Johan Ludvig Runeberg's Home Museum + The Town Of Porvoo

in photography •  5 years ago 

We went on one of hour day trips again and visited the town of Porvoo. My wife had always wanted to visit the national poet Johan Ludvig Runeberg's (1804-1877) home museum. Runeberg wrote in Swedish. He was a notable lyricist and an epic poet who had a large influence in literature also in Sweden. Runeberg taught Latin and Greek at the local gymnasium. He was also a journalist and a minister of the church as his lectorate required him to be ordained. Runeberg was also a docent at the university of Turku (moved to the new capital Helsinki after the great fire in 1828). An important subject matter in his works is the common people of Finland and their struggles in the harsh climate. Runeberg was heavily influenced by the classical Greek and Roman literature. He also wrote the national anthem. His most popular work is Tales of Ensign Stål, an epic poem about the defensive war against Russia in 1808-1809, which the Realm of Sweden lost resulting in Finland being incorporated into the Russian Empire as an autonomous Grand Duchy.

DSC_0006.jpg

Johan Ludvig Runeberg's home is in the new part of the town. He bought it in 1852 to house his family and four servants. The Runeberg's had eight children, six of whom survived in to adulthood. They also entertained a large number of guests from time to time. The notables of Finland's cultural life at the time and many foreign visitors would stay at the house often for months at a time. The size of the main building is about 350 m2 in size. Runeberg could afford it despite not inheriting anything of note because he had a lectorate at the gymnasium and because he earned about as much as a poet.

DSC_0007.jpg

The main entrance

DSC_0008.jpg

Many of the children of the Runebergs traveled a lot as grownups. They would send seeds to their mother Fredrika Runeberg who planted many exotic plants in the garden. Mrs. Runeberg is best known for the traditional Runeberg's torta to be enjoyed on Runeberg's Day on the 5th of February:

image.png

Image by Bengt Oberger CC BY-SA 3.0

DSC_0010.jpg

DSC_0011.jpg

J.L. Runeberg, by his son Walter Rungeberg who was a sculptor.

DSC_0012.jpg

There were about a thousand books in J.L. Runeberg's collection.

DSC_0013.jpg

Typical of the layouts of homes of the era

IMG_2995.JPG

J.L. Runeberg was an amateur hunter. When he bought the house, there was little else but the town gardens near it. He is said to have spent time hunting for wolves outside the house. Wolves were a menace in Finland in the 19th century. There were several cases of small children having fallen prey to wolves near the old capital Turku. That resulted in wolves being hunted down to near extinction because a reward was paid for every dead wolf. As you might imagine, the same thing happened as with bid bots on Steem: some people started farming them. :)

Nowadays, wolves are a protected species.

IMG_2996.JPG

IMG_2999.JPG

Notice the shortness of the beds. They were of adjustable length typical of the era.

IMG_3005.JPG

IMG_3006.JPG


DSC_0020.jpg

Taken from the new bridge over the river Porvoo. The cathedral of Porvoo and its bell tower are in the center right.

DSC_0023.jpg

A scenery from the new part of Porvoo. The town has a population of about 50,000. It's bilingual. About a half of the population is Finnish-speaking and the rest speak Swedish.

DSC_0026.jpg

From the old town of Porvoo. The museum guide told me that most of these buildings didn't even have plumbing or sewers until the 1980s. It's not very large, about half a square kilometer at most but it's on a rocky hill and expensive and difficult to make modern infrastructure on. In her childhoold, the district was a little fearsome even. Since the 1980s the place has undergone rapid gentrification and those houses tend to be quite expensive.

Pispala in Tampere is a bit similar. Once a district for poor factory workers, nowadays for millionaires.

DSC_0028_01.jpg

DSC_0030.jpg

DSC_0041.jpg

There are a lot of tourists here in the summer.

DSC_0042.jpg

The high frequency of fires should surprise nobody.

DSC_0054.jpg

The pink building is the old town hall. It's a museum nowadays.

DSC_0058.jpg

A glimpse of the river can seen on the extreme left.

DSC_0059.jpg

The cathedral. Burned in an arson in 2006.

DSC_0060.jpg

The bell tower.

DSC_0068.jpg

Back to the car. Starting to get dark.

DSC_0070.jpg

The slantedness of the walls is not an artifact of the kit lens.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Hi @markkujantunen!

Your post was upvoted by @steem-ua, new Steem dApp, using UserAuthority for algorithmic post curation!
Your UA account score is currently 4.398 which ranks you at #2568 across all Steem accounts.
Your rank has dropped 31 places in the last three days (old rank 2537).

In our last Algorithmic Curation Round, consisting of 59 contributions, your post is ranked at #22.

Evaluation of your UA score:
  • Some people are already following you, keep going!
  • The readers like your work!
  • Try to work on user engagement: the more people that interact with you via the comments, the higher your UA score!

Feel free to join our @steem-ua Discord server