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Heimosodat

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File:Bolshevikki juliste-Itä-Karjala.jpg
A 1922 Bolshevik propaganda poster: "We don't want war, but we will defend the Soviets!"

The term in Finnish historiography heimosodat (Template:Lang-de[1]) in English literally "Kindred Nations Wars", "Wars for kindred peoples" or "Kinship Wars" for Finnic kinship. It is often erroneously translated as "Tribal Wars".[citation needed] It refers to conflicts in territories inhabited by other Finnic peoples, often in Russia or in borders of Russia, in which some 9000 Finnish volunteers took part between 1918 and 1922, to assert Finnish control over areas with predominantly Finnic populations. Many of the volunteer soldiers were inspired by the idea of Greater Finland. Some of the conflicts were incursions from Finland and some were local uprisings, where volunteers wanted either to help the people in their fight for independence or to annex the areas to Finland.

Finnish volunteers arrive in Tallinn, Estonia in December 1918 during Estonian War of Independence

The phenomenon is closely linked to nationalism and irredentism as Finland had just won its national independence, and a part of the population felt that they had obligations to help other Finnic peoples to attain the same. Estonia, the closest and numerically biggest "kindred nation", had gained its independence at the same time, but had less resources, less institutions ready to support its attained position, and more Russian troops inside its borders. Other Finnic peoples were at a much lower cultural, economic and political capability level. The Finnish Civil War had awakened a strong nationalistic feeling that sought tangible ways to make itself have impact. Finland had, for the two next decades, a relatively high citizen participation in nationalistic activities (e.g. Karelianism and Finnicization of the country and its institutions). Only the strenuous five-year period 1939–45 of total war drained excess enthusiasm.

Glossary

Sota
"War", and in this context, mostly a small one, such as a border skirmish, an expeditions made by volunteer troops, an expulsion of some remnant forces of occupation, or an attempt to form a rebellion
Heimo
"Tribe" or "clan", but in this context, also the ethnic and language kinship between Finnic peoples; "kindred peoples"
Sukukansa
People that are linguistically and/or ethnically kin to another; "suku" means "family" and "kansa" means "people" (singular)

References

  1. ^ Zägel, Jörg (2007). Vergangenheitsdiskurse in der Ostseeregion (in German). LIT Verlag Berlin-Hamburg-Münster. ISBN 9783825802028. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)

See also

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