Path: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!boulder!csnews!coop.net!enews.sgi.com!news-peer.gip.net!news.gsl.net!gip.net!news-peer.sprintlink.net!news-peer-europe.sprintlink.net!news.sprintlink.net!genius.dat.hk-r.se!news.ifm.liu.se!not-for-mail
From: [email protected] (SCN Faq-maintainer)
Newsgroups: soc.culture.nordic,soc.answers,news.answers
Subject: Nordic FAQ - 4 of 7 - FINLAND
Supersedes: <[email protected]>
Followup-To: soc.culture.nordic
Date: 27 Jun 1998 16:46:04 GMT
Organization: Lysator Academic Computer Society, Link�ping University, Sweden
Lines: 2589
Approved: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
NNTP-Posting-Host: tindra.lysator.liu.se
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
Summary: About Finland: culture, history, places of interest and other
things. This document is part 4 of the soc.culture.nordic-FAQ.
Archive-name: nordic-faq/part4_FINLAND
Posting-Frequency: yearly (at least)
Version: 1.5
Last-modified: 27/06/98 (dd/mm/yy)
URL: http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/textvers/part4.html
Xref: senator-bedfellow.mit.edu soc.culture.nordic:117863 soc.answers:10103 news.answers:133980

       A Frequently Answered Questions (FAQ) file for the newsgroup
                   S O C . C U L T U R E . N O R D I C
                         *** PART 4: FINLAND ***


   Index
                 4.1
                        Fact Sheet
                 4.2
                        General information
                 4.2.1
                        Geography, climate, vegetation
                 4.2.2
                        Economy
                 4.2.3
                        Population
                 4.2.4
                        Who is a Finn?
                 4.2.5
                        The Finnish language
                 4.2.6
                        Culture
                 4.2.7
                        Government
                 4.2.8
                        School system
                 4.3
                        History
                 4.3.1
                        A chronology of important dates
                 4.3.2
                        A list of Grand Dukes and presidents of Finland
                 4.3.3
                        @ Viking times and before that
                 4.3.4
                        @ Finland in the Swedish realm
                 4.3.5
                        @ Finland as a Russian Grand Duchy
                 4.3.6
                        @ The independence of Finland
                 4.3.7
                          !  Wars with the Soviet Union
                 4.3.8
                          !  Finland after the wars
                 4.4
                        The Finnish parliament, government and political
                        parties
                 4.4.1
                        The political parties
                 4.4.2
                        The 1995 general elections
                 4.4.3
                        The present cabinet
                 4.5
                        Main tourist attractions
                 4.5.1
                        Helsinki
                 4.5.2
                        Turku
                 4.5.3
                        Tampere
                 4.5.4
                        Jyv�skyl�
                 4.5.5
                        Porvoo
                 4.5.6
                        Other places of interest
                 4.6
                        The Finnish sauna
                 4.7
                        Finnish literature
                 4.8
                        Books for learning Finnish
                 4.8.1
                        Grammars, Primers, Phrase Books.
                 4.8.2
                        Dictionaries
                 4.8.3
                        Readers
                 4.8.4
                        Materials for Teaching Finnish
                 4.8.5
                        Miscellaneous
                 4.8.6
                        Course Details
                 4.8.7
                        Acknowledgements
    _________________________________________________________________



Subject: 4.1 Fact Sheet

Name:  Suomen Tasavalta / Republiken Finland [ Fi / Sw ]

Telephone country code:   358

Area:  338,127 km� / 130,125 sq mi

Terrain:  mostly low, flat to rolling plains interspersed with lakes and
         low hills; fjells and some mountains in the extreme northwest

Highest mountain:  Haltiatunturi (1,328 m).

Natural resources:  timber, copper, zinc, iron ore, silver

Land boundaries:  Russia, Sweden, Norway

Population:  5,147,000 [year-end 1997]

Population density:  15.1 persons per km�

Distribution:  65% in urban, 35% in rural municipalities. [1996]

Life expectancy:  women 80, men 72. [1992]

Infant mortality:  6 per 1,000 live births. [1992]

Capital:  Helsinki/Helsingfors (pop. 532,053), metropolitan area ca 1 mill.

Other major towns:  Tampere/Tammerfors (186,026),
                   Turku/�bo (166,929)
                   Espoo/Esbo (196,260)[a suburb to Helsinki]
                   Vantaa/Vanda (168,778) [a suburb to Helsinki]
                   Oulu/Ule�borg (111,556)  [year-end, 1996]
                   (note: many places in Finland have
                   two names, Finnish and Swedish)

Flag:  a blue Nordic cross on white background.

Type:  Republic

Head of state:  President Martti Ahtisaari

Languages:  Finnish (92.7 %),
           Swedish (5.7 %) (both official),
           small S�mi and Romani minorities.

Currency:  markka (Finnish mark, FIM).
          for the current exchange rate,
          see the URL <http://www.dna.lth.se/cgi-bin/kurt/rates>


Climate:  cold temperate. Gulf stream warms up parts of the country,
         Lapland is sub-arctic. Average temp. in Helsinki:
          -9�C - -4�C in Feb., 12�C - 22�C in July.

Religion:  Evangelic-Lutheran (84%),
          Greek Orthodox (1%) (both churches are official state-churches)

Exports:  paper, metal, machinery, ships, timber, textiles, chemicals, electron
ics, furniture






------------------------------

Subject: 4.2 General information



 4.2.1 Geography, climate, vegetation

  Finland (Finnish: Suomi) is the fifth largest country in Europe,
  excluding the Russian federation. Roughly 1/3 of the country lies
  north of the Arctic Circle. Finland shares a common border in the
  north with Norway, in the east a long border (1,269 km) with Russia,
  on the south it is bordered by the Gulf of Finland, and on the west by
  the Gulf of Bothnia and Sweden. Most of Finland is lowland, but in the
  far northwest (the "arm" of Finland) some mountains rise to over
  1000m. Most of Finland is made of ancient granite bedrock, which has
  been shaped and fractured by numerous ice ages, the marks of which can
  be seen e.g in the complex lake system, the equally complex
  archipelagos and the huge boulders scattered all over the country.

  Finland has three main physical regions: the coastal lowlands, the
  inland lake system, and the northern uplands. The coastal lowlands
  extend along coasts of the Gulfs of Finland and Bothnia, off which lie
  thousands of rocky islands; the principal archipelagos are the �land
  (in Finnish: Ahvenanmaa) Islands and the archipelago of Turku. The
  lake district is an interior plateau of southern central, heavily
  forested and studded with lakes, swamps and bogs. The northern upland,
  much of which lies north of the Arctic Circle, has rather poor soils
  and is the most sparsely populated region of Finland. In the far
  north, arctic forests and swamps eventually change to tundra.

  Finland's climate shows both maritime and continental influences.
  Surrounding seas cool the climate on the coast in spring but on the
  other hand warm it up in the autumn.The climate becomes more
  continental, i.e more extreme, the further east and north one goes.
  The furtherst north, however, has a rather marine climate because of
  the influence of the Arctic Ocean. The summer lasts two to four
  months, the growing season four to six.

  The tourist cliche of Finland as "the country of thousands of lakes"
  has some basis; in one count, a number of 187,880 islands was reached
  (but it all depends on what counts as a lake). They are often
  connected by rivers and canals to form large lake-systems. Finland's
  largest lake, Saimaa, is in fact a system of more than a hundred
  interconnected smaller lakes. Finland's rivers are short and shallow,
  the longest being located in the north. Finland has about 30,000
  coastal islands, of which the especially the southwestern archipelago
  is known for its beauty.

  The country is situated entirely within the northern zone of
  coniferous forests. Forests cover about 65% of the total area (45%
  pines, 37% spruces, 15%). Oaks, lindens, elms, and ashes appear mostly
  in the southwest corner. Among the large wild animals are e.g ear,
  elk, deer, lynx, wolverine and wolf.



 4.2.2 Economy

  Forests are Finland's most important natural resource, and paper,
  timber, etc. are a major source of national income. The granite
  bedrock contains a diversity of minor mineral deposits, including
  copper, nickel, iron, zinc, chromium, lead, and iron pyrites. In
  recent years, diamonds have been found in eastern Finland, but they
  aren't mined yet. In addition, limestone, granite and sand are
  quarried for building materials.

  Wood processing has traditionally been the most important economy. The
  metal and engineering industries have developed rapidly and today are
  the largest source of industrial employment. Since the 1950s
  large-scale swamp drainage, fertilizing, and reforestation have
  improved woord production. The state owns 20% of the forests; the rest
  are privately controlled. The chemical, graphics, and food industries
  are also significant to the economy, followed by textile and
  electrochemical enterprises. Mining activity has decreased in
  importance, although Finland still produces one-half of the copper and
  nickel needed for the domestic market. In 1960, 30% of Finland's work
  force was engaged in farming; by 1990 the figure was less than 10%,
  and only 7% of the total land area was cultivated. Nevertheless, the
  agricultural sector produces a surplus of dairy products, meat, and
  eggs. Wheat and rye are the most important bread grains; other major
  crops include hay, potatoes, oats, and barley. Finland's climate and
  small farms favor dairy and livestock production, which account for
  most of the farm income. The problems created by overproduction have
  led to soil banking (a policy of purposely leaving farmland
  uncultivated) and reforestation.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq41.html ]



 4.2.3 Population

  Finland is a bilingual country (with a Swedish-speaking minority
  living mostly in the coastal areas).

  The autonomous island-province of �land is an exception: the province
  is monolingually Swedish-speaking.

  �land Islands, with approximately 25,000 inhabitants, is a
  demilitarized area with its own flag (a red Nordic cross outlined in
  yellow, on blue background) and a separate local legislation. Its
  autonomy is based on international treaties.

  The Swedish-speaking minority of Finland descends chiefly from the
  settlers that arrived with the Christian missionaries and crusaders in
  the early middle ages. They speak a variety called "finlandssvenska"
  that differs slightly from Swedish spoken in Sweden ("rikssvenska"),
  most notably for its Finnish intonation and some archaic vocabulary.
  Today 5.7 % of Finland's population is registered as Finland-Swedish.
  The proportion has been steadily diminishing since the 18th century
  when 20% of the population had Swedish as mother tongue.

  The Romani, or Gypsies, who arrived to Finland in late 16th century
  have long had to experience the prejudices of the majority population,
  but in recent years their situation has been improving, and Romani
  language is now taught at schools. They number approximately 5.500.
  Different from the situation in Scandinavia the Gypsies of Finland
  have usually not preserved their own language, but have Finnish as
  their mother tongue. On the other hand, they have preserved their
  dress customs a lot more.

  In Lapland (the northernmost province of Finland), a small S�mi (Lapp)
  minority still survives. Their number is only around 5,000, with even
  fewer reporting Sami as their native language, but nowadays there are
  schools for S�mi-speakers and the language is considered official in
  municipalities with at least 7% of the population speaking S�mi. For
  more information about the S�mi, see section 2.3.



 4.2.4 Who is a Finn?

  Believe it or not, but this question does raise heated discussions in
  the news group now and then. The disputes have their base in the
  inability, general among Nordeners, to distinguish between ethnicity,
  nationality and citizenship.

  In the news group you can find citizens of Finland who declare that he
  or she "is certainly no Finn even if I am born in Finland (and my
  ancestors some 600 years back at least). If some bullshit Fascists
  think they can call everyone living in this country a Finn they are
  mistaken."

  On the other hand ethnic Finns can be studied, who get insulted by any
  word referring to Finland's multi-ethnicity, arguing along the slogan
  In Finland we speak Finnish. They might claim that the distinction
  between Swedish-speaking and Finnish-speaking inhabitants of Finland
  is based on racism and the minority's need to feel superior.

  Be warned!
  This is a sensitive topic.

  The origin of Finns is still subject to a lot of discussion; the
  traditional theory is that Finns emigrated from the Urals to Finland
  some 2,000 years ago, but the current view seems to be that the
  Finnish people have evolved into what they are in Finland as a result
  of numerous successive waves of immigration coming from east, south
  and west.

  As Roman writers described the Fenni it is unclear whether they
  referred to nomadic Lapps exclusively, or if also the Finnish speaking
  farmers and sea-farers were included.

  In any case: Written medieval sources exhibit great confusion on this
  point. When the king of Norway (who for long was the king of Denmark),
  or the Norse Sagas, refer to "Finns" they mostly mean S�mis or Lapps.
  The Swedish administration wasn't much better in making the
  distinctions we today put such a great importance to.

  Still today "a Finn" is a S�mi or Lapp for many speakers of Norwegian.

  Until the national awakening of the 19th century Swedish speakers
  meant people from Finland, or with ancestry from Finland, when talking
  about "Finns" (finne, plural: finnar). Then the Finnish nationalistic
  movement led to the majority language (Finnish) being given equal
  status to the old administrative language (Swedish). It became
  fashionable for the educated class to learn Finnish, to start using
  Finnish as much as possible, and to make Finnish the mother tongue of
  their children.

  Then the remaining parts of the Swedish speaking minority in Finland
  started to stress their "Swedishness" - in reaction to the Finnish
  nationalistic movement from the mid-1800's on with its expectation
  that all inhabitants of Finland should switch from Swedish to Finnish.
  The Swedish speakers began to label themselves as "Finland-Swedes"
  defending their language's position in Finland as much as they could.

  The battle was long and hard between proponents for Finnish as the
  national language of Finland and the proponents for Swedish as the
  language linking Finland to Germanic nations of Western Europe. And "a
  Finn" became a term which for the Swedish speaking minority referred
  to members of the Finnish speaking majority.

  By the time of Finland's liberation from Russia the language-battle
  was almost won by the proponents for Finnish, but the Swedish speakers
  were still well represented in the government and among State
  officials. The independent Finland became officially bilingual, and
  during the Second World War (if not before) a consensus was
  established that both "Finns" and "Swedes" of Finland belonged to the
  same nation, a nation which thus in conflict with the 19th century
  Nationalism's dogma comprised two very different languages: Finnish
  and Swedish.

  But still, for the Finland-Swedes the term en finne ("a Finn") denotes
  an ethnic Finn, and the term finl�ndare (literally: Finlandener) is
  used to denote nationality or citizenship. The Finnish language has a
  term (suomenruotsalainen) for the Finland-Swedes, of course, but uses
  the same term (suomalainen) for ethnic Finns and citizens of Finland.

  In Sweden people try to show the Finland-Swedes basal courtesy by
  remembering to distinguish between en finne and en finl�ndare. In
  Norway people try to avoid the word finne perceived as derogatively as
  the word "Lapp" when denoting the S�mis, and the word finlender (the
  equivalent term to "Finlandener") is the recommended form, especially
  by people interested in politicial correctness.

  The problem usually arises when Swedes or Norwegians remember the
  political correctness but forget the sensitive nature of this matter.
  The word "a Finn" can be avoided in English, by exchanging it to
  citizen of Finland, inhabitant of Finland, ethnic Finn, or
  Finland-Swede.

  Thereby, however, nothing is implicated for the question of �land's
  status as being a part of the country Finland or not, its population
  belonging to the nation of ethnic Finns and Finland-Swedes or not, or
  other disputable issues...
  :->>>

 4.2.5 The Finnish language

  Whatever the roots of Finns are, a fact is that they speak a language
  that isn't Indo-European like the other Nordic languages, but
  Finno-Ugric; its closest major relative is Estonian (but even those
  two languages aren't really mutually intelligible), and it is
  distantly related to Hungarian, S�mi, and several minor languages
  spoken in European Russia and Siberia.

  Eugene Holman writes:

    Even though Finnish is not related to the Scandinavian languages,
    like Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish, it has its sister languages
    which it is more or less mutually intelligible spoken by people of
    essentially the same ethnic stock as the Finns. Many people know
    that the difference between Finnish and Estonian is approximately
    the same as the difference between Swedish and Danish. Fewer know
    that the same holds for Finnish and the indigenous speech forms
    behind the Russian border: Karelian (karjala), Olonetsian (aunus),
    Lydian (lyydi) and Vepsian (Veps�). These three speech forms are
    essentially part of the eastern Finnish dialect continuum with an
    increasingly strong Russian superstratum the further east one goes.
    Twice in this century, specifically during the Finnish Civil War
    1918-1920 and then again during the so-called Continuation War
    (1941-1944), certain nationalist circles in Finland have aspired to
    join these areas of Karelia to Finland.

    Finnish military rule in White Sea Karelia during the Continuation
    War meant the erection of concentration camps, and the internment
    and eventual death of many Russians, communists, and other
    "undesirables", a large number of them children. It also meant the
    establishment of a school system teaching in local speech forms and
    a serious effort to make the inhabitants literate in their local
    "dialects" as a first step towards making them Finnish. The story,
    although not without its positive aspects, is not one that official
    Finland is particularly proud of.



 4.2.6 Culture

  Finnish culture could be characterized as a mixture of Swedish and
  Finnish elements, with a touch of Russian influence especially in the
  eastern provinces. Mikael Agricola (1510-57) established Finnish as a
  written language. The national epic Kalevala, collected from Karelian
  oral poetry by the scholar Elias L�nnrot, has had enormous effect on
  the forming of the Finnish culture in the last century, as did the
  poetry of Johan Ludvig Runeberg (1804-72) and the drama of the author
  Aleksis Kivi (1834-72). The scholar H. G. Porthan (1739-1804) awakened
  the public interest in Finnish mythology and folk poetry, and laid a
  firm basis to humanist sciences. Tove Jansson (1914--) has won
  popularity with her books about the Moomins.

  Music has had a special place in Finnish culture, the best known and
  loved composer being of course Jean Sibelius (1865-1957); others
  include Fredrik Pacius (1809-91), Oskar Merikanto (1868-1924), and
  Aarre Merikanto (1893-1958), Leevi Madetoja (1887-1947), and Uuno
  Klami (1900-61). Aulis Sallinen, Joonas Kokkonen and Magnus Lindberg
  are major contemporary composers. Hundreds of music festivals draw
  large crowds in the summer; among the best known are Kaustinen Folk
  Festival, Savonlinna Opera Festival which is held in a medieval
  castle, and Ruisrock in Turku.

  Finnish architecture has won international fame; it is represented by
  people such as Eliel Saarinen (and his son Eero Saarinen, who worked
  chiefly in North America) Wivi L�nn (1872-1966), and Lars Sonck
  (1870-1956) who were pioneers of the national romantic style.
  Neoclassicism was introduced by J. S. Siren (1889-1961), and
  functionalism by Alvar Aalto (1898-1976). Aalto is also well known as
  an urban planner, interior designer, and industrial and furniture
  designer. Reima and Raili Pietil� are contemporary architects well
  known for their unconventional, expressionistic style.

  Among painters, Albert Edelfelt (1854-1905) and Akseli Gallen-Kallela
  (1865-1931) are the best known representatives of the golden era of
  Finnish painting; their styles were naturalism, realism, and
  symbolism, the themes often being taken from Finnish history or
  mythology. Helene Schjerbeck (1862-1946) was a leader in the break
  with realism, Hugo Simberg (1873-1917) was one of the foremost
  symbolists, and Tyko Sallinen (1879-1955) was one of the first
  expressionists.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq423.html ]



 4.2.7 Government

  The Finnish constitution was adopted in 1919. Finland is a republic,
  headed by a president elected for a 6-year term. The president is
  chosen by the general electorate (all citizens over 18). Supreme
  executive power is vested in the president, who heads the country's
  foreign policy. Legislative power is shared by the president and the
  one-chamber parliament of 200 members. The government which is headed
  by a prime minister, is responsible for the country's general
  administration. Judicial power is vested in independent courts of
  justice. Finland has had an ombudsman (oikeusasiamies), an impartial
  public officer whose duty is to handle public complaints against
  actions of the government, since 1919.

  The constitution of Finland guarantees a freedom of religion, but the
  Evangelical Lutheran church is an official state church to which 84 %
  of the population belongs to. The Orthodox church is also a state
  church, 1.1 % of Finns are members (mainly in the east); those with no
  religious affiliation constitute 12 % of the population.

  See section 4.4 for more information about the current parliament,
  cabinet and political parties. The virtual Embassy by the Finnish
  Ministry for Foreign Affairs publishes on the web among a lot of
  interesting documents also weekly newsletter on arts and sports.



 4.2.8 The School system

  Parents choose between placing their children in the Finnish-language
  or the Swedish-language school. Education on either of the languages
  is provided on all levels.

  The compulsory education (Fi: peruskoulu, Sw: grundskolan) starts when
  the child is 6 or 7 years old. The 9-year schooling is normally
  completed when the pupil is 15 or 16.

  High schools (Fi: lukio, Sw: gymnasium) are either academically or
  vocationally oriented, with roughly half of the students attending
  university-preparatory study programs, culminating with high school
  diploma (Fi: ylioppilastutkinto, Sw: studentexamen) after rigorous
  examination where grades are given on basis of the student's
  achievement in relation to the nationwide graduating class. The more
  vocationally oriented high schools (Fi: ammattikoulu, Sw: yrkesskola)
  train their students in things such as auto mechanics, hairdressing,
  etcetera.

  Virtually all students attend public schools. Some private and
  semi-private schools exist, in many cases offering education based on
  a specific education philosophy or religious affiliation.

   �land

  The teaching language in all schools in �land is Swedish. The
  nine-year comprehensive school, for which the local districts are
  responsible, provides a general basic education. The English language
  is a compulsory subject at comprehensive school, while the Finnish
  language is optional. Pupils completing their schooling there may sit
  for either the Finnish State Matriculation Examination, or else the
  special �land Leaving Examination in which Finnish is not a compulsory
  subject.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq428.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 4.3 History



 4.3.1 A chronology of important dates

  (A brief chronicle is to find in the section 4.3.3.)
  (for the period 1155-1809, see also the Swedish history section)

  1155
         The First Crusade to Finland, launched by Swedes and led by the
         English bishop Henry and the Swedish king Erik (later canonized
         and made Sweden's patron saint, St.Erik, and Finland's patron
         saint, St.Henry, respectively ).
  1156
         According to the legend, bishop Henry is murdered by the
         peasant Lalli on the frozen surface of lake K�yli�.
  1229
         The bishop's seat is moved from Nousiainen to Koroinen in the
         vicinity of modern Turku; the year is considered to be the
         founding year of Turku, which becomes the capital of the
         eastern half of the kingdom.
  1249
         After a pagan uprising, the Second Crusade to Tavastia (a
         province of western/central Finland) is launched by Birger Jarl
         and the pagans are defeated.
  1293
         The Third Crusade by Sweden's marsk Torgils Knutsson to
         Karelia, a province of eastern Finland, establishes the
         borderline between Catholic West and Orthodox East for the
         centuries to come. The castle and town of Viipuri/Viborg are
         founded to defend the border.
  1323
         The peace of N�teburg (P�hkin�saari) between Sweden and Russia.
         Finland's eastern border is defined for the first time.
  1350
         The first Swedish national law replaced the local provincial
         laws.
  1362
         Finns receive the right to participate in the election of the
         king.
  1387/97-1523
         The era of the Kalmar Union, with Finland, Sweden, Denmark
         Norway and Iceland united as a single kingdom.
  1495-97
         War against Russia. During a siege of Viipuri, just as the
         Russians are about to get over the city walls, St. Andrew's
         cross appears in the sky and the frightened Russians flee from
         battle. In reality, what happened was probably the exploding of
         a gunpowder tower.
  1527
         Reformation. Finland becomes Lutheran with the rest of Sweden.
  1550
         Helsinki founded by Gustav Vasa, but remains little more than a
         fishing village for more than two centuries.
  1551
         Mikael Agricola, a bishop of Turku, publishes his translation
         of the New Testament in Finnish.
  1595
         The peace of T�yssin� (Teusina); Finland's borders are moved
         further east and north.
  1596-97
         The Cudgel War.
  1617
         Karelia joined into Finland in the peace treaty of Stolbova
         ending a hundred years of almost continuous wars with Russia.
  1630-48
         Finns fight in the Thirty Years' War in the continent. The
         Finnish cavalry, known as hakkapeliittas, spreads fear among
         the Catholic troops who're used to more orderly warfare.
  1637-40 and 1648-54
         Count Per Brahe as the general governor of Finland. Many and
         important reforms are made, towns are founded, etc. His period
         is generally considered very beneficial to the development of
         Finland.
  1640
         Finland's first university founded in Turku.
  1642
         The whole Bible is finally published on Finnish.
  1714-21
         Russia occupies Finland during the Great Northern War. The
         period of the so called "Great Wrath".
  1721
         The peace of Uusikaupunki gives Karelia to Russia.
  1741-43
         The "War of the Hats". Adventurous politics by the "Hat" party
         leads to a new disastrous war with Russia and a new occupation
         of Finland, known as "The Lesser Wrath", which ends in the
         peace treaty of Turku in 1743.
  1757
         Storskifte, first reform of Swedish farming decided.
  1766
         The liberty of Press and "Offentlighetsprincipen" was declared
         as constitution.
  1808-09
         "The War of Finland". Russia attacks Finland in Feb. 1808
         without a declaration of war; Finnish troops retreat all the
         way to Oulu, which forces Russians to leave a large part of
         their army as occupation forces, giving the Swedish general
         Klingspor superiority in force. A reconquest starts in June and
         Klingspor receives several victories; however, the baffling
         surrender of the mighty Sveaborg / Suomenlinna fortress on May
         3rd and the fresh Russian troops received in autumn of 1808
         force the Swedish-Finnish troops to retreat all the way to
         H�rn�sand in Sweden. Once again Russia occupies Finland.
  1809
         In the diet of Porvoo, while the war still goes on, the Finnish
         estates swear an oath of loyalty to Emperor Alexander I, who
         grants Finland a status of an autonomous Grand Duchy, retaining
         its old constitution and religion. A few months later the peace
         treaty of Hamina (Fredrikshamn) is signed and Finland becomes
         under Russian rule.
  1812
         Helsinki, being closer to Russia than the Swedish-oriented
         Turku, is made the new capital. Karelia is joined to the Grand
         Duchy as an act of goodwill.
  1809-99
         Finland prospers under the extensive autonomy and more liberal
         conditions than in the rest of Russian Empire. National
         identity and nationalism awakens.
  1827
         The great fire of Turku destroys most of the former capital.
         The university is moved to Helsinki.
  1835
         The first publication of the Kalevala, the Finnish national
         epic. It was collected by Elias L�nnrot from traditional
         Karelian oral poetry, and became the most important source of
         inspiration to Finnish nationalists when it appeared in its
         final form in 1849.
  1862
         The first railway, between Helsinki and H�meenlinna.
  1866
         Finnish becomes, alongside with Swedish and Russian, an
         official language.
  1899
         Russia starts a Russification policy of Finland with the so
         called "February manifesto". After the initial shock and
         disbelief, a well-organized passive resistance follows.
  1904
         The dictatorical general governor and active adherent of
         Russification of Finland, Nikolai Bobrikov, is assassinated by
         the young clerk Eugen Schauman.
  1906
         Finnish women receive the right to vote and to run for
         parliament. Finland was the first country in Europe (and second
         in the world, after New Zealand) to grant women an equal right
         to vote in elections. The Finnish diet, which up until now had
         been a system of four estates (nobility, clergy, merchantry,
         peasantry), becomes a unicameral parliament and a universal
         suffrage is declared.
  1917
         As Russia plunges into the chaos of the October Revolution,
         Finland seizes the opportunity and declares independence on the
         6th of December.
  1918
         A civil war erupts between "whites" and "reds", and ends in
         "white" victory under the commander . Even though the war is
         relatively brief, the casualties rise high because of "red" and
         "white" terror, poor conditions at prison camps and random
         executions of prisoners. The war leaves bitter marks on the
         nation, which are eventually healed in the Winter War of
         1939-40, when both sides have to unite forces against a common
         enemy.
         The civil war increases scepticism towards the effeciency of
         democratic institutions, and monarchists in the parliament
         succeed (chiefly because the Social Democrats had not been
         allowed to partake in the parliament) in turning Finland into a
         monarchy, and the German prince Friedrich Karl of Hesse is
         invited to become King of Finland. However, as Germany soon
         lost the World War I, Friedrich who had delayed answering to
         the invitiation refused the crown so Finland never officially
         had a king; as a result monarchism in general suffered an
         inflation. In 1919 Finland gets a republican constitution, with
         a strong position for the president as a concession to the
         monarchists.
  1920s-30s
         Finland prospers after the war and adopts a neutral Nordic
         profile in its foreign policy, although with strong German
         sympathies. In early 1930's fascism in the Italian fashion
         emerges and the so called Lapua-movement attempts a coup d'etat
         in 1932, but fails and is banned (ironically, using the laws
         the movement was itself most eager to push into force). The IKL
         ("Patriotic Movement"), an extreme right party, is formed to
         continue the legacy of Lapua-movement, but it never gains
         significant support and Finnish fascism remains a fringe
         phenomenon.
  1939-40
         Soviet Union attacks Finland. Fierce Finnish resistance
         surprises the overwhelming but poorly prepared Soviet troops
         and the Winter War lasts for roughly three and a half months,
         causing heavy casualties on the Soviet side. Eventually Finland
         has to give in and cede Karelia to the USSR, causing some
         400,000 people to lose their homes.
  1941-44
         The Continuation War; Finland attacks the Soviet Union with
         Germany, hoping to regain the lost areas, but eventually has to
         accept the borders of 1940 and, and also cede Pechenga, lease
         Porkkala peninsula as a military base for 50 years (SU returns
         it already in 1956) and pay war reparations.
  1944-45
         The War of Lapland. As a part of the peace treaty, Finland has
         to force all German troops to leave Finland. Germans put up a
         fight and burn much of Finnish Lapland as they retreat.
  1947
         Paris peace treaty. Finland assumes a policy of careful
         neutrality (e.g declining to receive Marshall aid) and
         realpolitik, taking into account Finland's geographical
         location next to the USSR. This policy becomes known as the
         Paasikivi-Kekkonen line.
  1944-48
         So called "Years of Danger" ("vaaran vuodet") when a communist
         takeover was hanging in the air. Some leading Finnish
         communists proclaimed that the "Czechoslovakian model" was to
         be Finland's future as well. This ends in the signing of the
         Treaty of Friendship, Co-operation and Mutual Assistance ("YYA"
         is the Finnish acronym) with the Soviet Union in 1948. In it,
         Finland among other things commits itself to defend its
         territory against Germany or any other country allied with
         Germany that might use Finland as a way to attack Soviet Union.
         The treaty guarantees Finland's sovereignty in the years to
         follow, but places Finland in between the two blocs of the Cold
         War, trying hard to please both sides.
  1950's-80's
         "Finlandization" era. Finland remains an independent western
         European democracy, but falls into exaggerations in keeping the
         eastern neighbour pleased. On the other hand, the bilateral
         trade arrangements with the Soviet Union are very beneficial to
         Finnish economy, which make possible the emergence of Finland
         as a rich welfare state.
  1952
         The Olympic Games held in Helsinki.
  1955
         Finland joins the United Nations and the Nordic Council.
  1960's-70's
         A time of intensive urbanization, Finland turns from a
         predominantly agrarian state into an urban one almost
         "overnight". This results in severe unemployment, and large
         numbers of Finns emigrate to Sweden in search of jobs.
  1973
         Finland signs a free trade treaty with the EEC (a precedent of
         the European Union), but remains outside the community.
  1975
         The first CSCE conference in held in Helsinki. The "spirit of
         Helsinki" becomes to epitomize the process of detente between
         East and West after the Cold War era.
  1987
         Finland becomes a full member of EFTA (European Free Trade
         Association). A special FINEFTA customs treaty had been in
         effect already since 1961.
  1989
         Finland becomes a member of the European Council.
  1994
         On 16th of October Finns voted YES (57% vs. 43% NO) to
         membership in the European Union; the parliament ratified the
         result after a long filibustering campaign by the NO-side.
  1995
         As of January 1st, Finland became a full member in the EU.

 4.3.2 Grand Dukes and presidents of Finland
         For a list of kings and queens of Sweden-Finland, see Part 7 of
         the FAQ, section 7.3.1.

Grand Dukes of the Grand Duchy of Finland
=========================================

Alexander I                     (1809-25)
Nicholas I                      (1825-55)
Alexander II                    (1855-81)
Alexander III                   (1881-94)
Nicholas II                     (1894-1917)


Regents of the period of Civil War
==================================

Pehr Evind Svinhufvud           (1918)
Carl Gustav Emil Mannerheim     (1918-19)


Presidents of the republic of Finland
=====================================

Kaarlo Juho St�hlberg           (1919-25)
Lauri Kristian Relander         (1925-31)
Pehr Evind Svinhufvud           (1931-37)
Ky�sti Kallio                   (1937-40)
Risto Heikki Ryti               (1940-44)
Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim     (1944-46)
Juho Kusti Paasikivi            (1946-56)
Urho Kaleva Kekkonen            (1956-81)
Mauno Henrik Koivisto           (1982-94)
Martti Oiva Kalevi Ahtisaari    (1994-  )


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq43.html ]


 4.3.3 Viking times and before that
         Finland as an entity did hardly exist before the 14th century.
         The ancestors of nowaday Finns consisted different tribes like
         Karelians, Tavastians and Finns. At that time, only the most
         South-Western part of the country was known as "Finland" and
         its inhabitants as Finns. These names came to be used of the
         entire country and the population at the beginning of the
         modern era. In the middle ages, the whole Finland was commonly
         called �sterlandet. (The South-Western part is now called as
         Finland proper, Varsinais-Suomi, and its inhabitants as Proper
         Finns.) ,
         Speakers of an early form of Finnish (of Finno-Ugric languages
         in any case) are believed to have lived in Finland for 6.000
         years. Earlier settlers are of unknown descent. This was also
         the time when Finnish and Hungarian lost contact with each
         other. Archaeological finds of wood objects (as runners - jalas
         /medar) made of pine from east of the Ural mountains indicate
         how these people must have belonged to a hunting culture moving
         over very wide areas.
         Historical linguists believe that a major portion of Germanic
         loan words were injected into the Finnish vocabulary
         approximately 500 B.C. Before this, the S�mis and the Finns had
         split to constitute separate cultures.
         The S�mis and Finns probably split into distinct cultures
         already 6,000 years ago, when the Baltic Indo-European
         immigrants settled the coast and merged into the native
         Comb-Ceramic culture. Thus the coast became a separate
         ("Finnish") cultural zone with elements of both cultures,
         whereas the hunter-gatherers of the inland continued the
         traditional lifestyle and seem to have developed to the S�mi
         culture.
         4,500 years ago animal husbandry was introduced by Baltic
         immigrants. (The first agriculture in Finland may also have
         been introduced by them, although no definite proof exists as
         of yet.)
         2,000 years ago the southern and western coasts were inhabited
         by people in close cultural contact with Scandinavia. The
         inland kept the contacts to the east. The similarity of the
         coastal bronze culture with that of Scandinavia is easily
         explained with cultural diffusion; there are no evidence of a
         conquest, and though much is similar, there are notable
         differences too. The continuity of culture from the neolithic
         (Kiukainen culture) is best shown in ceramics and stone tools,
         as well as some aspects of burial.
         During the "Roman Iron Age" (A.D. 1-400) evidences are
         convincing for a Baltic sea-farer culture connecting estuaries
         at Elbe (west for Jutland) and Vistula (at Gdansk) with
         Finland, Estonia and Sweden. People began to bury deceased in
         rich graveyards. The culture spread inland to Tavastia and
         Ostrobothnia. Fur trading peaked, wealth increased and maybe a
         new surge of immigrants arrived. In any case: �land was
         colonized by Germanics from Sweden and has remained
         (culturally) Swedish ever since. The �land population stood in
         close contact with the people along the Finnish coast from
         Ostrobothnia in north to Hanko in east.
         Later during the first millennium the West-Finnish culture
         spread to Karelia, around Lake Ladoga, where an independent
         culture arose.
         At Viking age three distinct Finnish cultures can be
         identified: In Karelia, in Tavastia and in Varsinais-Suomi
         ("Finland proper" i.e. later Turku fief). In these three
         provinces there is believed to have existed regents or
         governors comparable to those among Germanic tribes; leading
         cult, big game hunting, defense and military expeditions. Finns
         are not believed to have launched Viking raids outside the
         Baltic. But nothing certain is known.
         Southern Ostrobothnia was inhabited by people in close contact
         with the Scandinavians. The culture of Southern Ostrobothnia
         certainly had strong Scandinavian flavor, but there are no
         graves of Swedish types such as one finds on �land, nor has
         Swedish ceramics been found. It's rather obvious that the
         "Scandinavization" of Southern Ostrobothnia in the migration
         period is due to trade contacts - the inhabitants were Finns
         (possibly the Kv�ns mentioned in the sagas). The area becomes
         depopulated by 800 A.D., probably because of changes in trade
         routes (the eastern trade being now conducted through the Gulf
         of Finland).
         The northern shores of the Gulf of Finland were for unknown
         reasons uninhabited - at least no archaeological traces have
         been found. The Vikings did not like to lose the sight of land
         while sailing, and used to camp each night, why one must assume
         that the Gulf's shores were (at least) free from enemies of the
         Vikings.
         The Vikings are known for their assimilation in the cultures
         along their trading routes. It's probable that Vikings settled
         also at Finnish shores and estuaries, married Finns, learned
         the language, and got Finnish children who after a few
         generations had no affiliation what-so-ever with their
         outlandish heritage.
         Particularly in Karelia it is known (or sooner: believed) to
         have existed Viking trading posts, which became assimilated or
         alienated to the original Viking culture in Novgorod, Uppland,
         Gotland or wherever they had come from. The town of Staraja
         Ladoga was a Viking stronghold, for instance. A Viking type
         (but Tavastian) trade station has in recent years been
         excavated in the heart of Tavastia, in Varikkoniemi.
         Finland's trade with the Vikings have left evidences as rich
         findings of Arabic silver coins, indicating Finland to have
         prospered as much as Scandinavia from the eastern trade.
         Linguistic similarities suggest that Gotland is the Germanic
         province which have been the greatest contributor to Swedish
         settlements in Finland, and Gotland is also the province were
         two thirds of Sweden's Viking time coins have been found; but
         no written sources support this theory. (Except for the
         Visby-bishops' great interest in supporting the Finnish
         colleagues against pagans and Russians in the 12th and 13th
         century.)
         In early medieval time the eastern Christian Church extended
         its influence to Novgorod, Karelia and Tavastia. The energetic
         bishop Thomas (1220-45) extended the Finnish Catholic diocese
         to Tavastia, probably with armed assistance in the 1230s from
         the German Brethren of the Sword. His death was followed by a
         pagan rebellion in Tavastia.
         With Earl Birger (Birger Jarl), Sweden's virtual leader
         1248-66, the Tavastian rebellion was defeated, the Finnish
         bishopric was put under Sweden, and the German presence in
         Finland limited to Hanseatic merchants. A strong castle was
         built in Tavastia; And Uusimaa /Nyland along the Gulf of
         Finland was colonized by Swedish "crusaders".
         At the end of the 13th century the Catholic Church's control in
         the Baltic sea region had increased, as Danes and Germans
         occupied the Baltic countries and Swedish magnates extended the
         Swedish realm along the Gulf of Finland to Viipuri /Viborg.
         The Finns are sometimes pictured as weak victims of foreign
         coercion. This is not entirely true. The Finns were expanding
         tribes who extended their areas continuously by clearing of
         woods, and sometimes by colonization of rich soil far away, as
         in Karelia and along the Kemi and Tornio rivers. These areas
         weren't uninhabited, but in fact belonged to the S�mi, whom the
         Finns (pirkkalaiset /birkarlar) taxed most brutally.
         Finns were successful in colonizing the inland (inland rivers,
         inland sea shores and inland woods), but maybe less interested
         in long journeys in big boats. Is it a coincidence that Finns
         still today are less of flock followers than our neighbor
         Germanics?

 4.3.4 Finland in the Swedish realm
         [ see also the sections 7.3.3 - 7.3.5 in the Swedish part of
         the faq. ]
         During early medieval time fief after fief in Finland came to
         be governed by Swedish magnates. First around Turku /�bo, then
         farther and farther into the country. The peasantry seems to
         have had a judicial organization with "Things" similar to that
         in the rest of Norden. It is unclear if the Thing also had
         pre-Christian religious functions.
         Sweden's colonization of Finland is often connected to "the
         First Crusade" (1155) led by the English bishop Henry and the
         Swedish king Erik. By this time Finland was, however, already
         mostly Christian so the real motivations of the "crusade" are
         obscure. SW Finland appears to have been allied with central
         Sweden already in the Viking age, so it has been hypothesized
         that the campaign was a punitive expedition against an ally
         that had become unreliable, perhaps because of the influence of
         Greek Orthodox missionaries. It's also disputed if the First
         Crusade really was a historical event. In due time, Finland
         becomes an integral part of the kingdom of Sweden.
         Year 1323 Finland's border is for the first time fixed in the
         peace in P�hkin�saari at lake Ladoga. The Swedish government
         supported the Church, and tithes were enforced. On February
         15th, 1362, the provinces in Finland can be said to have been
         officially acknowledged as equal parts of the realm under
         Swedish crown as the national law now was enforced in all parts
         of the realm, and Finland was represented at the election of
         king. (King H�kon of Norway was elected king also of Sweden.)
         During the following Kalmar Union, Finland plays a rather
         independent role. Viipuri fief became increasingly important as
         the Muscovite realm expanded. The clergy, including the
         bishops, has Finnish names and the magnates with estates in
         southern Finland come to play a strong part in the power-play
         between the Danish Union-king and the Swedish State Council.
         The most important positions - such as those of governors -
         were often held by men from the highest nobility, with its
         roots and base in Svealand (or G�taland).
         After Novgorod had been conquered by Moscow 1471 the situation
         became worse with skirmishes, sieges and small wars.
         At Gustav Vasa's rebellion in Svealand it was unclear whether
         the provinces in Finland would remain in the Union or not. The
         Union-king's connection with Moscow was probably the crucial
         reason to why the nobility in Finland took Gustav Vasa's side.
         All of the 16th century was marked by continuous conflicts with
         Moscow. But Finland thereby also became a prioritized part of
         the realm. The Vasa princes were taught Finnish, prince Johan
         was given an enlarged Turku fief as duchy, and the Finnish
         nobility made careers in the civil service - and in the wars
         with Russia. Viipuri was established as Finland's second
         bishopric beside Turku.
         In the national conflicts and civil wars the Finnish nobility
         supported the legal kings (Erik XIV & Sigismund), and not the
         opponents duke Johan & duke Karl, with the consequence that
         many lost their lands and/or their heads when duke Karl had
         become king Karl IX.
         The civil war between duke Karl and king Sigismund led to a
         peasant rebellion in central Finland, the so called Cudgel War.
         Manipulated by the usurper duke Karl, Finnish peasantry
         uprises, prompted by the worsened living conditions. After
         short-lived success, the poorly armed peasants are brutally
         defeated by the troops of Klaus Fleming, a Finnish aristocrat,
         regent of Finland and the commander-in-chief (riksmarsk) for
         Sweden, who opted for an extended union with Poland and
         Livonia.
         During the 17th century the nobility in Finland accepts the
         succeeding Swedish king Gustav II Adolf. Karelia (Kexholm's
         l�n) is now incorporated as another Finnish province. The
         followers of Russian Orthodox faith in the occupied Karelia and
         Ingria are persecuted, and many flee to the Russian side of the
         border. After that (during internal turbulence in Russia),
         peace is to prevail at Finland's borders until year 1700.
         The 17th century is therefore remembered as a good time for
         Finland. 1637-54 count Per Brahe worked as governor for the
         Finnish provinces taking initiative to many important
         improvements and reliefs for the war-pestered land, and Finnish
         troops became feared in the 30 Years' War. Lots of new baronies
         were granted in reward (to be retracted anew in 1680).
         But the 17th century was also the era when Sweden directed its
         interest to the south. Gotland and the Scanian provinces were
         conquered, as were also large areas on the European continent.
         1696-98 the crops failed and the population was reduced by a
         third. Then followed Karl XII's failed war with Russian
         occupation, much suffering and loss of southern Karelia with
         Viipuri and the Karelian isthmus. At the Gulf of Finland, in
         the conquered Ingria, a new town was founded and made capital
         for all of Russia - St. Petersburg.
         The 18th century meant both repeated wars with Russia and a
         marked increase of population. Politicians from Finland often
         played a leading role during the Parliamentarian times:
         + Count Arvid Horn is chancellor 1721-38;
         + In the end of the century, Gustav Mauritz Armfelt from
           Halikko became the leading councillor at Gustav III - and
           then later the Russian emperor's chief-councillor for Finnish
           affairs;
         + The campaign for freedom of press (and
           "offentlighetsprincipen") in the Swedish realm was for
           instance led by the Finnish priest Anders Chydenius.
         [ Anders Chydenius is also dedicated a www-server at
         <http://www.chyden.net/> honoring his publication National
         Profit & Loss from the year 1765. This book is a perfect
         example of how "new" ideas often get discovered independently
         by several persons at the same time. Adam Smith did not read
         Swedish, and could not know of Chydenius' work as he eleven
         years later wrote The Wealth of Nations with by and large the
         same content. ]
         The Finnish language, which had been neglected during the 17th
         century, now begins to gain ground (very slowly!) in the
         "official" sphere. The parliament grants tax reliefs to the
         Finnish provinces pestered by the wars with Russia.
         The opinion among the educated classes in Finland shifts slowly
         toward a pro-Russian stand, which ultimately results in
         distrust for the kings Gustav III and Gustav IV Adolf. The
         upper class is mentally well prepared for an annexion to Russia
         at the Russian attack in February 1809. However, the peasantry
         is not, and the distrust between the commoners and the masters
         aggravates.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq433.html ]


 4.3.5 Finland as a Russian Grand Duchy
         The time as a Grand-Duchy under the Russian Emperor is
         generally regarded as very good times for Finland.
         Finland enjoys an economic autonomy, the taxes from Finland are
         spent in Finland. Finland gets a National Bank of its own, a
         currency of its own, and a customs service of its own.
         Finland also gets a Civil Service of its own, and in all
         aspects a more independent position then she had had as one of
         many parts in the Swedish realm. (The position of Finland in
         the Swedish realm is sometimes compared to the present-day
         position of Norrland.)
         The Russian interest to draw Finland apart from Sweden, and to
         thereby make a re-conquest less likely, led to reforms which
         gradually promoted the use of Finnish language -  explicit
         expressions of nationalism were repressed, however.
         Between 1863 and 1902, the status of the Finnish language in
         the Civil Service was gradually equalized with that of the
         Swedish language.
         The 19th century was also the time when scholars and scientists
         in Finland began to be identified as Finns (and not Swedes) by
         the surrounding world. For the self-esteem of the Finns it was
         of particular importance that prominent scientists (such as for
         instance family of geologists Nordenski�ld and the family of
         zoologists von Wright of which Magnus von Wright, became famous
         for his outstanding zoological paintings) were working at the
         University of Helsinki.
         From year 1869, the Parliament was to be regularly summoned
         every fifth year, although briefly 1899-1905 the Parliament was
         given a subordinate role in the legislative process as a step
         in the Russian policy of tying Finland closer to Russia. Until
         Russia's defeat by Japan in 1905 the situation in Finland
         remains very tense. Then the decree from 1899 is revoked, and
         common suffrage, equal for all men and women, is enacted in
         1906.
         The Social Democrats get a strong, bordering to very strong,
         position in the Parliament, but the Left loses its confidence
         in democracy as discussions and compromises with Liberals
         and/or Conservatives turn out to give very poor results.
         Furthermore: the Russian representative uses his power to close
         the Parliament to hinder radical reforms.
         At the end of the first World War, the educated classes in
         Finland were (like those in Sweden) heavily oriented towards
         Germany. During the war, a number of Finnish men (mainly young
         and mainly of the educated classes, with pro-German and
         right-wing views) have secretly fled to Germany to receive
         military education, training and experience.

 4.3.6 The independence of Finland
         As the political situation in Russia gets increasingly chaotic
         after the revolutions in 1917, Finland prepares for liberation.
         ...or sooner: the Conservative farmers and the educated class
         prepare for Independence. The agrarian and urban proletarians,
         inspired by the October Revolution in Russia, instead prepare
         for a World Revolution. Strikes, riots and shootouts occur in
         several cities and towns; as well as some widely-publicized
         murders.
         The former organized so-called Security Corps - the latter Red
         Militia.
         As Finland's parliament declares Finland a sovereign state on
         December 6th 1917, the "Security Corps" claim status as the
         national army, and the polarity between the Corps and the Red
         Militia aggravates further.
         (The �land Islands try to become independent too - from
         Finland! - but fail to achieve this.)
         According to a revoked law from 1878, a compulsory military
         service is introduced, and the remaining Russian troops are
         required to leave. As they don't, they are disarmed by the
         National Army. This triggers the mobilization of the Red
         Militias of southern Finland against the "White" government at
         the end of January 1918.
         The Civil War lasts only three months, but is both bitter and
         bloody. Initially, southern Finland (with a majority of the
         country's population and its major urban centers) is controlled
         by the Red Militias, while the White government controls the
         predominantly agrarian northern and central provinces.
         Eventually, the White side defeats the Red, aided by
         volunteering officers from Sweden (8,000 man) and Norway
         (700 man), Finnish officers from the Czar's army, the Finnish
         officers educated in Germany and additionally also military
         support from Germany. Some 30,000 people (out of 3 mill.
         population) die as a result of the war; when the Red fronts
         collapse at end of April, the Militia leaders go underground or
         flee to Russia; tens of thousands of rank-and-file surrendered
         militia troops, male and female, are placed in prison camps.
         Several thousands are executed. At end of May 1918, General
         Mannerheim receives the White victory parade in Helsinki.
         The Civil War is followed by enhanced orientation toward
         Germany, and a German prince is proposed to become king of
         Finland. As Germany loses the World War, this alternative
         becomes politically unrealistic.

 4.3.7 Wars with the Soviet Union

This section is not yet written


But, hei!

Angela writes:

> I need to know for school why that a high percentage
> of Jewish people survived in Finland.

Hiski Haapoja replies:
  Because the Finnish government didn't give in to German demands to
         deport them. The only known case is 8 Central European
         refugees, one of whom survived.

 4.3.8 Finland after the wars

This section is not yet written


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq435.html ]





------------------------------

Subject: 4.4 The Finnish parliament, government and political parties

&ltby Jorma Kypp�, Hiski Haapoja et al>

         + Official governmental information is available in English at
           <http://virtual.finland.fi/nr/noframes_eng.html> (foreign
           ministry press pages).
         + Finland's Constitution and other Laws with constitutional
           status are available in English at
           <http://www.uni-wuerzburg.de/law/fi__indx.html>.

 4.4.1 The political parties
         The Centre (Keskusta, abbr. Kesk) was called Agrarian League
         until 1965 and still derives its main support from rural areas
         covering most of Finland. Not nearly all the voters have
         anything to do with farming, but loyalty to the Centre is
         almost a family value in the provinces, particularly the two
         northern ones (Oulu and Lapland). The higher voting percentage
         of the rural areas is an additional asset. The party has a
         strong anti-EU wing, which has close ties with Vapaan Suomen
         Liitto (Union of Free Finland), whose sole issue is to
         terminate the EU membership. Esko Aho has been chairman of the
         Centre since 1990 and Prime Minister since 1991. Other main
         politicians include the controversial Paavo V�yrynen, Seppo
         K��ri�inen, Olli Rehn, Tytti Isohookana-Asunmaa, Anneli
         J��tteenm�ki. The chairman of VSL is the noted troublemaker
         Ilkka Hakalehto.
         The Social Democrats (SDP) are strongest in Southern industrial
         towns, also sharing much of the middle-class and public
         employee vote. Party chairman Paavo Lipponen is the new Prime
         Minister. Other notable names: Arja Alho, Erkki Tuomioja,
         Pertti Paasio, Ulf Sundqvist, Antti Kalliom�ki, Lasse Lehtinen,
         Kalevi Sorsa. President Martti Ahtisaari, EU commissioner Erkki
         Liikanen and many trade union figures come from SDP.
         The National Coalition (Kokoomus, abbr. Kok), or Conservatives,
         presents itself as the party of entrepreneurs and patriots,
         winning 90 per cent shares of vote in army bases. Helsinki and
         the other main cities are National Coalition strongholds. While
         most of rural Finland is dominated by the green of the Centre,
         Eastern H�me is blue for some reason. Chairman Sauli Niinist�
         and his minions (Pertti Salolainen, Pekka Kivel�, Ilkka
         Suominen, Harri Holkeri) are currently worried about a new
         rival, Nuorsuomalaiset (Young Finns - the name harks back to
         the days of the Tsar), which appears as a more modern, "cool"
         urban alternative. Risto E. J. Penttil� is the champion of the
         Young Finns, while the image of the National Coalition is
         burdened by the ruthless know-it-all Minister of Finance, Iiro
         Viinanen. Riitta Uosukainen is the first-ever Chairwoman of the
         Parliament.
         The Left-wing Alliance (Vasemmistoliitto, abbr. Vas) is a 1990
         attempt to gather together the quarreling Communist movement.
         Some splits are still visible both inside and outside of the
         party. Much stronger in the North than in the South, the party
         gets most of its votes from industrial workers. The eternal
         struggle with SDP over trade unions goes on and on. The
         chairman is Claes Andersson, psychiatrist and novelist.
         The correct translation of Svenska Folkpartiet is not obvious.
         In this article "Swedish People's Party" is used, however this
         is far from a perfect translation:
         "Folkpartiet" means "People's party" and denotes in Finland
         like in Scandinavia parties of Liberal, non-Socialist,
         character. "Svenska" means that the party intends to represent
         the fraction of Finland's citizens with Swedish mother-tongue.
         This they do quite well as the Swedish speakers are less than
         6% of Finland's population.
         The Swedish People's Party (SFP in Swedish, RKP in Finnish)
         unites the Swedish-speaking minority of the Southern and
         Ostrobothnian coasts, from leftist intellectuals through
         farmers and fishermen to nobility. The language issue gives SFP
         the stablest electorate of any Finnish party. It manages to
         worm its way to most Finnish governments, thus having influence
         far greater than its size. One of the 12 mandates is the
         representative of �land Islands, Gunnar Jansson, who
         technically is not a member of the party as the islands have a
         political system of their own.
         The Greens first entered the Parliament in 1983. Their main
         concern is the environment (attitudes ranging from moderate to
         fanatical) but many counter-culture youths and citizens' rights
         activists feel home here as well. Paradoxically, the nature
         party thrives mainly in the big cities (the "Neon Greens") as
         well as in the Universities.
         The Christian League (founded in 1958) owes most of its seats
         to skillful electoral alliances which give the party benefit
         from votes originally given to other parties. Many of its faces
         represent Revivalist movements rather than mainstream
         Lutheranism. The chairman is Toimi Kankaanniemi.
         SMP, The Finnish Rural Party, (although changing the meaning of
         the letters is continually proposed) originated in 1959 as a
         rebellious (anti-Kekkonen) fraction of the Agrarian League. The
         party's electoral success has been very variable and despite
         government participation during the 1980s it never achieved, or
         much sought for, respectability, preferring to fish the
         populist vote with anti-refugee statements. The current state
         of SMP is chaotic, but it has happened before and SMP has risen
         like a phoenix from the ashes.
         The Liberal Party lost its only MP, the party's chairwoman
         Tuulikki Ukkola, in the elections. LKP has a history of power
         despite its small size, but is facing extinction and is
         hysterical about the threat of the Young Finns.
         The ultra green Ecological Party got one MP, one of the
         surprises of the elections.
         There are a dozen registered parties outside the Parliament.
         The law states that a party which twice consecutively fails to
         enter the Parliament must be dissolved, but usually they
         re-arrange themselves with the collection of another 5,000
         signatures. Among them are three pensioners' parties (the least
         of them called Party of Shared Responsibility of Pension
         Receivers and Greens), the Women's Party and the Natural Law
         Party which aims to heal the Finnish economy by the means of
         yoga flying. The status of bad old IKL (the main Fascist party,
         banned in 1944) is somewhat unclear at the moment.

 4.4.2 The 1995 general elections
         The Finnish parliament is unicameral, elected by citizens over
         18 every fourth March (to commemorate the opening of the
         Estates' Diet by Tsar Alexander I in March 1809). The
         President, with the consent of the Prime Minister, can dissolve
         the Parliament and call for new elections. This last occurred
         in 1975. In the election of March 1995 the 200 seats went as
         follows:


Party                          % of votes      Seats (change from -91)

Social Democrats               28.3            63 (+15)
Centre Party                   19.9            44 (-11)
National Coalition (cons.)     17.9            39 (-1)
Left-wing Alliance (comm.)     11.2            22 (+3)
Greens                          6.5             9 (-1)
Swedish People's Party          5.1            11 (0)
Christian League                3.0             7 (-1)
Young Finns                     2.8             2 (+2)
Rural Party                     1.3             1 (-6)
Ecological Party                0.3             1 (+1)
�land representative                            1

Voting percentage: 71.8

         Of the new MP's 143 are men and 67 women. The parliament
         elected in 1991 had 77 women out of the total 200 MP's (a world
         record in its time), and as many women's organizations had set
         the goal as 101 women MP's to be elected, the result was
         clearly a disappointment and one of the most surprising
         elements of the elections.
         The Social Democrats got a great victory as a result of their
         being in the opposition in the last government. Centre party,
         the leading party of the previous government, was the greatest
         loser of the elections, probably because the party's split-up
         in the question of EU-membership. The National Coalition, the
         other major party in the government, was among the losers but
         was much less affected by government responsibility than the
         Centre. The gallups lied to the Greens once again and for the
         first time since its formation the party stopped growing. Young
         Finns got their first seats, not as many as they expected but
         it's a start. The Rural Party was one of the biggest losers of
         the elections; a once significant populist party, it has waned
         away almost completely and may soon disappear entirely from the
         Finnish political chart as it is currently in deep economical
         problems. The little known Ecological Party got its sole seat
         because of its candidate Pertti "Veltto" ("Slack") Virtanen, a
         well-known eccentric rock musician and psychologist, who was
         also a candidate in the presidential elections (and did
         surprisingly well).
         As Mrs. Speaker of the Parliament Riitta Uosukainen (Cons.)
         continued.

 4.4.3 The rainbow cabinet
         The new cabinet appointed by president Ahtisaari is nicknamed
         "Rainbow cabinet" as it includes 7 Social Democrats, 5
         Conservatives, 2 (ex-)Communists, 2 ethnic Swedes, one Green
         and one independent minister. The only major party left out is
         the Centre, which dominates rural Finland. Cuts in agricultural
         subsidies are expected. The notion of Conservatives and
         Communists in the same cabinet is unheard before, as is the
         presence of the Green (party chairman Pekka Haavisto, who lost
         his seat in the Parliament), as Minister of Environment. 11 men
         and 7 women.
         Prime Minister: Paavo Lipponen (born 1941). The slow-speaking,
         197cm tall chairman of the Social Democratic Party was the
         first Finnish politician to suggest EC membership, at a time
         when it was highly unrealistic and potentially career-damaging
         (anti-Soviet).
         Foreign Minister: Tarja Halonen (SocDem). A surprise choice.
         Red hair and onetime Minister of Justice is all I can remember.
         Unless I'm mistaken, our first female Foreign Minister.
         Minister of the Treasury: Iiro Viinanen (Cons.) The most hated
         member of the former cabinet continues to persecute women,
         children and the trade unions. He has also gained much respect
         among some people, which shows e.g in that he got one of the
         biggest shares of votes in the parliamentary elections of all
         candidates.
         Second Minister of Treasury: Arja Alho, a Social Democrat from
         Helsinki with an independent mind.
         Minister of Trade and Commerce: Antti Kalliom�ki, vice-chairman
         of the Social Democratic Party. A gray bore and former athlete.
         Minister of Interior Affairs (such as the Police): Jouni
         Backman (SocDem). A totalitarian character. 2nd minister
         Jan-Erik Enestam (Swedish People's Party), a municipal leader
         from V�stanfj�rd.
         Minister of Labour: Liisa Jaakonsaari (SocDem, from Oulu).
         Faces a huge task of reducing the record-high unemployment.
         Good luck!
         Minister of Justice: Sauli Niinist�, Chairman of the
         Conservatives. Lost his wife in a car accident earlier this
         year.
         Minister of Defence: Anneli Taina (Cons.) Apparently they
         decided to make this a permanent women's job.
         Minister of Traffic: Tuula Linnainmaa (Cons.) A nobody.
         Minister of Education: the 30-year old Conservative Olli-Pekka
         Heinonen continues.
         Minister of Social and Health Issues: Sinikka M�nk�re (SocDem)
         and Terttu Huttu (Comm.), a newcomer from Suomussalmi.
         Minister of European Affairs: Ole Norrback, the Ostrobothnian
         chairman of the Swedish People's Party and just about our most
         provincial politician.
         Minister of Culture: Claes Andersson, Comm. Chairman, poet,
         jazz pianist, ex-football player, psychiatrist and father of
         six or more. It's not often that we see a Minister of Culture
         who actually understands something about culture.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq44.html ]





------------------------------

Subject: 4.5 Main tourist attractions


 4.5.1 Helsinki
         Helsinki (Swedish: Helsingfors) is the capital and largest city
         of Finland. It is in the southern coast of the country on the
         Gulf of Finland and occupies the tip of a small peninsula. The
         "towns" of Vantaa and Espoo are effectively suburbs of
         Helsinki, and together with Kaunianen, form the metropolitan
         where ca. 1 million people or nearly 20% if Finland's
         population live.
         The city is protected from the sea by a fringe of islands, so
         that its harbor is almost landlocked. It is underlain by hard
         rock, which shows in rounded masses, smothered and polished by
         ice sheets. Hollows in this surface are occupied by lakes or
         the sea, although some have been filled with urban waste to
         create new land. Summers in Helsinki are rather mild, with an
         average temperature of 18C in July; winters are pretty long and
         cold, January temperatures averaging -6�C. A belt of sea ice
         forms close to the coast during the winter months,but a passage
         is usually kept open by icebreakers.
         Helsinki was founded in 1550 by King Gustav Vasa to compete
         with the Hansaetic city of Tallinn in Estonia, some 50km south
         across the Gulf of Finland, and merchants from several smaller
         towns were ordered by force to move to Helsinki. It didn't
         start out well, however; many of the merchants moved back to
         their own towns, the place of the town had to be moved a couple
         of times to more suitable locations, fires and war destroyed
         the town several times, and plague killed most of the
         ihabitants. For over two hundred years, Helsinki was little
         more than a fishing village, but things started to improve when
         the construction of the huge fortress of Sveaborg started in
         1748 on the islands just outside Helsinki and brought tens of
         thousands of soldiers, builders, officers, etc. to Helsinki.
         In 1809 Sveaborg (the modern Finnish name is Suomenlinna)
         surrendered almost without a shot to a Russian army that was
         much smaller than the Swedish-Finnish garrison, and Finland
         became an autonomous Grand Duchy of Russia. Helsinki was made
         capital in 1812, the university (founded 1640) was moved there
         from Turku in 1827, and the modern growth of the city started.
         The war had destroyed much of the old Helsinki, and the central
         city was rebuilt according to the plans of the German-born
         architect C.L.Engel in grand imperial scale to show the power
         of the Russian Empire. The city was bombed during the World War
         II, but not as badly as it might have because of the ingenious
         air raid defense (for example, a fake Helsinki was built next
         to the real one and set on fire to fool the Russian bombers).
         The Helsinki accords was the "declaration of policy intent"
         signed in Helsinki in 1975, by the United States, Canada, the
         USSR, and 32 European countries at the end of the Conference on
         Security and Cooperation in Europe (1973-75). The accords
         declared inviolable the frontiers of all the signatory nations,
         provided for scientific, technological, and cultural exchanges,
         and pledged the signatories to respect human rights, including
         "freedom of thought, conscience, religion, or belief."
         The most important sights in Helsinki include the following:
         + The Senate Square, in the very centre of Helsinki, is one of
           the most beautiful neo-classical squares in Europe. On one
           side of the square is situated the Senate palace, and on the
           other, the maiun building of Helsinki University; above them
           rises the Helsinki Cathedral (all are designed by C.L.Engel),
           and in the centre of the square is a statue of Emperor
           Alexander II. The university library is next to the main
           building of the university is considered to be perhaps
           Engel's finest work, especially the intererior is beautiful.
           Slightly "hidden" behind the square is the old House of the
           Estates, a fine piece of exuberant neo-renaissance
           architecture with golden decorations. Ateneum Art Museum
           located in the Rautatientori square nearby has the best
           collection of fine arts in Finland; mostly Finnish painters
           and some foreign masters of turn of the century (the rest of
           the somewhat modest collection of foreign art is housed in
           the Sinebrychoff museum on Bulevardi street); on the same
           square is the railway station, designed by Eliel Saarinen,
           which is a large and innovative Art Nouveau building (the
           main entrance looks a bit like an old radio set).
         + The Market Square, in the South Harbour, is a lively
           year-round market in beautiful surroundings. Beside the
           square is the fountain of Havis Amanda, the symbol of
           Helsinki. The Esplanade, a park avenue lined with shops and
           cafes starts from the fountain; at it's other end is the
           Swedish Theatre and the Stockmann department store, reputedly
           the largest in Scandinavia, and certainly the best one in
           Helsinki. A part of the Stockmann, although located in a
           separate building next to it, is the Academic Bookstore which
           is a must for every bookhoarder. They have a large selection
           of books in English, as well as several other major
           languages. For slightly cheaper shopping, you could take the
           subway to the It�keskus -station (East Centre). The station
           is right next to a huge suburban mall.
         + On the other end of the Market Square rises the golden,
           onion-shaped cupola of the Uspensky Cathedral, representing
           the other major religion in Finland, Greek Orthodoxy. Ferries
           leave from the square to the 18th century island fortress of
           Suomenlinna (Sveaborg), once called "the Gibraltar of the
           North" (but unlike Gibraltar, never had much military
           significance), located just outside the harbour; it's a
           beautiful place for picnics and just strolling around.
           There's also a centre for Scandinavian art in one of the old
           barracks, and a museum dedicated to the man behind Sveaborg's
           building, Augustin Ehrensv�rd. The fortress is included in
           the UNESCO list of world heritage. Tickets to the ferries
           cost only about 10 FIM. There are also ferries to Korkeasaari
           Zoo, also located in a nearby island. Another good place for
           picnics is the Kaivopuisto park, where free pop-concerts are
           held in summer.
         + Going down the Mannerheimintie (Mannerheim street), which
           starts from the other end of the Esplanade, you'll pass the
           following places of interest: the parliament, which is a
           massive granite building that dates from the 1930's (and,
           frankly, looks like something that Albert Speer might have
           designed..). The Finlandia-house, by Finland's most famous
           architect Alvar Aalto, built of white marble, where the
           Helsinki accords were signed (it's also the home of e.g the
           Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra). The Italian Carrara-marble
           plates haven't quite stood the test of Finnish weather, so it
           might be a good idea to wear a helmet in case of falling
           marble. :) The National Museum built in Art Nouveau style
           displays objects from different periods of Finnish history.
           The collection is relatively interesting, but displayed in a
           somewhat conservative way. Also, the museum is far too small
           for it's purpose. The National Opera is the next building on
           the line, it's a piece of modern architecture finished in
           1993, more beautiful from the inside than the outside; and
           finally, the Olympic Stadium, where the 1952 Olympics were
           held.
         + You might also want to check the Temppeliaukio church in the
           district of T��l�, which is carved into a low hill of granite
           rock and covered by a copper dome (architect Reima Pietil�).
           Take a look from above, some of the staircases of the houses
           next to it for example; it looks like a landed UFO.
           Seurasaari island has an open-air museum of traditional
           Finnish wooden houses, not quite as good as Skansen in
           Stockholm or Bygd�y in Oslo, but if you're interested in folk
           culture it's certainly worth checking out. Linnanm�ki
           amusement park is the largest in Finland; it differs in no
           way from your average large amusement park, but might still
           be a nice place to spend a day, especially if you're
           travelling with children. Heureka Science Center in the
           suburb of Vantaa is another good place to spend time with
           children; it popularizes science, lets you do all sorts of
           experiments of your own, and has a globular movie theatre.
           You can get there by local train or a special bus line
           leaving from Rautatientori. Ainola, home of the composer Jean
           Sibelius, is located in J�rvenp�� not far from Helsinki.
         + Internet addicts visiting the city can cure their withdrawal
           symptoms at the CompuCafe at Annankatu 22 in the center of
           the city. Free net access is also provided by an increasing
           number of public libraries, for instance the Kirjakaapeli
           library in the Kaapelitehdas (Cable Factory) culture center
           in western Helsinki. The place is well worth a visit on its
           own right. It's a huge old factory building where cables used
           to be made (hence the name), which after the closing of the
           factory was spontaneously taken over by various artists,
           workshops, clubs, etc., and after a brief wrestle with the
           city authorities and the company owning the building, it was
           turned in its entirety into a culture complex. It now houses,
           in addition to the library, cafes, galleries, several
           museums, repetition rooms for rock bands, classical
           orchestras, martial arts clubs, theatre groups, etc, and its
           a site for all sorts of cultural happenings. Getting there is
           easiest by taking the subway to the Ruoholahti station.

       For more information on Helsinki, you may wish to check these
               URLs:

             A clicable map of Helsinki WWW-resources:
                     <http://www.funet.fi:80/resources/maps/stadi/>

             Official Helsinki city information:
                     <http://www.hel.fi/>


 4.5.2 Turku, the old capital
         Turku (Swedish: �bo) is a port city in southwestern Finland at
         the mouth of the river Aura, about 160 km west of Helsinki. It
         has several important libraries, museums, and theaters. The
         Swedish University of �bo (�bo Akademi, 1917) and the
         University of Turku (1920) serve, respectively, the Swedish and
         Finnish populations of this bilingual city.
         Turku/�bo is Finland's oldest city, founded sometime in the
         early 13th century, but not very many old buildings remain
         because of tens of disastrous fires, the worst one being that
         of 1827 which destroyed the city almost completely. Most of the
         buildings are, therefore, fairly new, with a couple of old
         monuments remaining. Before the Russian takeover in 1809, Turku
         was Finland's largest city and served as its capital. It was
         rather heavily damaged during also during the WWII.
         The city is divided by the river Aura, on the bank of which
         rises the Turku Cathedral, the most important medieval
         cathedral in Finland and a national sanctuary. It was started
         in 1230, and it's present shape (except for the cupola and the
         roof, which were built after the 1827 fire) dates from late
         middle ages. In the cathedral are buried e.g the wife of Erik
         XIV, Queen Karin M�nsdotter (Kaarina Maununtyt�r) and some of
         the most famous of Gustav II Adolf's military leaders from the
         Thirty Years' War (the Finnish marshalls Evert Horn and �ke
         Tott, the general of the Hakkapeliitta cavalry Torsten
         St�lhandske and the Scottish colonel Samuel Cockburn). There's
         also a museum in one of the galleries.
         The other major medieval monument in Turku is the castle,
         started in the 1310's. The castle acted as the main castle of
         Finland in the middle ages and renaissance and experienced it's
         best days in the 16th century when the duke of Finland, Johan,
         held his court there together with the Polish-born princess
         Katarina Jagellonica whom he married in 1562. Later, in 1568,
         Johan imprisoned his brother, the mad renaissance king Erik
         XIV, and he was held prisoner in Turku castle. It's an
         impressive construction, but perhaps not exceptionally
         romantic. In the river Aura, there are two 19th century
         sailingships that act as museums, the Suomen Joutsen and Sigyn.
         The Cloister Hill (Luostarinm�ki) has an attractive collection
         of simple wooden merchants houses that were spared from the
         fire of 1827.
         For more information on Turku: <http://www.tku.fi/>

 4.5.3 Tampere, the third largest city of Finland
         <from: Kari Yli-Kuha >
         Tampere (in Swedish Tammerfors) lies about 160 km northwest of
         Helsinki. A major manufacturing hub and the textile center of
         Finland, Tampere also produces metals, heavy machinery, pulp,
         and paper, etc. The heavy concentration of industry has
         prompted some to call it Finland's Manchester (the center, with
         several rather attractive old factory buildings, looks pretty
         industrial, too).
         Just currently some old factories, such as Finlayson and
         Tampella, and their wide factory areas in the centre of the
         city are being renovated and partly rebuilt, but still in an
         attempt to maintain the architectural general appearance.
         Tampere was founded in 1779 and is the largest inland city in
         Scandinavia. The location between two lakes, N�sij�rvi and
         Pyh�j�rvi, and the rapids (Tammerkoski) joining the lakes gave
         birth to the industry in the city. The cathedral by Lars Sonck
         is a masterpiece of Finnish national-romantic Art Nouveau; it's
         frescoes by the symbolist painter Hugo Simberg are especially
         fascinating. Lake tours, "Hopealinja" (Silver Line) in
         Pyh�j�rvi and "Runoilijan tie" (Poet's Way) in N�sij�rvi, are
         popular in the summer. A gravel ridge, Pispalan harju, and the
         settlement there is also a major tourist attraction. Tampere
         has two theatres (TT and TTT) and a summer theatre with a
         revolving auditorium. The S�rk�nniemi amusement park is very
         popular in the summer. The new Tampere Hall is currently the
         second most popular place in Finland (after Finlandia House in
         Helsinki) for international congresses, large special events
         and exhibitions.
         One of the gastronomic delicacies typical for Tampere is black
         sausage ("mustamakkara") which is made of blood, though not
         nearly all regard it as a delicacy.
         Other tips:
         + Main shopping street H�meenkatu
         + "Koskikeskus" shopping center by the rapids
         + Pyynikki natural park only two kilometres west from downtown
         + A 20 min ferry trip to Viikinsaari island

For more information on Tampere:

  A clicable map of Tampere WWW-resources:
     <http://www.funet.fi:80/resources/maps/tampere/>
  Official Tampere city information:
     <http://www.tampere.fi/>
  Maps of Tampere:
     <http://www.uta.fi/maps/sisluettelo.html>

 4.5.4 Jyv�skyl�
         <from: Jarmo Ryyti>
         Jyv�skyl� was where Alvar Aalto began his career as an
         architect; from 1920's up until our days, dozens of buildings
         designed by him have been built in and around Jyvaskyla, thus
         making the city famous for its architecture.
         Jyv�skyl� in the area of Finnish language culture it has a
         remarkable succession of "firsts": the first Finnish-language
         lyceum, the first school for the girls, the first teachers'
         training college (the seminary) the first national song and
         instrument festivals, the first society for the advancement of
         public education, the first "summer university", and the first
         arts festival.

 4.5.5 Porvoo
         Porvoo (Swedish: Borg�) on the coast of the Gulf of Finland
         received its town rights in 1346. The town lies 48 km northeast
         of Helsinki, along the Porvoonjoki River. It's a rather small
         town with only 30,000 or so inhabitants, but it's rather
         attractive and the (mostly wooden) Old Town still has a rather
         medieval character. Building of the the cathedral in the center
         of the Old Town was finished 1414-18, and the Diet of Porvoo
         where Finland was granted its autonomous status as a Grand
         Duchy was held there in 1809 by emperor Alexander I. The house
         of Porvoo Gymnasium, built 1760, is on the cathedral square.
         The town hall was built in 1764 and now houses a historical
         museum; the art collection of the museum is in the Holm house
         (1762), included are works by two great artists of the golden
         age of Finnish art who were born in Porvoo, the painter Albert
         Edelfelt (1854-1940) and the sculptor Ville Valgren
         (1855-1940). Edelfelt's studio is one of the most popular
         museums of Porvoo area, it's located close to the Haikko manor
         (now a hotel) a few kilometers from Porvoo. The poet Johan
         Ludvig Runeberg spent the 25 last years of his life in Porvoo;
         his home at the corner of Aleksanterinkatu and Runeberginkatu
         has been a museum since 1880. He is buried in the N�sim�ki
         cemetary of Porvoo. Next to the Old Town, on a hill across the
         Porvoo river, is Linnanm�ki or Borgbacken (Castle Hill, which
         has given Porvoo its name; Borg� = Castle River). There are no
         stone fortifications left, the only remains are moats that have
         belonged to hillfort built by the Danes in the late 12th or
         early 13th century.

 4.5.6 Other places of interest in Finland
         �land islands (Ahvenanmaa in Finnish) are a beautiful
         archipelago, perfect for cycling, with medieval churches
         scattered around and the castle ruins of Kastelholm.
         Naantali/N�dendal, close to Turku, is a charming small,
         medieval town by the sea, where a Brigittine cloister was
         located (the church still remains). A popular place to visit in
         summers. Likewise, Rauma, located 100km north of Turku, has a
         very charming old town which is included in the UNESCO world
         heritage list, and a church that was part of a Franciscan
         monastery. The inland lake-system, with such lakes as Saimaa
         and P�ij�nne is perfect for a canoeing holiday; trips on one of
         the many lake steam boats are also recommended. The mightiest
         of Finnish medieval castles, Olavinlinna, is located in an
         island in the Saimaa, and a famous opera-festival is arranged
         in the castle every summer. The province of Lapland is among
         the last wild natural areas in Europe; no real mountains
         (except in some areas close to Norwegian border), but low fells
         that rise to some 500 metres. Good for trekking, but be
         prepared for mosquitoes.
         For general information through WWW see the clicable map of
         Finnish resources at <http://www.funet.fi:80/resources/maps/>


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq45.html ]





------------------------------

Subject: 4.6 The Finnish Sauna

         <by Mauri Haikola>
         While the word "sauna" (in the Finnish pronounciation, the "au"
         sound is like "ou" in "loud") means different things in
         different countries, for a Finn it means an elementary part of
         everyday life. Ever since childhood, Finnish people learn to
         bathe in sauna, usually at least once a week. Yes, they do it
         naked, and yes, they go in there together with other people,
         while naked. This and other aspects of the Finnish sauna are
         discussed in the following questions and answers.

 Q1 Why is sauna something special in Finland?
         A1: Mostly because of ancient traditions. Wherever there have
         lived Finns, there have also been a sauna nearby their
         residences. In the early days of Finnish history, it was a
         small wooden hut near a lake, and people used it not only for
         cleaning themselves, but for childbirths, some medical
         operations and other duties that required a clean,
         bacteria-free environment. Today, practically all houses in
         Finland have a sauna. In urban areas, you usually have one per
         building, but even in a relatively small apartment it is not a
         rare piece of luxury these days. This being the case, Finns
         discover at an early age what a refreshing way it is to clean
         oneself both physically and mentally. The tradition is not a
         dying one either.

 Q2 What is a Finnish sauna like?
         A2: The basic parts are the stove ("kiuas"), filled with
         fist-sized stones, and the benches or platforms ("lauteet"),
         made of wood (anecdotes of metal benches in the saunas of some
         Finnish-built Russian warships are told :). There are usually
         two benches, one of which is higher (the seat) and the other
         one lower (place to rest your feet on, or another seat if you
         feel it's too hot). These are what all saunas have. The modern
         saunas have the usual shower and dressing rooms too, but the
         traditional ones near a lake or sea (usually in the vicinity of
         a summer cabin, or built in one) do not require anything but a
         stove for heating and a bench to sit down on -- you can do the
         cleaning in the lake. The stove is traditionally fuelled by
         wood, but electrically heated saunas are common due to their
         safe, easy and clean use. The average sauna has room for 3-6
         people at a time.

 Q3 How are you supposed to bathe?
         A3: There are no rules, only guidelines. Finns like their
         traditions, but do not enforce them on themselves or
         foreigners. Usually you bathe together with your family. If you
         are with friends or others that aren't family members, men and
         women take turns to bathe separately. Most public saunas are
         separate for men and women, but not all. You take your clothes
         off (this is not a rule, mind you; if someone wants to use a
         towel or bathing suite, it's not a breach of any important
         etiquette), go and sit down on the benches and relax. The air
         is not particularly humid at first (there is no visible steam),
         and when you feel like it, you throw some water on the stones
         to increase humidity. This causes the water to vaporize very
         quickly, and it makes the bathers feel a momentary breath of
         hot air in their backs. It may be uncomfortable, if the stove
         is too hot or if you use too much water, and in those cases it
         helps to step down on the lower bench, or to go out entirely.
         This is also perfectly acceptable, and first-time sauna bathers
         shouldn't feel obligated to stay in if they don't feel like it.
         The basic goal is to enjoy and relax, and sweat. After you've
         done enough of that, you go to the showers, and/or swim in the
         lake, depending on the facilities. After swimming or showering,
         you can go back to the sauna, and repeat this cycle as many
         times as you want.

 Q4 How hot is it in there?
         A4: This varies according to the bathers' wishes. Usually the
         temperature is between 60�C and 110�C, the widely-agreed-upon
         ideal temperature being somewhere around 85�degrees. Sometimes
         (after a few drinks) Finnish men engage in an unhealthy
         competition over who can stay in a hot sauna the longest time.
         This is not the way sauna is meant to be enjoyed, not to
         mention that it can be dangerous. Also, you shouldn't be drunk
         in sauna. A cold beer after sauna, however, tastes usually
         great, even a mediocre brand.

 Q5 What is a smoke sauna? How does it differ from the usual one?
         A5: A smoke sauna (savusauna) is perhaps the most traditional
         kind of sauna. There is no smoke pipe: all the smoke from the
         stove goes inside the sauna while heating. Of course, it has to
         be removed before bathing, and this is done by opening a small
         hatch on the wall. The fire on the stove must not be burning
         while bathing, but this doesn't matter, since the massive stove
         radiates plenty of heat for many hours. A smoke sauna is often
         considered the ultimate sauna experience, complete with the
         wonderful smoke odour. Smoke saunas are somewhat rare compared
         to the normal ones these days, but sauna enthusiasts praise
         them so that there still exist plenty of them.

 Q6 Do Finns really jump out naked into the snow in the middle of sauna
 bathing and roll around in winter time? Or go swimming in a frozen lake?
         A6: Some do, most don't. This is a habit that requires a
         healthy heart and a bit of courage, but it is practised, and
         there are some enthusiasts who think sauna in the winter is
         nothing without a quick swim in the snow or freezing water. Of
         course, others think this is sheer madness.

 Q7 What about sauna and sex?
         A7: Even though people are naked in sauna, Finns do not see
         anything sex-related in their sauna tradition. Of course you
         can have sex in there if you feel like it, but that is neither
         a part of any tradition nor very comfortable. Women used to
         give birth in saunas a long time ago, but the conceiving was
         done mostly elsewhere. Massage parlours and other (sometimes
         sexual) services that often come with a public sauna in the
         red-light districts of big cities are unknown phenomena in
         Finland. Going to sauna naked with all your family is not at
         all perverted, as the reader might think. Instead, the sauna
         tradition makes it natural and comfortable for children to
         learn about human body, and for parents to tell them about it.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq46.html ]





------------------------------

Subject: 4.7 Finnish literature

         Most of the text below is reproduced on the Project Runeberg
         pages on Nordic Authors
         <http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/authors/>. Links to the
         Project Runeberg pages are provided when they hold also other
         information.
         Fire has destroyed most of the early literature the Finnish
         church and monasteries must have produced. The first known
         Finnish author was J�ns Budde, a Franciscan monk who lived in
         the Brigittene monastery at Naantali in the latter part of 15th
         century, chiefly translating from Latin to Swedish, but he also
         wrote a few things of his own. Codex Aboensis written probably
         in Turku in the 1440's is an important collection of law texts;
         Missale Aboense printed in 1488 for the Finnish church is a
         beautiful book and a source of medieval Finnish religious life.
         Mikael Agricola (circa 1510-57), a bishop of Turku and great
         advocate of Lutheranism, is considered the father of Finnish
         literature. His ABC-book published 1538 is the first known book
         in Finnish, but the translation of New Testament (1548) is his
         greatest achievement. Paavali Juusten (?1512-72) was another
         important 16th century author; his Chronicon episcoporum
         Finlandensium (Chronicle of the Finnish Bishops [published in
         Latin]) is an important source of early Finnish history. Erik
         Sorolainen (1545-1625) did most of the translation of the Old
         Testament when the whole Bible was eventually published in
         Finnish in 1642, delayed by the Thirty Years' War. The first
         grammar of Finnish, Linguae Finnicae brevis institutio [Latin],
         was written by Eskil Petraeus in 1649.
         Daniel Juslenius (1676-1752) was an enthusiastic advocate of
         things Finnish. He wrote a baroque study on Finland (Aboa vetus
         et Nova [Latin], 1700) which among other things traced the
         origins of Roman civilization to Finland; a defense of
         Finnishness (Vindicae Fennorum [Latin], 1702); and most
         importantly, the first major Finnish dictionary (Suomalaisen
         Sana-Lugun Coetus, 1745), containing 16,000 entries. He and his
         ideological followers became known as Fennophiles
         (proto-nationalists, but not separatists). Jakob Frese
         (1691-1729) and Gustaf Filip Creutz (1731-1785) contributed
         importantly to the Swedish-language poetry of the era.
         The first major Finnish poet, however, was Frans Mikael Franz�n
         (1772-1847), whose fresh, romantic poetry was enormously
         popular in Sweden (including Finland!) in his time. His teacher
         was the great scholar Henrik Gabriel Porthan (1739-1804), a
         student of Juslenius and a Fennophile, who brought Finnish
         history-writing, study of mythology and folk poetry, and other
         humanistic sciences to an international level. His De Po�si
         Fennica (published in Latin in five parts 1776-78), a study on
         Finnish folk poetry, had great importance in awakening public
         interest in the Kalevala-poetry and Finnish mythology, and the
         study was also the basis of all later study of the poetry. He
         was among the founders of the Aurora Society that advocated
         Finnish literary pursuits and was the editor of the first
         Finnish newspaper, Tidningar utgifne af et s�llskap i �bo,
         founded in 1771. Antti Lizelius (1708-1795) published the first
         newspaper in Finnish, Suomenkieliset Tieto-Sanomat, 1776.
         Porthan inspired the following generation of Finnish authors,
         poets and researchers, many of whom were among the founders of
         the Finnish Literature Society in 1831. A movement literary
         trend known as Helsinki Romanticism was born in the 1830's when
         the university was moved to the new capital. Four young
         university students came to have towering importance to the
         forming of the Finnish literature, and ultimately, the Finnish
         national identity. These were the poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg
         (1804-77), the scholar Elias L�nnrot (1802-84), the author
         Zacharias Topelius (1818-1898) and the Hegelian philosopher and
         statesman Johan Vilhelm Snellman (1806-81).
         Especially important was Elias L�nnrot, who did a huge task of
         collecting folk poetry from the remote wildernesses of Karelia,
         and compiling these to what was to become Finland's national
         epic, the Kalevala. (1849). It is composed of 50 poems
         (sometimes called runes), altogether 22,795 verses. The book
         starts with a creation-myth, then goes on to recount the deeds
         and adventures of the three protagonists, V�in�m�inen the
         magician and bard, Ilmarinen the smith, and Lemmink�inen the
         wanton loverboy and warrior, and ends with the introduction of
         Christianity to Finland. L�nnrot was under the influence of
         Homeric ideals and tried to forge the poems into a single epic,
         adding bits and pieces of his own and altering some parts to
         make them appear a whole, which they however never have been.
         Nevertheless, its role to the development of Finnish
         literature, arts and identity can hardly be over-estimated, and
         having been translated to all major world languages and lots of
         minor ones, it is no doubt the most important contribution of
         Finland to world literature. L�nnrot also published a
         counterpart to Kalevala, the Kanteletar, a collection of
         ancient lyrical poetry often sung by women. These two books,
         however, cover but a small part of the recorded Finnish folk
         poetry. For instance, between 1908-48 was published a massive,
         33-volume book series called Suomen Kansan Vanhoja Runoja,
         containing altogether 85,000 poems, with well over a million
         verses. Kalevala & Kanteletar can be found (in Finnish) at
         <http://www.sci.fi/kalevala/> &
         <http://www.edita.fi/kustannus/kalevala/paasivu.htm>.
         Runeberg's main works were the realist/idealist poem
         �lgskyttarna (Elk Hunters, 1832), which can be called the first
         major literary portrayal of ordinary people in Scandinavia, the
         Ossianic epic Kung Fjalar (King Fjalar, 1844) and the emotional
         and humane heroic poem F�nrik St�ls S�gner (The Tales of Ensign
         St�l, I 1848, II 1860) on the war of 1808-09, which enjoyed
         huge popularity in both Finland and Sweden and became something
         of a national romantic symbol.
         Topelius was a full-blooded romantic, more superficial as a
         literary artist than Runeberg, and less of an innovator. His
         F�ltsk�rns Ber�ttelser (1851-67, The Barber-Surgeons Stories)
         is a historical novel set in the Thirty Years' War, in the
         tradition of Sir Walter Scott; he is also well known in Finland
         for his fairy tales.
         Snellman's chief achievement was in his role as a national
         awakener, the editor of two newspapers, strongly encouraging
         literature as part of the process leading to independence.

 Early writers in Finnish
         The first great prose writer in Finnish - considered by some to
         be the most genial - was Aleksis Kivi (1834-72), a novelist and
         playwright who during his lifetime was largely ignored. Major
         works include Seitsem�n Veljest� (The Seven Brothers, 1870),
         his most celebrated play, and the comedy Nummisuutarit (The
         Heath Shoemakers, 1864). He was more modern and many-sided in
         his expression than Runeberg, but his image of the Finnish
         people was too "raw" and realistic for most people of his era,
         and he died in extreme poverty, suffering from a mental
         illness.
         Minna Canth (1844-97), an energetic fighter for women's rights
         and social justice, was a contemporary of Juhani Aho
         (1861-1921), a novelist and short-story writer known for his
         humorous sketches and lyrical, dreamy descriptions of nature.
         Eino Leino (1878-1926) was a poet of exceptional talent,
         drawing heavily on the Kalevala tradition. His main themes are
         love and nature, and poem collections such as Helkavirsi�
         (Helka-hymns, 1903), Halla (Frost, 1908) which includes the
         wonderful love/nature poem Nocturne, and Hymyilev� Apollo (The
         Smiling Apollo) are still much-loved. V. A. Koskenniemi often
         turned to classical themes. Uuno Kailas wrote harsh,
         self-analytic verse, whereas Kaarlo Sarkia sought solace in
         aestheticism and fantasy. The personal, abrupt, and humorous
         poetry of Aaro Hellaakoski and the equally humorous, learned,
         yet folklike verse of P. Mustap�� were only appreciated after
         1945. The generation of the 1950s, including Paavo Haavikko and
         Eeva-Liisa Manner, introduced new poetic forms to which their
         successors often added absurd humor, formalist experimentation,
         and social criticism.

 Modern writers in Swedish
         Finland-Swedish modernism was introduced by Edith S�dergran
         (1892-1923). She didn't receive much recognition in her
         lifetime, but is now regarded one of Finland's foremost poets.
         She was first influenced by French symbolism, then German
         expressionism and Russian futurism, and creatively applied
         these to her own poetry. Her free rhythm, strong, challenging
         images fired by a Nietzschean self-conscience and conviction of
         the importance of her message were new and baffling to the
         Finnish audience, and she was almost without exception
         misunderstood and even ridiculed. Her first collection of poems
         was Dikter (Poems, 1916), which was followed by Rosenaltaret
         (The Rose Altar, 1919) and Landet som icke �r (The land that is
         not, 1925) among others. Always physically weak and somewhat
         sickly, she died young just as she was starting to get
         followers. Among these the most important were Elmer Diktonius
         (1896-1961), Gunnar Bj�rling (1887-1960) and Rabbe Enckell
         (1903-74).
         In recent years writers such as M�rta & Henrik Tikkanen, Kjell
         West� (b. 1961) and others have proved that the size of a
         linguistic minority has very little to do with the quality of
         its literature.
         The author Tove Jansson (b. 1914) has won much international
         fame for her creation of the Moomins, philosophical-minded,
         friendly trolls who live in Moominvalley. There are many books
         on their adventures, e. g. Muminpappan och Havet (Moominpappa
         and the Sea). Her fantasy world charms with its richness,
         inventiveness and wisdom of life spiced with witty humor. The
         events and imagery flow freely and uninhibited, yet reflecting
         the phenomena of the real world.

 Modern writers in Finnish
         Joel Lehtonen, Volter Kilpi, and especially Frans Eemil
         Sillanp�� (1888-1964) dominated naturalistic prose in the first
         half of the 20th century. Sillanp�� was awarded the 1939 Nobel
         Prize for literature for the book Silja, nuorena nukkunut
         (Silja, Fallen Asleep While Young, 1931). Also important are
         Toivo Pekkanen, who wrote about the plight of industrial
         workers, and Pentti Haanp��, who portrayed with a bitter but
         defiant humor the struggle of humans against harsh nature in
         northern Finland.
         After World War II, V�in� Linna had great success with the
         novel Tuntematon Sotilas (The Unknown Soldier, 1954) which
         played a part in the healing of the wounds of the war and is
         read by almost every Finnish schoolkid. The extensive use of
         dialects make the book quite impossible to translate;
         translations into English and many other languages do exist,
         but cannot be recommended very highly (although I hear the
         Swedish one is pretty good). His other major work is the
         trilogy T��ll� pohjant�hden alla (Here Under the North Star,
         1959-62), a story of the struggles of poor farmers that
         culminated in the Civil War of 1918. More recently, Veijo Meri
         has described the violence and absurdity of human life,
         especially during times of war.
         Mika Waltari (1908-79) is among the Finnish prose writers best
         known to an international audience. He wrote his most
         successful novels in the 1940s and 50's, many of them on
         historical subjects; among these is Sinuhe egyptil�inen (The
         Egyptian, 1945), a novel set in ancient Egypt, about the
         collapse of traditional ways of life and the inflation of
         inherited values. It's also been filmed into a dreary Hollywood
         spectacle.
         From the 1960s, social issues became central to the young
         novelists and poets. Hannu Salama went through a famous trial
         for blasphemy (after which the blasphemy laws were repealed)
         for his novel Juhannustanssit (Juhannus Dances, 1964). Pentti
         Saarikoski was the leading poet of the 60's. Often better
         remembered for his for his unhealthy lifestyle, Saarikoski was
         nevertheless one of the most genial poets in Finnish and a
         brilliant translator of e. g. Homer and Joyce. Such younger
         writers as as Alpo Ruuth and Antti Tuuri have also dealt with
         social issues.
         Another author who has long been very popular in Finland and
         has started to win international fame recently is the humorist
         Arto Paasilinna; J�niksen Vuosi (The Year of the Hare, 1974),
         is the story of an advertising man who gets sick of urban life
         and escapes to the wilderness with his pet hare.
         For electronic versions of some of the works of Nordic
         literature, see the collection of Project Runeberg:
         + Icelandic Literature
         + Literature from the Viking Age
         + Medieval Nordic Literature
         + Danish Literature
         + Norwegian Literature
         + Literature of Finland
         + Literature from the Age of Liberty [ in Sweden and Finland
           (1719-1772) ]


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq47.html ]





------------------------------

Subject: 4.8 Dictionaries and other study-material

         <Compiled by Nils O. Monaghan>
         BOOKS USEFUL FOR LEARNING FINNISH (Version 2.3)
         Many thanks to all those who have contributed and commented on
         this list. As usual any additions, corrections, and other
         comments should be mailed to <[email protected]>.
         This list contains works which may be found useful for learning
         Finnish - either whether by self-study or other means. Some
         works are directed towards teachers rather than students. Older
         works are retained as these are often the ones that will be
         stumbled across in libraries.

INDEX

      Grammars, Primers, Phrase Books.
      Dictionaries
      Readers
      Materials for Teaching Finnish
      Miscellaneous
      Course Details
      Acknowledgements

 4.8.1 Grammars, primers, phrase books


Maija-Hellikki Aaltio: Finnish for Foreigners (1963)
              A good book to work through, it teaches grammar and
      vocabulary in small chunks with plenty of grammatical exercises
      and reading exercises. The emphasis on obtaining a practical
      command of the language (even if mainly a reading knowledge)
      makes it very useful. I think there may well be an updated
      version available these days. A new edition is now available. [NOM]

Maija-Hellikki Aaltio: Finnish for Foreigners (1987):
      Finnish for Foreigners 1 Textbook
      Finnish for Foreigners 1 Exercises
      Finnish for Foreigners 2 Textbook
      Finnish for Foreigners 2 Exercises
      Finnish for Foreigners 3 Textbook
      [ There are also 2 cassettes per book giving aural
      versions of the chapter readers and listening
      exercises for the exercise books. ]
              I find these books OK for learning progressively, and the
      reference tables in the back are more useful as a quick grammar
      reference than Fred Karlsson's book, however there are two
      distinct drawbacks:
      1. It is very difficult to find anything in the books, e.g. if
      you decide you want to check up a particular grammatical
      feature or item of vocabulary.
      2. The texts are getting a bit out of date (they're quite
      sixties/seventies in their topics and attitudes in places).
      [Matthew Faupel]
              A complete revision of the original 1963 book which
      bore the same title, this has long been the standard work
      for teaching Finnish to English-speaking foreigners. The
      book is slightly dated with respect to language teaching
      methodology, but it takes the student from the basics to
      a solid command of the language. The 1987 edition devotes
      considerable attention to the peculiarities of spoken Finnish.
      [Eugene Holman]

J. Atkinson: Finnish Grammar (Helsinki, 1956)
              A course in Finnish grammar for the learner. It concentrates
      on explaining the grammar and thus contains only a
      few short reading passages and a very limited vocabulary.

Michael Branch et al: A Student's Glossary of Finnish: The Literary
      Language Arranged by Frequency and Alphabet (Werner Soderstrom
      Osakeyhtio, Porvoo, 1980)
              1200 items, graded and accompanied by morphological
      information. Glossed in several languages, including English.
      [Lance Eccles]

Berlitz Finnish for Travellers
      Various editions in various languages.
              A typical inexpensive Berlitz pocket language guide.
      Like all the these guides, it of great help unless you actually
      know a little bit already, but then it is very helpful for
      vocabulary in various situations - especially menus. [NOM]

Bj�rn Collinder: A Handbook of the Uralic Languages. Part 2. Survey of
      the Uralic Languages (Stockholm, 1957) [This may have been
      issued separately entitled "A Finnish Primer".]
              Although a book aimed at compartative linguists, the Finnish
      section contains a graded grammatical introduction together
      with reading passages and a vocabulary. I have seen this Finnish
      section as a separate pamphlet but without any publication
      details. [NOM]

Artem Davdijants Inge Davidjants, Eugene Holman, Riitta Koivisto-Arhinm�ki:
      Terve, Suomi! Conversational Finnish in video ( Helsinki/Tallinn
      1992)
              This is the first attempt to produce an audiovisual
      course in Finnish. The course consists of a 45-minute video
      (VHS-PAL) dramatization of a trip to Finland, a 60-minutte
      audio cassette, and a 140-page textbook. The English version
      is a translation and expansion of the Estonian original. The
      course was produced under difficult circumstances during the
      last days of Soviet Estonia, and it has some unfortunate
      shortcomings. Nevertheless, it represents a totally new
      approach to presenting and teaching Finnish as a foreign langauge.
      Contact <[email protected]> for further information.
      [Eugene Holman]

Eugene Holman: Handbook of Finnish Verbs. 231 Finnish verbs
      conjugated in all tenses (Finnish Literature Society, 1984)
              Modelled on the famous Barrons 201 Verbs series, this
      book contains a detailed discussion of all the regularities
      and peculiarities of Finnish verb morphology, in
      addition to which it has information on the cases used in
      conjunction with more than 1200 Finnish verbs.

Eugene Holman: Finnmorf (1986)
              An MS-DOS computer program which generates
      all the forms of a Finnish verb, noun, adjective, numeral
      or pronoun if given the dictionary form. It is thus a computer
      emulation of a handbook of Finnish inflectional morphology.
      Particularly useful for teachers of Finnish because it
      quickly produces neatly formatted full paradigms
      which can be saved as text files for further editing. Available
      as freeware upon request from <[email protected]>.
      [Eugene Holman].

Leena Horton: First Finnish (Helsinki, 1982)
              Teaches a very basic knowledge of Finnish with a limited
      vocabulary through pictures. There are no grammatical
      explanations beyond the translations in the vocabularies for
      each chapter. This book was designed for use with children in a
      classroom situation. [NOM]

Mirja Joro et al.: Askelia Suomeen (Ammattikasvatushallitus,
      Helsinki, 1985-86)
              Four slim vols, all in Finnish, and intended for
      newcomers to Finland. [Lance Eccles]

Fred Karlsson: Finnish Grammar (tr Andrew Chesterman, WSOY,
      Porvoo-Helsinki-Juva, 1983).
      Finnish edition: Suomen peruskielioppi (1982)
      Swedish edition: Finsk grammatik (1978).
              Karrlsson systematically covers the grammar of Finnish. This
      is an excellent book - the grammar rules are easy to read and
      understand and numerous examples are given. The book uses a very
      clear and understandable style of layout. However, it is a
      grammar and will need to be used in conjunction with other
      material. [NOM]
              I've got this book, and while I find it useful, I'd
      hesitate to call it "excellent".  It's difficult to find things
      in it sometimes, it doesn't cover everything (e.g. I would dearly
      love to have information on such things as the use of "fossilised"
      cases (e.g. maanatai/sin, posti/tse) and I find the rule blocks
      written entirely in capitals difficult to read.  There is
      definite room for improvement. [Matthew Faupel]

Aira Haapakoski, Seija Koski & Mirja Valkesalmi: HUOMENTA SUOMI (Valtion
      painatuskeskus, Helsinki, 1990, ISBN 951-861-175-0)
              I've used it for adults and children. It
      illustrates basic grammar fairly clearly and may make teaching
      grammar more fun, it does not, however, give verbal rules, mainly
      the info is given in "boxes". Huomenta Suomi costs around 100
      FIM (= $25 CAD). [Marja Coady]

Marjatta Karanko & Ulla Talvitie: TOTTAKAI! (Oy Finn Lectura Ab, Loimaan
      kirjapaino, Loimaa 1993, ISBN 951-8905-71-1)
              I have not used it much yet but it would seem to
      be suitable especially for teenagers since its texts are geared
      towards them. Grammar is explained somewhat and the book
      contains exercises as well. Everything is done in Finnish.
      [Marja Coady]

Meri Lehtinen: Basic Course in Finnish (Ural and Altaic Series #27,
      Indiana UP, Bloomington, 1963)
              A huge book, full of drills. Unfortunately now out of
      print. [Lance Eccles]

Terttu Leney: Teach Yourself Finnish (New Version, Hodder and Stoughton,
      ISBN 0-340-56174-2) [An audio casette is also available]
              Whitney's notorious _Teach Yourself Finnish_ has been
      superseded by a new Finnish textbook compiled according to the
      Council of Europe's Threshold guidelines on language learning.
      It is an excellent introduction to spoken and written
      Finnish. [Eugene Holman]
              Teach Yourself has just recently brought out a
      new version. A colleague recckons its pretty good. [Matthew Faupel]
              The new version seems to be a *much* better
      book [Antti Lahelma]

Anneli Lieko: Suomen kielen fonetiikkaa ja fonologiaa ulkomaalaisille
      (1992) [Finnish phonetics and phonology for foreigners].
              A clearly written presentation of the Finnish sound
      system intended for foreigners with a good reading knowledge
      of the language. The book concentrates on the learning
      difficulties foreigners speaking a wide range
      of languages face when trying to master Finnish pronunciation.
      [Eugene Holman]
              I would like to say that the book is certainly useful
      but far from being a complete presentation of Finnish phonetics and
      phonology for foreigners. It does not, for example, specify exactly
      when a two-vowel pair is pronounced as a diphthong (instead of two
      vowels belonging to distinct syllables), nor does it describe the
      rules for secondary stress in Finnish. Admittedly, these are areas
      which have not been studied extensively enough, and they seldom have
      any phonematic effect.  But the phenomena certainly affect the
      naturalness of one's speech in Finnish. [Jukka "Yucca" Korpela]

Olli Nuutinen: Suomea Suomeksi 1. (Suomalaisen Sirjallisuuden Seura,
      Helsinki, repr. 1992) Vocabuary available in Danish, Icelandic,
      French, Spanish, Swedish, Norwegian, English, German, and Italian.
              Teaches everything in Finnish only. Probably less suitable
      for self studies. No audio cassettes available. As a student
      I know only this one and can't compare, but my impression is
      quite good. Seems to be up to date. The German vocabulary
      contains many errors. [Uwe Geuder]
              At first the book looks extremely childish but all of
      the grammar is there. I have found it quite effective when used in
      tandem with Karlsson's grammar. I first used this book in
      1982 and I would guess it was first published in the
      late 70's. This book makes Finnish feel EASY and
      with a little imagination is fun to learn from (and teach with!).
      [Cecelia A Musselman].

John B. Olli: Fundamentals of Finnish Grammar (Northland Press, New
      York, 1958)
              This book concentrates mainly on long lists of declensions
      and conjugations. The approach taken is not a very helpful for the
      learner. [NOM]

Anges Renfors: Finnish Self-Taught (Thimm's System) with Phonetic
      Pronunciation (Marlborough's Self Taught Series, London, 1910)
              Quite a old one! It is really a structured vocabulary with a
      brief grammar and a mini-phrase book. Very similar in many ways
      to the modern Berlitz books. [NOM]

Thomas A. Sekeboed (?): Spoken Finnish
              It seems to be good for having lots of conversational
      stuff in it, though probably you need the tapes (and a grammar)
      to make a good go of it [Robert Cumming]

Leena Silfverberg: Suomen kielen jatko-oppikirja (Finn Lectura,
      Helsinki?, 1990)
              An intermediate course. All in Finnish. Has vocab lists,
      but no translations. [Lance Eccles]

Arthur H. Whitney: Finnish (Teach Yourself Books, Hodder and Stoughton,
      1956)
              Being available in the cheap Teach Yourself Series, this book
      is easily and widely available. Which makes it such a shame that
      it is so bad. It consists of 20 chapters each of which has a
      grammatical section, a vocabulary, and exercises including short
      reading passages. The grammar is dreadfully complicated with the
      reader learning rare variations almost immediately. It is also
      very poorly laid out with no attempt at making it even vaguely
      easy on the eye and brain. The vocabularies seem somewhat
      pointless - they are normally 4 or 5 pages long which is an
      incredible amount of learning expected for a single chapter - it
      would have been better to include them alphabetically at the end
      of the work and then tell the reader "learn the words beigining
      with 'a' today". The exercises and reading passages are short
      and no great aid to someone working alone - as "Teach yourself"
      implies. A replacement by Terttu Leney is now available in this
      series. [NOM]
              Yes, that book presents the reader with the most massive

      vocabulary lessons I have seen in any text book. But, I liked
      one thing about it; the reading passages form a real continuing
      story. This is something most language books lack completely.
      Personally, I also liked the fact that even the first passage is
      far from trivial, not on the order of "Hello, Mrs. Paivinen.
      That is a house." But as usually happens with me and language
      books, I didn't assimilate the whole of the book. A
      lot has stuck, though.
      [ <[email protected]> ]


 4.8.2 Dictionaries


Suomi-Englanti-Suomi taskusanakirja, WSOY, Porvoo-Helsinki-Juva 1989.
              A small pocket dictionary with a stylised picture of the Union
      Jack as its cover.  Just about passable as a pocket dictionary,
      but it often doesn't give an indication of whether the word is
      a noun, adjective or verb (not always obvious) and only gives
      the basic form of each word (not helpful if it has an irregular
      partitive or whatever).  It also lacks most Finnish
      colloquialisms (the dictionary seems to be designed for Finns
      coming to Britain rather than vice-versa). [Matthew Faupel]

WSOY Suomi/Englanti and Englanti/Suomi.
              Two volumes, about the same size as the Concise Oxford
      (i.e. about 25cmx20cmx8cm).  Hence lots of words and
      examples. [Matthew Faupel]

Suomi/Englanti/Suomi Sanakirja, Gummerus Kirjapaino OY, 1989
              A single volume mid-size dictionary with a reasonable amount
      of colloquial information in, but still no information on
      things other than the basic forms of words (other than
      indirectly via examples). [Matthew Faupel]

Nykysuomen sanakirja
              Something like 6 volumes. Irreplaceable for knowing
      which words inflect in which ways, and for less common words.
      Clearly not for beginners, because of the total lack of English,
      but it's currently a bargain at around 300FIM (40 pounds
      sterling) in softback. [Steve Kelly]


 4.8.3 Readers


Robert Austerlitz: Finnish Reader and Glossary (Research and Studies in
      Uralic and Altaic Languages No 14, Indiana UP, 1963)

Aili Rytk�nen Bell & Augustus Koski: Finnish Graded Reader (1968)
      (Foreign Service Institute. Department of State. 1968)
      [Audio cassettes are also available]
              A behemoth (744 pgs.) of a book, this book takes the
      student from the advanmced elementary level (approx.  500 words
      and basic grammar) up to unedited journalistic, literary, and
      historical texts. Jam packed with interesting exercises and
      information otherwise unavailable about Finnish vocabulary,
      idioms and phraseology.  In my opinion this is the
      BEST BOOK AVAILABLE for mastering Finnish in all of its
      stylistic variety after you have learned the basics. The book
      is a public document and costs $17.50 according to the latest
      information I have available. [Eugene Holman]



 4.8.4 Material for teaching Finnish


(Language Centre for Finnish Universities)

Eija Aalto (ed.): Kohdekielen� suomi. Oppimateriaalien kommentoitu
      bibliografia. (Information from the Language Centre for Finnish
      Universities, 1991) (in Finnish)

J�nsson-Korhola & White: Rakastan sinua. Pid�tk� sin� minusta? Suomen
      verbien rektioita. (Language Centre Materials No. 66, 1989)

H. Koivisto: Suomi-tyt�n kieli. Suggestopedinen alkeiskurssi (Finnish-
      English). (Language Centre Materials No. 75, 1990)

K. Siitonen: Auringonvalo. El�m�� suomalaisessa kyl�ss�. (Reading
      materials for conversation classes). (Language Centre Materials
      No. 79, 1990)

E. Aalto: Kuule hei! Suomen kielen kuunteluharjoituksia
      vieraskielisille, (listening comprehension material, booklet + tapes).
      (Language Centre Materials No. 80, 1990)

Ahonen & White: Monta sataa suomen sanaa. (reader for vocabulary
      building and revision, English glossaries). (Language Centre
      Materials No. 101, 1993)

All the above can be ordered from: Language Centre for Finnish
Universities, University of Jyv�skyl�, P.O. Box 35, 40351 Jyv�skyl�,
Finland. If you want further information, feel free to contact Helena Valtanen
<[email protected]>.
[Helena Valtanen]



 4.8.5 Miscellaneous



Peter Hajdu: Finno-Ugrian languages and peoples (tr and adapted by G.F.
      Cushing fr Hungarian "Finnugor nepek es nyelvek", Deutsch,
      London, 1975).
              Gives a background to the peoples and cultures of the
      Finno-Ugrian family of languages. [NOM]


 4.8.6 Course details


Suomea/Finska/Finnish
      Soumen kielen ja kultuurin opinnot kes�ll� 1994 /
      Att studera finska och Finlands kultur sommaren 1994 /
      Courses in Finnish language and culture summer 1994
      (Council for Instruction of Finnish for Foreigners, Ministery of
      Education)
              This brochure is available from UKAN/Opitusministeri|
      PL 293, FIN-00171 Helsinki, Finland [Uwe Geuder]


 4.8.7 Acknowledgements


With lots of additions & help gratefully received from:

Uwe Geuder <[email protected]>;
Matthew Faupel <[email protected]>
Antti Lahelma <[email protected]>
Eugene Holman <[email protected]>
Robert Cumming <[email protected]>
Cecelia A Musselman <[email protected]>
Helena Valtanen <[email protected]>
Arndt Jonasson <[email protected]>
Brian Wilkins  <[email protected]>
Hans-Christian Holm <[email protected]>
Lance Eccles <[email protected]>
Steven Kelly <[email protected]>
Jukka "Yucca" Korpela <[email protected]>
Marja Coady <[email protected]>

plus others.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq48.html ]


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- END OF PART 4 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

  � Copyright 1994-98 by Antti Lahelma and Johan Olofsson.
         You are free to quote this page as long as you mention the URL
         for the original archive
         (as: <http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/index.html>), where the
         most recent version of this document can be found.
--
 e-mail: [email protected]
 s-mail: Majeldsv�gen 8a, 587 31  LINK�PING, Sweden
 www:    http://www.lysator.liu.se/~jmo/