@prefix : . @prefix acs: . @prefix ammo: . @prefix ammo-s: . @prefix asc: . @prefix atypes: . @prefix bio-crm: . @prefix bioc: . @prefix cas: . @prefix casclass: . @prefix casualties: . @prefix cidoc: . @prefix coo1980: . @prefix coo1980_status: . @prefix coo1980status: . @prefix crm: . @prefix cs: . @prefix dbonto: . @prefix dc: . @prefix dc-terms: . @prefix dcat: . @prefix dct: . @prefix dcterms: . @prefix dctype: . @prefix diaries: . @prefix etypes: . @prefix events: . @prefix foaf: . @prefix geo: . @prefix georss: . @prefix geosparql: . @prefix gs: . @prefix hipla: . @prefix hisclass12: . @prefix hisclass5: . @prefix hisclass7: . @prefix hisco: . @prefix kplaces: . @prefix ldf-schema: . @prefix medals: . @prefix muns: . @prefix narc: . @prefix natbib: . @prefix ns1: . @prefix org: . @prefix owl: . @prefix photos: . @prefix places: . @prefix pnr: . @prefix prism: . @prefix ps: . @prefix ql: . @prefix ranks: . @prefix rdf: . @prefix rdfs: . @prefix rml: . @prefix rr: . @prefix sch: . @prefix schema: . @prefix sd: . @prefix skos: . @prefix sources: . @prefix ssd: . @prefix suo: . @prefix temp-cemetery: . @prefix times: . @prefix void: . @prefix wac: . @prefix wacs: . @prefix wact: . @prefix wam: . @prefix war: . @prefix wars: . @prefix warsa: . @prefix warsa-actors: . @prefix warsa-events: . @prefix warsa-places: . @prefix wca: . @prefix wcc: . @prefix wce: . @prefix wces: . @prefix wcf: . @prefix wcg: . @prefix wcm: . @prefix wcn: . @prefix wco: . @prefix wcp: . @prefix wcs: . @prefix wcsc: . @prefix wct: . @prefix wdi: . @prefix wev: . @prefix wevs: . @prefix wgs: . @prefix wgs84: . @prefix wiki: . @prefix wikis: . @prefix wme: . @prefix wp: . @prefix wph: . @prefix wphs: . @prefix wpri: . @prefix wps: . @prefix wpsc: . @prefix wra: . @prefix wsc: . @prefix wsca: . @prefix wsch: . @prefix wso: . @prefix wsou: . @prefix wti: . @prefix xml: . @prefix xml1: . @prefix xmls: . @prefix xsd: . @prefix xsd1: . wac:person_1 rdf:type acs:Person ; wacs:genicom ; wacs:genitree ; wacs:knight "18" ; dc-terms:description "Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim (4. kesäkuuta 1867 Askainen – 27. tammikuuta 1951 Lausanne, Sveitsi) oli kuudes Suomen tasavallan presidentti (1944–1946), Suomen marsalkka ja yksi itsenäisen Suomen historian keskeisistä henkilöistä.\nHän myös palveli lähes kolmekymmentä vuotta Venäjän keisarikunnan armeijassa, jossa osallistui Venäjän–Japanin sotaan ja ensimmäiseen maailmansotaan. Hän toimi ylipäällikkönä jokaisessa Suomen itsenäisyyden ajan neljässä sodassa sekä jälkimmäisenä valtionhoitajana."@fi , "Baron Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈkɑːɭ ˈɡɵˈstav ˈeːmɪl ˈmanːɛrˈheɪm]; in Russian: Густав Карлович Ма́ннергейм, tr. Gustav Karlovich (lit.\"Karl's son\") Mannerheim; 4 June 1867 – 27 January 1951) was a Finnish military leader and statesman. Mannerheim served as the military leader of the Whites in the Finnish Civil War, Regent of Finland (1918–1919), commander-in-chief of Finland's defence forces during World War II, Marshal of Finland, and the sixth president of Finland (1944–1946).\nMannerheim was born in the Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire, into a family of Swedish-speaking aristocrats who had settled in Finland in the late 18th century. His paternal German ancestor Marhein had emigrated to Sweden during the 17th century. His maternal ancestry has its roots in Södermanland, Sweden.\nMannerheim made a career in the Imperial Russian Army, rising to the rank of lieutenant general. He also had a prominent place in the ceremonies for Tsar Nicholas II's coronation and later had several private meetings with the Russian Tsar. After the Bolshevik revolution, Finland declared its independence but was soon embroiled in civil war between the pro-Bolshevik \"Reds\" and the \"Whites,\" who were the troops of the Senate of Finland. Mannerheim was appointed the military chief of the Whites. Twenty years later, when Finland was twice at war with the Soviet Union from late 1939 until September 1944, Mannerheim successfully led the defence of Finland as commander-in-chief of the country's armed forces. In 1944, when the prospect of Germany's defeat in World War II became clear, Mannerheim was elected President of Finland and oversaw peace negotiations with the Soviet Union and the United Kingdom. (Finland was never at war with the United States.) He resigned the presidency in 1946 and died in 1951.\nIn a Finnish survey 53 years after his death, Mannerheim was voted the greatest Finn of all time. Given the broad recognition in Finland and elsewhere of his unparalleled role in establishing and later preserving Finland's independence from Russia, Mannerheim has long been referred to as the father of modern Finland, and the Finnish capital Helsinki's Mannerheim Museum memorializing the leader's life and times has been called \"the closest thing there is to a [Finnish] national shrine.\""@en ; dc-terms:source wsou:source8 , wsou:source2 , wsou:source5 , wsou:source10 ; owl:sameAs , natbib:p379 , ; skos:altLabel "Ylipäällikkö" , "Marski" ; skos:prefLabel "Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim" ; foaf:familyName "Mannerheim" ; foaf:firstName "Carl Gustaf Emil" ; foaf:page wiki:Carl_Gustaf_Emil_Mannerheim , .