The Estates in
Sweden (including
Finland) and later also Russia's
Grand Duchy of Finland were the two higher estates,
nobility and
clergy, and the two lower estates,
burghers and land-owning
peasants. Each were free men, and had specific rights and responsibilities, and the right to send representatives to the
Riksdag of the Estates. The Riksdag, and later the
Diet of Finland was
tetracameral: at the Riksdag, each Estate voted as a single body. Since early 18th century, a bill needed the approval of at least three Estates to pass, and constitutional amendments required the approval of all Estates. Prior to the 18th century, the King had the right to cast a deciding vote if the Estates were split evenly. After Russia's conquest of Finland in 1809, the estates in Finland swore an oath to the Emperor in the
Diet of Porvoo. A
Finnish House of Nobility was codified in 1818 in accordance with the old Swedish law of 1723. However, after the Diet of Porvoo, the
Diet of Finland was reconvened only in 1863. In the meantime, for a period of 54 years, the country was governed only administratively. There was also a population outside the estates. Unlike in other areas, people had no "default" estate, and were not peasants unless they came from a land-owner's family. A summary of this division is: • Nobility (see
Finnish nobility and
Swedish nobility) was exempt from tax, had an inherited
rank and the right to keep a
fief, and had a tradition of military service and government. Nobility was codified in 1280 with the Swedish king granting exemption from taxation (
frälse) to land-owners that could equip a cavalryman (or be one themselves) for the king's army. Around 1400,
letters patent were introduced, in 1561 the ranks of
Count and
Baron were added, and in 1625 the House of Nobility was codified as the First Estate of the land. Following
Axel Oxenstierna's reform, higher government offices were open only to nobles. However, the nobility still owned only their own property, not the peasants or their land
as in much of Europe. Heads of the noble houses were hereditary members of the assembly of nobles. The Nobility is divided into
titled nobility (
counts and
barons) and lower nobility. Until the 18th century, the lower nobility was in turn divided into
Knights and
Esquires such that each of the three classes would first vote internally, giving one vote per class in the assembly. This resulted in great political influence for the higher nobility. • Clergy, or priests, were exempt from tax, and collected
tithes for the church. After the
Swedish Reformation, the church became
Lutheran. In later centuries, the estate included teachers of universities and certain state schools. The estate was governed by the
state church which consecrated its ministers and appointed them to positions with a vote in choosing diet representatives. • Burghers were city-dwellers, tradesmen and craftsmen. Trade was allowed only in the cities when the
mercantilistic ideology had got the upper hand, and the burghers had the exclusive right to conduct commerce within the framework of
guilds. Entry to this Estate was controlled by the autonomy of the towns themselves. Peasants were allowed to sell their produce within the city limits, but any further trade, particularly foreign trade, was allowed only for burghers. In order for a settlement to become a city, a royal charter granting
market right was required, and foreign trade required royally chartered
staple port rights. After the annexation of Finland into Imperial Russia in 1809, mill-owners and other proto-industrialists would gradually be included in this estate. • Peasants were land-owners of land-taxed farms and their families (comparable in status to
yeomen in England), which represented the majority in medieval times. Since most of the population were independent farmer families until the 19th century, not serfs nor villeins, there is a remarkable difference in tradition compared to other European countries. Entry was controlled by ownership of farmland, which was not generally for sale but a hereditary property. After 1809, Swedish tenants renting a large enough farm (ten times larger than what was required of peasants owning their own farm) were included as well as non-nobility owning tax-exempt land. Their representatives to the Diet were elected indirectly: each municipality sent electors to elect the representative of an electoral district. • To no estate belonged propertyless
cottagers,
villeins,
tenants of farms owned by others, farmhands, servants, some lower administrative workers, rural craftsmen, travelling salesmen, vagrants, and propertyless and unemployed people (who sometimes lived in strangers' houses). To reflect how the people belonging to the estates saw them, the Finnish word for "obscene",
säädytön, has the literal meaning "estateless". They had no political rights and could not vote. Their mobility was severely limited by the policy of "legal protection" (Finnish:
laillinen suojelu): every estateless person had to be employed by a taxed citizen from the estates, or they could be charged with
vagrancy and sentenced to forced labor. In Finland, this policy lasted until 1883. In Sweden, the Riksdag of the Estates existed until it was replaced with a bicameral Riksdag in 1866, which gave political rights to anyone with a certain income or property. Nevertheless, many of the leading politicians of the 19th century continued to be drawn from the old estates, in that they were either noblemen themselves, or represented agricultural and urban interests. Ennoblements continued even after the estates had lost their political importance, with the last
ennoblement of explorer
Sven Hedin taking place in 1902; this practice was formally abolished with the adoption of the new
Constitution January 1, 1975, while the status of the
House of Nobility continued to be regulated in law until 2003. In Finland, this legal division existed until 1906, still drawing on the Swedish constitution of 1772. However, at the start of the 20th century most of the population did not belong to any Estate and had no political representation. A particularly large class were the rent farmers, who did not own the land they cultivated but had to work in the land-owner's farm to pay their rent (unlike Russia, there were no slaves or
serfs.) Furthermore, the industrial workers living in the city were not represented by the four-estate system. The political system was reformed as a result of the
Finnish general strike of 1905, with the last Diet instituting a new constitutional law to create the
modern parliamentary system, ending the political privileges of the estates. The post-independence constitution of 1919 forbade ennoblement, and all tax privileges were abolished in 1920. The privileges of the estates were officially and finally abolished in 1995, although in legal practice, the privileges had long been unenforceable. As in Sweden, the nobility has not been officially abolished and records of nobility are still voluntarily maintained by the
Finnish House of Nobility. In Finland, it is still illegal and punishable by jail time (up to one year) to defraud into marriage by declaring a false name or estate (Rikoslaki 18 luku § 1/Strafflagen 18 kap. § 1). ==Low Countries==