
J.L. Runeberg's autograph
'Johan Ludvig Runeberg' (
February 5,
1804,
Jakobstad –
May 6,
1877,
Porvoo) was a
Finland-Swedish poet, and is held to be the
national poet of
Finland.
Runeberg studied first in the cities of
Vaasa and
Oulu, later on at
Academy of Ã…bo, where he befriended
Johan Vilhelm Snellman and
Zacharias Topelius. His studies concentrated mainly on the classical languages of Latin and Greek. From
1837 onwards he lived in
Porvoo, where he served as professor of Roman literature in the
Gymnasium of Porvoo.
Many of his poems deal with life in rural Finland. The best known of these is ''Bonden Paavo''
[1], (''Farmer Paavo'', ''Saarijärven Paavo'' in Finnish), about a smallholding peasant farmer in the poor parish of
Saarijärvi and his determination, "
sisu" (guts) and unwavering faith in providence in the face of a harsh climate and years of bad harvests. Each year he mixes double the amount of
bark into his
bread to stave off
starvation and gives what he can to his neighbors.
Runeberg's most famous work is ''Fänrik Ståls sägner'' (
The Tales of Ensign Stål, ''Vänrikki Stoolin tarinat'' in
Finnish) written between
1848 and
1860. It is considered the greatest Finnish
epic poem outside the native
Kalevala tradition and contains tales of the
Finnish War of
1808-
09 with
Russia. In the war,
Sweden ignominiously lost Finland, which became a
Grand Duchy in the
Russian empire. The poem, which is composed episodically, emphasizes the common humanity of all sides in the conflict, while principally lauding the heroism of the Finns. The first poem "VÃ¥rt land", (''Our Land'', ''Maamme'' in Finnish) became the
Finnish National Anthem. Runeberg is celebrated on
5 February each year.
See also
★
List of Swedish language writers
★
Runeberg's tart
External links
★
★
Works by Runeberg at
Project Runeberg
★ http://www.dugamladufria.com/songs/finland.html