Finnish Studies Volume 20 Number 1 May 2017 ISSN 1206-6516 ISBN 978-1-937875-92-3

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Finnish Studies Volume 20 Number 1 May 2017 ISSN 1206-6516 ISBN 978-1-937875-92-3 JOURNAL OF INNISH TUDIES F S Poverty of a Beggar and a Nobleman: Experiencing and Encountering Impoverishment in Nineteenth-Century Finland Guest Editors Pirita Frigren and Tiina Hemminki Theme Issue of the Journal of Finnish Studies Volume 20 Number 1 May 2017 ISSN 1206-6516 ISBN 978-1-937875-92-3 JOURNAL OF FINNISH STUDIES EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICE Journal of Finnish Studies, Department of English, 1901 University Avenue, Evans 458 (P.O. Box 2146), Sam Houston State University, Huntsville, TX 77341-2146, USA Tel. 1.936.294.1420; Fax 1.936.294.1408 SUBSCRIPTIONS, ADVERTISING, AND INQUIRIES Contact Business Office (see above & below). EDITORIAL STAFF Helena Halmari, Editor-in-Chief, Sam Houston State University; [email protected] Hanna Snellman, Co-Editor, University of Helsinki; [email protected] Scott Kaukonen, Assoc. Editor, Sam Houston State University; [email protected] Hilary Joy Virtanen, Asst. Editor, Finlandia Univ.; [email protected] Sheila Embleton, Book Review Editor, York University; [email protected] Jennifer Seay, Intern, Sam Houston State University; [email protected] EDITORIAL BOARD Börje Vähämäki, Founding Editor, JoFS, Professor Emeritus, University of Toronto Raimo Anttila, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles Michael Branch, Professor Emeritus, University of London Thomas DuBois, Professor, University of Wisconsin, Madison Sheila Embleton, Distinguished Research Professor, York University Aili Flint, Emerita Senior Lecturer, Associate Research Scholar, Columbia University Tim Frandy, Outreach Specialist, Associate Lecturer, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison Titus Hjelm, Reader, University College London Daniel Karvonen, Senior Lecturer, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis James P. Leary, Professor Emeritus, University of Wisconsin, Madison Andrew Nestingen, Associate Professor, University of Washington, Seattle Jyrki Nummi, Professor, Department of Finnish Literature, University of Helsinki Jussi Nuorteva, Director General, The National Archives of Finland Juha Pentikäinen, Professor, Institute for Northern Culture, University of Lapland Oiva Saarinen, Professor Emeritus, Laurentian University, Sudbury George Schoolfield, Professor Emeritus, Yale University Beth L. Virtanen, Professor, South University Online Keijo Virtanen, Professor, University of Turku Marianne Wargelin, Independent Scholar, Minneapolis SUBSCRIPTION RATES 2017–18 (2 ISSUES PER YEAR) Individuals: US $40 Institutions: US $50 Europe €40 Europe €50 ADVERTISEMENTS (BLACK & WHITE ONLY) Half page $50/€50 Full page $100/€100 Inside back cover $200/€200 Outside back cover $250/€250 MORE INFORMATION Contact Business Office, or http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_www/finnishstudies/ ©2017 Journal of Finnish Studies The Journal of Finnish Studies adheres to delayed self-archiving of the published ver- sion of the article (Sherpa/Romeo Green) in academic and institutional reposito- ries, with a 12-month embargo starting from the month of publication. Subscriptions to the Journal of Finnish Studies are available through our website: http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_www/finnishstudies/JFS_subs_and_ads.html. For a cumulative bibliography of articles published in the Journal of Finnish Studies, see http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_www/finnishstudies/JoFS_Articles.html. Back issues are available directly from the editor at [email protected]. Cover: The Lapinlahti coat of arms. Original design by Ahti Hammar. Heraldic description: “On black field a slash-and-burn worker with bar as a tool; man is accompanied on both sides with six-spiked star; all gold, except man’s face and hands natural coloured and birch-bark shoes and slash-and-burn bar base red” (http:// www.lapinlahti.fi/loader.aspx?id=0ee6bc73-4d92-4ec4-96f1-2fc47495aa5d). Cover design: Scott Kaukonen The Journal of Finnish Studies expresses its gratitude to the Department of English and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Sam Houston State University for the important institutional support provided. TABLE OF CONTENTS Helena Halmari: Editorial 1 I Introduction Pirita Frigren, Tiina Hemminki, and Ilkka Nummela: Experiencing and Encountering Impoverishment in Nineteenth-Century Finland 5 Henrik Forsberg: Masculine Submission: National Narratives of the Last Great Famine, c. 1868–1920 38 II The Landless Poor Miikka Voutilainen: Poverty and Tax Exemptions in Mid-Nineteenth-Century Finland 67 Anu Koskivirta: Crimes of Desperation: Poverty-Related Filicides 1810–1860 97 Johanna Annola: Out of Poverty: The Ahrenberg Siblings, 1860–1920 132 III Impoverishment of the Changing Elite Irene Ylönen: The Experience of Impecuniousness in a Noble Family at the End of the Nineteenth Century 167 Marja Vuorinen: Bourgeois Stories of Impoverished Noblemen as Evidence of the Decline of the Noble Estate 197 Maare Paloheimo: Petitioning the Tsar for Help: Survival Strategies of an Impoverished Finnish Merchant after the Great Fire of Turku (1827) 224 Riina Turunen: Enterprising People and the Threat of Impoverishment and Social Loss: The Consequences of Urban Business Failure in Finland at the End of the 1870s 254 Antti Häkkinen: Afterword 282 Book Reviews Koskinen-Koivisto, Eerika. Her Own Worth: Negotiations of Subjectivity in the Life Narrative of a Female Labourer. Reviewed by Yvonne R. Lockwood. 287 Sahlberg, Pasi. Finnish Lessons: What Can the World Learn from Educational Change in Finland? Reviewed by Sharon Franklin-Rahkonen. 290 Ahola, Joonas, and Frog, with Clive Tolley, editors. Fibula, Fabula, Fact: The Viking Age in Finland. Reviewed by Kendra Willson. 293 Contributors 303 EDITORIAL We are pleased to present to our readers this latest theme issue, entitled Poverty of a Beggar and a Nobleman: Experiencing and Encountering Impoverishment in Nineteenth- Century Finland. The guest editors, Pirita Frigren and Tiina Hemminki from the University of Jyväskylä, have compiled a fascinating collection of articles about pov- erty in Finland during the 1800s. The contributors to this volume approach the topic from a number of different perspectives, showing how poverty in nineteen-century Finland could afflict anyone, regardless of social status—from the landless poor to the merchant and the aristrocrat. The authors weave together stories of individual tragedies caused by unfortunate circumstances: the Great Famine, the death of a caregiver, the birth of an unwanted child, business failure, or the Great Fire of Turku. We also learn about tax exemptions, petitions to the tsar, and other options and hopes for survival in dire situations. We learn about the Ahrenberg siblings, who were fortunate enough to be able to work their way out of poverty, and we read about members of the bourgeois who plunged into it. Most importantly, these articles tell us about a society without a reliable safety network—of mothers and fathers who frantically kill their children because they cannot feed them, servants who steal in order to survive through tomorrow. But we also learn about incredible resilience. The chapters are thoroughly researched and well presented, with meticu- lous archival work backing up the facts and individual histories. Professor Antti Häkkinen from the University of Helsinki has written the afterword. We recom- mend this collection warmly to anyone interested in the life of nineteenth-century Finland, a place that many left—because of poverty. If your ancestors lived in that world, you will possibly learn about their Finland, their lives, and their strug- gles. Reading through the chapters, I felt I was getting in touch with my own great-great-grandparents, people who saw the world of which Poverty of a Beggar and a Nobleman tells. They knew a life without health insurance, school lunches, 1 Journal of Finnish Studies investment funds, summer vacations, social security, meals-on-wheels, retirement savings, and burial accounts. Our great-great-grandfathers must have known the desperation when summer frost descended on the fields and killed the harvest. Our great-great-grandmothers may have added pine bark into their dough. The chapters here make us appreciate what we have. May they also inspire us to work for a world where no child, woman, or man has to worry about where the next meal will come from. Helena Halmari 2 I INTRODUCTION EXPERIENCING AND ENCOUNTERING IMPOVERISHMENT IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FINLAND Pirita Frigren, University of Jyväskylä Tiina Hemminki, University of Jyväskylä Ilkka Nummela, University of Jyväskylä ABSTRACT The nineteenth century in Finland was characterized by significant societal changes. Since 1809 a Grand Duchy of imperial Russia, Finland began to transform from an early modern society of estates to a modern civic society. The end of the nine- teenth century was characterized by significant economic growth. Despite this general development, for many people this era signaled impoverishment and down- ward mobility that affected even the next generations. A fresh look at the economic threats on various societal layers is called for. In this theme issue we are concerned with socially varying dimensions of destitution, its manifestations, and the ways in which it was experienced and repelled. We explore the manifold and fruitful sources available, some of which are as yet little explored, while others afford novel approaches to the history of poverty. POVERTY IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY FINLAND In Finnish history, poverty and impoverishment, as personally experienced and lived through, have so far been paid only slight attention to when it comes to early modern
Recommended publications
  • Lions Clubs International Club Membership Register
    LIONS CLUBS INTERNATIONAL CLUB MEMBERSHIP REGISTER CLUB MMR MMR FCL YR MEMBERSHI P CHANGES TOTAL IDENT CLUB NAME DIST TYPE NBR RPT DATE RCV DATE OB NEW RENST TRANS DROPS NETCG MEMBERS 4017 020348 KVARNBO 107 A 1 09-2003 10-16-2003 -3 -3 45 0 0 0 -3 -3 42 4017 020363 MARIEHAMN 107 A 1 05-2003 08-11-2003 4017 020363 MARIEHAMN 107 A 1 06-2003 08-11-2003 4017 020363 MARIEHAMN 107 A 1 07-2003 08-11-2003 4017 020363 MARIEHAMN 107 A 1 08-2003 08-11-2003 4017 020363 MARIEHAMN 107 A 1 09-2003 10-21-2003 -1 -1 55 0 0 0 -1 -1 54 4017 041195 ALAND SODRA 107 A 1 08-2003 09-23-2003 24 0 0 0 0 0 24 4017 050840 BRANDO-KUMLINGE 107 A 1 07-2003 06-23-2003 4017 050840 BRANDO-KUMLINGE 107 A 1 08-2003 06-23-2003 4017 050840 BRANDO-KUMLINGE 107 A 1 09-2003 10-16-2003 20 0 0 0 0 0 20 4017 059671 ALAND FREJA 107 A 1 07-2003 09-18-2003 4017 059671 ALAND FREJA 107 A 1 08-2003 09-11-2003 4017 059671 ALAND FREJA 107 A 1 08-2003 10-08-2003 4017 059671 ALAND FREJA 107 A 1 09-2003 10-08-2003 4017 059671 ALAND FREJA 107 A 7 09-2003 10-13-2003 2 2 25 2 0 0 0 2 27 GRAND TOTALS Total Clubs: 5 169 2 0 0 -4 -2 167 Report Types: 1 - MMR 2 - Roster 4 - Charter Report 6 - MMR w/ Roster 7 - Correspondence 8 - Correction to Original MMR 9 - Amended Page 1 of 126 CLUB MMR MMR FCL YR MEMBERSHI P CHANGES TOTAL IDENT CLUB NAME DIST TYPE NBR RPT DATE RCV DATE OB NEW RENST TRANS DROPS NETCG MEMBERS 4019 020334 AURA 107 A 1 07-2003 07-04-2003 4019 020334 AURA 107 A 1 08-2003 06-04-2003 4019 020334 AURA 107 A 1 09-2003 10-06-2003 44 0 0 0 0 0 44 4019 020335 TURKU AURA 107 A 25 0 0 0
    [Show full text]
  • Arkkitehti Carl Ludvig Engel, Keisari Aleksanteri I Ja Sotaväenpäällikön Talon Pääjulkisivu Helsingin Esplanadilla
    Jarkko Sinisalo Arkkitehti Carl Ludvig Engel, keisari Aleksanteri I ja sotaväenpäällikön talon pääjulkisivu Helsingin Esplanadilla Kaksikerroksinen kulmatalo osoitteessa Eteläesplanadi 6 - Fabianinkatu 25, nykyinen Valtioneuvoston juhlahuoneisto ("Smolna''), oli alun perin Suo- men sotaväen ylitarkastajan, sotaväenpäällikön, virkatalo. 1 (Kuva 1.) Se oli yksi niistä varhaisen pääkaupungin julkisista rakennuksista, joiden suun- nittelusta Carl Ludvig Engel huolehti Johan Albrecht Ehrenströmin joh- taman Helsingin uudelleenrakennuskomitean arkkitehtina (1816-1824). Engelin toiminnasta virkatalon suunnittelijana erottuu menettely, jota ei ta- vata muista uudelleenrakennuskomitean projekteista ja joka oli ylipäätään erittäin harvinainen arkkitehdin suunnittelutuotannossa. Hän nimittäin sisällytti lopulliseen, keisarille esiteltyyn suunnitelmaan kaksi vaihtoehtoa pääfasadiksi. Vaihtoehtoiset fasadipiirustukset ovat molemmat nyttemmin tulleet tutkimuksen ulottuville, toinen vuonna 1987 ja toinen 2006. Eräs yl- lättävä havainto vuonna 1987 oli, että nykyinen pääfasadi, jonka tiedetään säilyneen likipitäen alkuperäisellään, ei kaikin kohdin seurannutkaan vah- vistettua suunnitelmaa. Tässä artikkelissa keskityn käsittelemään pääfasa- din suunnittelua ja mahdollisia motiiveja vaihtoehtoisten fasadipiirustusten laatimiselle. Kuitenkin taustaksi käyn ensin läpi mm. aiemmin hyödyntä- mättä jääneiden kirjallisten lähteiden varassa virkatalon rakennushankkeen perustavia tapahtumia. Näin sitä suuremmalla syyllä, sillä hankkeen eräät piirteet viittaavat
    [Show full text]
  • Personal Agency at the Swedish Age of Greatness 1560–1720
    Edited by Petri Karonen and Marko Hakanen Marko and Karonen Petri by Edited Personal Agency at the Swedish Age of Greatness 1560-1720 provides fresh insights into the state-building process in Sweden. During this transitional period, many far-reaching administrative reforms were the Swedish at Agency Personal Age of Greatness 1560–1720 Greatness of Age carried out, and the Swedish state developed into a prime example of the ‘power-state’. Personal Agency In early modern studies, agency has long remained in the shadow of the study of structures and institutions. State building in Sweden at the Swedish Age of was a more diversified and personalized process than has previously been assumed. Numerous individuals were also important actors Greatness 1560–1720 in the process, and that development itself was not straightforward progression at the macro-level but was intertwined with lower-level Edited by actors. Petri Karonen and Marko Hakanen Editors of the anthology are Dr. Petri Karonen, Professor of Finnish history at the University of Jyväskylä and Dr. Marko Hakanen, Research Fellow of Finnish History at the University of Jyväskylä. studia fennica historica 23 isbn 978-952-222-882-6 93 9789522228826 www.finlit.fi/kirjat Studia Fennica studia fennica anthropologica ethnologica folkloristica historica linguistica litteraria Historica The Finnish Literature Society (SKS) was founded in 1831 and has, from the very beginning, engaged in publishing operations. It nowadays publishes literature in the fields of ethnology and folkloristics, linguistics, literary research and cultural history. The first volume of the Studia Fennica series appeared in 1933. Since 1992, the series has been divided into three thematic subseries: Ethnologica, Folkloristica and Linguistica.
    [Show full text]
  • Labour Market Areas Final Technical Report of the Finnish Project September 2017
    Eurostat – Labour Market Areas – Final Technical report – Finland 1(37) Labour Market Areas Final Technical report of the Finnish project September 2017 Data collection for sub-national statistics (Labour Market Areas) Grant Agreement No. 08141.2015.001-2015.499 Yrjö Palttila, Statistics Finland, 22 September 2017 Postal address: 3rd floor, FI-00022 Statistics Finland E-mail: [email protected] Yrjö Palttila, Statistics Finland, 22 September 2017 Eurostat – Labour Market Areas – Final Technical report – Finland 2(37) Contents: 1. Overview 1.1 Objective of the work 1.2 Finland’s national travel-to-work areas 1.3 Tasks of the project 2. Results of the Finnish project 2.1 Improving IT tools to facilitate the implementation of the method (Task 2) 2.2 The finished SAS IML module (Task 2) 2.3 Define Finland’s LMAs based on the EU method (Task 4) 3. Assessing the feasibility of implementation of the EU method 3.1 Feasibility of implementation of the EU method (Task 3) 3.2 Assessing the feasibility of the adaptation of the current method of Finland’s national travel-to-work areas to the proposed method (Task 3) 4. The use and the future of the LMAs Appendix 1. Visualization of the test results (November 2016) Appendix 2. The lists of the LAU2s (test 12) (November 2016) Appendix 3. The finished SAS IML module LMAwSAS.1409 (September 2017) 1. Overview 1.1 Objective of the work In the background of the action was the need for comparable functional areas in EU-wide territorial policy analyses. The NUTS cross-national regions cover the whole EU territory, but they are usually regional administrative areas, which are the re- sult of historical circumstances.
    [Show full text]
  • Nordic American Voices Nordic Heritage Museum Seattle, Washington
    Nordic American Voices Nordic Heritage Museum Seattle, Washington Interview of Jorma Salmi February 7, 2014 Bellevue, Washington Interviewers: Gary London; Pirkko Borland Gary London: [0:12] This is an interview for the Nordic American Voices oral history project. Today is February 7 th , 2014, and we’ll be interviewing Jorma Salmi. We are at his home in Bellevue, Washington. My name is Gary London, and with me is Pirkko Borland. Jorma, thank you very much for agreeing to be interviewed. Jorma Salmi: [0:38] Thank you very much for coming to our humble house. Gary: [0:42] Well, I don’t think it’s so humble; it’s a beautiful house. Jorma: [0:44] By American standards, I think it is. Gary: [0:47] It’s a beautiful home. Jorma: [0:48] Thank you. Gary: [0:49] I know you have a very interesting story to tell us. Remember that we want you to talk as much as possible. Jorma: [0:56] Okay. Gary: [0:57] …And us to talk as little as possible. Jorma: [0:58] Okay. Gary: [0:59] So, we’ll ask, occasionally, a question, but we would really like to hear from you. Let’s start, however, with telling us about what you remember about your grandparents. Jorma: [1:14] My grandparents were… he was a… how can I say… he was a… the father was my… he was dead when I was born. He was already… But he had been making bells. Like dinner bells. Nordic American Voices Page 1 of 32 And one of his bells was in the Langinkoski where Charles had a summer home.
    [Show full text]
  • Helsinki: an Overview
    Helsinki: An Overview Helsinki, the largest city in Finland, is the nation’s capital and its administrative, economic, scientific and cultural center. The metropolitan area covers 0.2 percent of Finland’s land area, yet 19 percent of the country’s population lives there, generating 30 percent of the nation’s total output. Demographics Helsinki is growing more international at a fast pace. Today 10 percent of Helsinki residents are foreign- born, and the frequency is higher among younger age groups. The proportion of foreign-born residents is expected to rise to 20-25 percent by 2025. Economy Finland’s economy is among the most competitive in the world, according to the World Economic Forum. Helsinki is the engine of Finland’s growth and is the country’s main economic and logistical center. Its industrial structure is diversified, but services and high-tech industries account for a large proportion of output. As the economic weight of Northern Europe shifts eastward, Helsinki is emerging as a regional hub of business and commerce. Located at the heart of the fast-growing Baltic Sea region, 315 miles due east of Stockholm, Helsinki serves as a gateway between East and West. Several daily flights and new high- speed trains link Helsinki to St. Petersburg, and extensive intercontinental flight connections make Helsinki a major hub for the megacities of East Asia, serving 13 million travelers in 2010. Annually, some 9 million ferry passengers travel through the port of Helsinki. Quality of Life Helsinki ranks second among European cities in The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Global Liveability Report (2010).
    [Show full text]
  • Swedish Royal Ancestry Book 4 1751-Present
    GRANHOLM GENEALOGY SWEDISH ANCESTRY Recent Royalty (1751 - Present) INTRODUCTION Our Swedish ancestry is quite comprehensive as it covers a broad range of the history. For simplicity the information has been presented in four different books. Book 1 – Mythical to Viking Era (? – 1250) Book 2 – Folkunga Dynasty (1250 – 1523) Book 3 – Vasa Dynasty (1523 – 1751) Book 4 – Recent Royalty (1751 – Present) Book 4 covers the most recent history including the wars with Russia that eventually led to the loss of Finland to Russia and the emergence of Finland as an independent nation as well as the history of Sweden during World Wars I and II. A list is included showing our relationship with the royal family according to the lineage from Nils Kettilsson Vasa. The relationship with the spouses is also shown although these are from different ancestral lineages. Text is included for those which are highlighted in the list. Lars Granholm, November 2009 Recent Swedish Royalty Relationship to Lars Erik Granholm 1 Adolf Frederick King of Sweden b. 14 May 1710 Gottorp d. 1771 Stockholm (9th cousin, 10 times removed) m . Louisa Ulrika Queen of Sweden b. 24 July 1720 Berlin d. 16 July 1782 Swartsjö ( 2 2 n d c o u s i n , 1 1 times removed) 2 Frederick Adolf Prince of Sweden b. 1750 d. 1803 (10th cousin, 9 times removed) 2 . Sofia Albertina Princess of Sweden b, 1753 d. 1829 (10th cousin, 9 times removed) 2 . Charles XIII King of Sweden b. 1748 d. 1818 (10th cousin, 9 times removed) 2 Gustav III King of Sweden b.
    [Show full text]
  • Turku Sustainable City Districts Skanssi and Linnakaupunki
    Final report Turku Sustainable City Districts Skanssi and Castle Town turku.fi/siemens siemens.com/answers © City of Turku & Siemens AG 2013. All rights reserved. Content 1 / 3 Content Page Content 1 Introduction, case for action and objectives 1 - 56 Skanssi and Castle Town – Content 2 57 - 210 Cornerstones of a sustainable development concept Content 3 Content III: Toolbox and Outlook 211 – 214 © City of Turku & Siemens AG 2013. All rights reserved. Page 2 September 2013 Content 1 Chapter Content Page 1 Management summary 1 - 10 The Urban Planning Challenge in midsize European cities 2 • Key development challenges 11 - 32 • Examples of current eco-district projects in Europe City of Turku – Pathway towards a sustainable urban development 3 • Current situation and future vision of Turku 33 – 40 • Renewal of existing districts & development of new eco-districts • Sustainable city districts in Turku – a major lever of sustainable growth Case for action – Sustainable living and working environments 4 • The planning and management challenge 41 - 56 • The technology and innovation challenge © City of Turku & Siemens AG 2013. All rights reserved. Page 3 September 2013 Management Summary Future way of City development and design will differ from traditional development I strategies: Polycentric structures of cities and increasing autonomy of city districts imply new ways of developing the districts spatial design as well as their infrastructures. II Cities need to implement available sustainable solutions starting with “day1” and need to establish a continuous improvement cycle. The report describes and partly evaluates 14 Infrastructure solutions, 1 platform solution III for smart mobility and citizen services and several solutions as enabler/supporter for a social approach to sustainability in the districts.
    [Show full text]
  • District 107 F.Pdf
    Club Health Assessment for District 107 F through December 2020 Status Membership Reports Finance LCIF Current YTD YTD YTD YTD Member Avg. length Months Yrs. Since Months Donations Member Members Members Net Net Count 12 of service Since Last President Vice Since Last for current Club Club Charter Count Added Dropped Growth Growth% Months for dropped Last Officer Rotation President Activity Account Fiscal Number Name Date Ago members MMR *** Report Reported Report *** Balance Year **** Number of times If below If net loss If no When Number Notes the If no report on status quo 15 is greater report in 3 more than of officers thatin 12 months within last members than 20% months one year repeat do not haveappears in two years appears appears appears in appears in terms an active red Clubs more than two years old M,MC,SC 20649 ÄHTÄRI 03/31/1965 Active 10 0 0 0 0.00% 10 1 IP 0 32745 ÄHTÄRI/OULUVESI 09/22/1976 Active 24 0 0 0 0.00% 25 1 N 0 20599 ALAHÄRMÄ 10/11/1961 Active 31 0 0 0 0.00% 31 1 N 6 MC,SC 20650 ALAJÄRVI/JÄRVISEUTU 02/26/1960 Active 34 0 0 0 0.00% 34 0 N 0 VP,MC,SC 20651 ALAVUS 03/06/1964 Active 16 0 0 0 0.00% 17 0 2 9 104719 ALAVUS/KUULATTARET 02/11/2009 Active 16 1 2 -1 -5.88% 20 5 1 N 3 M,MC,SC 36146 ALAVUS/SALMI 10/16/1978 Active 20 0 0 0 0.00% 21 1 N 19 MC,SC 20597 EVIJÄRVI 10/17/1963 Active 35 0 0 0 0.00% 38 0 N 0 MC,SC 20600 ILMAJOKI 02/25/1964 Active 26 1 0 1 4.00% 27 1 N 3 44303 ILMAJOKI/ILKKA 10/31/1984 Active 35 1 0 1 2.94% 34 0 N 0 $96.15 M,MC,SC 67723 ILMAJOKI/VILJAT 04/11/2003 Active 23 1 1 0 0.00% 21 13 1 N 2 MC 20601
    [Show full text]
  • The Population Finland at the Beginning of the 1930'S
    ¿HA World Populath*Year THE POPULATION FINLAND CI.CR.E.D. Seríes The Population of Finland A World Population Year Monograph Central Statistical Office ISBN 951-46-1697-9 Valtion. Painatuskeskus/Arvi A. Karisto Osakeyhtiön kirjapaino Hämeenlinna 1975 PREFACE »The Population of Finland» is Finland's introduction on the development of Fin- contribution to the population research land's population beginning from the eigh- series to be made in different countries at teenth century. In addition, the publication the request of the United Nations. The includes surveys on the development of the Committee for International Coordination labor force, on the demographic, labor of National Research in Demography (CIC- force and education projections made, and RED) has been in charge of the international on the effect of the economic and social coordination of the publication. The publi- policy pursued on the population devel- cation is part of the program for the World opment. Population Year 1974 declared by the United Nations. The monograph of Finland has been prepa- red by the Central Statistical Office of In this publication, attention has been Finland in cooperation with the Population focused on the examination of the recent Research Institute. population development with a historical CONTENTS I POPULATION GROWTH Page V LABOR FORCE Page 1. Historical development 7 1. Labor force by age and sex 39 2. Population development during 2. Labor reserves 42 pre-industrial period 7 3. Labor force by industry 43 3. Development of birth rate during 4. Change in occupational structure pre-industrial period 7 by region 45 4. Development of mortality rate 5.
    [Show full text]
  • Helsinki in Early Twentieth-Century Literature Urban Experiences in Finnish Prose Fiction 1890–1940
    lieven ameel Helsinki in Early Twentieth-Century Literature Urban Experiences in Finnish Prose Fiction 1890–1940 Studia Fennica Litteraria The Finnish Literature Society (SKS) was founded in 1831 and has, from the very beginning, engaged in publishing operations. It nowadays publishes literature in the fields of ethnology and folkloristics, linguistics, literary research and cultural history. The first volume of the Studia Fennica series appeared in 1933. Since 1992, the series has been divided into three thematic subseries: Ethnologica, Folkloristica and Linguistica. Two additional subseries were formed in 2002, Historica and Litteraria. The subseries Anthropologica was formed in 2007. In addition to its publishing activities, the Finnish Literature Society maintains research activities and infrastructures, an archive containing folklore and literary collections, a research library and promotes Finnish literature abroad. Studia fennica editorial board Pasi Ihalainen, Professor, University of Jyväskylä, Finland Timo Kaartinen, Title of Docent, Lecturer, University of Helsinki, Finland Taru Nordlund, Title of Docent, Lecturer, University of Helsinki, Finland Riikka Rossi, Title of Docent, Researcher, University of Helsinki, Finland Katriina Siivonen, Substitute Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland Lotte Tarkka, Professor, University of Helsinki, Finland Tuomas M. S. Lehtonen, Secretary General, Dr. Phil., Finnish Literature Society, Finland Tero Norkola, Publishing Director, Finnish Literature Society Maija Hakala, Secretary of the Board, Finnish Literature Society, Finland Editorial Office SKS P.O. Box 259 FI-00171 Helsinki www.finlit.fi Lieven Ameel Helsinki in Early Twentieth- Century Literature Urban Experiences in Finnish Prose Fiction 1890–1940 Finnish Literature Society · SKS · Helsinki Studia Fennica Litteraria 8 The publication has undergone a peer review. The open access publication of this volume has received part funding via a Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation grant.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Contributors of Finngen
    BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance Supplemental material placed on this supplemental material which has been supplied by the author(s) BMJ Open Resp Res Contributors of FinnGen Steering Committee Aarno Palotie Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, HiLIFE, University of Helsinki, Finland Mark Daly Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, HiLIFE, University of Helsinki, Finland Pharmaceutical companies Howard Jacob Abbvie, Chicago, IL, United States Athena Matakidou Astra Zeneca, Cambridge, United Kingdom Heiko Runz Biogen, Cambridge, MA, United States Sally John Biogen, Cambridge, MA, United States Robert Plenge Celgene, Summit, NJ, United States Mark McCarthy Genentech, San Francisco, CA, United States Julie Hunkapiller Genentech, San Francisco, CA, United States Meg Ehm GlaxoSmithKline, Brentford, United Kingdom Dawn Waterworth GlaxoSmithKline, Brentford, United Kingdom Caroline Fox Merck, Kenilworth, NJ, United States Anders Malarstig Pfizer, New York, NY, United States Kathy Klinger Sanofi, Paris, France Kathy Call Sanofi, Paris, France University of Helsinki & Biobanks Tomi Mäkelä HiLIFE, University of Helsinki, Finland, Finland Jaakko Kaprio Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, HiLIFE, Helsinki, Finland, Finland Petri Virolainen Auria Biobank / Univ. of Turku / Hospital District of Southwest Finland, Turku, Finland Kari Pulkki Auria Biobank / Univ. of Turku / Hospital District of Southwest Finland, Turku, Finland Terhi Kilpi THL Biobank / Finnish Institute
    [Show full text]