Viipuri Province

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(Redirected from
Vyborg Province
)
Viipuri Province
Viipurin lääni
Viborgs län

Выборгская губерния
Province of Finland
1812–1945
Coat of arms of Viipuri
Coat of arms
Viipuri
Area 
• 19391
32,134 km2 (12,407 sq mi)
Population 
• 19391
620,838
History 
• Established
1812
• Disestablished
1945
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Vyborg Governorate
Karelo-Finnish Soviet Socialist Republic
Leningrad Oblast
Kymi Province
1 About 43 thousand km2 with the surface of the Finnish part of Lake Ladoga.
Viipuri Province in 1897
Viborg Castle

Viipuri Province[a] was a historical province of Finland from 1812 to 1945.

History

The predecessor of the province was Vyborg Governorate, which was established in 1744 from territories ceded by the Swedish Empire to Russia in 1721 (Treaty of Nystad) and in 1743 (Treaty of Åbo). These territories originated as parts of the Viborg and Nyslott County and Kexholm County in 1721, and parts of the Savolax and Kymmenegård County in 1743. The governorate was also known as Old Finland.

During the

Kingdom of Sweden had allied itself with the Russian Empire, United Kingdom and other parties against Napoleonic France. However, following the Treaty of Tilsit in 1807, Russia made peace with France. In 1808, supported by France, Russia successfully challenged Swedish control over Finland in the Finnish War. In the Treaty of Fredrikshamn on September 17, 1809, Sweden was obliged to cede all its territory in Finland east of the Torne River to Russia. The ceded territories became a part of the Russian Empire and were reconstituted into the autonomic Grand Duchy of Finland
, with the Russian Tsar as Grand Duke.

In 1812, the territories of the

N.S.), can be seen[vague] as a symbolic gesture and an attempt to appease the sentiment of the Finnish population, which had just experienced Russian conquest of their country by force. Siestarjoki was transferred to Saint Petersburg Governorate
in 1864.

When Finland became independent from Russia in 1917, the status of Viipuri Province remained unchanged. The provincial capital, Vyborg (Swedish: Viborg, Finnish: Viipuri), was at this time the fourth largest city in Finland.

Viipuri Province had sided with the Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic during the Finnish Civil War. The Province was important to Red Finland for the reason that it shared a border with the Russian SFSR which in turn could send troops and supplies to Red Finland.

World War II

On September 1, 1939,

Rajajoki River (Swedish: Systerbäck) in the south. 22,973 km2, or 71.5 percent of the province on the Karelian Isthmus, including the cities of Viipuri and Sortavala, became part of the newly established Karelo-Finnish SSR in the Soviet Union. Following the peace treaty, the entire population of the ceded territories, more than four hundred thousand people, was evacuated to central Finland
.

In 1941 the

were pushed back and by the Moscow Armistice on September 19, 1944, and the Paris Peace Treaty
in 1947 the territorial losses were confirmed again.

Winter war evacuees had returned following the Finnish offensive in 1941 and were evacuated again in 1944 after the Soviet counterattack, and the territories were repopulated by people from other parts of the Soviet Union. This time, the Karelian Isthmus became part of the Vyborgsky and Priozersky districts of the Leningrad Oblast, and only Ladoga Karelia and Border Karelia became part of the Karelo-Finnish SSR.

While Ladoga Karelia retained most of its original

toponyms, the vast majority of toponyms in the Karelian Isthmus were renamed by the Soviet government around 1948. In 1945 the parts of the province that remained in Finnish hands were renamed Kymi Province, with its center at Kouvola. The Kymi Province was in turn merged with other provinces into the larger Southern Finland Province
in 1997.

Maps

Provinces of Finland 1634: 1: Turku and Pori, 14: Nyland and Tavastehus, 18: Ostrobothnia, 20: Viborg and Nyslott, 21: Kexholm
Provinces of Finland 1721: 1: Turku and Pori, 14: Nyland and Tavastehus, 18: Ostrobothnia, 19: Kymmenegård and Nyslott
Provinces of Finland 1812:1: Turku and Pori, 4: Vaasa, 10: Oulu, 13: Viipuri, 14: Nyland and Tavastehus, 15: Kymmenegård, 16: Savolax and Karelia
Provinces of Finland 1831: 1: Turku and Pori, 2: Uusimaa, 3: Häme, 4: Vaasa, 6: Mikkeli, 8: Kuopio, 10: Oulu, 13: Viipuri
Provinces of Finland 1945: 1: Turku and Pori, 2: Uusimaa, 3: Häme, 4: Vaasa, 5: Kymi, 6: Mikkeli, 8: Kuopio, 10: Oulu, 11: Lapland, 12: Åland
  • Coat of arms between 1812 and 1917
    Coat of arms between 1812 and 1917
  • Coat of arms after 1917
    Coat of arms after 1917

Economy

The area had a well-developed economy due to its proximity to Saint Petersburg, the capital of the Russian Empire. In 1856

Lake Saimaa and Finnish Lakeland to the Vyborg Bay
.

The development of the province was bolstered further by the construction of the

Petrograd–Hiitola railroad
in 1917.

pulp and paper mills
.

Administrative divisions

Local districts

In Finnish kihlakunta, in Swedish härad.

Cities, towns and municipalities in 1939

Those which were ceded to the Soviet Union during World War II are given in italics.

Cities

Towns

Rural municipalities

Finnish/Swedish name. Main village with the same name unless otherwise noted.

Electoral districts

Following the electoral reform to the new Parliament of Finland in 1906, the province was divided into an Eastern and a Western electoral district.

Western electoral district

Haapasaari, Hamina, Johannes, Kanneljärvi, Koivisto, Koiviston maalaiskunta, Kotka, Kouvola, Kuolemajärvi, Kymi, Lappee, Lappeenranta, Lauritsala, Lavansaari, Lemi, Luumäki, Miehikkälä, Nuijamaa, Pyhtää, Savitaipale, Seiskari, Sippola, Suomenniemi, Suursaari, Säkkijärvi, Taipalsaari, Tytärsaari, Uusikirkko, Vahviala, Valkeala, Vehkalahti, Viipuri, Viipurin maalaiskunta, Virolahti, Ylämaa.

Eastern electoral district

Antrea, Harlu, Heinjoki, Hiitola, Impilahti, Jaakkima, Joutseno, Jääski, Kaukola, Kirvu, Kivennapa, Korpiselkä, Kurkijoki, Käkisalmen maalaiskunta, Käkisalmi, Lahdenpohja, Lumivaara, Metsäpirtti, Muolaa, Parikkala, Pyhäjärvi, Rautjärvi, Rautu, Ruokolahti, Ruskeala, Räisälä, Sakkola, Salmi, Simpele, Soanlahti, Sortavala, Sortavalan maalaiskunta, Suistamo, Suojärvi, Terijoki, Uukuniemi, Valkjärvi, Vuoksela, Vuoksenranta, Äyräpää.

Gallery

Kuolemajärvi
Lutheran Church. Built in 1903, destroyed in 1939.
Lutheran Church in Koivisto, designed by Josef Stenbäck
Muolaa
Lutheran church. Built in 1849, destroyed during the Second World War.
Muolaa
municipality on their way to West-Finland, December 1939
The old railway station in Elisenvaara, constructed around 1893, was destroyed in the Winter War.
Parikkala old Lutheran Church
its recapture
Sakkola
municipality, in the 1930s
Saijanjoki

Governors

Governors of the Viipuri Province 1812-1945:

Carl Gustaf Mannerheim, Governor 1834–1839
Antti Hackzell, Governor 1918–1920

Both the second President of Finland Lauri Kristian Relander and Carl Gustaf Mannerheim, grandfather of the sixth President, Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, were governors of Viipuri province.

Notable people

Ernst Löfström
Lydia Sesemann
Väinö Kunnas Self-portrait, 1926
Ester Toivonen, 1930s

People born in Viipuri Province between 1812 and 1917, when it was part of the Grand Duchy of Finland

For people born after 1917 in Vyborg

References

  1. ^

See also

Further reading

  • OCLC 4029300
    – via Hathi Trust.
  • William Henry Beable (1919), "Governments or Provinces of the Former Russian Empire: Viborg", Russian Gazetteer and Guide, London: Russian Outlook

External links