Euro Pilgrimage ’85, Ch. 14: Meet the Finns — and hop a bus to Leningrad
Stockholm to St. Petersburg via Helsinki. 18 hours? In 1985?
Accompanying these recollections of my travel year 1985 are some of the songs I kept hearing while on the road. This video features an actual library, otherwise known as the place where I hung out for months prior to travel, researching the trip.
Previously: Euro Pilgrimage ‘85, Ch. 13: Introductions to Oslo, Bergen, Stockholm and Uppsala.
In this passage from Germania, Tacitus ((c. 55-120) was not speaking of youthful backpackers in Europe: “The Fenni live in astonishing barbarism and disgusting misery: no arms, no horses, no household; wild plants for their food, skins for their clothing, the ground for their beds.”
However, one might reasonably guess that the learned Roman’s passage explains why many non-Finnish speakers refer to the Suomalaiset people (as they call themselves) as Finns, and this is partially correct, although the Fenni referenced here probably were the Sami, natives of the Arctic region, later to become known as Lapps, which may be a mild pejorative in the fashion of Canucks, and anyway, there are many more of the Sami in Svenska (Sweden) that Suomi (Finland).
Concurrently, Finnish is fiendishly bizarre to non-natives. It is derived from the Uralic family of languages, entirely removed...Read more
















