Backstugusittare
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A Backstugusittare ("hill cottage sitter") is a historical term of a certain category of the country side population in the
history of Sweden The history of Sweden can be traced back to the melting of the Northern Polar Ice Caps. From as early as 12000 BC, humans have inhabited this area. Throughout the Stone Age, between 8000 BC and 6000 BC, early inhabitants used st ...
. It referred to the inhabitants of a
backstuga A backstuga (literally "slope cottage") is a Swedish language judicial term, previously used in Finland and Sweden, for a kind of rural cottage. Additionally, in architecture, a ''backstuga'' is a cottage built into the southern slope of a hi ...
(hill cottage), who lived on common land or the land of someone else and did not engage in any farming. In contrast to the somewhat similar torpare, backstugusittare did not use any land and lived on the charity of the landowner or, if they lived on common land, on the charity of the village. They may grow some potatoes for their own use and have some smaller animals but normally only enough to eat themselves. That category of people were normally among the very poorest of the village community and supported themselves on odd jobs, some handicrafts and charity. The phenomenon is confirmed from the early 17th-century. After the land reform of 1827, during which the farmers moved out from the villages and occupied land previously left for the torpare, the category grew larger, as the torpare were often given no other choice than to become backstugusittare. However, during the 19th-century, it also became more common for successful village craftsmen to live temporarily in the
backstuga A backstuga (literally "slope cottage") is a Swedish language judicial term, previously used in Finland and Sweden, for a kind of rural cottage. Additionally, in architecture, a ''backstuga'' is a cottage built into the southern slope of a hi ...
merely to save money, which somewhat raised the status of backstugusittare.


References

* Herman Juhlin-Dannfelt, Lantmannens uppslagsbok (1923) {{Sweden-hist-stub Social history of Sweden Agriculture in Sweden History of agriculture