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Samuli Korkalainen

Music researcher at the Sibelius Academy, University of the Arts Helsinki and President of the Finnish Society for Hymnology and Liturgy, as well as pastor, church musician, and LGBTQIA+ activist.

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Articles by Samuli Korkalainen

  1. NATIONAL IDENTITY, MUSIC EDUCATION, AND GENDER The Kolppana Seminary in Ingria, 1863–1919

    Towards the end of the 19th century, Ingrian Finns became aware of their own national identity and culture. These ideas were maintained by the Kolppana Teacher and Churchwarden Seminary, which was founded in 1863. At the turn of the twentieth century, national thinking also began to emerge from the deep ranks of Ingrian-Finnish people, partly because Ingrian-born teachers and churchwardens educated in Kolppana formed a new, schooled intelligentsia. Music played a central role in the national process, and the Kolppana graduates taught religious and patriotic repertoire. The new intelligentsia comprised only men because the Kolppana Seminary was not open to women. The Ingrian Finns strove to preserve their own language, Lutheran religion, and national customs. Even though they recognized Finland as their spiritual homeland, the Ingrian-Finnish national spirit was marked by a clear “Ingrianism”.

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