Julius Ailio (19 July 1872 – 4 March 1933) was a Finnish archaeologist and a Social Democratic politician. His archaeological work involved the Stone Age and Early Metal Age[a]inKarelia, especially the isthmus.
On 19 July 1872, Ailio was born in Loppi, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire[citation needed] to a school teacher and future Social Democratic member of Finnish parliament.[3]
In 1906, he excavated Räisälä Papinkangas.[4] Between 1909 and 1912, he excavated dwelling sites Riukjärvi and Piiskunsalmi. He also researched shore displacement at Lake Ladoga, creating the first model of its history, a history late 19th-century geologists and archaeologists had already found unique for its deviation from the standard land uplift model. In 1909 and 1910, he with Kaarle Soikkeli [fi] salvage excavated HäyrynmäkiinViipuri Province.[5] From his 1909 excavations he first identified the Kiukainen culture[6] and Corded Ware as distinct archaeological cultures, referring to the latter as Alastaro pottery.[7] In 1915, he excavated Heinjoki Vetokallio.[8]
In 1917, during Oskari Tokoi's chairmanship of the Senate of Finland, he served in the body with Väinö Tanner, Väinö Voionmaa, Wäinö Wuolijoki, Matti Paasivuori, and six bourgeoise representatives.[9]
In 1921, he expressed study facial features, skin color, and hair structure as less important than the skeleton and inner organs in anthropology.[10]InFragen der russischen Steinzeit (1922) Ailio responded to Aarne Michaël Tallgren's conceptualization of Russian Bronze Age cultures, being the third Finnish scholar to do so. Timo Salminen characterized it as bitter and an exercise to prove his knowledge for the archaeology professorship at Helsinki University. Ailio did not believe the Comb Ceramic culture and Fat'janavo related. He considered the latter's pottery connected to Central Europe, the Kuban, and the Tripolye culture, but did not know the main origin. He rejected Allgren's assumption of it being primarily Central European and regarded the culture to be a "broader chronological phenomenon".[11] In the article he also considered a Pärnu figurine as a Muttergott (Mother-God) based on similar findings with the Tripolye.[12] In 1923, Ailio rejected the notion Giant's Churches were former Stone Age man-made structures and instead labeled them as shore formations.[13]
Head of prehistory of the National Board of Antiquities, in late 1922, he was appointed chairman of a committee responsible for the cooperation of local museums, with the proposer, Julius Finnberg [fi], as secretary; the project received support from the state archeologist Hjalmar Appelgren-Kivalo [fi]. Its first academic conference convened in January 1923 at the National Museum and was attended by 52 representatives. Also involved in the establishment of the Finnish Museums Association, when Ailio became Minister of Education in 1927, the association was subsidized.[14]
In 1930, he signed a manifesto denouncing militarization and conscription.[15]
In 1932, excavated Muolaa Kuusaa Kannilanjoki.[8]
On 4 March 1933, he died in Helsinki.[citation needed]