This article is about a Finnish province. For other meanings, see Karelia (disambiguation)

Karelia, Karjala (in Finnish) or Karelen (in Swedish), is a historical province in eastern Finland. It borders to Nyland, Savonia and Ostrobothnia. It is also bounded by Russia and the Gulf of Finland.

Karelen
Karjala
LandÖsterland
AdministrationEastern Finland
Southern Finland
Areaxx,xxx km²

The historical province Karelia should be distinguished from East Karelia, that has remained Russian Orthodox since medieval times, although in the early 20th century considered a Finnish irredenta and occupied by Finland during the Continuation War (1941-1944). It constitutes today the autonomous republic of Karelia.

Table of contents
1 Administration
2 History
3 Geography
4 Culture
5 Heraldry
6 External links

Administration

Present-day Finnish Karelia is divided upon the administrative provinces of Eastern Finland (Northern Karelia) and Southern Finland (Southern Karelia).

History

Main article: History of Karelia

During the 13th century Karelia was fought over between Novgorod and Sweden. In some Swedish sources the Karelians are described as allies to the Novgorodians. The "Third Swedish crusade", lead by the marsk Torkel Knutsson, which took place 1293-1295, resulted in the western parts of Karelia coming under Swedish rule, and in the building of the castle of Viipuri.

The hostilities continued in 1300 when a Swedish force attacked the opening of the river Neva and built a fort near the current location of Saint Petersburg. The fort was destroyed the following year by the Novgorodians. Indecisive fighting in 1321 and 1322 lead to negotiations and Peace Treaty in Nöteborg (Orochovets) which for the first time decided the border between Sweden and Novgorod. Sweden got western Karelia and Novgorod got Ingria and Ladoga Karelia or East Karelia.

In 1635 Savonia and the parts of Karelia around Viipuri were incorporated in the Viborg and Nyslott County. After the Treaty of Nystad in 1721 Viborg and the Kexholm County were ceded to Russia and the rest was incorporated into the Kymmenegårds and Nyslott County. This was also ceded to Russia in the Treaty of Åbo in 1743. After the conquest of the Grand Duchy of Finland, it was in 1812 joined to Russia's 18th century gains, called "Old Finland". After the Second World War, when the new border was established close to that of 1721, the Finnish remains of the Province of Viipuri were made into the "Province of Kymi". In 1997 the Kymi province was added to the province of Southern Finland.

Geography

Main article: Geography of Karelia

Culture

Main article: Culture of Karelia See also: Saami music.

The traditional culture of Ladoga-Karelia, or Finnish Karelia (according to the pre-Winter War borders), was by and large similar to that of East-Karelia, or Russian Karelia.

Karelians live, and did even more so before Stalinism and the Great Purges, also in vast areas east of Finland (in East-Karelia, not marked on the map to the right), where folklore, language and architecture during the 19th century was in the center of the Finns' interest, representing a "purer" Finnish culture than that of Southern and Western Finland, which had been in more contact with (or "contaminated by") German and Scandinavian culture. The Kalevala and Finnish Art Nouveau are expressions hereof.

The Karelian language is by Finns usually considered a dialect of Finnish, as it differs only slightly from Finnish language. Others, for instance many foreign linguists and some people in Estonia and Russia, consider the Karelian variety a language of its own, similarly to how the dialects of Ingria by Finns usually are considered dialects of Finnish-proper, but in Estonia often considered languages of their own, and also similarly to Meänkieli.

The Karelian variety has two main types (or dialects): Karelian Proper (North and South Karelian) and Olonets (by the name of Olonka river) or Ludic (luudi, in their own tongue) (East Karelian), reflecting the fact that East of Finland where Karelians to the early 20th century had remained relatively uninfluented by the influx of Russians (following the founding of Saint Petersburg in 1703).

Heraldry

Main article: Heraldry of Karelia

The arms is crowned by a ducal coronet, though by Finnish tradition this more resembles a Swedish count's coronet. The symbolism of the coat of arms is supposed to represent how the region was fought over by Sweden and Russia for centuries. Blazon: "Gules, in center chief a crown or above two duelling arms, the dexter armored holding a sword and the sinister chain-mail armored with a scimitar, all argent except for hafts and gauntlet joint or."

External links

The Karelians