Finnish Crusades -

To call these events "crusades" in the same vein as the expeditions to Jerusalem is misleading. There was no massive pilgrimage army, no vow to liberate the Holy Sepulchre. They were, instead, frontier crusades —military missions blessed by the Pope to expand Christendom's borders and secure the political interests of a rising Swedish kingdom.

This was the real war. Sweden and Novgorod had been competing for control of Karelia (eastern Finland) and the lucrative fur trade routes. In 1293, Marshal Torkel Knutsson led a large Swedish force across the frozen Gulf of Finland. He stormed the Novgorodian outpost at Ladoga, but more decisively, he built a formidable stone castle at Vyborg (Viipuri). finnish crusades

What is undeniable is the outcome. By the end of the 13th century, the disparate tribal regions of Finland—Tavastia, Karelia, and Satakunta—had been permanently drawn into the Swedish cultural and political sphere, and by extension, into the Roman Catholic Church. This was not a sudden conquest but a long, grinding struggle for influence against the other great power of the Baltic: the Novgorod Republic. To call these events "crusades" in the same

Vyborg became the eastern sword-point of the Swedish kingdom. The campaign of 1293, explicitly called a crusade by papal bulls issued to justify it, was a brutal frontier war. The Swedish army fought Novgorodians and their Karelian allies, baptizing captured Karelians by force. The conflict was not resolved until the Treaty of Nöteborg (1323), which formally divided Finland and Karelia between the two powers. The border drawn then would separate Western and Eastern Christianity—and later, Sweden and Russia—for over six centuries. This was the real war

The story is a vivid one. King Eric IX of Sweden, urged by the Papacy to expand Christendom, sails across the Gulf of Bothnia with Bishop Henry. They defeat the Finns in battle, baptize them en masse, and establish a church hierarchy. The king returns to Sweden, only to be martyred. Bishop Henry remains, is later killed by a Finnish peasant named Lalli on the ice of Lake Köyliö, and becomes the patron saint of Finland.