1st Edition

Swedish and Finnish Historiographies of the Swedish Realm, c. 1520–1809 Shared Past, Different Interpretations?

Edited By Miia Kuha, Petri Karonen Copyright 2024
    266 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In the early modern era, two Nordic countries that are neighbours today, Sweden and Finland, formed one realm. Yet, modern history writing has largely ignored this unity, instead developing analysis and discussion in close connection to nationalistic ideas, national politics, and processes of state-building. Historians of both countries have therefore mostly approached their common past separately and academic history in both countries has taken its own course of development, leading to different emphases.

    This volume explores the common early modern history between Sweden and Finland from the Middle Ages to beginning of the 19th century, and how this history has been created in professional historiography (1860–2020), which methods have been used, and which themes studied. Based on extensive source material, including a database of history publications in different fields in both countries, this book offers a fresh scholarly approach to the study of historiography through a unique comparative perspective.

    This book is an excellent resource for students and professional researchers alike through providing an alternate view on the history of Sweden and Finland and providing key insight into the historiography of these two countries, and the similarities and differences they showcase.

    PART I

    Premises and preconditions of research and publishing

    1 Introduction: comparing Swedish and Finnish historiographies on the early modern Swedish realm

    MIIA KUHA AND PETRI KARONEN

    2 Research on early modern Sweden: resources, research areas, and prominent scholars, 1850–2020

    PETRI KARONEN

    PART II

    Institutions and interactions

    3 Early modern Swedish state-building in Swedish and Finnish historiography

    ANTTI RÄIHÄ

    4 Joint wars – diverging interpretations: the period 1523–1809 in Swedish and Finnish military history

    LARS ERICSON WOLKE AND NILS ERIK VILLSTRAND

    5 The rise and fall of the Swedish Empire: causes and explanations

    PETRI KARONEN

    6 Church history of the Swedish realm, 1520–1809

    ANDERS JARLERT AND JOONAS TAMMELA

    PART III

    People and livelihoods

    7 The Finnish and Swedish historiography of the early modern Swedish patriarchal estate society: individuals, social groups,

    household, and gender in dissertations, 1850–2020

    PETTERI IMPOLA

    8 Histories of the free peasant in Finnish and Swedish historical research, ca. 1800–1980

    PETTERI NORRING

    9 United and divided: early modern economic history in Finnish and Swedish academic literature

    KERSTIN ENFLO, JARI OJALA AND JAN-PETER GUSTAFSSON

    PART IV

    History culture and historical awareness

    10 Birkarl origins in Finnish and Swedish historical research and history culture, ca. 1857–1917

    SAMU SARVIAHO

    11 The Age of Liberty divide: representations in Swedish historical research, ca. 1870–1970

    DANIEL ANDERSSON

    12 Cultural–historical approaches in Finnish and Swedish early modern research

    MIIA KUHA

    Biography

    Petri Karonen is a professor of Finnish history at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. His research interests include Finnish and economic history in general, focusing on the shared history of Sweden and Finland in the early modern period. His publications include a general history of the Swedish realm 1520–1809: Great Power of the North (in Finnish) and studies concerning the history of historiography.

    Miia Kuha is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. She is currently working in her own project on 17th-century clergymen’s wives and widows, funded by the Academy of Finland. She has published articles on the historiography of cultural history in Sweden and Finland, the local history tradition in Finland, and lived religion in early modern Eastern Finnish parish communities.