Excerpted from “Finnish Folk Culture” by Ilmar
Talve
Content provided by June
Pelo
During the Middle
Ages there were only six towns in Finland, and eight in the 16th
century. By the end of the 17th century there were 14 new
towns.
There were 28 by the end of the Swedish rule and in 1870 there were 33
towns. During the period 1639-1765 only three
towns
had the right to engage in direct foreign trade. There were: Åbo/Turku; Viborg/Viipuri, and
Helsingfors/Helsinki. The Towns were small. In 1640 Åbo had a population
of
5,400 and it was the 6th largest town in the Swedish realm.
By 1870
the population of Helsingfors was barely over 28,000. Swedish was the
official
language of administration and town councils until 1886, and later in
many
towns.
Very few of the
old buildings have been preserved in the oldest towns because they were
destroyed by war and fire. During Stora Ofreden, the Great Northern War,
all
the buildings in nine large towns were destroyed. In the 18th
and 19th
centuries large fires swept through the towns. Between 1809 and 1856
there were
eleven towns destroyed by fire. Except for churches and castles, Finland
doesn’t have a single medieval building completely preserved. Only Åbo
and
Viborg had stone buildings; the other towns had only stone cellars.
In the Middle Ages
and 16th century, the most common type of town dwelling was
the
smoke cottage. It had only one room. In front of the door there might be
a
windbreak made of trees. Two smoke cottages might be built together with
doors
facing each other. Of the 321 dwellings in Viborg in 1602, sixty were
smoke
cottages. In 1675 they were removed. The smoke cottages were also used
for
bathing purposes and drying the malt. Until the 16th century,
the
dwelling had a single room, and two rooms after that time. The first
2-story
buildings were built in the 17th century and were public
buildings.
The dwellings had roofs of peat with beams or planks over a birch-bark
frame.
The fireplaces were open fires with an adjoining baking oven. Sometimes
the
baking oven was in a separate building in the yard. The dwellings of
merchants
had windowpanes in the 17th century, but lesser folk still
had thin
leather or parchment in windows. In the country houses, the furniture
was
mostly built-in.
After the Great
Northern War of 1710-21 there was a period of reconstruction in
Finland’s
towns. The wealthy people built 2-story houses. The yards were enclosed
and the
house was entered through the yard via a gate from the street. In the
1870s-1890s the entrance to the houses was still via the yard. This
custom can
still be seen in some of the oldest houses. By the end of the century,
the
entrance shifted to the street. Red paint became common in mid-18th
century; yellow oil paint appeared at a later date. Houses in the small
towns
weren’t usually painted during the 18th century.
The interiors of
houses changed a lot in the 18th century. Open fireplaces
were
replaced by tiled stoves. Floors were unpainted but the walls were
half-paneled
and decorated with wall cloth of paper. In the 18th century
14 new
glassworks were founded and some towns prohibited parchment windows.
In the 1820s the
features of the little towns of Swedish-type vanished and the towns
began to
resemble those of the Russian provinces. During the Russian Empire
period
houses were built using upright weatherboards. In the first half of the
19th
century these boards were replaced by planed horizontal boards. The
living
rooms were usually heated by high tiled stoves, and from the 1820s
onward by
lower Empire stoves. At the beginning of the century cast iron cooking
stoves
were used in the kitchens of the homes of merchants. In the early 19th
century the walls were covered with hand-painted wallpaper.
Duty was imposed
on goods brought from the country into the towns; the roads leading into
the
towns had storehouses equipped with gates and huts for the customs
officers.
Few of the huts have remained. The streets of the big towns were not
surfaced
and there were no sidewalks, but some towns had cobbled streets in the
latter
half of the 17th century. The streets of Åbo were lit by
lanterns
siince 1805, but smaller towns didn’t install lanterns until the middle
of the
century. Oil lamps replaced candles in the 1860s, and larger towns had
gas
lamps.
Because of the
frequent fires, fire inspections were held 3-4 times a year and watchmen
were
employed in the 17th century. In the small towns the
merchants took
turns to fire watch. One of the watchman’s duties was to tell the people
the
time. His shout also informed the people he had not fallen asleep. In the case of a fire it was his job to ring
a fire alarm, beat a drum or ring the church bells. In the 1870s many
towns
built watch towers that were manned around the clock. Fireplace
inspections,
lost animals, auctions and market times were also cried on street
corners after
first beating a drum or ringing a bell. In some towns it was the custom
to
announce the quiet period at night by beating a drum on the steps of the
town
hall. In some towns a “work bell” was also rung from the town hall tower
at 4
A.M. and 7 or 8 P.M.
Town dwellers kept
their own cattle and horses until the end of the 19th
century.
Cattle grazed on town land and were tended by a town herder, who was fed
and
housed by the owners of the cattle. The fields were rented in strips to
the
wealthier citizens. The fishing waters were divided into sections that
were
also rented to those citizens.
After the grid
plan was introduced, the town square and main streets around it was the
most
prestigious area and stone houses were built there. The merchants and
officials
lived around the square while artisans and cottagers lived in smaller
houses on
the outskirts of towns.
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