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Wikipedia

Scandinavia

Scandinavia[b] (/ˌskændɪˈnviə/ SKAN-di-NAY-vee-ə) is a subregion in Northern Europe, with strong historical, cultural, and linguistic ties between its constituent peoples. In English usage, Scandinavia most commonly refers to Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. It can sometimes also refer more narrowly to the Scandinavian Peninsula (which excludes Denmark but includes part of Finland), or more broadly to include all of Finland, Iceland, and the Faroe Islands.[4][c]

Scandinavia
Photo of the Fennoscandian Peninsula and Denmark, as well as other areas surrounding the Baltic Sea, in March 2002
Languages
List of languages
Demonym(s)Scandinavian
Composition Denmark
 Norway
 Sweden[4]
Sometimes also:
 Åland
 Faroe Islands
 Finland
 Iceland[a]

Nordic territories that are not part of Scandinavia:

 Bouvet Island
 Greenland
 Jan Mayen
 Svalbard
Internet TLD

The geography of the region is varied, from the Norwegian fjords in the west and Scandinavian mountains covering parts of Norway and Sweden, to the low and flat areas of Denmark in the south, as well as archipelagos and lakes in the east. Most of the population in the region live in the more temperate southern regions, with the northern parts having long, cold, winters.

The region became notable during the Viking Age, when Scandinavian peoples participated in large-scale raiding, conquest, colonization and trading mostly throughout Europe. They also used their longships for exploration, becoming the first Europeans to reach North America. These exploits saw the establishment of the North Sea Empire which comprised large parts of Scandinavia and Great Britain, though it was relatively short-lived. Scandinavia was eventually Christianized, and the coming centuries saw various unions of Scandinavian nations, most notably the Kalmar Union of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, which lasted for over 100 years until the Swedish king Gustav I led Sweden to independence. It also saw numerous wars between the nations, which shaped the modern borders. The most recent union was the union between Sweden and Norway, which ended in 1905.

In modern times the region has prospered, with the economies of the countries being amongst the strongest in Europe. Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland all maintain welfare systems considered to be generous, with the economic and social policies of the countries being dubbed the "Nordic model".

Geography

 
Galdhøpiggen is the highest point in Scandinavia and is a part of the Scandinavian Mountains.

The geography of Scandinavia is extremely varied. Notable are the Norwegian fjords, the Scandinavian Mountains covering much of Norway and parts of Sweden, the flat, low areas in Denmark and the archipelagos of Finland, Norway and Sweden. Finland and Sweden have many lakes and moraines, legacies of the ice age, which ended about ten millennia ago.

The southern regions of Scandinavia, which are also the most populous regions, have a temperate climate.[5][6] Scandinavia extends north of the Arctic Circle, but has relatively mild weather for its latitude due to the Gulf Stream. Many of the Scandinavian mountains have an alpine tundra climate.

The climate varies from north to south and from west to east: a marine west coast climate (Cfb) typical of western Europe dominates in Denmark, the southernmost part of Sweden and along the west coast of Norway reaching north to 65°N, with orographic lift giving more mm/year precipitation (<5000 mm) in some areas in western Norway. The central part – from Oslo to Stockholm – has a humid continental climate (Dfb), which gradually gives way to subarctic climate (Dfc) further north and cool marine west coast climate (Cfc) along the northwestern coast.[7] A small area along the northern coast east of the North Cape has tundra climate (Et) as a result of a lack of summer warmth. The Scandinavian Mountains block the mild and moist air coming from the southwest, thus northern Sweden and the Finnmarksvidda plateau in Norway receive little precipitation and have cold winters. Large areas in the Scandinavian mountains have alpine tundra climate.

The warmest temperature ever recorded in Scandinavia is 38.0 °C in Målilla (Sweden).[8] The coldest temperature ever recorded is −52.6 °C in Vuoggatjålme [sv], Arjeplog (Sweden).[9] The coldest month was February 1985 in Vittangi (Sweden) with a mean of −27.2 °C.[9]

Southwesterly winds further warmed by foehn wind can give warm temperatures in narrow Norwegian fjords in winter. Tafjord has recorded 17.9 °C in January and Sunndal 18.9 °C in February.

Etymology

 
Scandinavia originally referred vaguely to Scania, a formerly Danish region that became Swedish in the seventeenth century.
 
The original areas inhabited (during the Bronze Age) by the peoples now known as Scandinavians included what is now Northern Germany (particularly Schleswig-Holstein), all of Denmark, southern Sweden, the southern coast of Norway and Åland in Finland while namesake Scania found itself in the centre.

The term Scandinavia in local usage covers the three kingdoms of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. The majority national languages of these three belong to the Scandinavian dialect continuum, and are mutually intelligible North Germanic languages.[10]

The words Scandinavia and Scania (Skåne, the southernmost province of Sweden) are both thought to go back to the Proto-Germanic compound *Skaðin-awjō (the ð represented in Latin by t or d), which appears later in Old English as Scedenig and in Old Norse as Skáney.[11] The earliest identified source for the name Scandinavia is Pliny the Elder's Natural History, dated to the first century AD.

Various references to the region can also be found in Pytheas, Pomponius Mela, Tacitus, Ptolemy, Procopius and Jordanes, usually in the form of Scandza. It is believed that the name used by Pliny may be of West Germanic origin, originally denoting Scania.[12] According to some scholars, the Germanic stem can be reconstructed as *skaðan- and meaning "danger" or "damage".[13] The second segment of the name has been reconstructed as *awjō, meaning "land on the water" or "island". The name Scandinavia would then mean "dangerous island", which is considered to refer to the treacherous sandbanks surrounding Scania.[13] Skanör in Scania, with its long Falsterbo reef, has the same stem (skan) combined with -ör, which means "sandbanks".

Alternatively, Sca(n)dinavia and Skáney, along with the Old Norse goddess name Skaði, may be related to Proto-Germanic *skaðwa- (meaning "shadow"). John McKinnell comments that this etymology suggests that the goddess Skaði may have once been a personification of the geographical region of Scandinavia or associated with the underworld.[14]

Another possibility is that all or part of the segments of the name came from the pre-Germanic Mesolithic people inhabiting the region.[15] In modernity, Scandinavia is a peninsula, but between approximately 10,300 and 9,500 years ago the southern part of Scandinavia was an island separated from the northern peninsula, with water exiting the Baltic Sea through the area where Stockholm is now located.[16]

Appearance in medieval Germanic languages

The Latin names in Pliny's text gave rise to different forms in medieval Germanic texts. In Jordanes' history of the Goths (AD 551), the form Scandza is the name used for their original home, separated by sea from the land of Europe (chapter 1, 4).[17] Where Jordanes meant to locate this quasi-legendary island is still a hotly debated issue, both in scholarly discussions and in the nationalistic discourse of various European countries.[18][19] The form Scadinavia as the original home of the Langobards appears in Paul the Deacon' Historia Langobardorum,[20] but in other versions of Historia Langobardorum appear the forms Scadan, Scandanan, Scadanan and Scatenauge.[21] Frankish sources used Sconaowe and Aethelweard, an Anglo-Saxon historian, used Scani.[22][23] In Beowulf, the forms Scedenige and Scedeland are used while the Alfredian translation of Orosius and Wulfstan's travel accounts used the Old English Sconeg.[23]

Possible influence on Sámi languages

The earliest Sámi joik texts written down refer to the world as Skadesi-suolu in Northern Sámi) and Skađsuâl in Skolt Sámi, meaning "Skaði's island". Svennung considers the Sámi name to have been introduced as a loanword from the North Germanic languages;[24] "Skaði" is the giant (jötunn) stepmother of Freyr and Freyja in Norse mythology. It has been suggested that Skaði to some extent is modeled on a Sámi woman. The name for Skade's father Þjazi is known in Sámi as Čáhci, "the waterman"; and her son with Odin, Sæmingr, can be interpreted as a descendant of Saam, the Sámi population.[25][26] Older joik texts give evidence of the old Sámi belief about living on an island and state that the wolf is known as suolu gievra, meaning "the strong one on the island". The Sámi place name Sulliidčielbma means "the island's threshold" and Suoločielgi means "the island's back".

In recent substrate studies, Sámi linguists have examined the initial cluster sk- in words used in the Sámi languages and concluded that sk- is a phonotactic structure of alien origin.[27]

Reintroduction of the term Scandinavia in the eighteenth century

 
Scandinavism—a Norwegian, a Dane and a Swede

Although the term Scandinavia used by Pliny the Elder probably originated in the ancient Germanic languages, the modern form Scandinavia does not descend directly from the ancient Germanic term. Rather the word was brought into use in Europe by scholars borrowing the term from ancient sources like Pliny, and was used vaguely for Scania and the southern region of the peninsula.[28]

The term was popularised by the linguistic and cultural Scandinavist movement, which asserted the common heritage and cultural unity of the Scandinavian countries and rose to prominence in the 1830s.[28] The popular usage of the term in Sweden, Denmark and Norway as a unifying concept became established in the nineteenth century through poems such as Hans Christian Andersen's "I am a Scandinavian" of 1839. After a visit to Sweden, Andersen became a supporter of early political Scandinavism. In a letter describing the poem to a friend, he wrote: "All at once I understood how related the Swedes, the Danes and the Norwegians are, and with this feeling I wrote the poem immediately after my return: 'We are one people, we are called Scandinavians!'".

The influence of Scandinavism as a Scandinavist political movement peaked in the middle of the nineteenth century, between the First Schleswig War (1848–1850) and the Second Schleswig War (1864).

The Swedish king also proposed a unification of Denmark, Norway and Sweden into a single united kingdom. The background for the proposal was the tumultuous events during the Napoleonic Wars in the beginning of the century. This war resulted in Finland (formerly the eastern third of Sweden) becoming the Russian Grand Duchy of Finland in 1809 and Norway (de jure in union with Denmark since 1387, although de facto treated as a province) becoming independent in 1814, but thereafter swiftly forced to accept a personal union with Sweden. The dependent territories Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, historically part of Norway, remained with Denmark in accordance with the Treaty of Kiel. Sweden and Norway were thus united under the Swedish monarch, but Finland's inclusion in the Russian Empire excluded any possibility for a political union between Finland and any of the other Nordic countries.

The end of the Scandinavian political movement came when Denmark was denied the military support promised from Sweden and Norway to annex the (Danish) Duchy of Schleswig, which together with the (German) Duchy of Holstein had been in personal union with Denmark. The Second war of Schleswig followed in 1864, a brief but disastrous war between Denmark and Prussia (supported by Austria). Schleswig-Holstein was conquered by Prussia and after Prussia's success in the Franco-Prussian War a Prussian-led German Empire was created and a new power-balance of the Baltic Sea countries was established. The Scandinavian Monetary Union, established in 1873, lasted until World War I.

Use of Nordic countries vs. Scandinavia

 
  Scandinavia according to the local definition
  The extended usage in English, which includes Iceland and the Faroe Islands, Åland and Finland

The term Scandinavia (sometimes specified in English as Continental Scandinavia or mainland Scandinavia) is ordinarily used locally for Denmark, Norway and Sweden as a subset of the Nordic countries (known in Norwegian, Danish, and Swedish as Norden; Finnish: Pohjoismaat, Icelandic: Norðurlöndin, Faroese: Norðurlond).[29]

However, in English usage, the term Scandinavia is sometimes used as a synonym or near-synonym for what are known locally as Nordic countries.[30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39]

Usage in English is different from usage in the Scandinavian languages themselves (which use Scandinavia in the narrow meaning), and by the fact that the question of whether a country belongs to Scandinavia is politicised, people from the Nordic world beyond Norway, Denmark and Sweden may be offended at being either included in or excluded from the category of "Scandinavia".[40]

Nordic countries is used unambiguously for Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Iceland, including their associated territories Greenland, the Faroe Islands and the Åland Islands.[30]

A large part of modern-day Finland was part of Sweden for more than four centuries (see: Finland under Swedish rule), thus to much of the world associating Finland with Scandinavia. But the creation of a Finnish identity is unique in the region in that it was formed in relation to two different imperial models, the Swedish[41] and the Russian.[42][43][44]

There is also the geological term Fennoscandia (sometimes Fennoscandinavia), which in technical use refers to the Fennoscandian Shield (or Baltic Shield), that is the Scandinavian Peninsula (Norway and Sweden), Finland and Karelia (excluding Denmark and other parts of the wider Nordic world). The terms Fennoscandia and Fennoscandinavia are sometimes used in a broader, political sense to refer to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland.[45]

Scandinavian as an ethnic term and as a demonym

The term Scandinavian may be used with two principal meanings, in an ethnic or cultural sense and as a modern and more inclusive demonym.

As an ethnic or cultural term

In the ethnic or cultural sense the term "Scandinavian" traditionally refers to speakers of Scandinavian languages, who are mainly descendants of the peoples historically known as Norsemen, but also to some extent of immigrants and others who have been assimilated into that culture and language. In this sense the term refers primarily to native Danes, Norwegians and Swedes as well as descendants of Scandinavian settlers such as the Icelanders and the Faroese. The term is also used in this ethnic sense, to refer to the modern descendants of the Norse, in studies of linguistics and culture.[46]

As a demonym

Additionally the term Scandinavian is used demonymically to refer to all modern inhabitants or citizens of Scandinavian countries. Within Scandinavia the demonymic term primarily refers to inhabitants or citizens of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. In English usage inhabitants or citizens of Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Finland are sometimes included as well. English general dictionaries often define the noun Scandinavian demonymically as meaning any inhabitant of Scandinavia (which might be narrowly conceived or broadly conceived).[47][48][49] There is a certain ambiguity and political contestation as to which peoples should be referred to as Scandinavian in this broader sense. Sámi people who live in Norway and Sweden are generally included as Scandinavians in the demonymic sense; the Sámi of Finland may be included in English usage, but usually not in local usage; the Sámi of Russia are not included. However, the use of the term "Scandinavian" with reference to the Sámi is complicated by the historical attempts by Scandinavian majority peoples and governments in Norway and Sweden to assimilate the Sámi people into the Scandinavian culture and languages, making the inclusion of the Sámi as "Scandinavians" controversial among many Sámi. Modern Sámi politicians and organizations often stress the status of the Sámi as a people separate from and equal to the Scandinavians, with their own language and culture, and are apprehensive about being included as "Scandinavians" in light of earlier Scandinavian assimilation policies.[50][51]

Languages

Two language groups have coexisted on the Scandinavian Peninsula since prehistory—the North Germanic languages (Scandinavian languages) and the Sámi languages.[52]

The majority of the population of Scandinavia (including Iceland and the Faroe Islands) today derive their language from several North Germanic tribes who once inhabited the southern part of Scandinavia and spoke a Germanic language that evolved into Old Norse and from Old Norse into Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Faroese, and Icelandic. The Danish, Norwegian and Swedish languages form a dialect continuum and are known as the Scandinavian languages—all of which are considered mutually intelligible with one another. Faroese and Icelandic, sometimes referred to as insular Scandinavian languages, are intelligible in continental Scandinavian languages only to a limited extent.

A small minority of Scandinavians are Sámi people, concentrated in the extreme north of Scandinavia.

Finland is mainly populated by speakers of Finnish, with a minority of approximately 5%[53] of Swedish speakers. However, Finnish is also spoken as a recognized minority language in Sweden, including in distinctive varieties sometimes known as Meänkieli. Finnish is distantly related to the Sámi languages, but these are entirely different in origin to the Scandinavian languages.

German (in Denmark), Yiddish and Romani are recognized minority languages in parts of Scandinavia. More recent migrations has added even more languages. Apart from the Sámi languages and the languages of minority groups speaking a variant of the majority language of a neighboring state, the following minority languages in Scandinavia are protected under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages: Yiddish, Romani Chib/Romanes and Scandoromani.

North Germanic languages

 
Continental Scandinavian languages:
  Danish
  Norwegian
  Swedish
Insular Scandinavian languages:
  Faroese
  Icelandic

The North Germanic languages of Scandinavia are traditionally divided into an East Scandinavian branch (Danish and Swedish) and a West Scandinavian branch (Norwegian, Icelandic and Faroese),[54][55] but because of changes appearing in the languages since 1600 the East Scandinavian and West Scandinavian branches are now usually reconfigured into Insular Scandinavian (ö-nordisk/øy-nordisk) featuring Icelandic and Faroese[56] and Continental Scandinavian (Skandinavisk), comprising Danish, Norwegian and Swedish.[57]

The modern division is based on the degree of mutual comprehensibility between the languages in the two branches.[58] The populations of the Scandinavian countries, with common Scandinavian roots in language, can—at least with some training—understand each other's standard languages as they appear in print and are heard on radio and television.

The reason Danish, Swedish and the two official written versions of Norwegian (Nynorsk and Bokmål) are traditionally viewed as different languages, rather than dialects of one common language, is that each is a well-established standard language in its respective country.

Danish, Swedish and Norwegian have since medieval times been influenced to varying degrees by Middle Low German and standard German. That influence was due not only to proximity, but also to the rule of Denmark—and later Denmark-Norway—over the German-speaking region of Holstein, and to Sweden's close trade with the Hanseatic League.

Norwegians are accustomed to variation and may perceive Danish and Swedish only as slightly more distant dialects. This is because they have two official written standards, in addition to the habit of strongly holding on to local dialects. The people of Stockholm, Sweden and Copenhagen, Denmark have the greatest difficulty in understanding other Scandinavian languages.[59] In the Faroe Islands and Iceland, learning Danish is mandatory. This causes Faroese people as well as Icelandic people to become bilingual in two very distinct North Germanic languages, making it relatively easy for them to understand the other two Mainland Scandinavian languages.[60][61]

Although Iceland was under the political control of Denmark until a much later date (1918), very little influence and borrowing from Danish has occurred in the Icelandic language.[62] Icelandic remained the preferred language among the ruling classes in Iceland. Danish was not used for official communications, most of the royal officials were of Icelandic descent and the language of the church and law courts remained Icelandic.[63]

Finnish

 
Historically verified distribution of the Sámi languages

The Scandinavian languages are (as a language family) unrelated to Finnish, Estonian and the Sámi languages, which as Uralic languages are distantly related to Hungarian. Owing to the close proximity, there is still a great deal of borrowing from the Swedish and Norwegian languages in Finnish and the Sámi languages.[64] The long history of linguistic influence of Swedish on Finnish is also due to the fact that Finnish, the language of the majority in Finland, was treated as a minority language while Finland was part of Sweden. Finnish-speakers had to learn Swedish in order to advance to higher positions.[65] Swedish spoken in today's Finland includes a lot of words that are borrowed from Finnish, whereas the written language remains closer to that of Sweden.

Finland is officially bilingual, with Finnish and Swedish having mostly the same status at national level. Finland's majority population are Finns, whose mother tongue is either Finnish (approximately 95%), Swedish or both. The Swedish-speakers live mainly on the coastline starting from approximately the city of Porvoo (Sw: Borgå) (in the Gulf of Finland) up to the city of Kokkola (Sw: Karleby) (in the Bay of Bothnia).[citation needed] The Swedish-speaking population is spread out in pockets in this coastal stretch. The coastal province of Ostrobothnia has a Swedish-speaking majority, whereas plenty of areas on this coastline are nearly unilingually Finnish, like the region of Satakunta.[citation needed] Åland, an autonomous province of Finland situated in the Baltic Sea between Finland and Sweden, are entirely Swedish-speaking. Children are taught the other official language at school: for Swedish-speakers this is Finnish (usually from the 3rd grade), while for Finnish-speakers it is Swedish (usually from the 3rd, 5th or 7th grade).[citation needed][66]

Finnish speakers constitute a language minority in Sweden and Norway. Meänkieli and Kven are Finnish dialects spoken in Swedish Lapland and Norwegian Lapland.

Sámi languages

The Sámi languages are indigenous minority languages in Scandinavia.[67] They belong to their own branch of the Uralic language family and are unrelated to the North Germanic languages other than by limited grammatical (particularly lexical) characteristics resulting from prolonged contact.[64] Sámi is divided into several languages or dialects.[68] Consonant gradation is a feature in both Finnish and northern Sámi dialects, but it is not present in southern Sámi, which is considered to have a different language history. According to the Sámi Information Centre of the Sámi Parliament of Sweden, southern Sámi may have originated in an earlier migration from the south into the Scandinavian Peninsula.[64]

History

Ancient descriptions

A key ancient description of Scandinavia was provided by Pliny the Elder, though his mentions of Scatinavia and surrounding areas are not always easy to decipher. Writing in the capacity of a Roman admiral, he introduces the northern region by declaring to his Roman readers that there are 23 islands "Romanis armis cognitae" ("known to Roman arms") in this area. According to Pliny, the "clarissima" ("most famous") of the region's islands is Scatinavia, of unknown size. There live the Hilleviones. The belief that Scandinavia was an island became widespread among classical authors during the first century and dominated descriptions of Scandinavia in classical texts during the centuries that followed.

Pliny begins his description of the route to Scatinavia by referring to the mountain of Saevo (mons Saevo ibi), the Codanus Bay ("Codanus sinus") and the Cimbrian promontory.[69] The geographical features have been identified in various ways. By some scholars, Saevo is thought to be the mountainous Norwegian coast at the entrance to Skagerrak and the Cimbrian peninsula is thought to be Skagen, the north tip of Jutland, Denmark. As described, Saevo and Scatinavia can also be the same place.

Pliny mentions Scandinavia one more time: in Book VIII he says that the animal called achlis (given in the accusative, achlin, which is not Latin) was born on the island of Scandinavia.[70] The animal grazes, has a big upper lip and some mythical attributes.

The name Scandia, later used as a synonym for Scandinavia, also appears in Pliny's Naturalis Historia (Natural History), but is used for a group of Northern European islands which he locates north of Britannia. Scandia thus does not appear to be denoting the island Scadinavia in Pliny's text. The idea that Scadinavia may have been one of the Scandiae islands was instead introduced by Ptolemy (c. 90 – c. 168 AD), a mathematician, geographer and astrologer of Roman Egypt. He used the name Skandia for the biggest, most easterly of the three Scandiai islands, which according to him were all located east of Jutland.[13]

Viking Age

The Viking age in Scandinavia lasted from approximately 793–1066 AD and saw Scandinavians participate in large scale raiding, colonization, conquest and trading throughout Europe and beyond.[71][72] The period saw a big expansion of Scandinavian-conquered territory and of exploration. Utilizing their advanced longships, they reached as far as North America, being the first Europeans to do so.[73] During this time Scandinavians were drawn to wealthy towns, monasteries and petty kingdoms overseas in places such as the British Isles, Ireland, the Baltic coast and Normandy, all of which made profitable targets for raids. Scandinavians, primarily from modern day Sweden, known as Varangians also ventured east into what is now Russia raiding along river trade routes. During this period unification also took place between different Scandinavian kingdoms culminating in the peak of the North Sea Empire which included large parts of Scandinavia and Great Britain.[74]

This expansion and conquest led to the formation of several kingdoms, earldoms and settlements throughout Europe such as the Kingdom of the Isles, Earldom of Orkney, Scandinavian York, Danelaw, Kingdom of Dublin, the Duchy of Normandy and the Kievan Rus'. The Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland were also settled by the Scandinavians during this time. The Normans, Rus' people, Faroe Islanders, Icelanders and Norse-Gaels all emerged from these Scandinavian expansions.

The Middle Ages

During a period of Christianization and state formation in the 10th–13th centuries, numerous Germanic petty kingdoms and chiefdoms were unified into three kingdoms:

According to historian Sverre Bagge, the divisions into three Scandinavian kingdoms (Denmark, Sweden, Norway) makes sense geographically, as forests, mountains, and uninhabited land divided them from one another. Control of Norway was enabled through seapower, whereas control of the great lakes in Sweden enabled control of the kingdom, and control of Jutland was sufficient to control Denmark. The most contested area was the coastline from Oslo to Öresund, where the three kingdoms met.[76]

The three Scandinavian kingdoms joined in 1397 in the Kalmar Union under Queen Margaret I of Denmark.[77] Sweden left the union in 1523 under King Gustav I of Sweden. In the aftermath of Sweden's secession from the Kalmar Union, civil war broke out in Denmark and Norway—the Protestant Reformation followed. When things had settled, the Norwegian privy council was abolished—it assembled for the last time in 1537. A personal union, entered into by the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway in 1536, lasted until 1814. Three sovereign successor states have subsequently emerged from this unequal union: Denmark, Norway and Iceland.

The borders between the three countries got the shape they have had since in the middle of the seventeenth century: In the 1645 Treaty of Brömsebro, Denmark–Norway ceded the Norwegian provinces of Jämtland, Härjedalen and Idre and Särna, as well as the Baltic Sea islands of Gotland and Ösel (in Estonia) to Sweden. The Treaty of Roskilde, signed in 1658, forced Denmark–Norway to cede the Danish provinces Scania, Blekinge, Halland, Bornholm and the Norwegian provinces of Båhuslen and Trøndelag to Sweden. The 1660 Treaty of Copenhagen forced Sweden to return Bornholm and Trøndelag to Denmark–Norway, and to give up its recent claims to the island Funen.[78]

In the east, Finland was a fully incorporated part of Sweden from medieval times until the Napoleonic wars, when it was ceded to Russia. Despite many wars over the years since the formation of the three kingdoms, Scandinavia has been politically and culturally close.[79]

Scandinavian unions

 
The Kalmar Union (c. 1400)

Denmark–Norway as a historiographical name refers to the former political union consisting of the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway, including the Norwegian dependencies of Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands. The corresponding adjective and demonym is Dano-Norwegian. During Danish rule, Norway kept its separate laws, coinage and army as well as some institutions such as a royal chancellor. Norway's old royal line had died out with the death of Olav IV[80] in 1387, but Norway's remaining a hereditary kingdom became an important factor for the Oldenburg dynasty of Denmark–Norway in its struggles to win elections as kings of Denmark.

The Treaty of Kiel (14 January 1814) formally dissolved the Dano-Norwegian union and ceded the territory of Norway proper to the King of Sweden, but Denmark retained Norway's overseas possessions. However, widespread Norwegian resistance to the prospect of a union with Sweden induced the governor of Norway, crown prince Christian Frederick (later Christian VIII of Denmark), to call a constituent assembly at Eidsvoll in April 1814. The assembly drew up a liberal constitution and elected Christian Frederick to the throne of Norway. Following a Swedish invasion during the summer, the peace conditions of the Convention of Moss (14 August 1814) specified that king Christian Frederik had to resign, but Norway would keep its independence and its constitution within a personal union with Sweden. Christian Frederik formally abdicated on 10 August 1814 and returned to Denmark. The Norwegian parliament Storting elected king Charles XIII of Sweden as king of Norway on 4 November.

The Storting dissolved the union between Sweden and Norway in 1905, after which the Norwegians elected Prince Charles of Denmark as king of Norway: he reigned as Haakon VII.

Economy

The economies of the countries of Scandinavia are amongst the strongest in Europe.[81] There is a generous welfare system in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden.[82]

Tourism

Various promotional agencies of the Nordic countries in the United States (such as The American-Scandinavian Foundation, established in 1910 by the Danish American industrialist Niels Poulsen) serve to promote market and tourism interests in the region. Today, the five Nordic heads of state act as the organization's patrons and according to the official statement by the organization its mission is "to promote the Nordic region as a whole while increasing the visibility of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden in New York City and the United States".[83] The official tourist boards of Scandinavia sometimes cooperate under one umbrella, such as the Scandinavian Tourist Board.[84] The cooperation was introduced for the Asian market in 1986, when the Swedish national tourist board joined the Danish national tourist board to coordinate intergovernmental promotion of the two countries. Norway's government entered one year later. All five Nordic governments participate in the joint promotional efforts in the United States through the Scandinavian Tourist Board of North America.[85]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ "Scandinavia". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Retrieved 28 October 2009. Scandinavia, historically Scandia, part of Northern Europe, generally held to consist of the two countries of the Scandinavian Peninsula, Norway and Sweden, with the addition of Denmark. Some authorities argue for the inclusion of Finland on geologic and economic grounds and of Iceland and the Faroe Islands on the grounds that their inhabitants speak Scandinavian languages related to those of Norway and Sweden and also have similar cultures.
  2. ^ Danish, Swedish and archaic (Dano-)Norwegian: Skandinavien; Norwegian, Faroese and Finnish: Skandinavia; Icelandic: Skandinavía; Sámi languages: Skadesi-suolu/Skađsuâl.
  3. ^ "Scandinavia". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2009. Retrieved 28 October 2009. Scandinavia, historically Scandia, part of Northern Europe, generally held to consist of the two countries of the Scandinavian Peninsula, Norway and Sweden, with the addition of Denmark. Some authorities argue for the inclusion of Finland on geologic and economic grounds and of Iceland and the Faroe Islands on the grounds that their inhabitants speak Scandinavian languages related to those of Norway and Sweden and also have similar cultures.

References

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  3. ^ "Samisk". Språkrådet.
  4. ^ a b . Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 24 December 2016. Retrieved 23 December 2016. A large peninsula in north-western Europe, occupied by Norway and Sweden [...] A cultural region consisting of the countries of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark and sometimes also of Iceland, Finland, and the Faroe Islands
  5. ^ Alderman, Liz (9 November 2019). "Scandinavian Wine? A Warming Climate Tempts Entrepreneurs". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  6. ^ "Scandinavian Countries 2021". worldpopulationreview.com. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  7. ^ Battaglia, Steven M. (2 January 2019). "Shifting Weather Patterns in a Warming Arctic: The Scandes Case". Weatherwise. 72 (1): 23–29. doi:10.1080/00431672.2019.1538761. S2CID 192279229.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 August 2010.
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Further reading

Historical

  • Aatsinki, Ulla, Johanna Annola, and Mervi Kaarninen, eds. Families, Values, and the Transfer of Knowledge in Northern Societies, 1500–2000 (Routledge, 2019).
  • Barton, H. Arnold. Scandinavia in the Revolutionary Era: 1760–1815 (U of Minnesota Press, 1986) online review
  • Bendixsen, Synnøve, Mary Bente Bringslid, and Halvard Vike, eds. Egalitarianism in Scandinavia: Historical and contemporary perspectives (Springer, 2017).
  • Derry, T. K. A History of Scandinavia: Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Iceland (George Allen & Unwin, 1979). online review
  • Fulsås, Narve, and Tore Rem, eds. Ibsen, Scandinavia and the making of a world drama (Cambridge UP, 2018).
  • Glørstad, Zanette T., and Kjetil Loftsgarden, eds. Viking-Age Transformations: Trade, Craft and Resources in Western Scandinavia (Taylor & Francis, 2017).
  • Gron, Kurt J., and Lasse Sørensen. "Cultural and economic negotiation: a new perspective on the Neolithic Transition of Southern Scandinavia." Antiquity 92.364 (2018): 958–974. online
  • Helle, Knut, ed. The Cambridge history of Scandinavia. Volume 1, Prehistory to 1520 (Cambridge UP, 2003).
  • Mikkelsen, Flemming, Knut Kjeldstadli, and Stefan Nyzell, eds. Popular struggle and democracy in Scandinavia: 1700–present (Springer, 2017).
  • Nissen, Henrik S. ed. Scandinavia during the Second World War (1983) online review
  • Nordstrom, Byron J. Scandinavia since 1500 (U of Minnesota Press, 2000).
  • Östling, Johan, Niklas Olsen, and David Larsson Heidenblad, eds. Histories of Knowledge in Postwar Scandinavia: Actors, Arenas, and Aspirations (Routledge, 2020) excerpt[dead link].
  • Pulsiano, Phillip, and Paul Leonard Acker. Medieval Scandinavia: an encyclopedia (Taylor & Francis, 1993).
  • Raffield, Ben, Neil Price, and Mark Collard. "Religious belief and cooperation: a view from Viking-Age Scandinavia." Religion, Brain & Behavior 9.1 (2019): 2–22. online
  • Rom-Jensen, Byron. "A Model of Social Security? The political usage of Scandinavia in Roosevelt's New Deal." Scandinavian Journal of History 42.4 (2017): 363–388 online.
  • Salmon, Patrick. Scandinavia and the great powers 1890–1940 (Cambridge UP, 2002).
  • Sanders, Ruth H. The Languages of Scandinavia: Seven Sisters of the North (U of Chicago Press, 2017).
  • Sawyer, Birgit. Medieval Scandinavia: From conversion to reformation, circa 800–1500 (U of Minnesota Press, 1993).
  • Sawyer, Peter Hayes. Kings and vikings: Scandinavia and Europe AD 700–1100 (1982)
  • Sigurdsson, Jon Vidar. Scandinavia in the Age of Vikings (Cornell UP, 2021) excerpt
  • Wilson, David Mackenzie, and P. Foote. The Viking achievement: the society and culture of early medieval Scandinavia (Sidgwick & Jackson, 1970).
  • Winroth, Anders. The Age of the Vikings (Princeton UP, 2016) excerpt
  • Winroth, Anders. The Conversion of Scandinavia: Vikings, Merchants, and Missionaries in the Remaking of Northern Europe (Yale UP, 2012). excerpt

Recent

  • Anderson, Jorgen, and Jens Hoff, eds. Democracy and citizenship in Scandinavia (Springer, 2001).
  • Bendixsen, Synnøve, Mary Bente Bringslid, and Halvard Vike, eds. Egalitarianism in Scandinavia: Historical and contemporary perspectives (Springer, 2017).
  • Gallie, Duncan. "The quality of working life: is Scandinavia different?." European Sociological Review 19.1 (2003): 61–79.
  • Green, Ken, Thorsteinn Sigurjónsson, and Eivind Åsrum Skille, eds. Sport in Scandinavia and the Nordic countries (Routledge, 2018).
  • Hilson, Mary. The Nordic Model: Scandinavia since 1945 (Reaktion books, 2008).
  • Ingebritsen, Christine. Scandinavia in world politics (Rowman & Littlefield, 2006).
  • Kröger, Teppo. "Local government in Scandinavia: autonomous or integrated into the welfare state?." in Social Care Services (Routledge, 2019) pp. 95–108.
  • Lappi-Seppälä, Tapio. "Penal policy in Scandinavia." Crime and justice 36.1 (2007): 217–295.
  • Nestingen, Andrew. Crime and fantasy in Scandinavia: Fiction, film and social change (University of Washington Press, 2011).
  • Rogerson, Richard. "Taxation and market work: is Scandinavia an outlier?." Economic theory 32.1 (2007): 59–85. online
  • Strand, Robert, R. Edward Freeman, and Kai Hockerts. "Corporate social responsibility and sustainability in Scandinavia: An overview." Journal of Business Ethics 127.1 (2015): 1–15 online.

External links

  • . Scandinavian Tourist Boards in North America, Globescope Internet Services, Inc. 2005. Archived from the original on 4 June 2013. Retrieved 5 September 2008.
  • Nordic Council – official site for co-operation in the Nordic region
  • Nordregio – site established by the Nordic Council of Ministers
  • – a digital library that provides scientific information on the Nordic and Baltic countries as well as the Baltic region as a whole
  • Expat Scandinavia – Site with useful information for expats in Scandinavia.

scandinavia, this, article, about, cultural, region, peninsula, peninsula, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, nordic, countries, skan, subregion, northern, europe, with, strong, historical, cultural, linguistic, ties, between, constituent, peoples, e. This article is about the cultural region of Scandinavia For the peninsula see Scandinavian Peninsula For other uses see Scandinavia disambiguation Not to be confused with Nordic countries Scandinavia b ˌ s k ae n d ɪ ˈ n eɪ v i e SKAN di NAY vee e is a subregion in Northern Europe with strong historical cultural and linguistic ties between its constituent peoples In English usage Scandinavia most commonly refers to Denmark Norway and Sweden It can sometimes also refer more narrowly to the Scandinavian Peninsula which excludes Denmark but includes part of Finland or more broadly to include all of Finland Iceland and the Faroe Islands 4 c ScandinaviaPhoto of the Fennoscandian Peninsula and Denmark as well as other areas surrounding the Baltic Sea in March 2002LanguagesList of languages Official languages 1 2 SwedishDanishNorwegianSometimes also FinnishIcelandicFaroeseRecognized minority languagesMeankieli Karelian KvenGermanRomani ScandoromaniSami languages official in Sami administrative areas 3 YiddishDemonym s ScandinavianComposition Denmark Norway Sweden 4 Sometimes also Aland Faroe Islands Finland Iceland a Nordic territories that are not part of Scandinavia Bouvet Island Greenland Jan Mayen SvalbardInternet TLD dk no se ax fi fo gl is sjThe geography of the region is varied from the Norwegian fjords in the west and Scandinavian mountains covering parts of Norway and Sweden to the low and flat areas of Denmark in the south as well as archipelagos and lakes in the east Most of the population in the region live in the more temperate southern regions with the northern parts having long cold winters The region became notable during the Viking Age when Scandinavian peoples participated in large scale raiding conquest colonization and trading mostly throughout Europe They also used their longships for exploration becoming the first Europeans to reach North America These exploits saw the establishment of the North Sea Empire which comprised large parts of Scandinavia and Great Britain though it was relatively short lived Scandinavia was eventually Christianized and the coming centuries saw various unions of Scandinavian nations most notably the Kalmar Union of Denmark Norway and Sweden which lasted for over 100 years until the Swedish king Gustav I led Sweden to independence It also saw numerous wars between the nations which shaped the modern borders The most recent union was the union between Sweden and Norway which ended in 1905 In modern times the region has prospered with the economies of the countries being amongst the strongest in Europe Sweden Denmark Norway and Finland all maintain welfare systems considered to be generous with the economic and social policies of the countries being dubbed the Nordic model Contents 1 Geography 2 Etymology 2 1 Appearance in medieval Germanic languages 2 2 Possible influence on Sami languages 3 Reintroduction of the term Scandinavia in the eighteenth century 4 Use of Nordic countries vs Scandinavia 4 1 Scandinavian as an ethnic term and as a demonym 5 Languages 5 1 North Germanic languages 5 2 Finnish 5 3 Sami languages 6 History 6 1 Ancient descriptions 6 2 Viking Age 6 3 The Middle Ages 6 4 Scandinavian unions 7 Economy 7 1 Tourism 8 See also 9 Explanatory notes 10 References 11 Further reading 11 1 Historical 11 2 Recent 12 External linksGeography EditSee also Geography of Denmark Geography of Finland Geography of Iceland Geography of Norway and Geography of Sweden Galdhopiggen is the highest point in Scandinavia and is a part of the Scandinavian Mountains The geography of Scandinavia is extremely varied Notable are the Norwegian fjords the Scandinavian Mountains covering much of Norway and parts of Sweden the flat low areas in Denmark and the archipelagos of Finland Norway and Sweden Finland and Sweden have many lakes and moraines legacies of the ice age which ended about ten millennia ago The southern regions of Scandinavia which are also the most populous regions have a temperate climate 5 6 Scandinavia extends north of the Arctic Circle but has relatively mild weather for its latitude due to the Gulf Stream Many of the Scandinavian mountains have an alpine tundra climate The climate varies from north to south and from west to east a marine west coast climate Cfb typical of western Europe dominates in Denmark the southernmost part of Sweden and along the west coast of Norway reaching north to 65 N with orographic lift giving more mm year precipitation lt 5000 mm in some areas in western Norway The central part from Oslo to Stockholm has a humid continental climate Dfb which gradually gives way to subarctic climate Dfc further north and cool marine west coast climate Cfc along the northwestern coast 7 A small area along the northern coast east of the North Cape has tundra climate Et as a result of a lack of summer warmth The Scandinavian Mountains block the mild and moist air coming from the southwest thus northern Sweden and the Finnmarksvidda plateau in Norway receive little precipitation and have cold winters Large areas in the Scandinavian mountains have alpine tundra climate The warmest temperature ever recorded in Scandinavia is 38 0 C in Malilla Sweden 8 The coldest temperature ever recorded is 52 6 C in Vuoggatjalme sv Arjeplog Sweden 9 The coldest month was February 1985 in Vittangi Sweden with a mean of 27 2 C 9 Southwesterly winds further warmed by foehn wind can give warm temperatures in narrow Norwegian fjords in winter Tafjord has recorded 17 9 C in January and Sunndal 18 9 C in February Etymology Edit Scandinavia originally referred vaguely to Scania a formerly Danish region that became Swedish in the seventeenth century The original areas inhabited during the Bronze Age by the peoples now known as Scandinavians included what is now Northern Germany particularly Schleswig Holstein all of Denmark southern Sweden the southern coast of Norway and Aland in Finland while namesake Scania found itself in the centre The term Scandinavia in local usage covers the three kingdoms of Denmark Norway and Sweden The majority national languages of these three belong to the Scandinavian dialect continuum and are mutually intelligible North Germanic languages 10 The words Scandinavia and Scania Skane the southernmost province of Sweden are both thought to go back to the Proto Germanic compound Skadin awjō the d represented in Latin by t or d which appears later in Old English as Scedenig and in Old Norse as Skaney 11 The earliest identified source for the name Scandinavia is Pliny the Elder s Natural History dated to the first century AD Various references to the region can also be found in Pytheas Pomponius Mela Tacitus Ptolemy Procopius and Jordanes usually in the form of Scandza It is believed that the name used by Pliny may be of West Germanic origin originally denoting Scania 12 According to some scholars the Germanic stem can be reconstructed as skadan and meaning danger or damage 13 The second segment of the name has been reconstructed as awjō meaning land on the water or island The name Scandinavia would then mean dangerous island which is considered to refer to the treacherous sandbanks surrounding Scania 13 Skanor in Scania with its long Falsterbo reef has the same stem skan combined with or which means sandbanks Alternatively Sca n dinavia and Skaney along with the Old Norse goddess name Skadi may be related to Proto Germanic skadwa meaning shadow John McKinnell comments that this etymology suggests that the goddess Skadi may have once been a personification of the geographical region of Scandinavia or associated with the underworld 14 Another possibility is that all or part of the segments of the name came from the pre Germanic Mesolithic people inhabiting the region 15 In modernity Scandinavia is a peninsula but between approximately 10 300 and 9 500 years ago the southern part of Scandinavia was an island separated from the northern peninsula with water exiting the Baltic Sea through the area where Stockholm is now located 16 Appearance in medieval Germanic languages Edit The Latin names in Pliny s text gave rise to different forms in medieval Germanic texts In Jordanes history of the Goths AD 551 the form Scandza is the name used for their original home separated by sea from the land of Europe chapter 1 4 17 Where Jordanes meant to locate this quasi legendary island is still a hotly debated issue both in scholarly discussions and in the nationalistic discourse of various European countries 18 19 The form Scadinavia as the original home of the Langobards appears in Paul the Deacon Historia Langobardorum 20 but in other versions of Historia Langobardorum appear the forms Scadan Scandanan Scadanan and Scatenauge 21 Frankish sources used Sconaowe and Aethelweard an Anglo Saxon historian used Scani 22 23 In Beowulf the forms Scedenige and Scedeland are used while the Alfredian translation of Orosius and Wulfstan s travel accounts used the Old English Sconeg 23 Possible influence on Sami languages Edit The earliest Sami joik texts written down refer to the world as Skadesi suolu in Northern Sami and Skađsual in Skolt Sami meaning Skadi s island Svennung considers the Sami name to have been introduced as a loanword from the North Germanic languages 24 Skadi is the giant jotunn stepmother of Freyr and Freyja in Norse mythology It has been suggested that Skadi to some extent is modeled on a Sami woman The name for Skade s father THjazi is known in Sami as Cahci the waterman and her son with Odin Saemingr can be interpreted as a descendant of Saam the Sami population 25 26 Older joik texts give evidence of the old Sami belief about living on an island and state that the wolf is known as suolu gievra meaning the strong one on the island The Sami place name Sulliidcielbma means the island s threshold and Suolocielgi means the island s back In recent substrate studies Sami linguists have examined the initial cluster sk in words used in the Sami languages and concluded that sk is a phonotactic structure of alien origin 27 Reintroduction of the term Scandinavia in the eighteenth century EditMain article Scandinavism See also Politics of Denmark Politics of Norway and Politics of Sweden Scandinavism a Norwegian a Dane and a Swede Although the term Scandinavia used by Pliny the Elder probably originated in the ancient Germanic languages the modern form Scandinavia does not descend directly from the ancient Germanic term Rather the word was brought into use in Europe by scholars borrowing the term from ancient sources like Pliny and was used vaguely for Scania and the southern region of the peninsula 28 The term was popularised by the linguistic and cultural Scandinavist movement which asserted the common heritage and cultural unity of the Scandinavian countries and rose to prominence in the 1830s 28 The popular usage of the term in Sweden Denmark and Norway as a unifying concept became established in the nineteenth century through poems such as Hans Christian Andersen s I am a Scandinavian of 1839 After a visit to Sweden Andersen became a supporter of early political Scandinavism In a letter describing the poem to a friend he wrote All at once I understood how related the Swedes the Danes and the Norwegians are and with this feeling I wrote the poem immediately after my return We are one people we are called Scandinavians The influence of Scandinavism as a Scandinavist political movement peaked in the middle of the nineteenth century between the First Schleswig War 1848 1850 and the Second Schleswig War 1864 The Swedish king also proposed a unification of Denmark Norway and Sweden into a single united kingdom The background for the proposal was the tumultuous events during the Napoleonic Wars in the beginning of the century This war resulted in Finland formerly the eastern third of Sweden becoming the Russian Grand Duchy of Finland in 1809 and Norway de jure in union with Denmark since 1387 although de facto treated as a province becoming independent in 1814 but thereafter swiftly forced to accept a personal union with Sweden The dependent territories Iceland the Faroe Islands and Greenland historically part of Norway remained with Denmark in accordance with the Treaty of Kiel Sweden and Norway were thus united under the Swedish monarch but Finland s inclusion in the Russian Empire excluded any possibility for a political union between Finland and any of the other Nordic countries The end of the Scandinavian political movement came when Denmark was denied the military support promised from Sweden and Norway to annex the Danish Duchy of Schleswig which together with the German Duchy of Holstein had been in personal union with Denmark The Second war of Schleswig followed in 1864 a brief but disastrous war between Denmark and Prussia supported by Austria Schleswig Holstein was conquered by Prussia and after Prussia s success in the Franco Prussian War a Prussian led German Empire was created and a new power balance of the Baltic Sea countries was established The Scandinavian Monetary Union established in 1873 lasted until World War I Use of Nordic countries vs Scandinavia Edit Scandinavia according to the local definition The extended usage in English which includes Iceland and the Faroe Islands Aland and Finland Further information on this terminology Nordic countries and Fennoscandia The term Scandinavia sometimes specified in English as Continental Scandinavia or mainland Scandinavia is ordinarily used locally for Denmark Norway and Sweden as a subset of the Nordic countries known in Norwegian Danish and Swedish as Norden Finnish Pohjoismaat Icelandic Nordurlondin Faroese Nordurlond 29 However in English usage the term Scandinavia is sometimes used as a synonym or near synonym for what are known locally as Nordic countries 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 Usage in English is different from usage in the Scandinavian languages themselves which use Scandinavia in the narrow meaning and by the fact that the question of whether a country belongs to Scandinavia is politicised people from the Nordic world beyond Norway Denmark and Sweden may be offended at being either included in or excluded from the category of Scandinavia 40 Nordic countries is used unambiguously for Denmark Norway Sweden Finland and Iceland including their associated territories Greenland the Faroe Islands and the Aland Islands 30 A large part of modern day Finland was part of Sweden for more than four centuries see Finland under Swedish rule thus to much of the world associating Finland with Scandinavia But the creation of a Finnish identity is unique in the region in that it was formed in relation to two different imperial models the Swedish 41 and the Russian 42 43 44 There is also the geological term Fennoscandia sometimes Fennoscandinavia which in technical use refers to the Fennoscandian Shield or Baltic Shield that is the Scandinavian Peninsula Norway and Sweden Finland and Karelia excluding Denmark and other parts of the wider Nordic world The terms Fennoscandia and Fennoscandinavia are sometimes used in a broader political sense to refer to Norway Sweden Denmark and Finland 45 Scandinavian as an ethnic term and as a demonym Edit Further information on this terminology North Germanic peoples The term Scandinavian may be used with two principal meanings in an ethnic or cultural sense and as a modern and more inclusive demonym As an ethnic or cultural termIn the ethnic or cultural sense the term Scandinavian traditionally refers to speakers of Scandinavian languages who are mainly descendants of the peoples historically known as Norsemen but also to some extent of immigrants and others who have been assimilated into that culture and language In this sense the term refers primarily to native Danes Norwegians and Swedes as well as descendants of Scandinavian settlers such as the Icelanders and the Faroese The term is also used in this ethnic sense to refer to the modern descendants of the Norse in studies of linguistics and culture 46 As a demonymAdditionally the term Scandinavian is used demonymically to refer to all modern inhabitants or citizens of Scandinavian countries Within Scandinavia the demonymic term primarily refers to inhabitants or citizens of Denmark Norway and Sweden In English usage inhabitants or citizens of Iceland the Faroe Islands and Finland are sometimes included as well English general dictionaries often define the noun Scandinavian demonymically as meaning any inhabitant of Scandinavia which might be narrowly conceived or broadly conceived 47 48 49 There is a certain ambiguity and political contestation as to which peoples should be referred to as Scandinavian in this broader sense Sami people who live in Norway and Sweden are generally included as Scandinavians in the demonymic sense the Sami of Finland may be included in English usage but usually not in local usage the Sami of Russia are not included However the use of the term Scandinavian with reference to the Sami is complicated by the historical attempts by Scandinavian majority peoples and governments in Norway and Sweden to assimilate the Sami people into the Scandinavian culture and languages making the inclusion of the Sami as Scandinavians controversial among many Sami Modern Sami politicians and organizations often stress the status of the Sami as a people separate from and equal to the Scandinavians with their own language and culture and are apprehensive about being included as Scandinavians in light of earlier Scandinavian assimilation policies 50 51 Languages EditMain articles North Germanic languages Sami languages Finnic languages and Scandoromani Two language groups have coexisted on the Scandinavian Peninsula since prehistory the North Germanic languages Scandinavian languages and the Sami languages 52 The majority of the population of Scandinavia including Iceland and the Faroe Islands today derive their language from several North Germanic tribes who once inhabited the southern part of Scandinavia and spoke a Germanic language that evolved into Old Norse and from Old Norse into Danish Swedish Norwegian Faroese and Icelandic The Danish Norwegian and Swedish languages form a dialect continuum and are known as the Scandinavian languages all of which are considered mutually intelligible with one another Faroese and Icelandic sometimes referred to as insular Scandinavian languages are intelligible in continental Scandinavian languages only to a limited extent A small minority of Scandinavians are Sami people concentrated in the extreme north of Scandinavia Finland is mainly populated by speakers of Finnish with a minority of approximately 5 53 of Swedish speakers However Finnish is also spoken as a recognized minority language in Sweden including in distinctive varieties sometimes known as Meankieli Finnish is distantly related to the Sami languages but these are entirely different in origin to the Scandinavian languages German in Denmark Yiddish and Romani are recognized minority languages in parts of Scandinavia More recent migrations has added even more languages Apart from the Sami languages and the languages of minority groups speaking a variant of the majority language of a neighboring state the following minority languages in Scandinavia are protected under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages Yiddish Romani Chib Romanes and Scandoromani North Germanic languages Edit Main article North Germanic languages Continental Scandinavian languages Danish Norwegian Swedish Insular Scandinavian languages Faroese Icelandic The North Germanic languages of Scandinavia are traditionally divided into an East Scandinavian branch Danish and Swedish and a West Scandinavian branch Norwegian Icelandic and Faroese 54 55 but because of changes appearing in the languages since 1600 the East Scandinavian and West Scandinavian branches are now usually reconfigured into Insular Scandinavian o nordisk oy nordisk featuring Icelandic and Faroese 56 and Continental Scandinavian Skandinavisk comprising Danish Norwegian and Swedish 57 The modern division is based on the degree of mutual comprehensibility between the languages in the two branches 58 The populations of the Scandinavian countries with common Scandinavian roots in language can at least with some training understand each other s standard languages as they appear in print and are heard on radio and television The reason Danish Swedish and the two official written versions of Norwegian Nynorsk and Bokmal are traditionally viewed as different languages rather than dialects of one common language is that each is a well established standard language in its respective country Danish Swedish and Norwegian have since medieval times been influenced to varying degrees by Middle Low German and standard German That influence was due not only to proximity but also to the rule of Denmark and later Denmark Norway over the German speaking region of Holstein and to Sweden s close trade with the Hanseatic League Norwegians are accustomed to variation and may perceive Danish and Swedish only as slightly more distant dialects This is because they have two official written standards in addition to the habit of strongly holding on to local dialects The people of Stockholm Sweden and Copenhagen Denmark have the greatest difficulty in understanding other Scandinavian languages 59 In the Faroe Islands and Iceland learning Danish is mandatory This causes Faroese people as well as Icelandic people to become bilingual in two very distinct North Germanic languages making it relatively easy for them to understand the other two Mainland Scandinavian languages 60 61 Although Iceland was under the political control of Denmark until a much later date 1918 very little influence and borrowing from Danish has occurred in the Icelandic language 62 Icelandic remained the preferred language among the ruling classes in Iceland Danish was not used for official communications most of the royal officials were of Icelandic descent and the language of the church and law courts remained Icelandic 63 Finnish Edit Historically verified distribution of the Sami languages The Scandinavian languages are as a language family unrelated to Finnish Estonian and the Sami languages which as Uralic languages are distantly related to Hungarian Owing to the close proximity there is still a great deal of borrowing from the Swedish and Norwegian languages in Finnish and the Sami languages 64 The long history of linguistic influence of Swedish on Finnish is also due to the fact that Finnish the language of the majority in Finland was treated as a minority language while Finland was part of Sweden Finnish speakers had to learn Swedish in order to advance to higher positions 65 Swedish spoken in today s Finland includes a lot of words that are borrowed from Finnish whereas the written language remains closer to that of Sweden Finland is officially bilingual with Finnish and Swedish having mostly the same status at national level Finland s majority population are Finns whose mother tongue is either Finnish approximately 95 Swedish or both The Swedish speakers live mainly on the coastline starting from approximately the city of Porvoo Sw Borga in the Gulf of Finland up to the city of Kokkola Sw Karleby in the Bay of Bothnia citation needed The Swedish speaking population is spread out in pockets in this coastal stretch The coastal province of Ostrobothnia has a Swedish speaking majority whereas plenty of areas on this coastline are nearly unilingually Finnish like the region of Satakunta citation needed Aland an autonomous province of Finland situated in the Baltic Sea between Finland and Sweden are entirely Swedish speaking Children are taught the other official language at school for Swedish speakers this is Finnish usually from the 3rd grade while for Finnish speakers it is Swedish usually from the 3rd 5th or 7th grade citation needed 66 Finnish speakers constitute a language minority in Sweden and Norway Meankieli and Kven are Finnish dialects spoken in Swedish Lapland and Norwegian Lapland Sami languages Edit The Sami languages are indigenous minority languages in Scandinavia 67 They belong to their own branch of the Uralic language family and are unrelated to the North Germanic languages other than by limited grammatical particularly lexical characteristics resulting from prolonged contact 64 Sami is divided into several languages or dialects 68 Consonant gradation is a feature in both Finnish and northern Sami dialects but it is not present in southern Sami which is considered to have a different language history According to the Sami Information Centre of the Sami Parliament of Sweden southern Sami may have originated in an earlier migration from the south into the Scandinavian Peninsula 64 History EditFor a more in depth look at the history of the region see History of Scandinavia Ancient descriptions Edit A key ancient description of Scandinavia was provided by Pliny the Elder though his mentions of Scatinavia and surrounding areas are not always easy to decipher Writing in the capacity of a Roman admiral he introduces the northern region by declaring to his Roman readers that there are 23 islands Romanis armis cognitae known to Roman arms in this area According to Pliny the clarissima most famous of the region s islands is Scatinavia of unknown size There live the Hilleviones The belief that Scandinavia was an island became widespread among classical authors during the first century and dominated descriptions of Scandinavia in classical texts during the centuries that followed Pliny begins his description of the route to Scatinavia by referring to the mountain of Saevo mons Saevo ibi the Codanus Bay Codanus sinus and the Cimbrian promontory 69 The geographical features have been identified in various ways By some scholars Saevo is thought to be the mountainous Norwegian coast at the entrance to Skagerrak and the Cimbrian peninsula is thought to be Skagen the north tip of Jutland Denmark As described Saevo and Scatinavia can also be the same place Pliny mentions Scandinavia one more time in Book VIII he says that the animal called achlis given in the accusative achlin which is not Latin was born on the island of Scandinavia 70 The animal grazes has a big upper lip and some mythical attributes The name Scandia later used as a synonym for Scandinavia also appears in Pliny s Naturalis Historia Natural History but is used for a group of Northern European islands which he locates north of Britannia Scandia thus does not appear to be denoting the island Scadinavia in Pliny s text The idea that Scadinavia may have been one of the Scandiae islands was instead introduced by Ptolemy c 90 c 168 AD a mathematician geographer and astrologer of Roman Egypt He used the name Skandia for the biggest most easterly of the three Scandiai islands which according to him were all located east of Jutland 13 Viking Age Edit See also Viking Age and Vikings The Viking age in Scandinavia lasted from approximately 793 1066 AD and saw Scandinavians participate in large scale raiding colonization conquest and trading throughout Europe and beyond 71 72 The period saw a big expansion of Scandinavian conquered territory and of exploration Utilizing their advanced longships they reached as far as North America being the first Europeans to do so 73 During this time Scandinavians were drawn to wealthy towns monasteries and petty kingdoms overseas in places such as the British Isles Ireland the Baltic coast and Normandy all of which made profitable targets for raids Scandinavians primarily from modern day Sweden known as Varangians also ventured east into what is now Russia raiding along river trade routes During this period unification also took place between different Scandinavian kingdoms culminating in the peak of the North Sea Empire which included large parts of Scandinavia and Great Britain 74 This expansion and conquest led to the formation of several kingdoms earldoms and settlements throughout Europe such as the Kingdom of the Isles Earldom of Orkney Scandinavian York Danelaw Kingdom of Dublin the Duchy of Normandy and the Kievan Rus The Faroe Islands Iceland and Greenland were also settled by the Scandinavians during this time The Normans Rus people Faroe Islanders Icelanders and Norse Gaels all emerged from these Scandinavian expansions The Middle Ages Edit During a period of Christianization and state formation in the 10th 13th centuries numerous Germanic petty kingdoms and chiefdoms were unified into three kingdoms Denmark forged from the lands of Denmark including Jutland Zealand and Scania Skaneland on the Scandinavian Peninsula 75 Sweden forged from the lands of Sweden on the Scandinavian Peninsula excluding the provinces Bohuslan Harjedalen Jamtland and Idre and Sarna Halland Blekinge and Scania of modern day Sweden but including most of modern Finland Norway including Bohuslan Harjedalen Jamtland and Idre and Sarna on the Scandinavian Peninsula and its island colonies Iceland Greenland Faroe Islands Shetland Orkney Isle of Man and the Hebrides According to historian Sverre Bagge the divisions into three Scandinavian kingdoms Denmark Sweden Norway makes sense geographically as forests mountains and uninhabited land divided them from one another Control of Norway was enabled through seapower whereas control of the great lakes in Sweden enabled control of the kingdom and control of Jutland was sufficient to control Denmark The most contested area was the coastline from Oslo to Oresund where the three kingdoms met 76 The three Scandinavian kingdoms joined in 1397 in the Kalmar Union under Queen Margaret I of Denmark 77 Sweden left the union in 1523 under King Gustav I of Sweden In the aftermath of Sweden s secession from the Kalmar Union civil war broke out in Denmark and Norway the Protestant Reformation followed When things had settled the Norwegian privy council was abolished it assembled for the last time in 1537 A personal union entered into by the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway in 1536 lasted until 1814 Three sovereign successor states have subsequently emerged from this unequal union Denmark Norway and Iceland The borders between the three countries got the shape they have had since in the middle of the seventeenth century In the 1645 Treaty of Bromsebro Denmark Norway ceded the Norwegian provinces of Jamtland Harjedalen and Idre and Sarna as well as the Baltic Sea islands of Gotland and Osel in Estonia to Sweden The Treaty of Roskilde signed in 1658 forced Denmark Norway to cede the Danish provinces Scania Blekinge Halland Bornholm and the Norwegian provinces of Bahuslen and Trondelag to Sweden The 1660 Treaty of Copenhagen forced Sweden to return Bornholm and Trondelag to Denmark Norway and to give up its recent claims to the island Funen 78 In the east Finland was a fully incorporated part of Sweden from medieval times until the Napoleonic wars when it was ceded to Russia Despite many wars over the years since the formation of the three kingdoms Scandinavia has been politically and culturally close 79 Scandinavian unions Edit The Kalmar Union c 1400 Denmark Norway as a historiographical name refers to the former political union consisting of the kingdoms of Denmark and Norway including the Norwegian dependencies of Iceland Greenland and the Faroe Islands The corresponding adjective and demonym is Dano Norwegian During Danish rule Norway kept its separate laws coinage and army as well as some institutions such as a royal chancellor Norway s old royal line had died out with the death of Olav IV 80 in 1387 but Norway s remaining a hereditary kingdom became an important factor for the Oldenburg dynasty of Denmark Norway in its struggles to win elections as kings of Denmark The Treaty of Kiel 14 January 1814 formally dissolved the Dano Norwegian union and ceded the territory of Norway proper to the King of Sweden but Denmark retained Norway s overseas possessions However widespread Norwegian resistance to the prospect of a union with Sweden induced the governor of Norway crown prince Christian Frederick later Christian VIII of Denmark to call a constituent assembly at Eidsvoll in April 1814 The assembly drew up a liberal constitution and elected Christian Frederick to the throne of Norway Following a Swedish invasion during the summer the peace conditions of the Convention of Moss 14 August 1814 specified that king Christian Frederik had to resign but Norway would keep its independence and its constitution within a personal union with Sweden Christian Frederik formally abdicated on 10 August 1814 and returned to Denmark The Norwegian parliament Storting elected king Charles XIII of Sweden as king of Norway on 4 November The Storting dissolved the union between Sweden and Norway in 1905 after which the Norwegians elected Prince Charles of Denmark as king of Norway he reigned as Haakon VII Economy EditSee also Economy of Sweden Economy of Denmark Economy of Finland Economy of Iceland and Economy of Norway The economies of the countries of Scandinavia are amongst the strongest in Europe 81 There is a generous welfare system in Denmark Finland Iceland Norway and Sweden 82 Tourism Edit Various promotional agencies of the Nordic countries in the United States such as The American Scandinavian Foundation established in 1910 by the Danish American industrialist Niels Poulsen serve to promote market and tourism interests in the region Today the five Nordic heads of state act as the organization s patrons and according to the official statement by the organization its mission is to promote the Nordic region as a whole while increasing the visibility of Denmark Finland Iceland Norway and Sweden in New York City and the United States 83 The official tourist boards of Scandinavia sometimes cooperate under one umbrella such as the Scandinavian Tourist Board 84 The cooperation was introduced for the Asian market in 1986 when the Swedish national tourist board joined the Danish national tourist board to coordinate intergovernmental promotion of the two countries Norway s government entered one year later All five Nordic governments participate in the joint promotional efforts in the United States through the Scandinavian Tourist Board of North America 85 See also EditBaltic region Baltoscandia Fennoscandia Kvenland Sapmi Nordic countries Nordic cross flag Nordic Council Nordic folklore Scandinavian colonialism Scandinavian family name etymology Scandza VikingsExplanatory notes Edit Scandinavia Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Scandinavia historically Scandia part of Northern Europe generally held to consist of the two countries of the Scandinavian Peninsula Norway and Sweden with the addition of Denmark Some authorities argue for the inclusion of Finland on geologic and economic grounds and of Iceland and the Faroe Islands on the grounds that their inhabitants speak Scandinavian languages related to those of Norway and Sweden and also have similar cultures Danish Swedish and archaic Dano Norwegian Skandinavien Norwegian Faroese and Finnish Skandinavia Icelandic Skandinavia Sami languages Skadesi suolu Skađsual Scandinavia Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Scandinavia historically Scandia part of Northern Europe generally held to consist of the two countries of the Scandinavian Peninsula Norway and Sweden with the addition of Denmark Some authorities argue for the inclusion of Finland on geologic and economic grounds and of Iceland and the Faroe Islands on the grounds that their inhabitants speak Scandinavian languages related to those of Norway and Sweden and also have similar cultures References Edit Languages Nordic Cooperation Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 8 July 2017 Landes David 1 July 2009 Swedish becomes official main language The Local Se Retrieved 8 July 2017 Samisk Sprakradet a b Definition of Scandinavia in English Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 24 December 2016 Retrieved 23 December 2016 A large peninsula in north western Europe occupied by Norway and Sweden A cultural region consisting of the countries of Norway Sweden and Denmark and sometimes also of Iceland Finland and the Faroe Islands Alderman Liz 9 November 2019 Scandinavian Wine A Warming Climate Tempts Entrepreneurs The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Scandinavian Countries 2021 worldpopulationreview com Retrieved 26 March 2021 Battaglia Steven M 2 January 2019 Shifting Weather Patterns in a Warming Arctic The Scandes Case Weatherwise 72 1 23 29 doi 10 1080 00431672 2019 1538761 S2CID 192279229 Hogsta uppmatta temperatur i Sverige Archived from the original on 26 August 2010 a b Lagsta uppmatta temperatur i Sverige Archived from the original on 28 December 2008 John Harrison Michael Hoyler Megaregions Globalization s New Urban Form p 152 Edward Elgar Publishing 2015 Anderson Carl Edlund 1999 Formation and Resolution of Ideological Contrast in the Early History of Scandinavia Archived 22 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine PhD dissertation Department of Anglo Saxon Norse amp Celtic Faculty of English University of Cambridge 1999 Haugen Einar 1976 The Scandinavian Languages An Introduction to Their History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1976 a b c Knut Helle 2003 The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Prehistory to 1520 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 47299 9 John McKinnell 2005 Meeting the other in Norse myth and legend Ds Brewer p 63 ISBN 978 1 84384 042 8 J F Del Giorgio 24 May 2006 The Oldest Europeans Who Are We Where Do We Come From What Made European Women Different A J Place ISBN 978 980 6898 00 4 Uscinowicz Szymon 2003 How the Baltic Sea was changing Archived 12 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Marine Geology Branch Polish Geological Institute 9 June 2003 Retrieved 13 January 2008 Jordanes translated by Charles Christopher Mierow The Origins and Deeds of the Goths Archived 24 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine 22 April 1997 Hoppenbrouwers Peter 2005 Medieval Peoples Imagined Working Paper No 3 Department of European Studies University of Amsterdam ISSN 1871 1693 p 8 A second core area was the quasi legendary Isle of Scanza the vague indication of Scandinavia in classical ethnography and a veritable hive of races and a womb of peoples according to Jordanes Gothic History Not only the Goths were considered to have originated there but also the Dacians Danes the Lombards and the Burgundians claims that are still subject to debate Goffart Walter 2005 Jordanes s Getica and the disputed authenticity of Gothic origins from Scandinavia Speculum A Journal of Medieval Studies 80 379 98 Paul the Deacon Historia Langobardorum Archived 23 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine Bibliotheca Augustana History of the Langobards Northvegr Foundation Archived 6 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Erik Bjorkman 1973 Studien zur englischen Philologie Max Niemeyer p 99 ISBN 978 3 500 28470 5 a b Richard North 1997 Heathen gods in Old English literature Cambridge University Press p 192 ISBN 978 0 521 55183 0 Svennung J 1963 Scandinavia und Scandia Scandinavia and Scandia Lateinisch nordische Namenstudien in German Almqvist amp Wiksell Harrassowitz 54 56 Mundel E 2000 Coexistence of Saami and Norse culture reflected in and interpreted by Old Norse myths PDF University of Bergen 11th Saga Conference Sydney 2000 Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2004 Steinsland Gro 1991 Det hellige bryllup og norron kongeideologi En analyse av hierogami myten i Skirnismal Ynglingatal Haleygjatal og Hyndluljod The sacred wedding and Norse royal ideology An analysis of the hierogamy myth in Skirnismal Ynglingatal Haleygjatal and Hyndluljod in Norwegian Oslo Solum Aikio A 2004 An essay on substrate studies and the origin of Saami PDF In Hyvarinen Irma Kallio Petri Korhonen Jarmo eds Etymologie Entlehnungen und Entwicklungen Festschrift fur Jorma Koivulehto zum 70 Geburtstag Memoires de la Societe Neophilologique de Helsinki 63 Etymology borrowings and developments Festschrift for Jorma Koivulehto s 70th birthday Memoirs of the Neophilological Society of Helsinki 63 Helsinki pp 5 34 Archived from the original PDF on 16 February 2008 On the basis of Scandinavian loanwords it can be inferred that both sk and ʃ were adopted in the west during the early separate development of the Saami languages but never spread to Kola Saami These areal features thus emerged in a phase when Proto Saami began to diverge into dialects anticipating the modern Saami languages a b Ostergard Uffe 1997 The Geopolitics of Nordic Identity From Composite States to Nation States The Cultural Construction of Norden Oystein Sorensen and Bo Strath eds Oslo Scandinavian University Press 1997 25 71 Also 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Islands amp Finland Scandinavia Archived 27 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Collins Cobuild Scandinavia proper noun Lexico Powered by Oxford Scandinavia geographical name Archived 23 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Merriam Webster Knut Helle Introduction Archived 18 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine in The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Volume I Prehistory to 1520 ed by Knut Helle E I Kouri and Jens E Oleson Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2003 pp 1 14 pp 1 4 Scandinavia Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Scandinavia historically Scandia part of northern Europe generally held to consist of the two countries of the Scandinavian Peninsula Norway and Sweden with the addition of Denmark Some authorities argue for the inclusion of Finland on geologic and economic grounds and of Iceland and the Faroe Islands on the grounds that their inhabitants speak Scandinavian languages related to those of Norway and Sweden and also have similar cultures Lonely Planet Scandinavian Europe 2009 The Rough Guide to Scandinavia 2008 Official Site of Scandinavian Tourist Board of North America 2009 Archived from the original on 4 June 2013 Retrieved 23 October 2008 Olwig Kenneth R Introduction The Nature of Cultural Heritage and the Culture of Natural Heritage Northern Perspectives on a Contested Patrimony International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 11 No 1 March 2005 pp 3 7 Finland and the Swedish Empire Archived 9 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine Country Studies U S Library of Congress Retrieved 25 November 2006 Introduction Reflections on Political Thought in Finland Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Editorial Redescriptions Yearbook of Political Thought and Conceptual History 1997 Volume 1 University of Jyvaskyla pp 6 7 T he populist opposition both to Sweden as a former imperial country and especially to Swedish as the language of the narrow Finnish establishment has also been strong especially in the inter war years Finland as a unitary and homogeneous nation state was constructed in opposition to the imperial models of Sweden and Russia The Rise of Finnish Nationalism Archived 21 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Country Studies U S Library of Congress Retrieved 25 November 2006 The eighteenth century had witnessed the appearance of a sense of national identity for the Finnish people an expression of the Finns growing doubts about Swedish rule The ethnic self consciousness of Finnish speakers was given a considerable boost by the Russian conquest of Finland in 1809 because ending the connection with Sweden forced Finns to define themselves with respect to the Russians Editors and Board Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Redescriptions Yearbook of Political Thought and Conceptual History Fennoscandia n Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Oxford English Dictionary Online 2nd edn Oxford Oxford University Press December 2019 Accessed 10 February 2020 Kennedy Arthur Garfield 1963 The Indo European Language Family In Lee Donald Woodward ed English Language Reader Introductory Essays and Exercises Dodd Mead North Germanic or Scandinavian or Norse peoples as they are variously called became a distinctive people Spaeth John Duncan Ernst 1921 Old English Poetry Princeton University Press The main divisions of Germanic are 1 East Germanic including the Goths both Ostrogoths and Visigoths 2 North Germanic including the Scandinavians Danes Icelanders Swedes Norsemen 3 West Germanic The Old English Anglo Saxons belong to this division of which the continental representatives are the Teutonic peoples High and Low Franks and Saxons Alemanni etc Thompson Stith 1995 Our Heritage of World Literature Cordon Company ISBN 978 0809310913 The North Germanic or Scandinavian group consists of the Norwegians Danes Swedes and Icelanders Gordon Eric Valentine Taylor A R 1962 An Introduction to Old Norse Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 811105 4 Norse was the language spoken by the North Germanic peoples Scandinavians from the time when Norse first became differentiated from the speech of the other Germanic peoples Rank Gustav 1976 Old Estonia The People and Culture Indiana University ISBN 9780877501909 Contacts are not impossible also with the Northern Germanic peoples i e with the Scandinavians directly across the sea Barbour Stephen Stevenson Patrick 1990 Variation in German A Critical Approach to German Sociolinguistics Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521357043 For the period when the existence of the Germanic tribes is first clearly recorded by Roman writers archaeological evidence suggests five tribal groups with perhaps five incipient distinct Germanic languages as follows 1 North Germanic tribes Scandinavians Diringer David 1948 The Alphabet A Key to the History of Mankind Philosophical Library Old Norse was spoken by the North Germanic or Scandinavian peoples Bolling George Melville Bloch Bernard 1968 Language Linguistic Society of America Northern Germanic peoples i e the Scandinavians Jones Gwyn 2001 A History of the Vikings Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0192801340 North Germanic Scandinavian peoples Scandinavian noun Lexico Powered By Oxford Scandinavian noun Merriam Webster Scandinavian 2 countable noun Archived 27 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Collins Cobuild Mathisen Stein R 2004 Ethnic Identities in Global and Local Discourses Contested Narratives of Sami Ethnic Heritage In Cultural Identity in Transition Contemporary Conditions Practices and Politics of a Global Phenomenon Edited by Jari Kupiainen Erkki Sevanen John A Stotesbury Atlantic Birgitta Jahreskog The Sami national minority in Sweden Rattsfonden 2009 ISBN 9780391026872 Dirmid R F Collis 1990 Arctic languages an awakening Unipub p 440 ISBN 978 92 3 102661 4 Population and Society www stat fi Aschehoug og Gyldendals store norske leksikon Nar Pd 1999 ISBN 978 82 573 0703 5 Gordon Raymond G Jr ed 2005 Ethnologue Languages of the World Fifteenth edition Dallas Tex SIL International Jonsson Johannes Gisli and Thorhallur Eythorsson 2004 Variation in subject case marking in Insular Scandinavian Archived 4 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Nordic Journal of Linguistics 2005 28 223 245 Cambridge University Press Retrieved 9 November 2007 Bernd Heine Tania Kuteva 2006 The changing languages of Europe Oxford University Press US ISBN 978 0 19 929734 4 Iben Stampe Sletten Nordisk Ministerrad 2005 Nordens sprog med rodder og fodder p 2 ISBN 978 92 893 1041 3 Urban misunderstandings Nordic Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers Copenhagen Faroese and Norwegians best at understanding Nordic neighbours Archived 25 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Nordisk Sprograd Nordic Council 13 January 2005 Adalnamskra grunnskola Erlend tungumal Archived 20 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine ISMennt EAN 1999 Holmarsdottir H B 2001 Icelandic A Lesser Used Language in the Global Community International Review of Education Internationale Zeitschrift Fr Erziehungswissenschaft Revue Inter 47 3 4 379 Bibcode 2001IREdu 47 379H doi 10 1023 A 1017918213388 S2CID 142851422 Halfdanarson Gudmundur Icelandic Nationalism A Non Violent Paradigm Archived 1 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine In Nations and Nationalities in Historical Perspective Pisa Edizioni Plus 2001 p 3 a b c Inez Svonni Fjallstrom 2006 A language with deep roots Archived 5 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Sapmi Language history 14 November 2006 Samiskt Informationscentrum Sametinget The Scandinavian languages are Northern Germanic languages Sami belongs to the Finno Ugric language family Finnish Estonian Livonian and Hungarian belong to the same language family and are consequently related to each other Suzanne Romaine 1995 Bilingualism Wiley Blackwell p 323 ISBN 978 0 631 19539 9 Institute Mercator 5 November 2020 The Swedish language in education in Finland PDF Oskar Bandle March 2005 The Nordic languages an international handbook of the history of the North Germanic languages Walter de Gruyter p 2115 ISBN 978 3 11 017149 5 www eng samer se The Sami dialects Archived 20 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Sapmi The Sami dialects Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia Book IV chapter XXXIX Archived 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ed Karl Friedrich Theodor Mayhoff Online version at Persus Retrieved 2 October 2007 Pliny the Elder Naturalis Historia Book VIII chapter XVII Archived 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ed Karl Friedrich Theodor Mayhoff Online version at Persus Retrieved 2 October 2007 Mawer Allen 1913 The Vikings Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 095173394X The term Viking is derived from the Old Norse vik a bay and means one who haunts a bay creek or fjord In the 9th and 10th centuries it came to be used more especially of those warriors who left their homes in Scandinavia and made raids on the chief European countries This is the narrow and technically the only correct use of the term Viking but in such expressions as Viking civilisation the Viking Age the Viking movement Viking influence the word has come to have a wider significance and is used as a concise and convenient term for describing the whole of the civilisation activity and influence of the Scandinavian peoples at a particular period in their history Sawyer Peter H 1995 Scandinavians and the English in the Viking Age University of Cambridge p 3 ISBN 095173394X The Viking period is therefore best defined as the period when Scandinavians played a large role in the British Isles and western Europe as raiders and conquerors It is also the period in which Scandinavians settled in many of the areas they conquered and in the Atlantic islands Solar storm confirms Vikings settled in North America exactly 1 000 years ago The Guardian Reuters 20 October 2021 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Franques Royal Annals cited in Sawyer Peter 2001 The Oxford Illustrated History of the Vikings ISBN 0 19 285434 8 p 20 Oskar Bandle 2002 The Nordic languages an international handbook of the history of the North Germanic languages Mouton De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 014876 3 Bagge Sverre 2014 Cross and Scepter The Rise of the Scandinavian Kingdoms from the Vikings to the Reformation Princeton University Press p 29 ISBN 978 1 4008 5010 5 The Kalmar Union Medeltiden Retrieved 28 April 2022 Treaty of Copenhagen 2006 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 9 November 2006 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Finnish history InfoFinland 28 August 2019 Archived from the original on 6 December 2020 Retrieved 20 February 2022 The Monarchy Historical Background permanent dead link The Royal House of Norway Official site Retrieved 9 November 2006 dead link GDP Ranked by Country 2020 worldpopulationreview com Retrieved 28 January 2020 McWhinney James The Nordic Model Pros and Cons Investopedia Retrieved 28 January 2020 About The American Scandinavian Foundation Archived 29 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine Official site Retrieved 2 February 2007 Scandinavian Tourist Board Official site Archived 17 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Scandinavian Tourist Board of North America Archived 4 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Official Website Retrieved 2 February 2007 Further reading EditHistorical Edit Aatsinki Ulla Johanna Annola and Mervi Kaarninen eds Families Values and the Transfer of Knowledge in Northern Societies 1500 2000 Routledge 2019 Barton H Arnold Scandinavia in the Revolutionary Era 1760 1815 U of Minnesota Press 1986 online review Bendixsen Synnove Mary Bente Bringslid and Halvard Vike eds Egalitarianism in Scandinavia Historical and contemporary perspectives Springer 2017 Derry T K A History of Scandinavia Norway Sweden Denmark Finland Iceland George Allen amp Unwin 1979 online review Fulsas Narve and Tore Rem eds Ibsen Scandinavia and the making of a world drama Cambridge UP 2018 Glorstad Zanette T and Kjetil Loftsgarden eds Viking Age Transformations Trade Craft and Resources in Western Scandinavia Taylor amp Francis 2017 Gron Kurt J and Lasse Sorensen Cultural and economic negotiation a new perspective on the Neolithic Transition of Southern Scandinavia Antiquity 92 364 2018 958 974 online Helle Knut ed The Cambridge history of Scandinavia Volume 1 Prehistory to 1520 Cambridge UP 2003 Mikkelsen Flemming Knut Kjeldstadli and Stefan Nyzell eds Popular struggle and democracy in Scandinavia 1700 present Springer 2017 Nissen Henrik S ed Scandinavia during the Second World War 1983 online review Nordstrom Byron J Scandinavia since 1500 U of Minnesota Press 2000 Ostling Johan Niklas Olsen and David Larsson Heidenblad eds Histories of Knowledge in Postwar Scandinavia Actors Arenas and Aspirations Routledge 2020 excerpt dead link Pulsiano Phillip and Paul Leonard Acker Medieval Scandinavia an encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis 1993 Raffield Ben Neil Price and Mark Collard Religious belief and cooperation a view from Viking Age Scandinavia Religion Brain amp Behavior 9 1 2019 2 22 online Rom Jensen Byron A Model of Social Security The political usage of Scandinavia in Roosevelt s New Deal Scandinavian Journal of History 42 4 2017 363 388 online Salmon Patrick Scandinavia and the great powers 1890 1940 Cambridge UP 2002 Sanders Ruth H The Languages of Scandinavia Seven Sisters of the North U of Chicago Press 2017 Sawyer Birgit Medieval Scandinavia From conversion to reformation circa 800 1500 U of Minnesota Press 1993 Sawyer Peter Hayes Kings and vikings Scandinavia and Europe AD 700 1100 1982 Sigurdsson Jon Vidar Scandinavia in the Age of Vikings Cornell UP 2021 excerpt Wilson David Mackenzie and P Foote The Viking achievement the society and culture of early medieval Scandinavia Sidgwick amp Jackson 1970 Winroth Anders The Age of the Vikings Princeton UP 2016 excerpt Winroth Anders The Conversion of Scandinavia Vikings Merchants and Missionaries in the Remaking of Northern Europe Yale UP 2012 excerptRecent Edit Anderson Jorgen and Jens Hoff eds Democracy and citizenship in Scandinavia Springer 2001 Bendixsen Synnove Mary Bente Bringslid and Halvard Vike eds Egalitarianism in Scandinavia Historical and contemporary perspectives Springer 2017 Gallie Duncan The quality of working life is Scandinavia different European Sociological Review 19 1 2003 61 79 Green Ken Thorsteinn Sigurjonsson and Eivind Asrum Skille eds Sport in Scandinavia and the Nordic countries Routledge 2018 Hilson Mary The Nordic Model Scandinavia since 1945 Reaktion books 2008 Ingebritsen Christine Scandinavia in world politics Rowman amp Littlefield 2006 Kroger Teppo Local government in Scandinavia autonomous or integrated into the welfare state in Social Care Services Routledge 2019 pp 95 108 Lappi Seppala Tapio Penal policy in Scandinavia Crime and justice 36 1 2007 217 295 Nestingen Andrew Crime and fantasy in Scandinavia Fiction film and social change University of Washington Press 2011 Rogerson Richard Taxation and market work is Scandinavia an outlier Economic theory 32 1 2007 59 85 online Strand Robert R Edward Freeman and Kai Hockerts Corporate social responsibility and sustainability in Scandinavia An overview Journal of Business Ethics 127 1 2015 1 15 online External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Scandinavia Look up scandinavia in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scandinavia category Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Scandinavian Civilization Scandinavia Official Website of the Scandinavian Tourist Boards in North America Scandinavian Tourist Boards in North America Globescope Internet Services Inc 2005 Archived from the original on 4 June 2013 Retrieved 5 September 2008 Nordic Council official site for co operation in the Nordic region Nordregio site established by the Nordic Council of Ministers vifanord a digital library that provides scientific information on the Nordic and Baltic countries as well as the Baltic region as a whole Expat Scandinavia Site with useful information for expats in Scandinavia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scandinavia amp oldid 1140734458, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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