- Larin Paraske
Larin Paraske (
December 27 1833 –January 3 1904 ) was a Finnish oral poet. She is considered a key figure in Finnish folk poetry and has been called the "FinnishMnemosyne ". [cite web | author=Väänänen, Kyösti | title=Larin Paraske ja hänen perheensä | work=GENOS | url=http://www.genealogia.fi/genos/33/33_57.htm | accessdate=2007-01-16 | language=Finnish] Her frequent listeners included several romantic nationalist artists, such asJean Sibelius , seeking inspiration from her interpretations ofKalevala , an epic poem compiled from Finnishfolklore byElias Lönnrot .cite web | title=Suuret suomalaiset - Larin Paraske | work=YLE | url=http://www.yle.fi/suuretsuomalaiset/100_suurinta/index.php?top100_id=87&nominee_id=64&place=0&gender=0&alive=0&province=0 | accessdate=2007-01-16 | language=Finnish]Paraske could recite over 32,000 verses of poetry, which made her an important source for
Karelian culture.cite web | title=Public Art - Larin Paraske | work=Helsinki City Art Museum | url=http://www.taidemuseo.hel.fi/english/veisto/veistossivu.html?id=157 | accessdate=2007-01-16] Her poems were written down by Adolf Neovius in the 1880s, and after several years of work, approximately 1200 poems, 1750 proverbs and 336 riddles were documented, along with several Finniclamentation s known as "itkuvirsi", performed by crying and sobbing.cite web | author=Kaasalainen, Väinö | title=Larin Paraske | work=Sakkola | url=http://www.sakkola.fi/tarinat/paraske.html | accessdate=2007-01-16 | language=Finnish]In 1936, sculptor Alpo Sailo created a statue of Paraske. It was planned for the Kalevala building, which however never realized, so the statue was erected in 1949 in the Hakasalmi park, off
Mannerheimintie , inHelsinki . A street named after Paraske is located in Kaarela, a district of Helsinki. In 2004, Paraske placed 87th on "Suuret suomalaiset ", a vote arranged byYLE , the Finnish Broadcasting Company, to determine the "100 greatest Finns". Paraske is also one of the people on stamps of Finland.Biography
Paraske was born as Paraskeva Nikitina, her official Russian name, in
Lempaala , NorthernIngria . Her father Mikitta Mikitanpoika (1802–1851) was a landless peasant, a "lampuoti", who rented a farm for agriculturing. Paraske took on poetry at early age by memorizing all the poems known in the area, and creating many more herself. Her relatives, Timon Tarja and Kondrolan Maura, were also prolific poets. Paraske's father died in 1851 and her mother, Tatjana Vasilovna, had died three years earlier in 1848.In 1853, to secure livelihood, Paraske married to a peasant named Kaurila Teppananpoika, or Gavril Stepanov, from Vaskela village in
Sakkola (laterMetsäpirtti municipality) ofViipuri Province . Her husband was sickly and 20 years older than her, but the marriage resulted in nine children during the years from 1855 to 1878. However, only three of them survived until adulthood. Besides her own children, Paraske cared for 50 orphans fromSt. Petersburg . Her life was hard as the livelihood of the family depended on her income. She was eventually widowed in 1888.cite web | title=Larin Paraske - Inkerin lauluemo | work=Inkerin kulttuuriseura ry | url=http://www.inkeri.com/Virtuaali////Merkkihenkilot/L_Paraske.htm | accessdate=2007-01-16 | language=Finnish]Paraske's life changed in 1887, as she was directed to the attention of clergyman Adolf Neovius who was documenting national folk poetry. Neovius noticed her talent and paid Paraske a ruble per hour for singing her poetry. With this money, Paraske was able to save her house from expropriation. Their collaboration resulted in 1200 poems, 1750 proverbs and 336 riddles. Her poems had earlier been written down by A. Borenius-Lähteenkorva in 1877, but this work consisted of only 26 poems.cite web | title=Larin Parasken harakka, vaimon päähine | work=The National Board of Antiquities | url=http://www.nba.fi/fi/kansatieteelliset_harakka | accessdate=2007-01-16 | language=Finnish]
In 1891, Neovius moved to
Porvoo and Paraske traveled to the city with him to complete their project. During the years from 1891 to 1894, she did several performances in Porvoo and Helsinki, becoming very popular. Her often Kalevala-themed "rune singing " influenced several prominent artists.Jean Sibelius ' "Kullervo, Op. 7" has been said to contain elements of Paraske's hypnotic, incantatory singing style. [cite web | author=MacDonald, Hugh | title=Sibelius Revisited 2 - Programme Notes | work=BBC | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/scotland/musicscotland/bbcsso/concert_notes/sibelius2.shtml | accessdate=2007-01-16]Albert Edelfelt andEero Järnefelt painted portraits of Paraske in 1893.Paraske returned to Vaskela, Sakkola, in 1894. Despite her success and several supporters, she remained poor. Her house was sold during the Summer of 1899 due to tax arrears, and she had to move to live in her neighbour's
sauna .Finnish Literature Society granted Paraske an artist's pension in 1901, but she was unable to overcome her financial problems. She died as a sickly woman in Sakkola in 1904.References
External links
* [http://www.kotikielenseura.fi/virittaja/hakemistot/jutut/lauerma1_2001.html Kotikielen Seura: "The metrics of Larin Paraske's epic folk poetry in the Kalevala metre]
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