Vyborg became the eastern sword-point of the Swedish kingdom. The campaign of 1293, explicitly called a crusade by papal bulls issued to justify it, was a brutal frontier war. The Swedish army fought Novgorodians and their Karelian allies, baptizing captured Karelians by force. The conflict was not resolved until the Treaty of Nöteborg (1323), which formally divided Finland and Karelia between the two powers. The border drawn then would separate Western and Eastern Christianity—and later, Sweden and Russia—for over six centuries.
For Finland, the legacy was profound. The crusades pulled the country away from the Eastern Orthodox orbit of Novgorod and towards the West. Finland became an integral part of the Swedish realm, gaining the rights of a Swedish land (the Österland or "Eastern Land"), representation in the election of the king, and the rule of Swedish law. The Catholic Church brought literacy, a written administration, and connection to the Latin cultural sphere. finnish crusades
It’s a powerful national epic. However, no Swedish or papal source from the 12th century mentions such an expedition. The first written account appears in the late 13th century, likely to justify Sweden’s existing dominion. The truth is probably more mundane: a gradual missionary effort from Sweden, led by figures like Bishop Henry, who likely died in Finland around 1158. The "crusade" was a later, political retcon. Vyborg became the eastern sword-point of the Swedish kingdom
To call these events "crusades" in the same vein as the expeditions to Jerusalem is misleading. There was no massive pilgrimage army, no vow to liberate the Holy Sepulchre. They were, instead, frontier crusades —military missions blessed by the Pope to expand Christendom's borders and secure the political interests of a rising Swedish kingdom. The conflict was not resolved until the Treaty