The
Kalevala is a major part of Finnish culture and history. It has influenced the arts in Finland and in other cultures around the world. In 2024, the
European Commission granted the epic with a
European Heritage Label.
Finnish daily life with Kalevala frescoes by Gallen-Kallela The influence of the
Kalevala in daily life and business in Finland is tangible. Names and places associated with the
Kalevala have been adopted as company and brand names and as place names. There are several places within Finland with
Kalevala-related names, for example: the district of
Tapiola in the city of
Espoo; the district of
Pohjola in the city of
Turku, the district of
Metsola in the city of
Vantaa, and the districts of
Kaleva and
Sampo in the city of
Tampere. In addition, the Russian town of Ukhta was in 1963 renamed
Kalevala. In the United States a small community founded in 1900 by Finnish immigrants is named
Kaleva, Michigan; many of the street names are taken from the
Kalevala. The banking sector of Finland has had at least three
Kalevala-related brands:
Sampo Bank (name changed to Danske Bank in late 2012),
OP-Pohjola Group and Tapiola Bank. The jewellery company
Kalevala Koru was founded in 1935 on the 100th anniversary of the publication of the
Old Kalevala. It specialises in the production of unique and culturally important items of jewellery. It is co-owned by the
Kalevala Women's League and offers artistic scholarships to a certain number of organisations and individuals every year. The Finnish dairy company
Valio has a brand of
ice-cream named Aino, specialising in more exotic flavours than their normal brand. The construction group
Lemminkäinen was formed in 1910 as a
roofing and
asphalt company. The name was chosen specifically to emphasise that they were a wholly Finnish company. They now operate internationally. The private healthcare company
Mehiläinen was formed in 1909. "Mehiläinen" means
bee in Finnish, and the name was chosen to represent the "selfless and hardworking healer" in the
Kalevala. After Lemminkäinen is drowned, his mother collects the pieces of him, but cannot bring him back to life. It is not until a bee has retrieved a drop of honey as ointment that Lemminkäinen is saved.
Finnish calendar Kalevala Day is celebrated in Finland on 28 February, to celebrate the publication date of Elias Lönnrot's first version of the
Kalevala in 1835. By its other official name, the day is known as the Finnish Culture Day. Several of the names in the
Kalevala are celebrated as Finnish
name days. The name days themselves and the dates they fall upon have no direct relationship with the
Kalevala itself; however, the adoption of the names became commonplace after the release of the
Kalevala.
Art has been a source of inspiration for several artists. (''Kullervo's Curse'', Gallen-Kallela, 1899) Several artists have been influenced by the
Kalevala, most notably
Akseli Gallen-Kallela.
Iittala group's
Arabia brand kilned a series of
Kalevala commemorative plates, designed by
Raija Uosikkinen (1923–2004). The series ran from 1976 to 1999, and the plates are highly sought-after collectibles. One of the earliest artists to depict the
Kalevala was
Robert Wilhelm Ekman. In 1989, the fourth full translation of the
Kalevala into English was published, illustrated by
Björn Landström.
Literature The
Kalevala has been translated over 150 times, into over 60 different languages. (See
§ translations.)
Re-tellings Finnish cartoonist Kristian Huitula illustrated a comic book adaptation of the
Kalevala. The
Kalevala Graphic Novel contains the storyline of all the 50 chapters in original text form. Finnish cartoonist and children's writer
Mauri Kunnas wrote and illustrated . The story is that of the
Kalevala, with the characters presented as
anthropomorphised dogs, wolves and cats. The story deviates from the full
Kalevala to make the story more appropriate for children. In the late 1950s, students from the Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama performed excerpts from the Kalevala in a presentation to the poet laureate John Masefield at Oxford. Some images from this presentation can be viewed online . The
Kalevala inspired the American
Disney cartoonist
Don Rosa to draw a
Donald Duck (who is himself a popular character in Finland) story based on the
Kalevala, called
The Quest for Kalevala. The comic was released on the 150th anniversary of the
Kalevala.
Works inspired by Franz Anton Schiefner's translation of the
Kalevala was one inspiration for
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's 1855 poem
The Song of Hiawatha, which is written in a similar
trochaic tetrameter.
Friedrich Reinhold Kreutzwald's Estonian national epic
Kalevipoeg was inspired by the
Kalevala. Both Väinämöinen and Ilmarinen are mentioned in the work, and the overall story of Kalevipoeg, Kalev's son, bears similarities to the Kullervo story.
J. R. R. Tolkien claimed the
Kalevala as one of his sources for
The Silmarillion. For example, the tale of Kullervo is the basis of
Túrin Turambar in
Narn i Chîn Húrin, including the sword that speaks when the
anti-hero uses it to commit suicide. Poet and playwright
Paavo Haavikko took influence from the
Kalevala, including in his poem
Kaksikymmentä ja yksi (1974), and the TV drama
Rauta-aika (1982). American science fiction and fantasy authors
L. Sprague de Camp and
Fletcher Pratt used the
Kalevala as source materials for their 1953 fantasy novella "
The Wall of Serpents". This is the fourth story in the authors'
Harold Shea series, in which the hero and his companions visit various mythic and fictional worlds. In this story, the characters visit the world of the Kalevala, where they encounter characters from the epic, drawn with a skeptical eye.
Emil Petaja was an American science fiction and fantasy author of Finnish descent. His best known works, known as the
Otava Series, were a series of novels based on the
Kalevala. The series brought Petaja readers from around the world, while his mythological approach to science fiction was discussed in scholarly papers presented at academic conferences. He has a further
Kalevala based work which is not part of the series, entitled
The Time Twister. British fantasy author
Michael Moorcock's sword and sorcery anti-hero,
Elric of Melniboné was influenced by the character Kullervo. British fantasy author
Michael Scott Rohan's
Winter of the World series feature Louhi as a major antagonist and include many narrative threads from the
Kalevela. The web comic "A Redtail's Dream", written and illustrated by
Minna Sundberg, cites the
Kalevala as an influence. (Physical edition 2014.) The British science fiction writer
Ian Watson's
Books of Mana duology, ''Lucky's Harvest
and The Fallen Moon
, both contain references to places and names from the Kalevala''. In 2008, Vietnamese author and translator Bùi Viêt Hoa published a piece of epic poetry
The Children of Mon and Man (), which delves into Vietnamese folk poetry and mythology, but was partially influenced by the
Kalevala. and the
Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs co-financed it.
Music in the 1950s. Sibelius is Finland's most famous composer. Many of his works were influenced by the
Kalevala. Finnish music has been greatly influenced by the
Kalevala, following in the tradition of the original song-poems.
Classical music The first recorded example of a musician influenced by the
Kalevala is
Filip von Schantz. In 1860, he composed the Kullervo Overture. The piece premièred at the opening of a new theatre in Helsinki on November of the same year. Von Schantz's work was followed by
Robert Kajanus' ''Kullervo's Funeral March
and the symphonic poem Aino in 1880 and 1885, respectively. Aino
is credited with inspiring Jean Sibelius to investigate the richness of the Kalevala
. Die Kalewainen in Pochjola, the first opera freely based upon the Kalevala'', was composed by
Karl Müller-Berghaus in 1890.
Jean Sibelius is the best-known
Kalevala-influenced classical composer. Twelve of Sibelius' best-known works are based upon or influenced by the
Kalevala, including his
Kullervo, a tone poem for soprano, baritone, chorus and orchestra composed in 1892. Sibelius also composed the music of to words written by Finnish soldier and writer
Heikki Nurmio. The march features the line . Other classical composers influenced by the
Kalevala: •
Einojuhani Rautavaara •
Leevi Madetoja •
Uuno Klami •
Tauno Marttinen •
Aulis Sallinen •
Veljo Tormis Folk metal A number of
folk metal bands have drawn on the
Kalevala heavily for inspiration. In 1993, the Finnish bands
Amorphis and
Sentenced released two
concept albums,
Tales from the Thousand Lakes and
North from Here respectively, which were the first of many
Kalevala-inspired albums that have followed since. Amorphis's 2009 album
Skyforger also draws heavily on the
Kalevala. The Finnish folk metal band
Ensiferum have released songs such as "Old Man" and "Little Dreamer", which are influenced by the
Kalevala. The third track of their
Dragonheads EP, entitled "Kalevala Melody", is an instrumental piece following the rhythm of the Kalevala metre. Another Finnish folk metal band,
Turisas, have adapted several verses from song nine of the
Kalevala, "The Origin of Iron", for the lyrics of their song "Cursed Be Iron", which is the third track of the album
The Varangian Way. Finnish metal band
Amberian Dawn use lyrics inspired by the
Kalevala on their album
River of Tuoni, as well as on its successor,
The Clouds of Northland Thunder. On 3 August 2012, Finnish folk metal band
Korpiklaani released a new album entitled
Manala. Jonne Järvelä from the band said, " is the realm of the dead – the underworld in Finnish mythology. and are used synonymously. This place is best known for its appearance in the Finnish national epic
Kalevala, on which many of our new songs are based."
Other musical genres In the mid-1960s, the
progressive rock band Kalevala was active within Finland and in 1974, the now prolific singer-songwriter
Jukka Kuoppamäki released the song "Väinämöinen". These were some of the first pieces of modern popular music inspired by the
Kalevala. In 1998,
Ruth MacKenzie recorded the album
Kalevala: Dream of the Salmon Maiden, a song cycle covering the story of
Aino and her choice to refuse the hand of the sorcerer Väinämöinen, instead transforming herself into a salmon. MacKenzie has continued to perform the piece live. The Karelian Finnish folk music group
Värttinä has based some of its lyrics on motifs from the
Kalevala. The
Vantaa Chamber Choir have songs influenced by the
Kalevala. Their
Kalevala-themed third album,
Marian virsi (2005), combines contemporary folk with traditionally performed folk poetry. In 2003, the Finnish progressive rock quarterly Colossus and French
Musea Records commissioned 30 progressive rock groups from around the world to compose songs based on parts of the
Kalevala. The publication assigned each band with a particular song from the
Kalevala, which the band was free to interpret as they saw fit. The result, titled
Kalevala, is a three-disc, multilingual, four-hour epic telling. In the beginning of 2009, in celebration of the 160th anniversary of the
Kalevalas first published edition, the Finnish Literature Society and the
Kalevala Society premièred ten new and original works inspired by the
Kalevala. The works included poems, classical and contemporary music and artwork. A book was published by the Finnish Literature Society in conjunction with the event and a large exhibition of
Kalevala-themed artwork and cultural artefacts was put on display at the
Ateneum museum in Helsinki. In 2017, a New York-based production
Kalevala the Musical premiered in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the Republic of Finland. The production featured original pop, folk and world music score written by Johanna Telander. The concert version was performed across the United States and Finland.
Film and television In 1959, a joint Finnish-Soviet production entitled
Sampo, also known as
The Day the Earth Froze, was released, inspired by the story of the
Sampo from the
Kalevala, which is also featured in a 1993 episode of
Mystery Science Theater 3000. In 1982, the Finnish Broadcasting Company (
YLE) produced a television
mini-series called , with music composed by
Aulis Sallinen and book by Paavo Haavikko. The series was set "during the Kalevala times" and based upon events which take place in the
Kalevala. The series' part 3/4 won
Prix Italia in 1983. The martial arts film
Jadesoturi, also known as
Jade Warrior, released in Finland on 13 October 2006, was based upon the
Kalevala and set in Finland and China. Also, the 2013 film
Kalevala: The New Era, directed by
Jari Halonen, takes place both in the ancient land of the Kalevala and also in modern Finland. The film, made with a budget of €250,000, turned out to be a
box-office bomb and received a mostly negative reception from critics. In "Chapter 17: The Apostate", the
first episode of the third season of
The Mandalorian series,
Din Djarin meets with
Bo-Katan in an old Mandalorian castle, which is located in the Mandalore system planet called Kalevala. The same planet has also previously been mentioned in
The Clone Wars series. The film will be premiered at the beginning of 2026.
Military Heinrich Himmler had designated the 41th Waffen SS Division as
Grenadier Division Kalevala. ==Interpretations==