The Finnish Mathematical Society was founded on 20 November 1868, when Finland was a Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire.[2]
The first president of the Finnish Mathematical Society was Lorenz Lindelöf, a professor at University of Helsinki, which at the time had the only mathematics department in Finland.[2] At first the official language of the FMS was Swedish, but over time it was replaced by Finnish.[2]
Student organisations were forbidden in Finland from 1852 to 1868 and replaced with "student faculties", which were led by professors.
The activities of the Finnish Mathematical Society were at first guided by its origins in the student faculties, and its early meetings were mostly didactic.[2]
In 1892 new statutes were introduced and the society's focus shifted towards research rather than teaching.[2]Marcel Riesz was the first foreign speaker at a meeting of the FMS in 1926.[3] In time the society came to see hosting international mathematicians as one of its main activities, and by 1999 some 30 were visiting per year.[3]
The journal Annales Fennici Mathematici, which was previously called Annales Academiæ Scientiarum Fennicæ Mathematica.[4] The journal is indexed by zbMath.[7]
The bulletin Arkhimedes, jointly with two Finnish physical societies.[8]
The journal Mathematica Scadinavica, jointly with other Nordic mathematical societies.[4]
The magazine Matematiikkalehti Solmu, which is distributed in Finnish schools.[4]
Prizes
The Finnish Mathematical Society awards three prizes.
Its Disseration Prize (Finnish: Väitöskirjapalkinto) is awarded annually since 2019 for the best mathematics Ph.D. thesis in Finland, and is supported by the Olli Lehto memorial fund.[9]
Since 1991 the Lindelöf Prize is awarded annually for the best mathematics Master's Thesis in Finland; until 2002 the thesis had to have been from the University of Helsinki.[10]
The Mathematics Prize of the FMS (Finnish: SMYn Matematiikkapalkinto) has been awarded biennially since 2004 for "the wider promotion of mathematics."[11][8]