Eastern and Central Europe (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(Ben Green) #1

96 NORTH EASTERN EUROPE


The 16th century saw Estonia as the
major battleground between Russia
and Sweden in the Livonian Wars
(1558–82). By 1629, the country was
in Swedish hands. The Swedes
achieved much over the next 50 years,
including the introduction of schools
and the establishment of Tartu
University. Later, however, the
Swedish kings seized German-owned
estates, incurring the wrath of the
Germans, who turned to Russia’s Peter
the Great for help. In 1709, Peter
defeated the Swedish King Charles
XII, which consigned the country to
tsarist rule for the next 200 years.
During World War I (1914–18), the
prospect of Estonian inde pendence
seem ed bleak. However, the 1917
Revolution that ended the tsarist
regime in Russia encouraged Estonia
to declare independence in February
1918, in Pärnu. Political stability proved
difficult to establish, however; there
were 20 coalition governments
between 1919 and 1933. In 1934, a
prominent nationalist politician,
Konstantin Päts, staged a coup.

He continued to rule until the Soviet
invasion on 16 June 1940, which
brought a brutal end to independent
Estonia. The German invasion, which
came a year later, was seen by many
in Estonia as a liberation. In September
1944, the Red Army returned to
Estonia, forcing the Nazis to surrender,
and subjecting the country to almost
five decades of Soviet rule.
From the 1960s, Estonia’s link with
the non-Soviet world began to grow.
At the time of the collapse of the
USSR in 1991, Estonians were better
prepared for a capitalist economy
than any of the other Soviet republics.
Thirteen years after independence,
entry into the EU in 2004 and NATO
has further strengthened the economy.

LANGUAGE AND CULTURE
In general, Estonians are more strongly
influenced by Scandinavian cul ture
than by that of their Baltic neighbours.
Finns and Estonians also share close
linguistic links through the Finno-Ugric
language family. The most important
aspects of Estonian culture are
distinctly pagan in origin, such as the
Midsummer festival Jaanipaev (John’s
Day), characterized by drink ing,
dancing and revelry. Folk culture is
central to national identity, and the
All Estonian Song Festival, held every
five years since 1869, remains an
iconic occasion for the nation.

Depiction of the Siege of Narva, Livonian Wars

KEY DATES IN ESTONIAN HISTORY

1208 Germans capture Otepää in
southern Estonia
1219 Danes seize Tallinn
1227 Germans conquer all of Estonia
1558–83 Northern Estonia comes under Swedish
rule, southern Estonia under Polish rule
1629 Estonia passes into Swedish hands
1709 Great Northern War between Charles XII
of Sweden and Peter the Great results in
Russian victory
1885 Russification of the Baltics begins
1918 Declaration of Estonian independence
signed; Germany loses World War I
1920 Treaty of Tartu confirms Estonia’s
independence
1939 Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact puts Estonia
under the influence of the USSR
1940 Soviet occupation begins
1944 Return of Soviet forces; Stalinist era begins
1953 Stalin dies
1991 Estonia declares independence
2004 Estonia joins NATO and the EU
2007 World’s first national Internet election held
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