'Old Finland' (''Vanha Suomi'' in
Finnish) is a name used for the areas that
Russia gained from
Sweden in the
Great Northern War and in the
Russo-Swedish War (1741–1743). Old Finland was joined to the
autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland as
Viipuri province in
1812.
★ In the
Peace Treaty in 1721, that concluded the Great Northern War, Sweden had to cede the
Käkisalmi County and
Wiburg/Viipuri County. Also the Finnish province of
Ingria around St.Petersburg but this was not included in "Old Finland".
★ In the
Peace Treaty in 1743 Sweden had to cede the areas in southern
Karelia east of the
Kymi river and around
Savonlinna.
The area quite much corresponded that of the medieval province subjugated to the
Viipuri castle.
The Russian ruler guaranteed
religion, properties, old Swedish laws and privileges of the inhabitants of these territories. However, in circumvention occurred, as Russian administrators and military were unfamiliar with Swedish system, and were used to a different system with its enslaved peasants, the
serfdom. As a result, the economy of the area was markedly different compared to that on the other side of the border. Some sort of apathy was the dominating thing.
The rulers guarantee froze the situation, thus legal developments in Sweden were not introduced to these areas: the Viipuri and Käkisalmi territory did not adopt the
1734 General Law of Sweden (though
Hamina,
Lappeenranta and
Savonlinna, then yet Swedish, of course did), and new
Constitutions of
Gustav III were out of question in the entire area.
The territories enjoyed a sort of
autonomy and much
particularism, since the Russian rulers applied similar principles here as in
Baltic Provinces. The administration resembled a bunch of German
principalities, rather than a
Russian province.
Under Russian rule the combined territories formed the
Vyborg Governorate.
Ecclesiastically, the areas were administered as a diocese, but without a
bishop. The church building in Vyborg and another in Hamina were assigned as
cathedrals, with a diocesan chapter ("consistory"), led by the archdean.
The area was not forced to give men to the Russian Army until 1797. However there was much of non-Finnish troops in the area, especially after the 1788-90 war.
Scandinavian-style district courts continued in judicial function, each with a judge and laymen members. However the Russian estate owners and military often ignored their decisions and made unlegal actions and punishments to the peasants.
Because of the apathy dominating the area not many figures from the area have a place in history. Two of them are
Maximilian von Alopeus and his brother
David Alopaeus, born in a Finnish family in Vyborg and both later serving many posts in Imperial administration, including ambassador in some Central European countries.
These areas were later referred to as ''Old Finland'' and from the beginning of the year
1812 they were incorporated in the
Grand Duchy of Finland. Basically, the population in these provinces came to the same legal system as the Grand Duchy, including its
Constitution and General Law, although some privileges took time to adapt, and so-called
donated estates (owned by
Russian noblemen) in Karelia were a headache that was resolved slowly by monetary compensations from the Grand Duchy's Treasury. This was a long lasting burden, as the last was not until the 1870's.
See also
★
Fief of Viipuri
★
Finnish Karelia
★
History of the administrative division of Russia
References
★ Viipurin läänin liittäminen muun Suomen yhteyteen, A.Danielsson-Kalmari