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Minne och livsmönster: Skogsfinsk identitet i tre undersökta bosättningar från tidigmodern tid

Bergholm, Hanna LU (2014) ARKH04 20132
Historical Archaeology
Abstract (Swedish)
Bergholm, H. 2014. Memory and life pattern: Identity of Forest Finns in three excavated settlements from the early modern period.

From the 1580s until the mid 1600s the “Forest Finns” – stemming from the area Savolax in eastern Finland – colonized parts of central and north Sweden. There were several factors that caused this migration; war and overpopulation were two of those factors.
The purpose of this essay is to determine whether the Forest Finns kept their cultural memory, identity, rituals and traditions after having migrated to Sweden during the 1600s.
The method used to achieve this is to compare the common scientific definitions of what is considered “Forest Finn culture” with the findings from three Forest Finn... (More)
Bergholm, H. 2014. Memory and life pattern: Identity of Forest Finns in three excavated settlements from the early modern period.

From the 1580s until the mid 1600s the “Forest Finns” – stemming from the area Savolax in eastern Finland – colonized parts of central and north Sweden. There were several factors that caused this migration; war and overpopulation were two of those factors.
The purpose of this essay is to determine whether the Forest Finns kept their cultural memory, identity, rituals and traditions after having migrated to Sweden during the 1600s.
The method used to achieve this is to compare the common scientific definitions of what is considered “Forest Finn culture” with the findings from three Forest Finn settlements in central and northern Sweden from the 1600s. The sources used are literature about Forest Finns and excavation reports from the settlements. An emphasis is placed on looking for the typical cultural attributes and also for differences within the group. The findings from the excavations are analyzed using the terms “cultural memory” and “identity” to determine what, if anything, could be considered examples of Forest Finn culture.
The comparison between the findings from the settlements and what is considered typical Forest Finn attributes showed that the settlements were quite different from each other as well as from what is used to define Forest Finn culture. The results also showed that there was a big difference in wealth and social status within Forest Finn settlements.
In the analysis of this result questions are raised about whether the common definitions of Forest Finn culture are faulty or not. The definitions seem to be strongly influenced by the over simplistic national romanticism of the 1800s, since a lot of pioneering research was made in that era. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Bergholm, Hanna LU
supervisor
organization
course
ARKH04 20132
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Forest Finns, memory, identity, 1600s, Sweden
language
Swedish
id
4227753
date added to LUP
2014-03-10 08:44:53
date last changed
2014-03-10 08:49:29
@misc{4227753,
  abstract     = {{Bergholm, H. 2014. Memory and life pattern: Identity of Forest Finns in three excavated settlements from the early modern period.

From the 1580s until the mid 1600s the “Forest Finns” – stemming from the area Savolax in eastern Finland – colonized parts of central and north Sweden. There were several factors that caused this migration; war and overpopulation were two of those factors. 
 The purpose of this essay is to determine whether the Forest Finns kept their cultural memory, identity, rituals and traditions after having migrated to Sweden during the 1600s. 
 The method used to achieve this is to compare the common scientific definitions of what is considered “Forest Finn culture” with the findings from three Forest Finn settlements in central and northern Sweden from the 1600s. The sources used are literature about Forest Finns and excavation reports from the settlements. An emphasis is placed on looking for the typical cultural attributes and also for differences within the group. The findings from the excavations are analyzed using the terms “cultural memory” and “identity” to determine what, if anything, could be considered examples of Forest Finn culture.
 The comparison between the findings from the settlements and what is considered typical Forest Finn attributes showed that the settlements were quite different from each other as well as from what is used to define Forest Finn culture. The results also showed that there was a big difference in wealth and social status within Forest Finn settlements. 
 In the analysis of this result questions are raised about whether the common definitions of Forest Finn culture are faulty or not. The definitions seem to be strongly influenced by the over simplistic national romanticism of the 1800s, since a lot of pioneering research was made in that era.}},
  author       = {{Bergholm, Hanna}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Minne och livsmönster: Skogsfinsk identitet i tre undersökta bosättningar från tidigmodern tid}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}