Finnish-Novgorodian wars

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Finnish-Novgorodian wars were a series of poorly documented conflicts that took place between the Finnish tribes and the Republic of Novgorod from the 11th century to early 13th century. They probably contributed to the eventual Swedish conquest of Finland about 1249.

Contents

[edit] Background

The only known written sources on the Finnish-Novgorodian wars are from the medieval Russian chronicles. The Russians and Finns (Yem)[1] had frequent conflicts from the 11th or, more securely, the 12th century onwards. Sources never reveal any reason why the conflict got started and kept going on for at least 100 years, or which party was responsible for most of the offensives.

Noteworthy is, though, that the eastern Finnic peoples Votes, Karelians and Izhorians are all mentioned as allies to Novgorod, said to have been fighting against the more western Finns also without Novgorod's direct involvement.

[edit] Early developments

The earliest possible mention of hostilities is from the Laurentian Codex which records in passing that the Novgorodian Prince Vladimir Yaroslavich was at war with the "Yam" in 1042.[2] The Yam are also mentioned as tributaries to Novgorod in the Primary Chronicle,[3] but they disappear from sources later on. It is disputed[who?] whether "Yam" was an earlier form of "Yem" or altogether different people. Yem are usually associated with Finnish Tavastia (historical province) tribe.

Conflicts certainly got started in the early 12th century, however information on them remaining very scarce.

According to the Novgorod First Chronicle, another Prince of Novgorod, Vsevolod Mstislavich, and his troops from Novgorod were at war with Finns during a great famine in 1123. The chronicle leaves any further developments of the conflict open, including the whereabouts of the fight.[4]

13th-century Novgorod as represented in Sergei Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky (1938).
13th-century Novgorod as represented in Sergei Eisenstein's Alexander Nevsky (1938).

Finns pillaged Novgorodian area in 1142, but were defeated near Ladoga with 400 casualties. Coincidently or not, Swedes attacked Novgorodians in the same year as well.[5] Karelians, now under Novgorodian influence, were at war with Finns in the following year, but were forced to flee, losing two ships.[6]

Finns attacked Russian soil again in 1149 with 1000 men. Novgorodians, totaling 500, went in pursuit of the Finns, utterly defeating them with Votes, a Finnic tribe in alliance with Novgorod. Votes, today almost extinct, lived south of the present-day Saint Petersburg, probably making this the deepest attack that Finns ever made into Russian territory.[7]

After a long pause in open hostilities—at least in the chronicles—a Novgorodian called Vyshata Vasilyevich led his troops against Finns in 1186, returning unharmed with prisoners. It is not clear whether he took his forces to fight in Finland or to defend his country against an intrusion. Reasons for the renewed fighting have not been identified.[8]

Karelians accompanied Novgorodians for yet another attack against Finns in 1191. This time the fighting is clearly said to have taken place in Finland, "the land of the Finns", the first such entry in Russian chronicles. The assailants "burned the country and killed the cattle".[9] This may have been the same attack that was mentioned in a much later Swedish chronicle Chronicon episcoporum Finlandensium by Bishop Paulus Juusten from the mid-16th century that knows Russians to have burned "Turku"—or probably the market place in Koroinen a few kilometers along the Aura River inland[citation needed]—in 1198, at the time of Bishop Folquinus.[10] Russian chronicles have no information about a conflict that year.

After this, there is no information on further Novgorodian conflicts for several decades. It is also impossible to confirm, whether the 1191 war resulted in a brief Novgorodian rule in parts of Finland. However, a later chronicle entry from the mid-1220s said that Russian princes had not been able to dwell in Finland.

[edit] Sweden and Pope get involved

Christianization of Finland
People
Bishops: Thomas · Henry
Rodulff · Fulco · Bero
Popes: Alexander III
Innocent III · Gregory IX
Archbishops: Anders
Valerius
Others: Birger Jarl
Sergius · Lalli · King Eric
Locations
Kokemäki · Köyliö
Nousiainen · Koroinen
Turku Cathedral
Events
Finnish-Novgorodian wars
First Swedish Crusade
Second Swedish Crusade

At the same time, Sweden and Novgorod were in conflict as well. Pope Alexander III, in his letter to the Archbishop of Uppsala and Jarl Gottorm of Sweden in 1171 (or 1172), seems to refer to the Finns' struggle against Novgorod by demanding Sweden to take over Finnish castles in exchange for protection.[11] In the late 15th century, historian Ericus Olai claimed that Bishop Kol of Linköping (d. 1196?) had been the "Jarl of Finland" (Dux Finlandiae),[12] possibly leading Swedish troops temporarily situated in Finland. He may have been in a similar military role than Jon jarl who allegedly spent nine years overseas fighting against Novgorodians and Ingrians at the end of the 12th century.[13]

Noteworthy is also the so-called First Swedish Crusade which according to several 15th century sources took place in 1150.[14] The crusade is only known from later legends that presented the expedition (if it ever took place) as a Christian mission, headed by a saint king to baptize heathens. However, it seems to have followed the exceptionally edgy 1140s with both the Finns and Swedes fighting against Novgorod. Some historians have seen it as a direct reaction to the failed Finnish expedition in 1149, associating it with the co-operation mentioned by the Pope 20 years later.[15]

In 1221, Pope Honorius III was again worried about the situation, after receiving alarming information from the Archbishop of Uppsala. He authorized the unnamed Bishop of Finland to establish a trade embargo against the "barbarians" that threatened the Christianity in Finland.[16] The nationality of the "barbarians", presumably a citation from Archbishop's earlier letter, remains unknown, and was not necessarily known even by the Pope. However, as the trade embargo was widened eight years later, it was specifically said to be against the Russians.[17]

Russian sources mention Swedish-Finnish co-operation in 1240 at the earliest; it was then that Finns[18] were mentioned as one of the Swedes' allies in the little-documented Battle of the Neva. The first reliable mention of Finns being a part of Swedish forces is from 1256,[19] seven years after the conventional dating of the so-called Second Swedish Crusade.

[edit] Final war

The final known conflict between the Finnish tribes and Novgorod took place in the 1220s, following decades of peace, at least in the chronicles. After having secured his power in Novgorod by 1222, Grand Prince Yaroslav II of Vladimir organized a series of attacks against Estonia, Finland and Karelia. The offensive against Finland took place in winter 1226–27.

The same winter Yaroslav, son of Vsevolod left Novgorod over the sea against Finns where no else Russian prince had been able to dwell; and he conquered the land and returned to Novgorod praising God with many prisoners. When those who were accompanying him could not handle all the prisoners, they killed some of them but released many more.[20]

The Finnish retaliatory expedition in summer 1228 against Ladoga, allegedly with more than 2000 men[21] ended in disaster, as described by the Novgorod First Chronicle.

The bailiff of Ladoga castle (here in its 15th century appearance) repelled the Finnish forces in 1228.
The bailiff of Ladoga castle (here in its 15th century appearance) repelled the Finnish forces in 1228.

The Finns (Yems) came to Lake Ladoga to war, and word about that came to Novgorod on the Ascension Day of the Christ (6.8). And Novgorodians took their barges and rowed to Ladoga with prince Jaroslav. Vladislav, the bailiff at Ladoga, and the people of Ladoga did not wait for the Novgorodians, but went after them (Finns) in boats where they were fighting, met with them and fought them; and then came night, and they (people of Ladoga) landed on an island, but Finns were on the coast with prisoners; for they had been fighting close to the lake near the landing place, and in Olonets. The same night they asked for peace, but the bailiff and the people of Ladoga did not grant it; and they killed all the prisoners and ran into forests, after abandoning their ships. Many of them fell there, but their boats were burned. -- And of those who had come, 2000 or more were killed, God knows; and the rest (who had not fled) were all killed.[22]

The war seems to have been the end of independent Finnish-Novgorodian conflicts and a watershed in the history of Finland. Based on Papal letters from 1229,[23] the unknown Bishop of Finland took advantage of the chaotic situation by taking over non-Christian places of worship and moving the see to a "more suitable" location. On bishop's request, the Pope also enforced a trade embargo against Novgorodians on the Baltic Sea, at least in Visby, Riga and Lübeck. A few years later, he also requested the Livonian Brothers of the Sword to send troops to protect Finland, however there is no known information if any ever arrived to assist.[24]

Novgorodian wars were a factor contributing to the eventual Swedish conquest of Finland around 1249.[25] Under Swedish rule, the wars continued to rage in Finland as a part of Swedish-Novgorodian Wars.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ About the association of the term Yem with Finns, see Suomen varhaiskeskiajan lähteitä. Historian aitta XXI. Gummerus kirjapaino Oy. Jyväskylä 1989. ISBN 951-96006-1-2. Finnish historians have long disputed whether the Finns fighting with Novgorod and eastern Finnic tribes were from Tavastia or coastal Finns from Finland Proper.
  2. ^ Laurentian Codex entry about a Finnish war in 1042. In Swedish. Hosted by the National Archive of Finland. See [1] and Diplomatarium Fennicum from the menu.
  3. ^ Primary Chronicle. In Russian.
  4. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entry about the war, 1123. In Swedish.
  5. ^ See Chronicle entry. In Swedish.
  6. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entries about Finnish wars, 1142, 1143. In Swedish.
  7. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entry about the war, 1149.
  8. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entries about the war, 1186. In Swedish.
  9. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entries about the war, 1191. In Swedish.
  10. ^ The chronicle has been published in Finnish, see e.g. Suomen piispainkronikka. Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seuran toimituksia 476. Pieksämäki 1988.
  11. ^ Letter by Pope Alexander III to the Archbishop of Uppsala in 1171 (or 1172). In Latin.
  12. ^ Suomen Museo 2002. See page 66. The book can be ordered from the Finnish Antiquarian Society. Note that the Latin word "Dux" came to mean "Duke" only in the late 13th century and was used in the meaning of Jarl earlier.
  13. ^ Suomen museo 2002. See page 65. Ericus Olai may also have made a mistake, since Jon Jarl is apparently buried in the Cathedral of Linköping, thus making him the Jarl of Finland instead of Bishop Kol.
  14. ^ Note however that several historians from the early 20th century onwards have tried to date the crusade to 1155, with some questionable lines of argument. See Heikkilä, Tuomas. Pyhän Henrikin legenda. Karisto Oy Hämeenlinna 2005. ISBN 951-746-738-9.
  15. ^ Linna, Martti. Suomen alueellinen pyhimyskultti ja vanhemmat aluejaot. Vesilahti 1346-1996. Jyväskylä 1996. See page 197.
  16. ^ Letter by Pope Honorius III to the Bishop of Finland in 1221. In Latin.
  17. ^ See papal letters from 1229 to Riga and Lübeck. In Latin.
  18. ^ As "Yems" and "Sums", presumably separating Tavastians and the coastal Finns which from then on was customary in Russian sources until the early 14th century.
  19. ^ Novgorod First Chronicle entry about the Swedish attack to Novgorod and Novgorodian counterattack to Finland. In Swedish.
  20. ^ Attack to Finland in 1226 from the Laurentian Codex. In Swedish.
  21. ^ The figure sounds high. The usual Swedish ledung had just 2500 men which would mean that less organized Finns were able to establish a similar naval force. Total population in Finland at the time is estimated to have been 50 000 at the maximum. See Suomen museo 2002 (ISBN 951-9057-47-1), page 85.
  22. ^ Finnish attack against Ladoga in 1228. In Swedish.
  23. ^ See letters by Pope Gregory IX: [2], [3], [4], [5], [6], [7], [8]. All in Latin.
  24. ^ Letter by Pope Gregory IX. In Latin.
  25. ^ See e.g. Suomen historian pikkujättiläinen. WSOY 1987. ISBN 951-0-14253-0. Pages 55-59.
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