Finland
In 1809 Finland was annexed by the
Russian Empire and became an autonomous Grand Duchy. Until then Finland had
been an integral part of the Swedish realm for over six hundred years. Finland
destiny was sealed in Tilsit, in 1807, when Napoleon and the Russian Czar
Alexander I came to an agreement on their respective spheres of influence.
Finland, situated in the Russian sphere, was conquered in the Finnish War of
1808-1809.
The cornerstone of modern Finland was laid in 1809 at the Porvoo Diet, where
Czar Alexander proclaimed himself constitutional ruler of the new Grand Duchy
and promised to maintain the faith and laws of the land. The historian Matti
Klinge has pointed out that Sweden ceded a mere conglomerate of provinces to
Russia; the Porvoo Diet united them as a state, "raised to the rank of
nations".
The creation of a capital was a clear indication of the Czar's will to make
the new Grand Duchy a functioning entity. Under Swedish rule, Turku (Åbo
in Swedish) had been the administrative and spiritual centre of Finland, but
Stockholm had of course been its capital. In 1812 Alexander declared Helsinki
- a small town of about 4,000 inhabitants - the capital of the Grand Duchy of
Finland. In 1808 the town had been badly damaged by a fire in which one third
of the residents had lost their homes.
On the same day as Alexander declared Helsinki the new capital he appointed
the military engineer Johan Albrecht Ehrenström, a former courtier of
Sweden's King Gustavus III, head of the reconstruction committee.
Ehrenström's task was, in accordance with the wishes of Czar Alexander,
to rebuild the new capital in an unprecedentedly grand manner, "in order
to show both Finns and the outside world that a new political unit, the Grand
Duchy of Finland, had come into being", as historian Matti Klinge puts
it.
In 1817 Ehrenström´s final town plan was ratified. The Senate
Square, bordered by a church and various administrative buildings, became the
monumental centre of the plan. In the words of art historian Riitta Nikula,
Ehrenström thus created "the symbolic heart of the Grand Duchy of
Finland, where all the main institutions had an exact place dictated by their
function in the hierarchy."
This plaque on the wall of the university library terrace reminds passers-by
of Ehrenström´s and Engel´s achievement.
Ehrenström's plan provided a fine outline for the construction of the new
capital, but without a skilful architect the whole project could have
faltered. Fortunately, he found one in Prussian-born Carl Ludvig Engel.
Carl Ludvig Engel and the Senate Square
Carl Ludvig Engel (1778-1840), who had received his diploma in architecture
from the Berlin Bauakademie in 1804, found no work in Prussia during the
Napoleonic Wars. He applied for and received an appointment as city architect
in Tallinn (Estonia). Soon he visited Finland and was asked to design an
observatory for the Academy in Turku. Ehrenström first met the talented
young architect in 1814 and was immediately convinced that he had found the
right man. After spending a couple of years in St. Petersburg Engel considered
moving back to Berlin, but he was appointed architect of the reconstruction
committee for Helsinki in 1816 and remained in Finland for the rest of his
life. Engel was thrilled by his new task: "Few architects have the good
fortune to plan an entire city", he explained in a letter to a friend.
And Engel had every right to express himself in this way; within a quarter of
a century he had designed and completed about 30 public buildings in Helsinki,
all in his chosen Neo-Classical (Empire) style. Some of the buildings have
been demolished, but his most important creations around the Senate Square are
preserved.
Senate Square in 1820.
Drawing by C.L.Engel
The first building to be completed was the main wing of the Senate (Now the
Palace of the Council of State) in 1822. The main University building, on the
opposite side of the Senate Square, was inaugurated in 1832. The general form
of the building is similar to the Senate, but another language is to be found
in the details. The University Library, completed in 1844 after Engel's death,
has often been praised as his most beautiful building.
No building task occupied Engel so long as the Lutheran church on the northern
side of the Senate Square. He worked on it from 1818 until his death in 1840.
The Lutheran Cathedral - then called the Church of Nicholas - dominating the
Square, was finally consecrated twelve years later, in 1852.
By the middle of the century, the new Empire-style Helsinki was finally ready.
In his book "The Senate Square" professor Nils Erik Wickberg
describes the result in the following way:
"It was a city in light colours - mainly yellow and grey - in which
practically every building was in the same style, with the same kinds of
cornices, window surroundings, pilasters and pediments and with the same low
roof slope. There it lay, resplendently framed by sea inlets and bare masses
of grey rock, which was later built on or converted into parks. When the
distinguished poet, Bishop Frans Michael Franzén, who had moved to
Sweden in the same year Ehrenström returned to Finland, visited Helsinki
in 1840, he compared the city to a butterfly which has flown out of its cocoon
and to Thebes charmed into place with the music of Amphion's magic lyre."
Ever since, the institutions responsible for guiding and governing the destiny
of Finland have been located in the same buildings around the Senate Square,
and the Square itself has been the venue of a great number of important
gatherings and celebrations in the history of both the Grand Duchy and
independent Finland. When Helsinki in the year 2000 celebrates its 450th
anniversary, the splendid Senate Square will certainly be a focal point for
the celebrations.
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