The late
medieval period was marked by the expansion of settlements
along the coast and into the interior. The Finns gradually
conquered the wilderness to the north, moved into it,
cleared the forest, and established agricultural
communities. This settling of the wilderness caused conflict
between the Finnish farmers and the Lapp reindeer herdsmen,
forcing the Lapps slowly northward. By the end of the
fifteenth century, the line of settlement was about 200
kilometers north of the Gulf of Finland, and it ran along
most of the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia, though less than
100 kilometers inland. The population of Finland likewise
had grown slowly in this difficult environment; it numbered
about 400,000 by the end of the Middle Ages The
economy of medieval Finland was based on agriculture, but
the brevity of the growing season, coupled with the paucity
of good soil, required that farming be supplemented by
hunting, fishing, trapping, and gathering. All but a small
portion of the Finnish population earned their livelihood in
this way. Although
the European institution of serfdom never existed in
Finland, and although most of the farmers were freemen, they
had little political power. Society and politics were
dominated by a largely Swedish-speaking nobility. Finland
was represented, however, in the Swedish Diet of the Four
Estates (Riksdag)-- clergy, nobility, burghers, and
farmers--that had advisory powers in relation to the king.
The Finns also had some responsibility for matters of local
justice and administration. Catholicism
was deeply rooted in medieval Finnish society. The church
parishes doubled as units of local administration, and the
church played the leading role in fostering an educated
Finnish leadership and the development of the Finnish
language. For example, the general requirement that parish
priests use the indigenous language helped to maintain the
speaking of Finnish. Turku (Swedish, Abo), encompassing the
whole country, was the was diocese, and the bishop of Turku
was the head of the Finnish church. In 1291 the first Finn
was named bishop, and thereafter all incumbents were
native-born. The
southwestern seaport city of Turku, the seat of the
bishopric, became the administrative capital of Finland.
Turku was also the center of Finland's mercantile life,
which was dominated by German merchants of the Hanseatic
League. Finland's main exports at this time were various
furs; the trade in naval stores was just beginning. The only
other city of importance at this time was Viipuri (Swedish,
Vyborg), which was significant both as a Hanseatic trade
center and as a military bastion that anchored Finland's
eastern defenses against the Russians.
Library of Congress Country Study Medieval
Society and Economy
Library of Congress Country Study
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