Statare

Interior of cabin. Photo: Nordiska museet

Statare were contract-workers in Swedish agriculture who, contrary to other farmhands, were expected to be married, were provided with a simple dwelling for their family, and instead of eating at the servants' table were paid in kind with foodstuff. They were, similarly to most other farmworkers, contracted on an annual basis. The family members' willingness to work, at some places unpaid, was taken for granted. This system became increasingly common during the 19th century,[1] attracted much public critique in the 20th century, and was abolished from November 1, 1945 through a collective bargaining agreement.

These agricultural laborers were generally viewed as being on the lowest rungs of Swedish society, worse off than crofters.[2] Their lives were described by prominent Swedish novelists and writers such as Ivar Lo-Johansson, Jan Fridegård and Moa Martinson,[3] making a considerable impact on the public debate in the decades following common suffrage. Their lives are also described by Swedish American novelist Helen Lundström Erwin in her novel Sour Milk in Sheep's Wool, published 2021.

Counties with the largest shares of noble tax-exempted land possession. Different colors for different counties. Red: >50%, orange: 40-50%[4]

The system was promoted by agrarian reforms resulting in enlarged fields[5] and by expanding markets for grain, meat and dairy. It occurred almost exclusively on farms greater than 60 hectares (150 acres),[6] mainly in regions of central and southern Sweden[7][8] where families from the landed nobility were dominant land owners. On many manors the statare system replaced manorial tenant farming.[1] It reached its maximum extent in the decades around year 1900. Thereafter the system gradually declined[9] until it was formally abolished in 1945.[3]

  1. ^ a b Lundh, Christer; Olsson, Mats (29 Jul 2011). "Contract-Workers in Swedish Agriculture, c. 1890s–1930s: a comparative study of standard of living and social status". Scandinavian Journal of History. 36 (3): 298–323. doi:10.1080/03468755.2011.582620. The end of the 18th century witnessed the start of an agrarian transformation that would multiply the returns to agriculture, at the same time as breaking up the old peasant society. Concurrently, a new work organization was introduced on the larger estates. The old corvée system was gradually replaced with wage labour, and in the latter half of the century a special form of employment, the contract-work system (stat/ar/systemet), was introduced and survived until 1945.
  2. ^ Lundh, Christer; Olsson, Mats (29 Jul 2011). "Contract-Workers in Swedish Agriculture, c. 1890s–1930s: a comparative study of standard of living and social status". Scandinavian Journal of History. 36 (3): 298–323. doi:10.1080/03468755.2011.582620. Some autobiographies point out that while working together on the lord's demesne all were equal, but when the contract-worker approached the peasant's or crofter's farmstead, he was regarded as inferior. Such social status differences are also found when the autobiographies discuss marriage.
  3. ^ a b statare Store Norske Leksikon, retrieved 6 April 2013 (in Norwegian)
  4. ^ Counties within the borders of present-day Sweden, data for the 18th century: Uppsala County (orange) >40%, Stockholm County (red) >50%, Södermanland County (lighter red) >50%, Halland County (red) >50%, Kristianstad County (orange) >40%, Malmöhus County (red) >50% (1971–1996 county borders shown on the map), after:
    Gadd, Carl-Johan (2000). Det svenska jordbrukets historia. I: Del 3, Den agrara revolutionen 1700-1870 [Sweden's agricultural history. Part 3, the agrarian revolution from 1700 to 1870] (in Swedish). Stockholm: Natur och Kultur. p. 43. ISBN 9789127352223.
  5. ^ Möller, Jens (1990). "Towards Agrarian Capitalism: The Case of Southern Sweden during the 19th Century". Geografiska Annaler. 72: 59–72.
  6. ^ Lantarbetarnas arbets- och löneförhållanden inom olika bygder och å typiska lantegendomar [The rural workers' working and pay conditions in different districts and on typical rural properties]. SOS socialstatistik (in Swedish). Stockholm: Socialstyrelsen. 1915. p. 52.
  7. ^ Ostergren, Robert Clifford (1988). A Community Transplanted: The Trans-Atlantic Experience of a Swedish Immigrant Settlement in the Upper Middle West, 1835-1915. Univ of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 9780299113247.
  8. ^ Blom, Tomas (2008-08-21). "Statarnas hårda liv". Populär Historia (in Swedish). Retrieved 2017-01-18.
  9. ^ Lundh, Christer; Olsson, Mats (29 Jul 2011). "Contract-Workers in Swedish Agriculture, c. 1890s–1930s: a comparative study of standard of living and social status". Scandinavian Journal of History. 36 (3): 298–323. doi:10.1080/03468755.2011.582620. The fifth group comprised agricultural workers who were employed until further notice with cash wages and their own housing. They had roughly the same employment terms as industrial workers and corresponded to the modern norms. At the end of the 1930s this category was as large as the contract-worker group.