Grand Duchy of Finland
The Grand Duchy of Finland was a state that existed 1809–1917.
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| Official languages | Swedish and, from 1883, Finnish | |
| Established church | Evangelical Lutheran and Orthodox | |
| Capital | Turku (1809-1812) Helsinki (1812-) | |
| Head of state | Grand Duke of Finland | |
| Area | - km² (-) | |
| Population | 1 636 900 (1850) | |
| Currency | Before 1840 old Swedish money, Russian money and Finnish 'kopeekka' issued in Turku since 1811. Ruble (1840-1859), Markka as manifestation of quater ruble (1860-1865), Markka (1865-) | |
| Existed | 1809-1917 | |
| Table of contents |
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2 Politics 3 Counties 4 Geography 5 Heraldry 6 Miscellaneous topics |
History
Finland was made a titulary Grand Duchy in 1581, when king John III of Sweden, who had been royal duke of Finland since 1556, made himself Grand Duke.
In 1808, Finland was conquered by the armies of Russian Emperor Alexander I and thereafter made an autonomous grand duchy in personal union with Imperial Russia until its fall in the end of 1917. For the foundation of the Grand Duchy as an entity with relatively great autonomy within the Russian realm, and for the regain of the so called Old Finland, that was lost to Russia in the previous century, the Finland-born Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt, councillor to the emperor, was instrumental.
The history of the Grand Duchy can briefly be characterized as:
- 1809–1862: fifty years of consolidation, during which the Grand Duchy's authorities succeeded in convincing the Russian court of not only their but of all Finns' loyalty
- 1863–1898: thirty-five years of increased independence, including the re-establishment of the Diet of Finland and the elevation of Finnish from a language for simple people to a national language equal to Swedish
- 1899–1917: twenty years of attempted russification, although ultimately unsuccessful, nevertheless detrimential for Finland's relationship with the Soviet Union
Politics
The Russian Emperor ruled as the Grand Duke of Finland and was represented in Finland by the Governor-General of Finland. The Senate of Finland was the highest governing body of the Grand Duchy. In St. Petersburg Finnish matters were represented by the Finnish Minister Secretary of State. From 1863 and onwards the Diet of Finland convened regulalry.
The administrative division introduced during the Swedish era in 1634 was continued with little changes.
Main article: Geography of Finland
The arms were granted at the burial of Gustav Vasa in 1560 and still remain the arms of the Republic of Finland.
In the 1860s talk about a Finnish Flag started in the fennoman movement. In 1863 numerous proposals were presented for a national flag. [1] The two main proposals were flags based on red/yellow and blue/white. Unfortunately the flag proposals never had a chanse to be presented to the Diet so none of them ever became an official flag. That didn't stop people from using different desings for flags of their own choosing.
Counties
Main article: Counties in FinlandGeography
Heraldry
Main articles: Flag of Finland, Coat of Arms of FinlandMiscellaneous topics