Armas-Eino Martola was born on 12 May 1896 in
Raahe to doctor Johan Martola and Anna Maria Cecilia Simelius. Martola graduated as an
ylioppilas in 1914 and began to study theology. He soon became involved in the
Jäger Movement, where Finnish volunteers received military training in
Germany, leaving for Germany in late 1915. While in Germany, the Finnish volunteers formed the
27th Royal Prussian Jäger Battalion, fighting for the
Imperial German Army on the
Eastern Front of World War I. During this time, he took part in several battles in the regions of
Misa,
Gulf of Riga and
Lielupe. Martola returned to Finland on 25 February 1918 to fight on the side of the
Whites in the
Finnish Civil War. Promoted to a
lieutenant, he served as a
platoon leader in the 1st Jäger Regiment before being wounded in the
Lempäälä region during the
Battle of Tampere. Later in 1918, he was made an adjutant for a battalion and a company commander before being transferred to the
Viipuri Officer Cadet School where he taught until 1919. In 1919, Martola was transferred to the Finnish General HQ and promoted to the rank of
captain. Between 1919 and 1921 Martola studied at the French
École supérieure de guerre as the first Finnish officer to do so. After his return to Finland, Martola was promoted to a
major in 1922, becoming the head of the General HQ Operations Department. In 1923, he married Aune Kyllikki Ignatius with whom he had had three children between 1924 and 1934. In 1924, he was briefly made the assistant director of the
War College before becoming the head of the General HQ department in charge of mobilization from 1925 to 1927. During his tenure in this position, he was also promoted to a
lieutenant colonel in 1926. In 1927, Martola took command of the Savo Jäger Regiment, before being posted as a
military attaché to France and Belgium between 1928 and 1931. Returning to Finland in 1931, Martola was promoted to
colonel and made the head of the General HQ department of statistics and foreign affairs. In 1933, he was made the
chief of staff for the
White Guard, where for an extended period he also carried out the duties of the White Guard commander, Lieutenant General
Lauri Malmberg, during the latter's leave of absence. ==Winter War and Continuation War==