During the Viking
Age (c. A.D. 800-1050), Swedish Vikings came into contact
with the Finns in the course of their expeditions eastward,
which were aimed at establishing, via Russia, trade ties
with the Arab world, although they built no permanent
settlements in Finland. The Finns' name for the Swedes, Rus,
was derived from the Finnish word for Sweden, Ruotsi, and is
believed to be the origin of the name Russia. Swedish influence
in Finland grew at approximately the close of the Viking
Age, when the Swedes were converted to Christianity by the
Roman Catholic Church and soon afterward began missionary
activities in Finland. Most Finns were converted to the
Roman Catholic Church about the mid-twelfth century, during
the wave of crusades that began in 1095. A quasi-historical
legend maintains that in 1157 a crusade was led against the
polytheistic Finns by the Swedish King Erik IX and the
English monk Henry, who had been appointed archbishop of
Uppsala. According to tradition, Henry was martyred in
Finland and was subsequently recognized as the country's
patron saint. The success of the crusade was supposed to
have given Sweden and Latin Christianity a solid foothold in
Finland. There is no evidence of the crusade and Henry's
role in it, however, and there are indications that
Christian communities existed in Finland at an earlier
date. Meanwhile, the
Russians, partly on religious grounds, also sought control
of Finland. They had been converted to Eastern Orthodox
Christianity and subsequently tried to convert the Finns to
this religion. Finnic peoples in eastern Karelia were
converted to Orthodoxy and were thereby drawn into a
different religious and cultural orbit from Swedish-ruled,
Roman Catholic Finns in the west. About 1240, Rome
sanctioned two crusades in an effort to push the frontier of
Latin Christianity eastward. Swedish crusaders first invaded
Russia along the northern shore of the Gulf of Finland, but
they were halted in 1240 on the banks of the Neva River by
Prince Alexander of Novgorod, who thereby earned the name
Alexander Nevsky ("of the Neva"). The second crusade,
spearheaded by the Teutonic Knights, followed the southern
shore of the Gulf of Finland and was defeated by Alexander
Nevsky in 1242 on the ice of Lake Peipus. The Swedes
initiated a final attempt to wrest eastern Karelia from the
Russians in 1293, but the thirty years of war that followed
failed to dislodge the Russians from the region. The Peace
of Pahkinasaari (Swedish, Nteborg) in 1323, which
ended this war, established the border between Finland and
Russia that was maintained for nearly three hundred
years. Sweden
consolidated its control over Finland gradually, in a
process that was facilitated by the introduction of Swedish
settlers along the southern and the western coasts of
Finland. The settlers, most of whom remained in the coastal
region, became a ruling class within Finland, and Finland
was politically integrated into the Swedish
realm. Origins
of the Finns <<<
Contents
>>> Medieval
Society and Economy
Library of Congress Country Study
c. 1150-1809
Library of Congress Country Study
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