6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1265e2d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Between the Darkness of Barbarism and the Light of Civilization: British Images of the Finn in the Late Eighteenth Century

Anssi Halmesvirta

subject

Cultural StudiesHistoryCivilizationHistoryEnlightenmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectHistory of ideasEnlightenmentAncient historyproto-racialismHistory of ideasGenealogyRace (biology)BarbarismRomanticismlcsh:D204-475BourgeoisieSaint petersburgtravel booksRomanticismFinnsmedia_commonlcsh:Modern history 1453-

description

This article aims to show that it was the British travellers (Coxe, Tooke, Clarke,et al.) to Finland in the late eighteenth century who discovered Finland for theBritish reading public. As they distinguished the Finns as a separate ‘race’ fromthe Russians, the Swedes, and the Lapps, they contributed to the proto-racialistimage of them that would become popular in the nineteenth century. BecauseSweden had become an important maritime trading partner (in iron ore, tar, andtimber) to the British, its eastern part, Finland, also became an interesting countryto visit en route from Stockholm to Saint Petersburg (or from Saint Petersburgto Stockholm). The travellers were astonished to realize that the Finnishpeasants had attained a higher degree of civilization than their Russian counterparts, who were still serfs, and additionally that there were in Finland bourgeois and noble people who had acquired culture and wealth. This image of the Finn as living between the civilized Swedes and ‘backward’ Russians was inherited by the Romantics from the enlightened travellers, and it penetrated later anthropological studies on the ‘races of man’.

10.7557/4.3245https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/1700/article/view/3245