'The Maiden of Finland' (
Finnish: '''Suomi-neito''') is the
national personification of
Finland, much as
Marianne in
France,
Britannia in the
United Kingdom,
Deutscher Michel in
Germany and
Uncle Sam or
Lady Liberty for the
United States. She is a young woman in her mid-twenties with often braided blonde hair, blue eyes, wearing a blue and white
national costume or a white dress. She was originally called 'Aura' after the
Aura River in
Turku. As a symbol, the Finnish Maiden has been used since the
18th Century when she was pictured as a woman wearing a turreted crown, and then developing as Finland gained a national consciousness and independence. Poetically, the maiden Aura has been linked to her foster mother,
Mother Svea, the personification of
Sweden.
'The Maiden of Finland' can also refer to the shape of Finland on the map. With a little imagination it looks like a female form which has one hand raised (and another before the
Moscow Peace Treaty of 1940), a head, and a skirt. The metaphor is so commonly used that the northwestern area around
Enontekiö is known as the Arm (''Käsivarsi'') even in official contexts.
See also
★
National personification
References
External links
★
An account of the Finnish Maiden by Irmeli Tanttu Porkka for Virtual Finland website