Helsinki

Forged By Empires, Shaped by the Sea

October 2025 9781805264583 256pp, 16 coloour illus
Forthcoming
Available as an eBook

Description

The Finnish capital has come a long way in 475 years, going from a sleepy fishing village to a thriving Nordic metropolis renowned internationally for its architecture, design and quality of life.

This intricate and expansive new history lays bare the perils – and occasional perks – of Helsinki’s position on the Baltic Sea, sandwiched between East and West. It tells how the city survived the rise and fall of two empires to become the figurehead of independent Finland in 1917. And how, since then, it has grown and flourished through language battles, Soviet air raids and Cold War compromises.

Through his trademark flowing prose, Henrik Meinander explores all corners of the city, from trade, military conflict and architecture to the minutiae of everyday existence. And through his eye for a telling anecdote, the reader experiences the city’s momentous events: the 1855 bombardment of Suomenlinna by an Anglo-French fleet, the 1918 Red Uprising and the 1952 Helsinki Olympics.

More than most European capitals, Helsinki has spent centuries at the mercy of geopolitical twists and turns far beyond its inhabitants’ control. This history is a timely reminder of how quickly these forces can alter a city’s destiny – and of how their impact is rarely as deterministic as it first appears.

Author(s)

Henrik Meinander is Professor of History at the University of Helsinki, formerly curator of Helsinki’s Mannerheim Museum and head of the Finnish Institute in Stockholm. His many books on Finnish and Nordic history include the award-winning Mannerheim, Marshal of Finland, and A History of Finland (both published by Hurst), which has been translated into seventeen languages.

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