Environmental History: A New Discipline with Long Traditions
Timo Myllyntaus & Mikko Saikku, “Environmental History, A New Discipline with Long Traditions,” In: Encountering the Past in Nature, Essays in Environmental History, Ed. by Timo Myllyntaus and Mikko Saikku, 1st edition, Helsinki: Helsinki University Press 1999, pp. 17-26, 2nd edition, Athens, OH: Ohio University Press 2001, pp. 1-28.
Nytt standardverk om det finska frälset : Om Henrik Impolas bok Frälset och dess rusttjänst i Finland på 1500-talet [A new standard work on the Finnish 16th-century nobility — a review of Henrik Impola's ›The Nobility and Its Armament in Finland During the 16th Century› together with an exposition on the challenges in researching the 16th-century nobility in the Swedish-Finnish kingdom.]
Published in Släkt och Hävd (Genealogiska Föreningen, Stockholm).
CfP - Everlasting Bath: Transnational History of Sauna Culture
.
You are welcome to contribute the "Sauna History Session" under the theme "Knowing Users: Social... more
.
You are welcome to contribute the "Sauna History Session" under the theme "Knowing Users: Social Demands in Shaping Technology and Designing Products" at the 40th Symposium of the International Committee for the History of Technology, ICOHTEC (Manchester, UK, 22–28 July 2013). The session will take place as as part of the 24th International Congress of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine. Organiser: Timo Myllyntaus.
............................................................................................................
In hectic modern world, we tend to believe that our way of life is modern and our customs dates from fairly recent times. It is supposed that nearly everything has changed since the Middle Ages, and technological development is regarded to reshuffle our living style completely and force to reject practically all traces to the antiquity. Technology is often considered a mighty enemy of traditions. Nevertheless, there is at least one outstanding exception to this pattern.
While native Americans bathed sweat lodges several millennia ago, steamy bathhouses were at the same time common in entire Europe as well. Still a thousand years ago steam baths were quite common all around the northern hemisphere. Only in the Middle Ages, authorities banned public bathhouses in Central Europe in order to prevent the spread of infectious diseases. Nevertheless, steamy bathhouses stayed in tact only in sparsely populated eastern peripheries of Europe – from Turkey and Bulgaria to Estonia, Russia and Finland. As the result, this ancient bathing tradition has remained more common in cold and forested Finland than in any other country, and there are almost as many saunas (>2 mill.) as cars: one sauna per two inhabitants. Actually the Finnish sauna has become the common concept for steamy bathhouses although there are considerable cultural and national variations in building constructions and heating technology.
During the past four millennia, building materials, construction techniques and styles of housing have changed several times. These changes have not led to exclude steamy baths from the everyday life of peripheral countries. In contrast, technology has been used to modify physical features of these bath institutions to the current construction conventions and social demands. During millennia and centuries, saunas have changed but they have not vanished. Basic elements of saunas have remained and the pleasure of bathing has been preserved.
Sauna is the case in point how an ancient cultural habit can be persistent in a changing world and technology has been used to preserve a prehistoric custom with constant innovation and modification.
This session will examine and discuss the persistence of sauna culture and the malleability of technology in adapting steam baths to the changing world. Can we find technological determinism or technological momentum in the history of sauna? If there is a path dependence in this case study: is it technological or cultural? The session aims to analyse transnationally the persistence of sauna in a number of countries and if possible in several civilizations. Therefore studies on extinct steam bath cultures are particularly welcome.
Please, contact Timo Myllyntaus (timmyl@utu.fi) and submit a 200 – 400-word abstract of your paper proposal and a one-page CV by Friday 9 March 2012.
Further information at: http://www.icohtec.org/annual-meeting-cfp-2013.html
49 views
Seen by: and 7 more"The Finnish Workers’ Experience at Home and Abroad in Historical Perspective."
Co-edited with Ronald N. Harpelle and Jaimi Penney. In Labouring Finns: Transnational Politics in Finland, Canada, and the United States, ed. Michel S. Beaulieu, Ronald N. Harpelle, and Jaimi Penney. Turku: Siirtolaisuusinstituutti, 2011, 7-13.
26 views
Seen by:"Lakeheadin yliopistossa mittava aineisto kanadansuomalaisista"
Akti: Arkistolaitoksen asiakaslehti 2 (2011): 22-23.
2 views
“Finnish Kanadalainen Sosialismi: Towards an Understanding of Finnish Canadian Socialist Activity, 1900-1939”
Faravid: Pohjois-Suomen Historiallisen yhdistyksen vuosikirja 33 (2009): 107-126.
The Efficiency of Electricity Supply in Estonia, Finland and Sweden, 1920–1938
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, “The Efficiency of Electricity Supply in Estonia, Finland and Sweden, 1920–1938,” International Productivity Comparisons and Problems of Measurement, 1750 -1939, Ed. P. K. O'Brien, The Ninth International Economic History Congress in Bern 1986, Section B-6, Zürich 1986, pp. 96-105.
11 views
Seen by:Standard of Living in Estonia and Finland in the 1930s
.
Reference:
“Standard of Living in Estonia and Finland in the 1930s,” Eesti Teaduste Akadeemia Toimetised, Humanitaar- ja sotsiaalteadused (Proceedings of the Estonian Academy of Sciences, Humanities and Social Sciences, Tallinn), vol. 41 (1992) no 3, pp. 184-191.
Abstracts available in Estonian and Russian Abstracts available in Estonian and Russian
132 views
Seen by:”’Tavallansa talo elääpi, puulla pirtti lämpiääpi,’ Energia Suomen historiassa
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, ”’Tavallansa talo elääpi, puulla pirtti lämpiääpi,’ Energia Suomen historiassa” [Energy in Finnish History], Tekniikan Waiheita – Teknik i Tiden vol. 19 (2001) no 2, pp. 13-20.
.
Abstract:
The amble use of energy has always been an important part of the Finnish way of life - not... more
.
Abstract:
The amble use of energy has always been an important part of the Finnish way of life - not least because of the climate, industrial structure and long distances. Fire and firewood have held a central position in everyday live. The decisions concerning the use of energy had far-reaching consequences already in the 19th century.
5 views
Seen by:Aarniometsästä puupeltoon: Metsät Suomen taloudessa
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, “Aarniometsästä puupeltoon: Metsät Suomen taloudessa,” [From old-growth forest to field of trees: Forests in the Finnish economy],Ympäristöhistorian näkökulmia, Piispan apajilta trooppiseen helvettiin, Ed. Timo Soikkanen, Turun yliopiston poliittisen historian laitoksen tutkimuksia 14, Turku: Turun yliopisto 1999, pp. 88-103.
Foreign investments on Finnish electricity supply utilities, 1884-1936
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, “Foreign Investments in Finnish Electricity Supply Utilities, 1884 – 1936,” Revista de Historia: Transportes, Servicios y Telecomunicaciones vol. 14 (2008), Madrid, Spain, pp. 120-143.
1 views
Seen by:Tekniikan valtavirrat ja Suomen malli
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, “Tekniikan valtavirrat ja Suomen malli,” [Main stream of technology and the Finnish model], Suomi Euroopassa, Toim. Mauno Jokipii. Jyväskylä: Atena 1991, pp. 219-246.
Tekniset uudisteet graafisessa teollisuudessa 1800-luvun puolivälistä 1920-luvun alkuun
Rerefence:
Timo Myllyntaus, “Tekniset uudisteet graafisessa teollisuudessa 1800-luvun puolivälistä 1920-luvun alkuun,” [Technological innovations in the printing industry from the mid-19th century to the beginning of the 1920s], Sanoma-lehtien taloudellinen tausta, Suomen sanomalehdistön historia-projektin julkaisuja no 21, Helsinki 1983, pp. 56-70.
7 views
Seen by:Luku-ja kirjoitustaito teollistuvassa Suomessa - tilastoharhako?
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, “Luku- ja kirjoitustaito teollistuvassa Suomessa – tilastoharhako?” Historiallinen aikakauskirja vol. 89 (1991) no 2, pp. 116-121.
Novgorod, Reval and the Finnish Castles - Aspects of Communication and Trade in 1412-1448.
Published in: Horst Wernicke (Hrsg.) Beiträge zur Geschichte des Ostseeraumes. Vorträge der ersten und zweiten Konferenz der Historiker des Ostseeraumes (SKHO) Katzow 1996/Greifswald 1998. Greifswalder Historische Studien 4.Verlag Dr. Kovac, Hamburg 2002, 53-65.
Aspects on Multilinguality in Late Medieval Livonia and Finland.
Published in: Einfluss, Vorbilder, Zweilfel. Studien zu den Finnisch-Deutschen Beziehungen vom Mittelalter bis zum Kalten Krieg. Hrsg. von Vesa Vares. 6. Deutsch-finnisches Historikerseminar in Tampere 27.31.3.2003. Institut für Geschichte, Tampere Universität, Publikationen 20. Tampere 2006, 15-22.
Tapio Salminen, Finland, Tallinn and the Hanseatic League – Foreign Trade and the Orientation of Roads in Medieval Finland.
Published in: Tapani Mauranen (ed.) Traffic, Needs, Roads; Perspectives on the Past, Present and Future of Roads in Finland and the Baltic Area. Helsinki 1999, 29-37
Suomen "pienet" kaupungit keskiajalla? - Keskiajan kaupunkien tutkimuksesta Suomessa sekä Ulvilan ja Rauman keskiajan erityispiirteistä ja mahdollisuuksista.
Published in: Satakunta XXVIII Kotiseutututkimuksia. Kauppa ja kaupungit Satakunnassa. Porin Raatihuoneella 5. huhtikuuta 2008 pidetyt seminaarin esitelmät. Toim. Jorma Ahvenainen. Satakunnan Historiallinen Seura. Satakunnan Painotuote OY, Kokemäki 2011, 8-63.
Medieval towns in Finland - Current status and possible developments of future research especially concerning Ulvila... more
Medieval towns in Finland - Current status and possible developments of future research especially concerning Ulvila and Rauma. With English Summary.
Summary (preliminary version)
The article discusses past views and new developments in the study of medieval towns in Finland where only six merchant communities emerged as chartered towns before the year 1544 and established the social, economic and administrative structure characteristic to medieval towns in the European Middle Ages.
The oldest and largest of the medieval towns in Finland was Turku (sw. Åbo), which took form during the closing decades of the thirteenth century at the mouth of Aurajoki river within the densest populated area of the country. With the help of the needs of the bishop and cathedral chapter of Turku the town grew up into the largest urban centre in medieval Finland with some 2500 people. Since the surrounding provinces of Finland Proper and Satakunta built substantial part of financial resources of the Swedish crown in Finland, the headman of the castle of Turku some two kilometres outside of the town possessed important economical, military and administrational power, which further boosted the trade in the area. Although the actual military protection offered by the castle failed several times during the Middle Ages, the castellan exercised official jurisdiction over the town which gave him the possibility to control its trade and obliged the town council to follow his policy when dealing with alien powers outside and inside the realm.
The relationship between the town and the local agent of territorial power was even closer in Viipuri (sw. Viborg, today in Russia), where the town had emerged from a community of merchants and craftsmen at the service of the castle built in 1293. After the stabilisation of the Novgorodian border some 30 kms North-East of the castle in 1323 the fortress became one of the most important strongholds in the Swedish realm with excessive rights concerning the economy, jurisdiction and defence of the bailiwick. Even if archaeological evidence suggests that the site followed an earlier tradition of a Karelian fortress and a market place, the actual merchant town established itself only during the course of the fourteenth century. Final consolidation of an urban community separate of the castle is marked by the town charter of 1403. With a population of ca 2000 Viipuri was the only Finnish town ever to be enclosed with walls. Characteristic to the relationship, however, was that the initiative had not been taken by the town council but by a headman of the castle in the 1470's.
Of other four towns the oldest known charters of the town of Ulvila (sw. Ulfsby) at the mouth of Kokemäenjoki river date from the year 1365. Since earlier regulations concerning trade and jurisdiction of the town from the late 1340's exist, the consolidation of a permanent urban community must have began somewhat earlier. According to the remaining documentation, the initiative was most likely taken by royal authorities, who deliberately resettled an older merchant community from alongside the river to one location for better control of trade and revenues. Similar process seems to have taken place in the mouth of Porvoonjoki river during the closing decades of the fourteenth century, when a single urban community of Porvoo (sw. Borgå) emerged from several older but somewhat scattered merchant outposts at the river mouths of Eastern Nyland. The oldest documentation concerning the town dates from the year 1383, but the consolidation of the town may have occurred already in the 1340's in connection with reorganisation of the trade in the area. In 1442 the headman of Turku castle chartered the merchants of Rauma (sw. Raumo) with rights similar to the burghers of Turku in their trade. The community had originally took form around the beginning of the fifteenth century at Unio midway the sailing route from Turku to Ulvila. King Christopher confirmed the privileges in 1444. The town was later characterised by the influence of a Franciscan convent, the activity of which may even have co-occurred the formation of the urban community. The population of Ulvila, Porvoo and Rauma is likely to have never exceeded 1000 each. The smallest of all medieval towns in Finland was Naantali (sw. Nådendal) with no more than 200-300 inhabitants. The town was founded around 1443 in order to cover the needs of a new Bridgettine monastery some 25 kms north of Turku and remained of minor importance throughout the Middle Ages.
In addition to the six towns several merchant communities existed in medieval Finland which never succeeded in obtaining official charter of a town or building up a community strong enough to form one. Many of them can be documented either historically, archaeologically or both, but it is usually very difficult to locate them more precisely. Such are for instance the merchant communities of Vehkalahti and Virolahti, which the castellan of Viipuri cited in 1336 with the civitas of Viipuri as the three places in which the Revalian merchants were allowed to trade with the local population. Similar trading posts of permanent or seasonal nature took form as early as the fourteenth century in the main river mouths around Gulf of Bothnia, but they were able to establish themselves as towns only after the Middle Ages. Important quasi-urban settlements even emerged in the vicinity of some of the castles and main fortifications of the realm, but only some like Raasepori (sw. Raseborg) , Kyrkosund or Hämeen linna (sw. Tavastehus) probably never got near of anything like in Viipuri and never succeeded in obtaining an official charter for their trade.
In the article the past scholarship over the Finnish medieval towns and especially those of Ulvila and Rauma towns are discussed. One of the more general assumptions of the older studies on the medieval towns in Finland has been their suggested smallness in respect to the large urban centres and multitude of middle-sized towns known from the more densely populated areas of Central Europe, England and the Mediterranean. Here the general opinion of more recent scholarship has been that the smallness of the Finnish urban centres in terms of number of sworn burghers, population and amalgamate relationship with the surrounding countryside resulted from the economic premises of Finnish areas where permanent field cultivation and animal husbandry mattered as prevailing means of livelihood only in the most densely populated Southern Finland with soils lending to high and late medieval agricultural technologies and even there often in the context of other forms of local economy such as fishing, hunting and prescription of forests. Since all the chartered Finnish medieval towns were situated at the coast and in close attachment to areas of permanent field cultivation, the older scholarship has logically maintained that the most important reason contributing to the number of urban centres and their location in Finland was the contemporary structure of economy, where only areas with established agricultural production were able to sustain permanent town populations of any kind and the flow of transregional trade in necessities such as salt predestined the location of the towns on coast and river mouths.
In the article the number of the Finnish medieval towns, size of population and location at the coasts are then discussed form the point of view what is known of the overall size of towns and urban centres in the Baltic Sea area as well as the origins and nature of regulated merchant activity and towns in the medieval Swedish realm. As Konrad Fritze has already in 1986 shown the majority of late medieval towns in the Baltic Sea area of interaction were small; of the total of 431 towns in ca. 1450 more than half had an estimated population of less than 5000 and every fifth less than 1000. Instead of being exceptionally small, the six chartered Finnish medieval towns presented a selection of lesser urban centres characteristic to the late medieval Baltic Sea area and well comparable to similar nodes of local merchant and artisan activity elsewhere in Europe. Instead of developing a more balanced geographical distribution between coastal ports and inland centres at the crossroads of important transport routes, however, the division of chartered coastal towns and townless inland evidently is an remains a Finnish speciality for which a variety of structural, economic and political reasons can be established. One of the most important of these may have been the role of the politics of the central authority of the realm and the evident desire of established agents of merchant interest in (Turku) and outside (Stockholm and Reval/Tallinn) Finland in controlling their interests in the Finnish areas, which appears to have pre-empted any possibilities of establishing chartered towns in Finnish inland since the mid 14th century. The politics of the merchant elites of Stockholm against all real or suspected rivals in the Gulf of Bothnia area are well documented in the medieval sources and the influence of Reval and merchant elites of Turku to the overall economic policy of the central authority in Finland should not be underestimated. Important economic and factual power also centred in castles of the Swedish realm in Finland the headmen and bailiffs of which cultivated close and reciprocal contacts with wealthy merchants in Reval, Stockholm and Turku, which further may have encouraged the preservation of mercantile status quo what came to establishing new towns outside those that already existed. Of special interest here, for instance, is, that the chartering of Rauma by Karl Knutsson in 1442 occurred during his overlordship of Western Finland after his failure to establish a permanent grip of the crown of Sweden during his regency in the late 1430s and after the election of King Christopher of Bavaria in 1442 when the king and the council of the realm had de facto compensated him with the enfeoffment of Turku castle and underlying areas in Finland in return of his sworn oath to the authority of the realm. The chartering of Rauma by Karl Knutsson in 1442 and the confirmation of its status by king Christopher in 1444 must also be understood as a joint action of the representatives of the central authority of the crown in creating a plausible terminal of trade on the Finnish coastline between Turku and Ulvila to retain control of the fish oriented trade of the area and merchants operating there at a time when a new ecclesiastic and economic centre was created and chartered in Naantali with access to the same area and resources.
The article also gives a short review of the results of recent archaeological excavations in Turku and Rauma and reinterpretations of the earlier 1970s excavations of Ulvila, which show that the everyday urban culture in ”small” Finnish towns did not lag behind other similar or larger centres in the Baltic area with the use of glass artefacts, multilingual spoken and written environment of interaction and an established mixture of local and transregional social, ethnic and cultural manifestations of society. Recent excavations both in Turku and Rauma also prove that both towns were deliberately planned and founded; Turku at the end of the 13th century and the beginning of the 14th most likely by a joint action of the central authority of the realm and the bishop and Rauma in the beginning if the 1440s by that time local overlord Karl Knutsson and the central authority of the realm with some kind of participation of Franciscan activit yin the place. In the history of Rauma and the surrounding hinterland of Satakunta the cultural, spiritual and economic role of the Franciscan house of Rauma has often been enthusiastically emphasised but remains vaguely studied, even if a more thorough examination and structural and sociocultural analysis of late 15th century Franciscan activity in the Gulf of Bothnia area is likely to give important contributions to various aspects in the history of Finland and Sweden as well as the history of the Franciscan order in Scandinavia in general.
Kokemäen käsikirjakoodeksi F1 (1548-1549): näkökulmia reformaatiokauden kirkkokäsikirjasidoksen paikalliseen käyttöhistoriaan ja ajoitusmahdollisuuksiin - Der Handbuchkodex von Kokemäki F1 (1548-1549). Zu Gebrauch, Geschichte und Datierungsmöglichkeiten von Handbuchkodexen der Reformationszeit
Published in: Suomen kirkkohistoriallisen seuran Vuosikirja 98 (2008), 21-45.
German Summary:
In den Archiven finnischer Kirchengemeinden werden zahlreiche Gesamtkodexen kirchlicher... more
German Summary:
In den Archiven finnischer Kirchengemeinden werden zahlreiche Gesamtkodexen kirchlicher Handbücher der Reformationszeit und des frühen 17. Jahrhunderts aufbewahrt, deren Inhalt noch nie einer durchgehenden Inventur unterzogen wurde. Die bisherige Forschung hat sich mit individuellen, in Kirchengemeindebesitz befindlichen zusammengebundenen Handbuchkodexen in der Regel nur im Zusammenhang mit Untersuchungen zur Liturgie und deren Geschichte befasst, aber aufgrund des vergleichsweise langen Verwendungszeitraums (von den 1540er Jahren bis zum zweiten Viertel des 17. Jahrhunderts) böte die durchgehend Analyse der Bände die Möglichkeit, auf lokaler Ebene viele Fragen im Grenzbereich zwischen Mittelalter und Neuzeit anzugehen. Gebundene Handbüchern, in diesen zu verschiedenen Zeiten gemachte Eintragungen sowie auf leere Blättern kopierte liturgische Texte ergeben zusammen häufig ein aus verschiedenen Epochen stammendes Dokument, mit dessen Hilfe sowohl sowohl untersucht werden kann, wie eine von oben geforderte Vereinheitlichung in der Liturgie auf lokaler Ebene umgesetzt wurde als auch welche Dinge von den Ortspfarrern Ende des 16. und Anfang des 17. Jahrhunderts in ihrem Dienst für wichtig erachtetet wurden.
Als Beispiel für die sich durch die in Gemeindebesitz erhaltenen Handbuchkodexen für die Forschung eröffnenden Möglichkeiten dient hier der in den Archiven der Gemeinde von Kokemäki erhaltene Handbuchkodex F1, der zusammengebunden die offiziellen schwedischsprachigen Handbücher für kirchliche Amtshandlungen und den Gottesdienst aus dem Jahre 1548, die entsprechenden von Mikael Agricola in Druck gegebenen finnischsprachigen Handbücher aus dem Jahre 1549 sowie eine von Agricola im Jahre 1549 in Druck gegebene Passion enthält. Aufgrund der im Kodex gemachten Eintragungen wurde der der Kirche von Kokemäki gehörende Einband 1592 repariert. Die Agendenlage wird im ältesten erhaltenen Inventarium der Bücher der Kirche von Kokemäki aus dem Jahre 1630 erwähnt. Aufgrund der Anmerkungen wurde sie erst im Mitte des 17. Jahrhunderts aus dem Gebrauch genommen.
Die kodikologische Analyse des Kodexes sowie die paläographische und vergleichende Untersuchung der Randbemerkungen und selbständigen liturgischen Texte ergibt, dass das Werk vom dritten Viertel des 16. Jahrhunderts bis wenigstens zum zweiten Viertel des 17. Jahrhunderts von den Pfarrern der Gemeinde Kokemäki benutzt wurde. Bei der Identifizierung der persönlichen Handschriften der Verfasser wurde ein als Anlage zu den sog. Vogtbüchern erhaltenes Zehntenverzeichnis verwendet, das seit 1566 vom Hauptpfarrer des entsprechenden Sprengels geschrieben und beglaubigt wurde. Anhand von Handschriftenanalysen und Textvergleichen lässt sich der überwiegende Teil der in Latein verfassten Perikopen des Kodexes dem Hauptpfarrer Michael Stephani (1558-1578) zuschreiben, während die auf leeren Blättern oder zwischen den gedruckten Text kopierten liturgischen Texte von unterschiedlichen Schreibern stammen. Von den auf Finnisch, Schwedisch oder Lateinisch geschriebenen Texten ist der lateinische Exorzismus des Effatio-Teils der Taufe eine direkte Kopie der Manuale Aboensis von 1522, die schwedischsprachige Allokutio und das Dankgebet aus der Taufordnung, die finnischsprachige Aufforderung an die Paten und die an das Ehepaar gerichtete schwedischsprachige Allokutio sind dagegen Kopien bzw Übersetzungen der Kirchenordnung des Jahres 1571. Ein finnischsprachiger Segensspruch für einen Krankenbesuch findet sich in der gleichen, aus dem 16. Jahrhundert stammenden Form auch im Agendenkodex von Urjala.
Mindestens eine der liturgischen Textkopien hatte der Pfarrer der Gemeinde Kokemäki, Johannes Michaelis (1578-1599) geschrieben, eine stammt vom Pfarrer Johannes Clementis Mentz (1600-1606), und zwei von Pfarrer Matthias Sigfridi (1608-1621).
Der aus einem vorreformatorischen Manual kopierte lateinische Exorzismus trägt wahrscheinlich die Handschrift Pfarrer Michael Stephani und zeigt, dass ein Teil der Gottesdienstordnung, die als Folge der Reformation aus der Handbüch entfernt worden war, auch nach 1549 in Kokemäki noch für notwendig erachtet wurde.

