dates from the 13th century, and is the oldest
parish church in Finland.
Prehistory The islands began
rising from the water 10,000 years ago. At that stage the
Danish straits were closed and the current Baltic Sea was the fresh-water
Lake Ancylus. The water around the islands turned from fresh to brackish around 7600 years ago as the saline water from the
North Sea penetrated further to the Baltic from the recently opened straits. The oldest
archaeological finds in
Dragsfjärd date back to ca. 4000 BC and represent the
Pit-Comb Ware culture. During that period the outer archipelago was formed by the highest points of the main islands of
Houtskär,
Korpo and
Nagu. Due to
post-glacial rebound the entire archipelago has risen approximately since, enlarging existing islands and creating many more.
Swedish rule During the 12th and 13th centuries Sweden established its control of the Archipelago Sea. At the same time Christianity started to spread to Finland, starting from the archipelago and the adjacent coastal area. The islands occupy a strategic position, guarding the approaches to Stockholm, Turku and the entire Gulf of Bothnia. Therefore, they were fortified by the
Swedish empire during the Middle Ages. A royal postal route used to go via the northern islands in the 16th and 17th century. According to legend, the notorious
pirates known as the
Victual Brothers, who terrorized the Baltic Sea region in the Middle Ages, would have lit stray fires in the Archipelago Sea, which would have lured other ships to shore, looted the booty and possibly killed the ship's crew. This is apparently just a later story tradition. According to the same tradition, the pirates were also joined by young adventurous men from coastal villages who did not see a future for themselves in their home region. In 1808 the
War of Finland broke out between Sweden and
Russia. In April Russian troops occupied the archipelago, including Åland. Soon after the local residents, enraged by the confiscation of ships, rebelled. Aided by troops from Sweden the archipelago was cleared of Russian troops in May. The Swedish troops then used the islands as a staging area for the recapture of continental Finland. The archipelago remained in Swedish control until the end of the war, but in the subsequent
Treaty of Fredrikshamn in 1809 Sweden was forced to cede the area along with the rest of Finland. The Archipelago Sea became part of the autonomous
Grand Duchy of Finland under the Russian Empire.
Grand Duchy of Finland During the
Crimean War an
Anglo-French force attacked and destroyed the
Bomarsund castle. In the
Åland convention of 1856 the Åland side of the archipelago was
demilitarised. The Russians moved troops back into the area in 1916, and for the next 5 years there was either Russian or Finnish military presence in Åland.
Independent Finland Finland gained its independence from Russia in 1917. Shortly after, the Swedish speaking inhabitants of
Åland, in the western part of the
Archipelago, appealed to Sweden to annex the islands. The request received mixed support in Sweden, but led to the
Åland crisis. The
League of Nations was called in to resolve the situation, and in 1921 the League granted the sovereignty of the entire archipelago to Finland, despite the objections of the majority of Ålanders. However, Åland was given a wide autonomy, and its
demilitarised status was reaffirmed. In 1939 the
Soviet Union attacked Finland in the
Winter War. At the end of the war in 1940 Finland was forced to rent Hanko at the eastern extreme of the Archipelago Sea to
Soviet Union as a military base. In 1941 the
Continuation War broke out. Finland sent troops to Åland to guard against a possible Soviet invasion, which didn't materialize. The Finnish army also laid siege on Hanko, which was evacuated by the Soviet Union later that year. Finnish troops remained in Åland until the end of the war in 1944. In 1995 Finland became a member of the
European Union. The
referendum on the membership was held separately in Åland, leading to the possibility of different outcomes. A rejection of the EU membership by the Ålanders would have created a situation similar to that of
Greenland, which is an autonomous region of
Denmark but is not part of the EU. However, the membership was accepted in both referendums. == Image gallery ==