Oldest University of Finland – Helsingin Yliopisto.
Reverse side of the postcard.
More information
Oldest University of Finland – Helsingin Yliopisto.
The academy was founded on 26 March 1640 by Queen Christina of Sweden at the proposal of Count Per Brahe, on base of Åbo Cathedral School was founded in 1276.
Turku was the largest city in Finland and among the three largest in Sweden, while under Swedish sovereignty. In 1809, Finland was ceded to Russia and the capital of the new Grand Duchy of Finland was relocated to Helsinki in 1812, as Turku was regarded as being too remote from Saint Petersburg - and too near to Stockholm.
As a result of the Great Fire of Turku of 1827, which devastated most of the city, the government offices that had remained were finally moved to the new capital, and so also was the university. It continued in Helsinki, first as the Imperial Alexander University in Finland, and, following Finland's independence in 1917, as the University of Helsinki.
There are two universities in Turku today: the Swedish-speaking Åbo Akademi University was founded in 1918, and the Finnish-speaking University of Turku (1920), which both sometimes may claim an academic tradition at the location since the 17th century, in spite of a break for almost a century.
Date
1910.
Culture
Finland.
Classification
Poscard.