The
signal achievement of Finland has been its survival against
great odds--against a harsh climate, physical and cultural
isolation, and international dangers. Finland lies at higher
latitudes than any other country in the world, and the
punishing northern climate has complicated life there
considerably. Geographically, Finland is on the remote
northern periphery, far from the mass of Europe, yet near
two larger states, Sweden and Russia--later the Soviet
Union, which have drawn it into innumerable wars and have
dominated its development. At the
beginning of its recorded history, in the eleventh century
A.D., Finland was conquered by its powerful neighbor,
Sweden. Christianization and more than 600 years of Swedish
rule (c. 1150-1809) made the Finns an essentially West
European people, integrated into the religion, culture,
economics, and politics of European civilization. The Finns
have, however, maintained their own language, which is
complex and is not related to most other European
languages. The
centuries of Swedish rule witnessed Finland's increasing
involvement in European politics, particularly when the
country served as a battleground between Sweden on the west
and Russia on the east. Over the centuries, Russia has
exerted an especially persistent and powerful pressure on
Finland. Many wars were fought between Swedes and Finns on
the one side and Russians on the other. Eventually, Russia
conquered Finland and incorporated it into the Russian
Empire, where it remained for more than a century, from 1809
to 1917. Until the
nineteenth century, the Finns were, like many other peoples
of Europe, a subject nation seemingly without a culture or a
history of their own. The national awakening of the
nineteenth century brought recognition of the uniqueness of
the Finnish people and their culture, and led to Finland's
independence in 1917. Complicating the emergence of the
Finnish people into national consciousness, however, was the
split between the majority of Finnish speakers and a
powerful and influential minority of Swedish speakers. Only
during the twentieth century was this conflict gradually
resolved. In 1987
Finland celebrated the seventieth anniversary of its
national independence, which was a hard-won achievement.
Independence was threatened at the start in a bloody civil
war in 1918 between Finnish leftists (Reds) and rightists
(Whites); a victory by the Reds might have resulted in
Finland's eventual absorption by the Soviet Union. One
legacy of the war was a longlasting political division
between working class Reds and middleclass Whites during the
first two decades of independence. As a result, political
extremism, as represented by communism and by fascism was
stronger in Finland than it was in many other Western
democracies; it was eventually neutralized, however, and
with time Finnish democracy became strongly
rooted. The most
serious challenges to Finland's independence came during
World War II, when the Finns twice faced attack by
overwhelming Soviet forces. They fought heroically, but were
defeated both times, and the Soviets were narrowly prevented
from occupying and absorbing Finland. Since World War II,
the Soviet Union's status as a superpower has meant that it
could at any time end Finland's existence as a separate
state. Recognizing this, the Finns have sought and achieved
reconciliation with the Soviets, and they have tenaciously
pursued a policy of neutrality, avoiding entanglement in
superpower conflicts. The long
era of peace after World War II made possible the blossoming
of Finland as a modern, industrialized, social-welfare
democracy. By the 1980s, the intense social conflicts of
previous decades were largely reconciled, and the country's
relationships with other nations were apparently
stable.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
This document is in the public domain. You may copy, download, print and distribute this work as you see fit.Every effort has been made to present this text accurately and cleanly, but no guarantees are made against errors. Neither Melissa Snell nor About.com may be held liable for any problems you experience with the text version or with any electronic form of the document.
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