Aland Islands

Aland Islands, a group of about 200 rocky islets, of which 80 are inhabited, situated at the entrance of the Bothnian gulf, between lat. 59° and 60° 32" N. and long. 19° and 21° E. They belong to Russia, having been ceded by Sweden in 1809, and form a part of the government of Abo, in Finland.[1] The population, about 15,000 in number, are of Swedish descent, and are excellent sailors and fishermen. The rocks, covered with a thin soil, produce pines and birches, rye, barley, potatoes, hops, flax, and the inhabitants keep great numbers of cattle, and export cheese, butter, and hides; they also manufacture cloth for home use and for sails. The chief island is named Aland; its area is 28 square miles, its population 10,000; it has a good harbor on the W. side. All the harbors are more or less fortified; foremost among these was the island and harbor of Bomarsund, taken and blown up in 1854 by the allied fleets of England and France during their war against Russia.[2] In 1714, the Russian admiral Apraxin won a decisive naval victory against the Swedes near the cliffs of Signilskar.[3]

  1. Under the Frederikshamm Peace Treaty of September 1809, which concluded the Russo-Swedish war of 1808-09, Sweden ceded Finland and the Aland Islands to Russia.
  2. The battle of Bomarsund in August 1854, during the Crimean war, is described by Engels in two articles in the New-York Daily Tribune (see present edition, Vol. 13, pp. 379-88) and in an item in The New American Cyclopaedia (see this volume, p. 287).
  3. A reference to the battle of Hangut, a peninsula at the exit of the Gulf of Finland, which took place on July 25-27, 1714, between the Russian and Swedish fleets during the Northern war (1700-21). The battle ended in a victory for the Russians.