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Grand Duchy of Finland

The Grand Duchy of Finland, officially and also translated as the Grand Principality of Finland,[a] was the predecessor state of modern Finland. It existed between 1809 and 1917 as an autonomous state ruled by the Russian Empire.[1]

Grand Duchy of Finland
  • Suomen suuriruhtinaskunta (Finnish)
  • Storfurstendömet Finland (Swedish)
  • Великое княжество Финляндское (Russian)

Turku (1809–1812)
Helsinki (1812–1917)

Official religions:
Evangelical Lutheran (until 1867)
Russian Orthodox (until 1917)

Diet (1809–1906)
Parliament (1906–1917)

 

29 March 1809

17 September 1809

6 December 1917

Swedish riksdaler
(1809–1840)
Russian ruble
(1840–1860)
Finnish markka
(1860–1917)

Originating in the 16th century as a titular grand duchy held by the King of Sweden, the country became autonomous after its annexation by Russia in the Finnish War of 1808–1809. The Grand Duke of Finland was the Romanov Emperor of Russia, represented by the Governor-General. Due to the governmental structure of the Russian Empire and Finnish initiative, the Grand Duchy's autonomy expanded until the end of the 19th century. The Senate of Finland, founded in 1809, became the most important governmental organ and the precursor to the modern Government of Finland, the Supreme Court of Finland, and the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland.[2]


Economic, social and political changes in the Grand Duchy of Finland paralleled those in the Russian Empire and the rest of Europe. The economy grew slowly during the first half of the 19th century. The reign of Alexander II (1855–1881) saw significant cultural, social and intellectual progress, and an industrializing economy. Tensions increased after Saint Petersburg adopted Russification policies in 1898; the new circumstances saw the reduction of Finnish autonomy and cultural expression. Unrest in Russia and Finland during the First World War (1914–1918) and the subsequent collapse of the Russian Empire in 1917 resulted in the Finnish Declaration of Independence and the end of the Grand Duchy.[3]

Count Göran Magnus Sprengtporten 1808–1809

General

General Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly 1809–1810

Knyaz

General Fabian Steinheil 1810–1823

Count

Gustav Mauritz Armfelt 1812–1813

Count

General Arseny Zakrevsky 1823–1831

Count

Aleksander Menshikov 1831–1855

Admiral

General 1855–1861

Friedrich Wilhelm Rembert Graf von Berg

General Platon Rokassovsky 1854–1855, 1861–1866

Baron

General 1861, 1864, 1868, 1870, 1872–1873

Johan Mauritz Nordenstam

General Nikolai Adlerberg 1866–1881

Count

General Fyodor Logginovich van Heiden 1881–1897

Count

Stepan Goncharov 1897–1898

General-Lieutenant

General 1898–1904

Nikolai Bobrikov

General-Lieutenant Ivan Obolenski 1904–1905

Knyaz

Nikolai Gerard 1905–1908

Privy Councillor

General 1908–1909

Vladimir von Boeckmann

General-Lieutenant 1909–1917

Franz Albert Seyn

Privy Councilor 1917

Adam Lipski

1917

Mikhail Stakhovich

1917

Nikolai Nekrasov

Independence of Finland

Military of the Grand Duchy of Finland

Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic

Old Finland

– Kingdom of Poland (1815–1831), another constitutional monarchy within the Russian Empire

Congress Poland

Åland War

Governorate of Estonia

Grand Duchy of Lithuania

Finnish Civil War

Hall, Wendy (1953), Green, Gold, and Granite, London: Max Parrish & Co.

Jussila, Osmo; Henttilä, Seppo; Nevakivi, Jukka (1995), From Grand Duchy to a Modern State, London, United Kingdom: Hurst & Company.

Jutikkala, Eino; Pirinen, Kauko (1962), A History of Finland (rev. ed.), New York, Washington: Praeger Publishers.

Mäkinen, Ilkka. (Winter 2015), "From Literacy to Love of Reading: The Fennomanian Ideology of Reading in the 19th-Century Finland", Journal of Social History, 49 (2).

Seton-Watson, Hugh (1967), The Russian Empire 1801–1917, London: Oxford.

Alenius, Kari. "Russification in Estonia and Finland Before 1917", Faravid, 2004, Vol. 28, pp. 181–94

Online

Huxley, Steven. Constitutionalist insurgency in Finland: Finnish "passive resistance" against Russification as a case of nonmilitary struggle in the European resistance tradition (1990)

Jussila, Osmo, et al. From Grand Duchy to a Modern State: A Political History of Finland Since 1809 (Hurst & Co. 1999).

Kan, Aleksander. "Storfurstendömet Finland 1809–1917 – dess autonomi enligt den nutida finska historieskrivningen" (in Swedish) ["Autonomous Finland 1809–1917 in contemporary Finnish historiography"] Historisk Tidskrift, 2008, Issue 1, pp. 3–27

Polvinen, Tuomo. Imperial Borderland: Bobrikov and the Attempted Russification of Finland, 1898–1904 (1995) . 342 pp.

Duke University Press

Thaden, Edward C. Russification in the Baltic Provinces and Finland (1981).

JSTOR

at Flags of the World

Grand Duchy of Finland

The text of The Imperial Manifesto of 1811 in German and Finnish

. Encyclopedia Americana. 1920.

"Finland, Grand Duchy of"