pitää + -jä. As a term for a territorial area or subdivision, probably originally in the sense of each territory which organized their own feasts as a larger community. The two theories differ here, one claiming that these feasts would be for pagan festivals, while the latter is that they were organized for tax collectors during the Middle Ages as was required.
pitäjä
The term "pitäjä" is no longer in official use in Finland (since the 1860s or 1870s), but is still used informally and in historical contexts as well as for some similar divisions in other countries (such as the socken in Sweden).
Inflection of pitäjä (Kotus type 10/koira, no gradation) | |||
---|---|---|---|
nominative | pitäjä | pitäjät | |
genitive | pitäjän | pitäjien | |
partitive | pitäjää | pitäjiä | |
illative | pitäjään | pitäjiin | |
singular | plural | ||
nominative | pitäjä | pitäjät | |
accusative | nom. | pitäjä | pitäjät |
gen. | pitäjän | ||
genitive | pitäjän | pitäjien pitäjäin rare | |
partitive | pitäjää | pitäjiä | |
inessive | pitäjässä | pitäjissä | |
elative | pitäjästä | pitäjistä | |
illative | pitäjään | pitäjiin | |
adessive | pitäjällä | pitäjillä | |
ablative | pitäjältä | pitäjiltä | |
allative | pitäjälle | pitäjille | |
essive | pitäjänä | pitäjinä | |
translative | pitäjäksi | pitäjiksi | |
abessive | pitäjättä | pitäjittä | |
instructive | — | pitäjin | |
comitative | See the possessive forms below. |