During his reign,
Gustav I Vasa concentrated on consolidating royal power in
the dynasty that he had founded and on furthering the aims
of the Reformation. In the process, he molded Sweden into a
great power, but he wisely avoided involvement in foreign
wars. His successors, however, sought, through an aggressive
foreign policy, to expand Sweden's power in the Baltic area.
This policy produced some ephemeral successes, and it led to
the creation of a Swedish empire on the eastern and the
southern shores of the Baltic Sea. Beginning in the
mid-sixteenth century, Sweden's ambitious foreign policy
brought it into conflict with the three other main powers
that had an interest in the Baltic: Denmark, Poland, and
Russia. These three powers fought numerous wars with Sweden,
which was at war for more than 80 of the last 300 years it
ruled Finland. Finland itself was often the scene of
military campaigns that were generally conducted as total
war and thus included the devastation of the countryside and
the killing of civilians. One example of such campaigns was
the war between Sweden and Russia that lasted from 1570 to
1595 and was known in Finland as the Long Wrath, because of
the devastations inflicted on the country. Sweden was also
heavily involved in the Thirty Years' War (1618-48), in
which the Swedes under King Gustavus II Adolphus thwarted
the advance of the Habsburg Empire to the shores of the
Baltic and thereby secured the Swedish possessions there.
Finnish troops were conscripted in great numbers into the
Swedish army to fight in this or in other wars, and the
Finns often distinguished themselves on the
battlefield. The Great
Northern War began in 1700 when Denmark, Poland, and Russia
formed an alliance to take advantage of Sweden's apparent
weakness at that time and to partition the Swedish empire.
Sweden's youthful king Charles XII surprised them, however,
with a series of military victories that knocked Denmark out
of the war in 1700 and Poland, in 1706. The impetuous
Swedish king then marched on Moscow, but he met disaster at
the battle of Poltava in 1709. As a result, Denmark and
Poland rejoined the war against Sweden. Charles attempted to
compensate for Sweden's territorial losses in the Baltic by
conquering Norway, but he was killed in action there in
1718. His death removed the main obstacle to a negotiated
peace between Sweden and the alliance. The Great
Northern War ended on August 30, 1721, with the signing of
the Peace of Uusikaupunki (Swedish, Nystad), by which Sweden
ceded most of its territories on the southern and the
eastern shores of the Baltic Sea. Sweden was also forced to
pay a large indemnity to Russia, and, in return, the
Russians evacuated Finland, retaining only some territory
along Finland's southeastern border. This area included the
fortress city of Viipuri. As a result of the war, Sweden's
power was much reduced, and Russia replaced Sweden as the
main power in the Baltic. Finland's ability
to defend itself had been impaired by the famine of 1696 in
which about one-third of the Finnish people died of
starvation, a toll greater than that caused by the Black
Death in the fourteenth century. The war's greatest impact
on Finland, beyond the heavy taxes and conscription, was
caused by Russian occupation from 1714 to 1722, a period of
great difficulty, remembered by the Finns as the Great
Wrath. The hardships of being conquered by a foreign invader
were compounded by Charles XII's insistence that the Finns
carry on partisan warfare against the Russians. Much of the
countryside was devastated by the Russians in order to deny
Finland's resources to Sweden. Of the nearly 60,000 Finns
who served in the Swedish army, only about 10,000 survived
the Great Northern War. Finland's prewar population of
400,000 was reduced by the end of the war to about
330,000. Charles XII's
policies led to the repudiation of absolute monarchy in
Sweden and to the ushering in of a half-century of
parliamentary supremacy, referred to as the Age of Freedom.
One major characteristic of this era was the strife between
the two major political parties, the Hats, representing the
upper classes, and the Caps, representing the lower classes.
These political parties, however, proved no more competent
in the realm of foreign affairs than the kings. In 1741 the
Hats led Sweden into a war with Russia in order to try to
undo the result of the Peace of Uusikaupunki. Russian forces
thereupon invaded Finland and began, virtually without a
fight, a short-lived occupation known as the Lesser Wrath.
In accordance with the Peace of Turku signed in 1743, Russia
once again evacuated Finland, but took another slice of
Finnish territory along the southeastern
frontier. King Gustav III,
who in 1772 had reimposed absolutism in Sweden, also tried
to alter the verdict of the Great Northern War. In 1788
Sweden declared war against Russia with the intention of
regaining territory along Finland's eastern frontier. A
significant incident during that war was the mutiny of a
group of Finnish military officers, the Anjala League, the
members of which, hoped to avert Russian revenge against
Finland. A leading figure in the mutiny was a former colonel
in the Swedish army, Gran Sprengtporten. Most Finnish
officers did not support the mutiny, which was promptly put
down, but an increasing number of Finns, especially Finnish
nobles, were weary of Finland's serving as a battleground
between Sweden and Russia. Because of Russia's simultaneous
involvement in a war with the Ottoman Empire, Sweden was
able to secure a settlement in 1790 in the Treaty of Varala,
which ended the war without altering Finland's
boundaries. Sweden's frequent
wars were expensive, and they led to increased taxation,
among other measures for augmenting state revenues. A system
of government controls on the economy, or mercantilism, was
imposed on both Sweden and Finland, whereby the Finnish
economy was exploited for the benefit of Sweden. In addition
to hindering Finland's economic development, Sweden's wars
enabled Swedish aristocrats and military officers to gain
large estates in Finland as a reward for their services. The
Swedish-speaking minority dominated landholding, government,
and the military. Although free of serfdom, peasants paid
high taxes, and they had to perform labor for the
government. Through the provincial assemblies, the peasants
retained a small measure of political power, but the
Swedish-speaking nobility held most political and economic
power in Finland. Throughout this
period, the peasantry continued to be the backbone of
Finland's predominantly agrarian society. The frontier was
pushed northward as new stretches of inland wilderness were
settled. The potato was introduced into Finnish agriculture
in the 1730s, and it helped to ensure a stable food supply.
Although Finland's trade in naval stores--timber, tar,
pitch, resin--was expanded considerably, the growth of an
indigenous Finnish middle class was retarded by the
continuing dominance of foreign merchants, especially the
Germans and the Dutch. The centuries-old
union between Sweden and Finland came to an end during the
Napoleonic wars. France and Russia became allies in 1807 at
Tilsit, and Napoleon subsequently urged Russia to force
Sweden into joining them against Britain. Tsar Alexander I
obliged by invading Finland in 1808, and, after overwhelming
Sweden's poorly-organized defenses, he conquered Finland in
1809. Sweden formally ceded Finland to Russia by the Treaty
of Hamina (Swedish, Fredrikshamn) on September 17,
1809.
Library of Congress Country Study Finland and the
Swedish Empire
Library of Congress Country Study
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