Hall, Wendy (1953), Green, Gold, and Granite, London: Max Parrish & Co.
  • Jutikkala, Eino; Pirinen, Kauko (1962), A History of Finland (rev. ed.), New York, Washington: Praeger Publishers.
  • Mäkinen, Ilkka. (Winter 2015), "From Literacy to Love of Reading: The Fennomanian Ideology of Reading in the 19th-Century Finland", Journal of Social History, 49 (2).
  • Seton-Watson, Hugh (1967), The Russian Empire 1801–1917, London: Oxford.

Further reading edit

  • Alenius, Kari. "Russification in Estonia and Finland Before 1917", Faravid, 2004, Vol. 28, pp. 181–94 Online
  • Huxley, Steven. Constitutionalist insurgency in Finland: Finnish "passive resistance" against Russification as a case of nonmilitary struggle in the European resistance tradition (1990)
  • Jussila, Osmo, et al. From Grand Duchy to a Modern State: A Political History of Finland Since 1809 (Hurst & Co. 1999).
  • Kan, Aleksander. "Storfurstendömet Finland 1809–1917 – dess autonomi enligt den nutida finska historieskrivningen" (in Swedish) ["Autonomous Finland 1809–1917 in contemporary Finnish historiography"] Historisk Tidskrift, 2008, Issue 1, pp. 3–27
  • Polvinen, Tuomo. Imperial Borderland: Bobrikov and the Attempted Russification of Finland, 1898–1904 (1995) Duke University Press. 342 pp.
  • Thaden, Edward C. Russification in the Baltic Provinces and Finland (1981). JSTOR

External links edit

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You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Finnish June 2023 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Finnish Wikipedia article at fi Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fi Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Grand Duchy of Finland also translated as Grand Principality of Finland a was the predecessor state of modern Finland It existed between 1809 and 1917 as an autonomous state within the former Russian Empire Grand Duchy of FinlandSuomen suuriruhtinaskunta Finnish Storfurstendomet Finland Swedish Velikoe knyazhestvo Finlyandskoe Russian 1809 1917Coat of armsThe Grand Duchy of Finland in 1914StatusGrand Duchy within the Russian EmpireCapitalTurku 1809 1812 Helsinki 1812 1917 Common languagesFinnishSwedishRussianSamiKarelianRomaniReligionOfficial religions Evangelical Lutheran until 1867 Russian Orthodox until 1917 Demonym s Finnish FinnGovernmentMonarchyGrand Duke 1809 1825Alexander I 1825 1855Nicholas I 1855 1881Alexander II 1881 1894Alexander III 1894 1917Nicholas IIGovernor General 1809 first Georg Sprengtporten 1917 last Nikolai NekrasovVice Chairman 1822 1826 first Carl Erik Mannerheim 1917 last Anders WireniusLegislatureDiet 1809 1906 Parliament 1906 1917 History Diet of Porvoo29 March 1809 Treaty of Fredrikshamn17 September 1809 Independence declared6 December 1917CurrencySwedish riksdaler 1809 1840 Russian ruble 1840 1860 Finnish markka 1860 1917 ISO 3166 codeFIPreceded by Succeeded bySwedish FinlandVyborg Governorate Kingdom of FinlandFinnish Socialist Workers RepublicToday part ofFinlandRussiaOriginating in the 16th century as a titular grand duchy held by the King of Sweden the country became autonomous after its annexation by Russia in the Finnish War of 1808 1809 The Grand Duke of Finland was the Romanov Emperor of Russia represented by the Governor General Due to the governmental structure of the Russian Empire and Finnish initiative the Grand Duchy s autonomy expanded until the end of the 19th century The Senate of Finland founded in 1809 became the most important governmental organ and the precursor to the modern Government of Finland the Supreme Court of Finland and the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland 1 Economic social and political changes in the Grand Duchy of Finland closely paralleled those in the rest of the Russian Empire and in the rest of Europe The economy grew slowly during the first half of the 19th century The reign of Alexander II 1855 1881 saw significant cultural social and intellectual progress and an industrializing economy Tensions increased after Saint Petersburg adopted Russification policies in 1898 the new circumstances saw the reduction of Finnish autonomy and cultural expression Unrest in Russia and Finland during the First World War 1914 1918 and the subsequent collapse of the Russian Empire in 1917 resulted in the Finnish Declaration of Independence and the end of the Grand Duchy 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginning of the Grand Duchy 1 2 Early years 1 3 Alexander s death and the assimilation of Finland 1820s 1850s 1 4 Crimean War and 1860s 1870s 1 5 Russification 2 Government and politics 2 1 Provinces 2 2 Flags 3 Historical population of the Grand Duchy 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editMain article History of Finland An extended Southwest Finland was made a titular grand duchy in 1581 when King Johan III of Sweden who as a Prince had been the Duke of Finland 1556 1561 63 extended the list of subsidiary titles of the Kings of Sweden considerably 3 The new title Grand Duke of Finland did not result in any Finnish autonomy as Finland was an integrated part of the Kingdom of Sweden with full parliamentary representation for its counties During the next two centuries the title was used by some of Johan s successors on the throne but not all Usually it was just a subsidiary title of the King used only on very formal occasions However in 1802 as an indication of his resolve to keep Finland within Sweden in the face of increased Russian pressure King Gustav IV Adolf gave the title to his new born son Prince Carl Gustaf who died three years later During the Finnish War between Sweden and Russia the four Estates of occupied Finland were assembled at the Diet of Porvoo on 29 March 1809 to pledge allegiance to Tsar Alexander I of Russia who in return guaranteed that the area s laws and liberties as well as religion would be left unchanged Following the Swedish defeat in the war and the signing of the Treaty of Fredrikshamn on 17 September 1809 Finland became a true autonomous grand duchy within the autocratic Russian Empire but the usual balance of power between monarch and diet resting on taxation was not in place since the emperor could rely on the rest of his vast empire The title Grand Duke of Finland was added to the long list of titles of the Russian tsar After his return to Finland in 1812 the Finnish born Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt became counsellor to the Russian emperor Armfelt was instrumental in securing the grand duchy as an entity with relatively greater autonomy within the Russian realm and acquiring so called Old Finland that Russia had annexed from Sweden in the Treaty of Nystad 1721 and the Treaty of Abo 1743 4 Beginning of the Grand Duchy edit nbsp Georg Magnus Sprengtporten was as the first who served Governor General of Finland Main articles Finnish War and Diet of Porvoo The formation of the grand duchy stems from the Treaty of Tilsit between Tsar Alexander I of Russia and Emperor Napoleon I of the French The treaty mediated peace between Russia and France and allied the two countries against Napoleon s remaining threats the United Kingdom and Sweden Russia invaded Finland in February 1808 claimed as an effort to impose military sanctions against Sweden but not a war of conquest and that Russia decided to only temporarily control Finland Collectively the Finns were predominately anti Russian and Finnish guerrillas and peasant uprisings were a large obstacles for the Russians forcing Russia to use various tactics to quash armed Finnish rebellion Thus in the beginning of the war General roda Voysk Friedrich Wilhelm von Buxhoeveden with permission of the tsar imposed an oath of fealty on Finland in which Russia would honour Finland s Lutheran faith the Diet of Finland and the Finnish estates as long as the Finns would remain loyal to the Russian imperial crown The oath also dubbed anyone person who gave aid to the Swedish or Finnish armies a rebel 5 The Finns complied bitter over Sweden abandoning the country for their war against Denmark and France and begrudgingly embraced Russian conquest The Diet of Finland was now to only meet whenever requested and was never mentioned in the manifesto published by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Further on Alexander I requested a deputation of the four Finnish estates as he expressed concern over continued Finnish resistance The deputation refused to act without the Diet to which Alexander agreed with and promised the Diet would shortly be summoned By 1809 all of Finland had been conquered and the Diet was summoned in March Finland was then united through Russia via the crown and Finland was able to keep the majority of its own laws giving it autonomy 6 7 Instead of the newly acquired territory being subjected to direct rule by an imperial governor general a novel administrative system was established in Finland drafted in part by the liberal Mikhail Speransky The new grand duchy would be governed by a Government Council later the Senate of Finland a body made up of Finnish citizens The governor general would accordingly have a relatively diminished role Further the emperor would deal with matters relating to Finland directly through a dedicated Secretary of State without the involvement of his Russian cabinet or administration This laid the foundation for the considerable autonomy enjoyed by Finland for most of the period of Russian rule Early years edit nbsp Finnish 20 Kopeks Banknote from 1814The earlier years of the grand duchy can be seen as uneventful In 1812 the area of Old Finland known as Viipuri Province from 1812 to 1945 was gifted to Finland Russia had annexed this territory from Sweden in the Great Northern War and the Russo Swedish War 1741 1743 This surprising action by the tsar was met with anger from certain parts of the Russian government and aristocracy who wished to either return to the previous border or annex the communities west of St Petersburg Despite the outcry the borders remained set until 1940 The gesture can be seen as Alexander s concern for Finland and his attempts of appeasement of the Finns in attempts to gain their loyalty which would come from passive appeasement compared to the vigorous Russification later in the nineteenth century Moreover Alexander moved the capital from Turku to Helsinki a small fortified town protected by Suomenlinna Finland s main university also transferred to Helsinki after a fire broke out in Turku destroying most of the building Despite promises of a Finnish Diet the Diet was not called to meet until 1863 and many new laws going through the legislature were laws that would have required the approval of the Diet while under Swedish rule Alexander went a step further to demand a Finnish House of Nobles which organised in 1818 The house was designed to register all noble families in Finland so that the highest Finnish estate would be representative of the next Finnish Diet As for Sweden the majority did not think too much about Finland s conquest as Sweden itself annexed Norway from Denmark in 1814 and entered a personal union with the nation Whether or not Alexander purposely ignored the existence of the Diet is debatable with notable factors such as the fall of Napoleon and the creation of the Holy Alliance newfound religious mysticism of the Russian crown and the negative experience with the Polish Sejm Despite this Alexander I ceased to give in to Finnish affairs and returned to governing Russia 8 Alexander s death and the assimilation of Finland 1820s 1850s edit nbsp Central Helsinki in 1820 nbsp Finnish Guards Rifle Battalion in the middle of the 19th century nbsp Fredrik Cygnaeus giving a speech at the Flora Day celebration on 13 May 1848 Author of the drawing is Alex Federley In 1823 Count Arseny Zakrevsky was made Governor General of Finland and quickly became unpopular among both Finns and Swedes alike Zakrevsky abolished the Committee for Finnish Affairs and managed to obtain the right to submit Finnish affairs to the Russian emperor bypassing the Finnish Secretary of State Two years later Alexander I died 1 December O S 19 November 1825 Zakrevsky seized the opportunity to require Finland to swear an oath of fealty which would refer to the emperor as the absolute ruler of Finland expecting that emperor would be Constantine Alexander s next eldest brother However Nicholas younger brother of Constantine and Alexander became emperor despite the Decembrist revolt against him in December 1825 Nicholas assured Finland s secretary of state Robert Henrik Rehbinder that he Nicholas would continue to uphold Alexander s liberal policies regarding Finland In 1830 Europe became a hotbed of revolution and reform as a result of the July Revolution in France Poland another Russian client state saw a massive uprising against Saint Petersburg during the November Uprising of 1830 1831 Finland made no such move as Russia had already won over Finnish loyalty Thus Russia continued its policies respecting Finnish autonomy and the quiet assimilation of the Finns into the empire Zakrevsky died in 1831 Knyaz Alexander Sergeyevich Menshikov succeeded him as Governor General of Finland and continued Finnish appeasement The appeasement of the Finns could be seen by whom as a prototype of the later Russification as educated Finns moved to Russia in mass seeking jobs within the imperial government to rise within Russian imperial society The Russian language was studied increasingly as well with more Finns seeking to learn Russian language politics culture and to assimilate into Russian society Even though Nicholas had no intentions on doing this clarification needed his inner office specifically Nicholas s Interior Minister Lev Perovski in office 1841 1852 advocated for Count Zakrevsky s ideas and further pushed the ideas of subtle Russification during the 1840s 9 However Finland did experience a nationalistic revolution in the 1830s one based around literature This marked the beginning of the Fennoman movement a nationalistic movement that would operate in Finland until its independence In 1831 the Finnish Literature Society was founded which formed on the basis of appreciation of the Finnish language Finnish was not represented as language of the scholarly elite as most printed academic works novels and poetry was written in either Swedish or Russian Copying the German reading rage Lesewut and subsequent Swedish mania Finland entered the reading craze by the 1830s This fad peaked in 1835 with the publication of The Kalevala the Finnish epic The Kalevala s influence on Finland was massive and strengthened Finnish nationalism and unity despite the epic being poetry or stories about Finnish folklore The quest for literature expanded into the 1840s and 1850s and caught the eye of the Finnish church and the Russian crown Finnish newspapers such as Maamiehen Ystava The Farmer s Friend began publication in both urban and rural areas of Finland However the Swedish academic elite the church and the Russian government opposed Finland s literature movement Edvard Bergenheim Archbishop of Turku from 1850 to 1884 called for double censorship on works opposing the church and works appearing socialist or communist The reactionary policies of the Lutheran Church convinced the also reactionary Nicholas I r 1825 1855 to prohibit 1850 the publishing of all Finnish works that were not religious or economic in nature as such works would have been considered revolutionary and might encourage the Finnish majority to revolt against the church and crown However the censorship only fueled Finland s language strife and the Fennomanian movement 10 11 12 Crimean War and 1860s 1870s edit Main articles Crimean War and Aland War nbsp Ball in Helsinki in honour of Alexander II 1863The works of Johan Snellman and other Fennoman authors combined literature and nationalism and increased the calls for language recognition and education reforms in Finland This heightened during the Crimean War in which Finnish ports and fortresses on the Baltic Sea became subject for Allied attacks specifically Suomenlinna and Bomarsund in Aland during the Aland War As newspapers were printed in Swedish and Russian due to the censorship many Finns could not read about the events of the Battle of Bomarsund and the Battle of Suomenlinna Moreover Nicholas I died in 1855 and the new emperor Alexander II had already planned educational reforms in outlying territories in Russia including Finland 13 Alexander II also planned to call on the Diet of the Estates once more Under Alexander s rule Finland experiences a period of liberalization in education the arts and economic desires In 1858 Finnish was made the official language of local self government such as provinces where Finnish was the majority of the language spoken However the Finns feared that St Petersburg would prevent the Diet from meeting on the basis that Polish and Russian citizens did not receive the same liberties and that the Diet would be eradicated It was misinterpreted as it only added a few extra steps to how the lawmaking process worked the Diet was allowed to stay In 1863 Alexander called the Diet and issued that the Finnish language was to be on par with Swedish and Russian in the Grand Duchy while also passing laws regarding infrastructure and currency Alexander came to favor the Finnish working class over the Swedish elite due to Swedish propaganda during the Crimean War urging revolt against the Russians Alexander also passed a law regarding language ordinance in August 1863 requiring that the Finnish language must be introduced to all public businesses within twenty years The law was expanded in 1865 to require that state offices must serve the public in Finnish if requested Despite this the language laws took time to be fully implemented due to the interference of the Swedish elite who owned most of these offices and businesses Despite this the education laws pushed through and the first secondary schools instructed in Finnish began in the 1870s 14 15 The power of the Diet was also expanded in 1869 as it allowed the Diet more power and the ability to initiate various legislation the act also called the tsar to call upon the Diet every five years An act passed regarding religion was also passed in 1869 which prevented the power of the state over the church Moreover Finland also received its own monetary system the Finnish markka and its own army 16 Finland s first railway line was opened between Helsinki and Hameenlinna on March 17 1862 17 18 Russification edit Main articles Independence of Finland and Russification of Finland nbsp Folk musician Kreeta Haapasalo plays kantele in a Peasant Cottage 1868 nbsp Managers and directors of Walkiakoski Oy a sulphate pulp mill in Valkeakoski 1899 nbsp Svenska Folkpartiet Swedish People s Party election advertising in Helsinki during the first unicameral parliamentary elections in 1907The policies of Russification under Alexander III and Nicholas II easily sum up the time period from 1881 to 1917 In 1881 Alexander III took the throne after the death of his father and began a rule of staunch conservative yet peaceful rule of Russia Finland as well as many other outlying Russian territories faced the burden of Russification the cultural social economical and political absorption into Russia Compared to the early Russification of the 1830s and 1840s the Russification of the late 19th early 20th century was much more vigorous in its policies Moreover Finland faced political turmoil within its nation between various factions such as liberals Social Democrats Young Finns and communists Finland became a target for the Pan Slavist movement which called for Slavic unity in eastern Europe Finland was viewed as conquered territory and that as subjects Finland was to respect the tsar Finland was also viewed as a land of settlement and that the alien race of the Finns were to be assimilated and protected from Western interference thereby blessing the Finns with their presence Moreover Finnish representatives to the tsar were replaced with Pan Slavist advocates 19 nbsp Salo railway station in 1900 nbsp Numismatic postcard from the early 1900 s Finnish markkaRussification only increased from there but from the 1880s on the conflict between the Swedish minority halted Compared to the Baltic States the Finnish majority was far better educated and more keen in Russian politics The reactionary policies of Russification which aimed to combine secular nationalism and a divine right monarchy infiltrated the Finnish economy in 1885 Finland had managed to create a thriving modern industry based around textiles and timber that managed to rival the Russian economy at the time Russian bureaucrats out of both shock and jealousy called for the revision of the Russo Finnish Tariff Russification had taken an economic turn as well as the basis of the reformed tariff was economic uniformity which only furthered economic difficulties of Finland The tariff s revision in 1885 and subsequently 1897 was formed out of spite of Finland s commercial success and working class unity Russification policies continued into 1890 with the addition of the Imperial Post System in Finland replacing the Finnish post It was not until the mid 1890s that the Finnish people realized the true intentions of the Russian crown nbsp Helsinki in 1907 nbsp The first session of the Parliament of Finland in 1907Nicholas II ascended to the throne in 1894 after Alexander s death and with him came General Nikolay Bobrikov who was appointed governor general Under Bobrikov the Finns had a near collective hatred of him whose reactionary policies gave rise to socialism and communism among the Finnish working class The Party of Active Resistance and Kagal in particular became very popular in Finland for the former s tactics of violence and the latter s tactic of propaganda and persuasion At the beginning of this reign Bobrikov almost immediately introduced a mandatory five year military service in which Finns had the possibility of being drafted into Russian units Furthermore he instituted that Russians be given the opportunity to serve in public office and that Russian be made the administrative language of Finland In 1899 the February Manifesto under Nicholas II declared that Russian law was the law of the land and Finland was to pledge allegiance to Russian law The Diet was essentially downgraded to a state assembly and that Finland was a province of Russia ignoring its autonomy The Finnish Army as a whole was dissolved in 1901 20 21 nbsp Governor General Bobrikov assassinated by Eugen Schauman on 16 June 1904 in Helsinki 22 A drawing of the assassination by an unknown author Bobrikov unintentionally united both Finns and Swedes against Russia which only angered him more With churches refusing to proclaim the law judges refusing to carry it out and conscripts refusing service Bobrikov went on a frenzy with the current state of Finland Bobrikov found little support in Finland mainly from the Russian minority and members of the Old Finnish Party Bobrikov brought in Russian officials to take government and state spots and in an extreme act of anger suspended the Finnish Constitution in 1903 His actions were met with extreme anger from Finns and Swedes in which the moderate parties the Young Finns and the Swedish Party combined to collectively fight Bobrikov The Social Democratic Party of Finland a Marxist party popular among peasants was also extremely hostile and advocated class warfare and took arms in contrast to the Social Democrats elsewhere in Europe Finally the Party of Active Resistance a nationalist party that advocated an armed struggle and guerilla tactics received fame when member Eugen Schauman assassinated Bobrikov in Helsinki on 16 June 1904 21 In 1905 Russia faced a humiliating defeat in the Russo Japanese War and amidst the turmoil in St Petersburg Finns remade their constitution and formed a new parliament whose representation was based on universal suffrage giving women full suffrage before any other European nation after the short lived Republic of Corsica However the parliament was quickly destroyed by Pyotr Stolypin Nicholas II s prime minister Stolypin proved to be even more vigorous than Bobrikov as he believed every subject should be a stoic patriot to the crown and uphold undying loyalty to Russia Stolypin wished to destroy Finland s autonomy and disregarded native tongues and cultures of non Russian subjects believing them to be traditional and ritualistic at best The Finnish parliament once again formed to combat Stolypin but Stolypin was bent on quashing Finnish insurrection and permanently disbanded the parliament in 1909 As with Bobrikov before him Stolypin was unaware that such actions only fanned the flames and was subsequently assassinated by Dmitry Bogrov a Jewish member of the far left From Stolypin s death henceforward the Russian crown ruled Finland as a monarchist dictatorship until Russia s collapse during the Russian Revolution from which Finland declared independence a war of independence that soon transformed into a civil war 23 24 25 Government and politics edit nbsp Map of Finland about 1900 The map is in Russian and uses the Swedish place names written in Cyrillic nbsp Provinces of the Grand Duchy of FinlandThe Russian emperor ruled as the Grand Duke of Finland and was represented in Finland by the Governor General The Senate of Finland was the highest governing body of the Grand Duchy and was composed of native Finns In St Petersburg Finnish matters were represented by the Minister Secretary of State for Finland The Senate had a primarily advisory role until it got the right to representation in 1886 On top of having its own central regional and local administration Finland had its own stamps currency and army nbsp Statue of Alexander II at the Senate Square in Helsinki was built to commemorate his re establishment of the Diet of Finland in 1863 Alexander I did not want the Grand Duchy to be a constitutional monarchy but the governmental institutions born during the Swedish rule offered him a more efficient form of government than the absolute monarchy in Russia This evolved into a high level of autonomy by the end of the 19th century There were a total of twenty Governors General from the Finnish War until independence 26 General Count Goran Magnus Sprengtporten 1808 1809 General Knyaz Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly 1809 1810 General Count Fabian Steinheil 1810 1823 Count Gustav Mauritz Armfelt 1812 1813 General Count Arseny Zakrevsky 1823 1831 Admiral Aleksander Mensikov 1831 1855 General Friedrich Wilhelm Rembert Graf von Berg 1855 1861 General Baron Platon Rokassovsky 1854 1855 1861 1866 General Johan Mauritz Nordenstam 1861 1864 1868 1870 1872 1873 General Count Nikolai Adlerberg 1866 1881 General Count Fyodor Logginovich van Heiden 1881 1897 General Lieutenant Stepan Goncharov 1897 1898 General Nikolai Bobrikov 1898 1904 General Lieutenant Knyaz Ivan Obolenski 1904 1905 Privy Councillor Nikolai Gerard 1905 1908 General Vladimir von Boeckmann 1908 1909 General Lieutenant Franz Albert Seyn 1909 1917 Privy Councilor Adam Lipski 1917 Mikhail Stakhovich 1917 Nikolai Nekrasov 1917Provinces edit Main article Governorates of the Grand Duchy of Finland The administrative division of the Grand Duchy followed the Russian imperial model with provinces Russian guberniya governorate Swedish lan Finnish laani headed by governors Few changes were made however and as the language of the administrators was still Swedish the old terminology from the Swedish time continued in local use The Viipuri Province was not initially part of the Grand Duchy but in 1812 it was transferred by Tsar Alexander I from Russia proper to Finland After 1831 there were eight provinces in the Grand Duchy until the end and that continued in the independent Finland Turku and Pori Province Russian Abo Berneborgskaya guberniya Swedish Abo och Bjorneborgs lan Finnish Turun ja Porin laani Kuopio Province Russian Kuopioskaya guberniya Swedish Kuopio lan Finnish Kuopion laani Vaasa Province Russian Nikolajstadskaya guberniya Swedish Vasa lan Finnish Vaasan laani Uusimaa Province Russian Nyulandskaya guberniya Swedish Nylands lan Finnish Uudenmaan laani Mikkeli Province Russian Sankt Mihelskaya guberniya Swedish S t Michels lan Finnish Mikkelin laani Hame Province Russian Tavastgusskaya guberniya Swedish Tavastehus lan Finnish Hameen laani Oulu Province Russian Uleaborgskaya guberniya Swedish Uleaborgs lan Finnish Oulun laani Viipuri Province Russian Vyborgskaya guberniya Swedish Viborgs lan Finnish Viipurin laani Flags edit nbsp A variant of the Finnish merchant flag 1809 1821 nbsp A variant of the Finnish merchant flag used by the Swedish speaking population 1905 nbsp A Finnish speaker version of the above flagThe Grand Duchy of Finland had no official flag but different types of flags were used in different occasions An official flag was debated even in the Diet of Finland in the 1860s but one was never officially chosen 27 An official maritime flag was chosen in 1812 for governmental use It was a white flag with the Russian flag in the upper corner and a compass rose in the middle In 1883 it was replaced with a blue cross flag with the compass rose in the upper corner A post flag a white flag with the Russian flag in the upper corner and a post horn in the middle was also used in the Grand Duchy along with a customs flag a blue flag with the Russian flag on the upper corner and the logo of the customs agency in the middle Originally there were no regulations regarding merchant flags until 3 October 1821 when Finnish ships were given the right to fly the Russian flag without permission White blue and red flags with the Russian flag in the corner were also used Later on six and nine striped flags with the colors of the Russian flag twice or thrice saw some use 28 A blue cross flag similar to that of the modern flag of Finland was first used by the yacht club Nylandska Jaktklubben in 1861 equipped with the coat of arms of Uusimaa in the upper corner It was inspired by the similar flag used by the Neva Yacht Club The flag of the yacht club was made official by the Senate in 1890 when the Swedish speaking Ostra Nylands Segelforening adopted the Flag of Sweden 29 At the end of the 19th century flags with the coat of arms were used in unofficial contexts such as private estates and protests In official contexts the Russian white blue red tricolour was primarily used 30 The Grand Duchy of Finland participated in the 1912 Summer Olympics with their own team In the opening ceremony the Finnish team marched behind the Russian team with a Finland sign In the medal ceremonies the Russian flag above a white blue pennant reading Finland was raised for the Finnish athletes 31 Historical population of the Grand Duchy edit1810 863 000 32 1830 1 372 000 1850 1 637 000 1870 1 769 000 1890 2 380 000 1910 2 943 000 1920 3 148 000 independent Finland since 1917 See also editIndependence of Finland Military of the Grand Duchy of Finland Finnish Socialist Workers Republic Old Finland Congress Poland Kingdom of Poland 1815 1831 another constitutional monarchy within the Russian Empire Aland War Governorate of Estonia Grand Duchy of Lithuania Finnish Civil WarNotes edit Finnish Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta Swedish Storfurstendomet Finland Russian Velikoe knyazhestvo Finlyandskoe Velikoye knyazhestvo Finlyandskoye all of which literally translate as Grand Principality of Finland References edit Klinge 1997 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 2002 Pulma 2003a Zetterberg 2003 Jussila 2004 Ylikangas 2007 Haapala 1995 Jussila 2004 ja 2007 Ylikangas 2007 Leif Tengstrom Muschoviten Turcken icke olijk II 1997 s 104 Knapas Rainer 2014 Ajankohtainen Armfelt Tieteessa tapahtuu in Finnish Retrieved 2016 04 30 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 178 79 183 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 p 185 Seton Watson 1967 pp 114 15 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 191 92 194 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 195 96 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 199 206 Hall 1953 pp 127 28 Makinen 2015 pp 292 95 Makinen 2015 pp 295 96 Hall 1953 p 128 Seton Watson 1967 pp 415 16 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 215 16 222 Neil Kent Helsinki A Cultural History p 18 Interlink Books 2014 ISBN 978 1566565448 Tulihevonen saapui ensi kerran Hameenlinnaan 150 vuotta sitten The fire horse arrived first time in Hameenlinna 150 years ago Yle Hame in Finnish Yle January 31 2012 Retrieved March 17 2022 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 222 24 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 229 32 a b Seton Watson 1967 pp 498 99 Kauffman George B Niinisto Lauri 1998 Chemistry and Politics Edvard Immanuel Hjelt 1855 1921 The Chemical Educator 3 5 1 15 doi 10 1007 s00897980247a S2CID 97163876 Seton Watson 1967 pp 668 69 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 1962 pp 242 55 Hall 1953 p 129 Apunen 1987 Jutikkala amp Pirinen 2002 Pulma 2003a Jussila 2004 Kajanti 1997 p 110 140 Kajanti 1997 ss 88 90 Kajanti 1997 s 79 80 Kajanti 1997 p 164 Kajanti 1997 p 176 178 B R Mitchell European Historical Statistics 1750 1970 Columbia U P 1978 p 4Bibliography editHall Wendy 1953 Green Gold and Granite London Max Parrish amp Co Jutikkala Eino Pirinen Kauko 1962 A History of Finland rev ed New York Washington Praeger Publishers Makinen Ilkka Winter 2015 From Literacy to Love of Reading The Fennomanian Ideology of Reading in the 19th Century Finland Journal of Social History 49 2 Seton Watson Hugh 1967 The Russian Empire 1801 1917 London Oxford Further reading editAlenius Kari Russification in Estonia and Finland Before 1917 Faravid 2004 Vol 28 pp 181 94 Online Huxley Steven Constitutionalist insurgency in Finland Finnish passive resistance against Russification as a case of nonmilitary struggle in the European resistance tradition 1990 Jussila Osmo et al From Grand Duchy to a Modern State A Political History of Finland Since 1809 Hurst amp Co 1999 Kan Aleksander Storfurstendomet Finland 1809 1917 dess autonomi enligt den nutida finska historieskrivningen in Swedish Autonomous Finland 1809 1917 in contemporary Finnish historiography Historisk Tidskrift 2008 Issue 1 pp 3 27 Polvinen Tuomo Imperial Borderland Bobrikov and the Attempted Russification of Finland 1898 1904 1995 Duke University Press 342 pp Thaden Edward C Russification in the Baltic Provinces and Finland 1981 JSTORExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grand Duchy of Finland Grand Duchy of Finland at Flags of the World The text of The Imperial Manifesto of 1811 in German and Finnish Finland Grand Duchy of Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Duchy of Finland amp oldid 1181028082, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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