Zacharias Topelius (; 14 January 181812 March 1898) was a Finnish author, poet, journalist, historian, and rector of the University of Helsinki who wrote novels related to Finnish history. He wrote his works exclusively in Swedish, although they were translated early on into Finnish. In Finland Topelius emerged as one of the foremost heirs to Sir Walter Scott’s legacy of exploring the nation through the historical novel.
Given name
Zacharias is his baptismal name, and this is used on the covers of his printed works. However, "he himself most often used the abbreviation Z. or the form Zachris (), even in official contexts", as explained in the National Biography of Finland. Zachris is therefore the preferred form used in recent academic literature about him.
The Finnish form of Topelius' first name is Sakari(as) ().
Life and career
Early life
The original name of the Topelius family was the Finnish name Toppila, which had been Latinized to Toppelius by the author's grandfather's grandfather and later changed to Topelius. Topelius was born at Kuddnäs, near Nykarleby in Ostrobothnia, the son of a physician of the same name (), who was distinguished as the earliest collector of Finnish folk songs. His grandfather, Mikael Toppelius, was a painter noted for his murals and altarpieces in churches in Ostrobothnia.
As a child, he heard his mother, Katarina Sofia Calamnius, sing the songs of the Finnish-Swedish poet Frans Michael Franzén. At the age of eleven, he was sent to school in Oulu and boarded with relatives in the possession of a lending library, where he nurtured his imagination with the reading of novels. He was given a Christian upbringing that came to characterize his entire life.
Study in Helsinki
thumb|150px|Together with [[Johan Ludvig Runeberg in 1863]]
He came to Helsinki in 1831 and became a member of the circle of young nationalist men surrounding Johan Ludvig Runeberg, at whose home he stayed for some time. Topelius became a student at the Imperial Alexander University of Finland in 1833, received his master's degree (cand. philol.) in 1840, the Licentiate degree in history in 1844 and his PhD in 1847, having defended a dissertation titled De modo matrimonia jungendi apud fennos quondam vigente ("About the custom of marriage among the ancient Finns"). Besides history, his academic studies had for periods been devoted both to Theology and Medicine. He was secretary of 1842–1846, was employed by the university library 1846–1861, and taught History, Statistics and Swedish at the school during the same period.
Becoming a professor
Through the intervention of a friend, Fredrik Cygnaeus, Topelius was named professor extraordinary of the History of Finland at the university in 1854. He was made first ordinary professor of Finnish, Russian and Nordic history in 1863, and exchanged this chair for the one in general history in 1876. He was rector of the university from 1875 until 1878, when he retired as Emeritus Professor and received the title of verkligt statsråd (Finnish: todellinen valtioneuvos, Russian: действительный статский советник; literally "state councillor", a Russian honorary title).
thumb|150px|left|[[Albert Edelfelt's illustration of Adalmina's Pearl, a fairy tale by Topelius]]
Focus on writing
thumb|150px|The first page of Finnish-language The Birch and the Star (Koivu ja tähti) from 1893
Quite early in his career he began to distinguish himself as a lyric poet, with the three successive volumes of his Heather Blossoms (1845–54). The earliest of his historical novels was The Duchess of Finland, published in 1850. He was also editor-in-chief of the from 1841 to 1860. In 1878, Topelius was allowed to withdraw from his professional duties, but this did not sever his connection with the university; it gave him, however, more leisure for his abundant and various literary enterprises. Of all the multifarious writings of Topelius, in prose and verse, that which has enjoyed the greatest popularity is his The Surgeon's Stories, episodes of historical fiction from the days of Gustavus II Adolphus to those of Gustavus III, treated in the manner of Sir Walter Scott where Topelius like Scott explored the history of the nation through the new genre of historical fiction. The novel made a substantial mark on the Finnish national identity. Topelius also emerged as a Nordic Lutheran writer in the novel exporing religious themes emphasizing good morals and ideals for the emerging Finnish nation and its citizens. He is buried in the Hietaniemi Cemetery in Helsinki.
Legacy
According to tradition, the modern flag of Finland was based on a design by Topelius in about 1860.
The literary archetypes that Topelius created in The Surgeon's Stories and in Boken om Vårt land (The Book About our Country, 1875) where later adapted by Väinö Linna in his famous work Tuntematon sotilas (The Unknown Soldier, 1954). (Lukemisia lapsille)
- Stjärnornas kungabarn, 1899–1900 (Tähtien turvatit)
- Sampo Lappelill (1860)
Gallery
References
Further reading
- Boije, Erika En ny luthersk nation: Ideal och motbilder i Fältskärns berättelser av Zacharias Topelius, Uppsala University, diss. 2025. https://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-571211
- Erika Boije, Emma Hellström, Ida Olenius, Christian Morality for the Nordic Nation—A Circulating Knowledge in Times of Crisis, Journal of Church and State, Volume 67, Issue 3, Summer 2025, csaf021, https://doi.org/10.1093/jcs/csaf021
External links
- Zachris Topelius at the Lied and Art Song Archive
- Zachris Topelius at the Biographical Centre of the Finnish Literature Society
- Zacharias Topelius at 375 Humanists, University of Helsinki, Faculty of Arts. 20 June 2015.
- The childhood home of Zachris Topelius, Kuddnäs, Museum
;Swedish language pages
- Zacharias Topelius skrifter
- Topelius i Nordisk familjebok
- Nordisk familjebok, vol. 29, col. 352ff
;Books in Swedish, Finnish and English
- Works by Zacharias Topelius at Project Runeberg
;Lyrics
- En liten fågel
- Du är min ro
;Audio
- En liten fågel on Victor Records
- Du är min ro on Edison Records
