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<P align="justify"> The latter main period of the Historical Age in northern Europe. Historically, the Modern Age can be considered to have begun, at least in northern Fennoscandia, with the tax reforms ([[Lapp taxation]]) of King {{Artikkelilinkki|1665|Gustav Vasa}} of Sweden in 1553. This had a clear effect on the social structure of the Saami (<i>{{Artikkelilinkki|0741|Siida}}</i>), as the archaeological material reveals. Form the point of view of archaeology, the Modern Age begins at the latest in 1600, when the type of settlements also changed. In Finnish Lapland, the Modern Age is with regard to the Saami divided into two periods: the {{Artikkelilinkki|1456|Winter Village Age}} (1500-1800) and the {{Artikkelilinkki|1463|Winter Dwelling Age}} (1750-[1900]). The formeris characterized by the central collective importance in the Saami social framework of fixed winter villages. When this period entered a decline in the latter half of the eighteenth century, the winter villages were replaced by family wintering sites on which a new type of settlement incorporating winter cabins was built. <BR><BR>{{Artikkelilinkki|1457|Winter dwelling}} <BR><BR> {{Artikkelilinkki|1431|Chronology}}</p>
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