The Russian ruler guaranteed religion, properties, laws and privileges of the inhabitants of these territories. However, in small details, circumvention occurred, as Russian administrators and military were unfamiliar with Swedish system, and were used to a different system with its enslaved peasants, serfdom.
That guarantee froze the situation, thus legal developments in Sweden were not introduced to these areas: The Viipuri and Käkisalmi territory did not adopt the 1734 General Law of Sweden (though Hamina, Lappeenranta and Savonlinna, then yet Swedish, of course did), and new Constitutions of Gustav III were out of question in the entire area.
The territories enjoyed a sort of autonomy and much particularism, since the Russian rulers applied similar principles here as in Baltic Provinces. The administration resembled a bunch of German principalities, rather than a Russian province.
These areas were later referred to as Old Finland and from the beginning of the year 1812 they were incorporated in the Grand Duchy of Finland. Basically, the population in these provinces came to the same legal system as the Grand Duchy, including its Constitution and General Law, although some privileges took time to adapt, and so-called donated estates (owned by Russian noblemen) in Karelia were a headache that was resolved slowly by monetary compensations from the Grand Duchy's Treasury.
An extended Finland Proper was made a titulary Grand Duchy (more correctly, Grand Principality) in 1581, when king John III of Sweden, who as a prince had been royal duke of Finland (1556–1561/63), extended the list of subsidiary titles to the Kings of Sweden considerably.
During the Finnish War between Sweden and Russia, the four Estates of occupied Finland were assembled at the Diet of Porvoo on March 29, 1809 to pledge allegiance to Alexander I of Russia.
The Russian Emperor ruled as the Grand Duke of Finland and was represented in Finland by the Governor-General of Finland.
OldFinland was joined to the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland in 1812.
The Russian ruler guaranteed religion, properties, old Swedish laws and privileges of the inhabitants of these territories.
Basically, the population in these provinces came to the same legal system as the Grand Duchy, including its Constitution and General Law, although some privileges took time to adapt, and so-called donated estates (owned by Russian noblemen) in Karelia were a headache that was resolved slowly by monetary compensations from the Grand Duchy's Treasury.