|
|||||||||||||||||
|
Association of Finnish Culture and IdentityThe Association of Finnish Culture and Identity, also known as the Finnish Alliance, is a Finnish cultural organization. The official name of the Association is in Finnish Suomalaisuuden liitto, in German Verband für das Finnentum e. V. and in French La Ligue Finlandaise.
The President of the Finnish Alliance in 1930-32 was Urho Kekkonen, the President of Finland in 1956-81. The Finnish Alliance is an important element in the Finnish establishment. It provides expert advice on matters such as the displaying of the Finnish flag and Finnish family names. It creates and maintains contacts between Finland and Finns living abroad. The Association of Finnish Culture and Identity especially emphasizes Finnish pupils' and students' right to determine for themselves the foreign languages they wish to study. For further information, please contact us. Our address is:
WARNING: A hostile office, probably Swedish, forges e-mails as if the mails were sent by us. The Finnish Alliance has not sent them and is not responsible for them. A bogus can be identified by its inconsistency with the main guidelines of the Finnish Alliance.
Famous FinnsThe world-famous composer Jean Sibelius' works include strongly nationalistic symphonic poems such as Finlandia in 1900. Sibelius' family originally came from Artjärvi in Eastern Uusimaa. He went to Hämeenlinna Lyseo, a highly esteemed Finnish grammar school in the heart of Finnish speaking Häme. Albert Edelfelt was a famous painter, who worked primarily in France. His famous protrait of Louis Pasteur hangs in the Musée d'Orsay in Paris. The element Gadolinium was named after Finnish chemist Johan Gadolin, whose original Finnish last name was Isolin. Under Swedish rule Gadolin's family, as well as many others, in the 17th and 18th century had to give up their original Finnish family names in order to obtain an education. This was a period when Finnish names were Swedenized, Germanized and Latinized and in Gadolin's case, translated into Hebrew with a suffix in or lin. Gad in Hebrew means big, just as Finnish iso. Famous Finns in America and early explorersEero Saarinen and his father Eliel Saarinen were famous Finnish American architects. Pietari (Pehr) Kalm was a Finnish explorer and botanist, who wrote the first description of the Niagara Falls. The explorer A.E. Nordenskiöld was born in Helsinki, Finland. He was sympathetic to Finnish nationalistic concepts and was therefore expelled from Finland by the Tsarist governor of Finland. He was the first to navigate the Northeast Passage. The most famous of the Finnish Orientalists, Yrjö (George) Wallin, traveled around Arabian Peninsula in the 19th century. His memoir is a classic for the Orientalists. He was later awarded a medal by the Royal Geographic Society. ![]() |
||||||||||||||||