Chinese people in Finland

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Chinese people in Finland
芬兰华人
Kiinalaiset Suomessa / Suomen kiinalaiset
Total population
19,023 born in China;
20,320 Chinese speakers (2025)[1]
Regions with significant populations
Helsinki, Tampere and Turku regions & Oulu
Languages
Finnish, English, Chinese
Related ethnic groups
Overseas Chinese

Chinese people in Finland (Chinese: 芬兰华人; pinyin: Fēnlán huárén; Finnish: Suomen kiinalaiset) are the ethnic Chinese in Finland. The majority of people have a background in the country of China. People can be born in China, have Chinese ancestry and/or be citizens of China. As of 2025, there were 19,023 people born in China living in Finland. Similarly, the number of people with Chinese citizenship was 16,680. The number of people who spoke Chinese as their mother tongue was 20,320.[1]

Between 1987 and 2023, 1,036 Chinese children were adopted in Finland, making China one of the most common countries of origin for international adoptions there.[2][3] From 1990 to 2023, a total number of 2,640 Chinese citizens had been granted Finnish citizenship.[4]

Chinese migrant workers (1916–1917)

Chinese street vendor in Helsinki in the 1910s

In 1916, while Finland was still an autonomous state ruled by the Russian Empire, a large number of Chinese migrant workers were brought by the Russians to the Helsinki metropolitan area for fortification work and the supporting task of logging. The workers were apparently Honghuzi (lit.'Red Beards') prisoners from Manchuria. In the Russian Far East, the Honghuzi were notorious for being fierce train robbers and highway bandits.[5] A total of around 3,000 Chinese workers were brought to Finland. The decision to resort to Chinese labor is believed to have been because Finnish migrant workers had proven to be unsuitable for the construction work on Peter the Great's Naval Fortress.[6]

Chinese labor was deployed in places such as Espoo, Kauniainen, Vantaa, Korso, and Söderkulla in Sipoo, primarily for logging work. They were also used in Kustavi for paving the artillery roads of the naval fortress, as well as for miscellaneous tasks in various parts of the country. The Chinese workers were often housed in cold barns or shacks without proper fireplaces. Although the workers were men, many Finns mistakenly thought they were women because they had long braids at the nape of their necks.[6]

Alongside the fortification work, the Chinese soon began committing thefts, robberies, assaults, and robberies involving murder in Finland.[5] They would also sometimes intimidate local residents to make them leave their homes, allowing the houses to be looted. Many of them also suffered from diseases such as syphilis and scabies.[6] The criminal activities provoked both fear and anger among the Finnish population. For example, painter Akseli Gallen-Kallela was no longer able to work in the restless conditions at Tarvaspää in Espoo, and he decided to flee with his spouse to Ruovesi.[5]

It is reported that there were up to 1,200 Chinese individuals residing in the Espoo area.[5] Starting from the turn of 1917, Chinese workers began to be sent back to Manchuria. After the Russian Revolution in the spring of 1917, the fortification work was halted, and most of the remaining Chinese left Finland.[6] According to contemporaries, there also remained a Chinese-Finnish heritage in Finland as a result of relationships between Finnish women and Chinese men.[7][8]

Population by municipalities

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1990790    
19952,180+22.51%
20002,907+5.92%
20054,613+9.68%
20107,546+10.34%
201510,722+7.28%
202013,778+5.14%
202520,320+8.08%
Chinese speakers. Source: Statistics Finland

People born in China and living in Finland, according to Statistics Finland.

People with Chinese citizenship living in Finland according to Statistics Finland.

People with Chinese as mother tongue living in Finland according to Statistics Finland.

Notable people

See also

References

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