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nordiska knivar Traditional Nordic Knives The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola Posted on October 27, 2013 | 1 Comment I have an interest in the Finnish axe and asked Marcus Lepola if he would contribute an article to Nordiska Knivar on the subject. Marcus is an ethnologist, a museum professional and a Ph.D researcher at Åbo Akademi University in Turku Finland. Marcus is especially interested in primitive and traditional skills of the North, primarily Finland. He is also interested in practical wilderness skills and knowledge of people living in the Arctic and Subarctic. He has an excellent blog from where this article originated: http://northernwildernesskills.blogspot.com/ Thank you Marcus for sharing your knowledge of the Finnish axe! An Introduction to Finnish Axe History The excellent practicality, durability and quality of Finnish axes has recently been rediscovered by contemporary bushcrafters, hunters, craftspeople and traditionalists alike. Long known and even iconic to most Finnish people, these axes seem a bit strange and exotic to the public outside of Finland. There is very little if any, written material about these axes in English, which explains why many non-Finns are a bit confused about all the different types of axes manufactured in Finland during the 19th and 20th centuries. There is no single Finnish axe type, but may axes made in Finland have similarities that were retained in some archaic features of the axes. These features will be further discussed in this article. The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola | nordiska knivar https://nordiskaknivar.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/the-finnish-axe-by-marcus-lepola/ 1 / 31 3.9.2015 8:28
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The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola

May 13, 2023

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Page 1: The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola

nordiska knivarTraditional Nordic Knives

The Finnish Axe by Marcus LepolaPosted on October 27, 2013 | 1 Comment

I have an interest in the Finnish axe and asked Marcus Lepola if he would contribute an article to Nordiska Knivar on the subject.

Marcus is an ethnologist, a museum professional and a Ph.D researcher at Åbo Akademi University in Turku Finland. Marcus is

especially interested in primitive and traditional skills of the North, primarily Finland. He is also interested in practical wilderness

skills and knowledge of people living in the Arctic and Subarctic. He has an excellent blog from where this article originated:

http://northernwildernesskills.blogspot.com/

Thank you Marcus for sharing your knowledge of the Finnish axe!

An Introduction to Finnish Axe History

The excellent practicality, durability and quality of Finnish axes has recently been rediscovered by contemporary bushcrafters,

hunters, craftspeople and

traditionalists alike. Long known and even iconic to most Finnish people, these axes seem a bit strange and exotic to the public

outside of Finland. There is very little if any, written material about these axes in English, which explains why many non-Finns are

a bit confused about all the different types of axes manufactured in Finland during the 19th and 20th centuries.

There is no single Finnish axe type, but may axes made in Finland have similarities that were retained in some archaic features of

the axes. These features will be further discussed in this article.

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A Finnish hunter carrying a Bila-axe and a crossbow, the archer is aRussian. Olaus Magnus, Historia de gentibus septentrionalibus 1555.

Finnish Axes From An Ethnological Perspective

Most Finnish axes have a distinctive collar or sleeve. Extended collars on

axe-heads became common in Western-European utility axes during the

Middle-Ages. The collar was developed to aid in the shafting of the axe and to

add durability as it increases the area of the shafted portion. East-European or Russian axes developed a “beard” to function in a

similar way as a collar. The beard is an extended tip that grows out from the bottom part of the axe head, just at the eye and makes

for a more durable shafting.

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Ancient Finnish axes by U.T.Sirelius. Suomen kansanomaista

kulttuuria 1,1989.

The Karelian type axe has two beards. These “beards” are two similar extensions in the front and the back half of the axe head and

this axe type is a middle form of the full collars European utility axe and the Russian axe.

Several different styles and versions of axes suited for local needs were

developed by local smiths and forges. These broad axes with long collars are

referred to as Bila (Swedish) or Piilu (Finnish).

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Karelian man in a woodsman ́s outfit with the distinctive “kukkeli” hood anda Karelian type axe with partial collar of the shaft. Louis Sparre 1892. Source

“Kalevalaseura – The Kalevala Society of Finland”.

Collar-axes remained popular in Finland because there was a high demand on durability due to the versatility of axe usage. Most

people in Finland could not afford to own a lot of axes, let alone carry all these axes with them to the field. One axe had to fit the

bill and the axe was used for all things possible. The long collar made the axe more durable, and the handle fitted snugly inside the

long collar. The wide edges of the Bila styled axes were preferred as this made it easier to carve logs for houses and they also

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proved efficient when cleaning branches of logs.

Medieval axes found in Uppsala, Sweden. These types of axes were furtherdeveloped by Finnish blacksmiths. UM20997, Upplandsmuseet.

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Three axes from the 18thcentury made by local blacksmiths in the Pargas

local history museum. All three are of the Bila-axe type, but only one axe has a longcollar extending from the eye. Photo by Marcus Lepola.

The overall size of axes remained fairly small until the 19th century due to the fact that iron was a valuable commodity and a good

axe could be handed down from father to son. Traditionally iron was manufactured from iron ore found in the bottom of Finnish

lakes and marshes. As industrially produced steel became available, this gradually increased the size of the axes.

As mentioned earlier the collared axes were tremendously well developed for heavy use in the Finnish forests. The axe was a virtual

all-functional tool for the Finns, much like a “Swiss-army knife”. The axe could be used for a number of different things and was

always carried along. The importance of the tool is evident in the way they were stored in the old days. The axes were kept in a rack

above the main door so it would be readily available when venturing out. There is also another possible, superstitious reason, for

keeping axes above the entrance to the cottages. Finns believed in all kinds of different supernatural forces such as ghosts,

guardian spirits (haltia), trolls and such that could be dangerous if they were allowed to enter in to the houses. Sharp steel objects

such as knives and axes were magically potent to deter unwanted spirit-beings from entering a home and hanging axes above the

doors would be an effective way to keep them away.

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Axe rack with axe and a sauna branch above the doorway in an old Finnishcottage at Pargas local history museum. Photo by Marcus Lepola.

Among old axes found today a version of the Bila, the Billnäs model number

12:1-3 outnumbers all others and was the most popular of all the models

manufactured due to its versatility in felling trees. This type, called the Kemi or Hult s type, was also manufactured by Kellokoski-

Mariefors, and labeled with the same model number 12. Kellokoski-Mariefors also had another, very similar axe, the Finspong,

originally from Sweden. The Finspong is very similar to the Kemi type, but it has a wider edge. Curiously, the name Finspong is

said to derive from Finns who were the first to settle the area.

Finland was part of Sweden for some 700 years until 1809 and Finns, especially the Savo, migrated to the uninhabited parts of

Northern Finland and worked their way down through Sweden and pioneered the establishment of new settlements.

The Finnish migrations were fueled by the constant need for new

agricultural lands. A family would settle in a wilderness, burn and slash down

some forest and plant rye and turnips among the ashes for a few years.

Additional food was provided through animal husbandry. Hunting, fishing and gathering were also important. This type of

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livelihood could only be maintained for a few years before locally available resources were spent and the household had to move.

The Finns reached Sweden by the 17th century. The Swedes were worried that the Finns would burn down all the valuable timber

needed for the ironworks and shipyards so they sent some of them away to Swedish colonies in Delaware in America to slash and

burn in the woods inhabited by Indians. The Finns probably fit well in with the Native Americans as their most valued possessions

in addition to the rye and turnips and the odd cow and dog was the knife, the axe, the bow and the spear.

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Six 19th century axes in the Pargas local history museum. The three broad“Bilas” are of unknown Finnish manufacture. One is marked with a B-stamp

andanother with a W-stamp. The third one is unmarked. A Billnäs nr 7 is thesecond one from the top. The broad Russian style axe at the bottom is

unusual as it is of Swedish manufacture, From Lunds bruk in Örebro. Thestanding axe is of unknown manufacture, probably an early Kellokoski. Photo

by Marcus Lepola.

Logging And Axes

In Finland logging season started in January. Logs were transported out on

sledges pulled by horses. It was not unusual for temperatures to fall well below -20 Celsius. In these conditions, wood dries and

shrinks. Wood becomes more brittle and brash as it dries up and freezes. If the handle is fitted on a narrow axe the risk for

breakage at the eye of the axe-head will dramatically increase, especially when twisting the axe sideways which is common when

splitting trunks. A long collar improves durability in these harsh conditions and gives a better grip of the wood.

Additional tricks were used to make sure that the handle fitted snugly to the eye of the axe. Tar and birch-bark were often added on

the joint before shafting the head to improve the hold. Boiling the head portion of the shaft in water before attaching the head is

also an old trick that has been proven. Even if the wood swells up due to added moister content, the head will still go a bit further

down over the softened shaft. The shaft was also developed to fit well in to the hand of the user, even when wearing thick gloves in

cold winter conditions. Axe handles would sometimes be roughed on the surface to provide additional grip for the user.

It was common that the men using the axes would make the shafts themselves in accordance to personal preference. Wood and

lumber did not hold a real value when standing as living trees in the forest. Trees had to be felled with axes to produce firewood,

boards and hewn lumber. The only tools used were broad or true Bilas and axes. Crude waterpower sawmills came in to use in

some parts of Finland in the 17th century but the handsaw did not find its way in to the toolkit of a Finnish lumberjack until the

latter part of the 19th century.

With the development of sawmills in the late 19th century forests became a

commodity and forestry and logging gave a small, but steady income to rural

people. At best, some 500 000 people earned at least a part of their living from logging and forestry during the poor years in 1950.

These are impressive figures considering that the population of Finland was 4 million at that time.

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Finnish builders from the turn of the 20thcentury with axes and saws. Photo from The Finnish

Literary Society (SKS).

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Hard work. During WWII Finland was caught in battle with the Soviet Union,

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while the men were at the front, woman and children had to do their share tokeep

the country going. A young boy has finished cutting fire wood for the winter.Though job for anyone, let alone a young boy. Image from the Lusto Forest

Museum.

There was a growing need for high quality durable axes. As mentioned earlier

the axes produced by the forges in Finland relied mainly on established models, previously made by local smiths. The Kemi and

Finspong types were clearly the ones most suited for the old Finnish slash and burn farmers and not surprisingly, this model also

became one of the most popular all around axes.

Finnish Axe Handles

The Finnish collar axes worked well with traditional birch handles. Gradually

new materials became available as well as store bought handles. Many still

continued to make their own handles well in to the 1960s as it was believed

that they were superior to store bought shafts. People would go to all lengths to get proper shafting material for their axes. One way

to improve the quality of the wood was to de-bark one side of a living birch. The exposed part of the

trunk became more weathered and durable. The wood becomes very dark and heavy. The only problem with this method is that it

took some 15-25 years before the hardened wood could be harvested. That is why fathers made sure to have a lot of processed trees

at different stages around so that their sons and grandsons would have an ample stock of axe-handles when they needed them.

Also distinct handle models were passed down in family lineages from fathers to sons.

The wooden handles of utility axes were further developed during WWII as

there was a need to improve knowledge about axe usage. The war with the

Soviet Union forced women and children to work in the forests to gather

firewood and lumber for the industry. A booklet called “A guide to tools used in the woods” was published in 1940 and distributed

widely. The booklet

had blueprints of axe handles suited for utility axes. Also the Finnish work

efficiency association organized the manufacture and distribution of

axe-handles made by the soldiers at the front to the people back home.

A utility axe-handle suited for a 12:2 model axe is 60-70 cm in length, for

splitting axes the handle should be 10cm longer. In felling and chopping a long handle transmits more power but it less accurate. If

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the handle is too short it will strain the back of the worker as he is forced to work in a bent over posture.

A trick to measure up the correct length of the handle is to place the tip of the

handle on the floor and stand next to it. The pommel of the handle should

reach the second joint of the middle finger. A splitting axe handle should reach the palm of the hand. A good handle has a

downward bend, the lower grip portion should be well defined and the pommel nob should be wide and round.

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How to measure the proper length of a utility axe-handle. Photo by MarcusLepola.

The handle has to be fairly flat at the grip and the whole shaft tapers towards

the grip. Every man was expected to make their own axe-handle. Some

handles were true works of art and perfectly shaped, tapered and balanced.

Crude and misshapen handles were often ridiculed as “axe carrying wood”. A

man who took all day to make an axe handle was also ridiculed as “worthless”.

Old axe handles and a Billnäs 12:2 axe head. Photo by Marcus Lepola.

Hickory shafts became available in Finland after the war and became

increasingly popular. However people noticed that the stiff hickory wood was

harder on the hands as it was less flexible than birch and vibrated heavily on

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impact. Hickory was also prone to split along the grain in really low winter

temperatures. The traditional birch handles had been proven unbeatable.

Before the advent of chain saws, the axe remained as the single most

important tool for cutting down timber as old type of saws were unreliable.

Finnish lumberjacks also preferred an axe that was well suited for splitting large chunks of wood. The blade of the axe had to be

slim and wedge-like so it would penetrate deep in to the wood. It should also be heavy and durable so it could be wedged deeper in

to the wood with another axe to aid splitting. The axe was also used for a number of other things, such as banging bears on the

head during winter hunts but that is a different story.

Blueprint of a Finnish axe-handle.

Forges And Ironworks In Finland

Up until the time of industrialization, most axes were made locally by rural

blacksmiths. Different laws imposed by the Swedish kingdom restricted

craftsmen from establishing businesses outside of towns or castles, but these

restrictions did not have considerable impact on rural blacksmithing even If the profession of parish blacksmiths did not receive

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official approval until 1739. The oldest historic account of blacksmithing goes back to the 14th

century. Blacksmiths were important members of rural agricultural communities as their services were necessary to maintain and

produce the tools necessary for everyday life. Blacksmiths started to specialize in the manufacture of certain products as early as

the 16th century, such as gunsmiths, knife-smiths and axe-smiths. As axes were made locally there was a great deal of variation in

axe models.

The industrialization of Finland was initiated in the 17th century with the

establishment of the first industrial ironworks in Western Nyland. The first

ironworks was established in Svartå at the expense of the Swedish Crown in

1616, followed by the Ironworks in Antskog in 1630. The ironworks at Billnäs

were established in 1641 and in 1649 ironworks were also established in

Fiskars. The Strömfors ironworks in East Nyland was established in 1698 but

received its final name in 1744. Kellokoski-Mariefors Ironworks was established in 1795. Several other forges and ironworks were

also established in Finland during the 18th century such as the Dalsbruk Ironworks and a similar one in Björkboda. Ironworks

were also established in Ostrobothnia such as the Kimo ironworks during the early part of the 18th century.

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Billnäs ironworks. Photo by Marcus Lepola.

However axes produced by these ironworks were not standardized until the end of the 19th century when only Billnäs, Kellokoski-

Mariefors and Strömfors remained as main manufacturers of axes. It is interesting to note that among the first axes produced at

the Billnäs ironworks was a halberd- or a battle-axe. These axes were made to arm the Swedish troops fighting in the 30-year war

in mainland Europe.

Axes manufactured industrially at Billnäs and Kellokoski remained true to

localized version developed by blacksmiths all around Finland. That is also why the axes, in addition to a model number, also had a

name which referred to the locality of the axe type. The market for axes changed in the mid 19th

century as Finland, then part of Russia, was able to increase the export of axes and other steel implements to Russia as import

taxation of Finnish products ended in 1835. The production of axes at Billnäs grew with 500% by 1880. Also the availability of

American and British axes forced the Finnish ironworks to step up their production. At Billnäs the owners followed the example of

Swedish ironworks, which at the time were highly industrialized.

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Up until then the smiths at Billnäs had made axes and other utensils using the same methods as any other village blacksmiths for

some 200 years. As of 1888 onward axes were made using American machine-hammers and by the end of the 19th century the

factory could produce as much as 2000 axes per day.

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Finnish style axes manufactured by the Kellokoski-Mariefors ironworks.Models 9 and 10 are the Karelian type.

The Forge at Strömfors also made axes but they were not able to competewith Billnäs or even Kellokoski-Mariefors. The models they made were

identical with the other forges, except for the model 2 which was only made byStrömfors and was modeled after the Viborg style axe. The models 15, 11 and

9 are considered “American” axes.

Finnish Axes In A Modern Context

The production of the popular Kemi model stopped in the 1970s. The last axe

with a wooden shaft was made forged in 1995 in Billnäs. The traditional axes

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were replaced by the modern Handy-series axes which are made of composite

material and have no eye. These axes are efficient, but banging on the head of

the axe to aid splitting is not possible as this will shatter the axe.

Since then the Ray Mears show “Bushcraft” and other survival shows have

made people more aware of traditional outdoors gear and boosted the sales of

traditional axes such as the axes of the Gränsfors forge. The truth of the matter is that never before have so many high quality axes

been available for the public. The irony is that most of these axes are used in a recreational context.

A modern Finnish axe from H. Roselli available from http://www.Lamnia.fi

This means that most users will only need the axes for splitting fire wood, cutting saplings and some carving. This is completely

understandable as cutting live wood is prohibited in most hiking areas in Europe, and even North America, so very few people will

ever use the axe to the same extent as an old Finnish lumberjack/slash and burn farmer who is cutting down huge pines one day,

building a fence of split trunks the next day and hewing and cutting out joints for a wooden cottage on the third day – all with the

same axe.

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In fact most people alive today are not capable of handling an axe as well as

the Finnish oldtimer or Äijä, because they never get to use the axes in the

same versatile way. Axes are dangerous for the user and you can inflict some

serious damage to your legs if you don t know how to use it. This is made

vividly clear by the teaching videos made by Ray Mears (video link in the

bottom of the page).

Luckily there are some old documentary clips made by Finnish ethnographers of some oldtimers making use of the axe in a very

versatile manner. These men were using axes as young children and learned the craft gradually over a period of several decades.

Their skill is evident in the way the effortlessly use the axe for carving and chopping. These documented skills are an inspiration to

anyone interested in learning and preserving old carpentry techniques.

The iconic Billnäs nr 12. The model in the photo is the smaller, 12:3 versionof the famous Kemi axe.

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All material copyright by Marcus Lepola 2013.

Addendum:

Here is a very nice contemporary Finnish axe made by Pasi Hurttila. The head is forged from a single piece of spring steel and the

handle is made of ash. The neck protection is iron, welded to the steel head. Photos are courtesy of Federico Buldrini.

head: 150 mm long

edge, from heel to toe: 76 mm

handle, from eye to knob: 420 mm long

weight of axe alone: 960 g

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Further reading, only in Finnish

Maasola, Juha: Kirves. Helsinki: Maahenki, 2009.

Sirelius, U.T. Sirelius U.T.: Suomen kansanomaista kulttuuria : esineellisen

kansatieteen tuloksia 1-2

Otava, Helsinki 1919-1921.

Internet resources:

Kellokoski product catalog: http://digi.lib.helsinki.fi/pienpainate/secure/showPage.html?action=page&type=lq&

conversationId=1&id=338918&pageFrame_currPage=1

Billnäs product catalog: http://digi.lib.helsinki.fi/pienpainate/secure/showPage.html?action=page&type=lq&conversationId=2&

id=338807&pageFrame_currPage=1

An archive film on how to shaft an axe from the Finnish Film Series “Isien työt” -The labours of our fathers”. These films were

The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola | nordiska knivar https://nordiskaknivar.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/the-finnish-axe-by-marcus-lepola/

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filmed by Sakari Pälsi in

1936-1939. He filmed five films in total of different Finnish traditional crafts, games, fishing etc. The man making the axe-handle is

Iivari Mattila from Renko, Finland. He was 80 years old at the time and he was also referred to as “The old man (äijä)from

Rauhaniemen.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcfwlfz_tGs

The same series as above, this time showing how a split stave fence was made using axes.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=4fdCFheNS_Q

Finnish home front from 1942, wood cutting and axe handle making.

http://yle.fi/elavaarkisto/artikkelit/koko_kansa_talkoissa_34217.html#media=34218

Ray Mears choosing and using an axe.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2tUUctg6dfk&feature=player_detailpage

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This entry was posted in Uncategorized and tagged Finnish axe, Finnish forest axe, history of Finnish axe, Marcus Lepola, Pasi

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Bob Burgess | December 31, 2013 at 6:42 am | Reply

A very interesting article – many thanks. Is there (can we have?) a similar one on Finnish billhooks (vesuri, kassara &

hakokirves)??? See my website: http://billhooks.co.uk/the-billhooks-of-northern-europe/

The Finnish Axe by Marcus Lepola | nordiska knivar https://nordiskaknivar.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/the-finnish-axe-by-marcus-lepola/

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