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Watch: On the trail of famine memorials in Finland

In the famine of 1866-68 some 270,000 people died in Finland, yet it can be difficult to find memorials to the catastrophe. Irish researcher Andrew Newby has been trying to uncover them.

Uutisvideot: On the famine road
  • Yle News

2017 marks not just the centenary of Finnish independence but also the sesquicentenary of the Finnish famine of 1866-68. Several years of cold summers and bitterly cold winters caused successive poor harvests and mass hunger.

Finns were accustomed to a hard life, but from 1866 they began to experience want on a bigger scale than ever before. People left the countryside to find work, beg or even steal as they lost the means to feed themselves.

Despite the widespread devastation, the famine is not remembered in quite the same way as the great famine in Ireland. Memorials can be out of the way and forgotten, and Irish researcher Andrew Newby is trying to visit as many as possible.