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Scania

Scania (/ˈskæniə/ SKAN-ee-ə), also known by its native name of Skåne[3] (Swedish: [ˈskôːnɛ] , Danish: [ˈskɔːnə]), is the southernmost of the historical provinces (landskap) of Sweden. Located in the south tip of the geographical region of Götaland, the province is roughly conterminous with Skåne County, created in 1997. Like the other former provinces of Sweden, Scania still features in colloquial speech and in cultural references, and can therefore not be regarded as an archaic concept. Within Scania there are 33 municipalities that are autonomous within the Skåne Regional Council. Scania's largest city, Malmö, is the third-largest city in Sweden, as well as the fifth-largest in Scandinavia.

Scania
Skåne
Coordinates: 55°48′N 13°37′E / 55.800°N 13.617°E / 55.800; 13.617
Country Sweden
LandGötaland
County Skåne County
Largest city Malmö
Area
 • Total10,939 km2 (4,224 sq mi)
Population
 (31 December 2020[2])
 • Total1,389,336
 • Density130/km2 (330/sq mi)
Ethnicity
 • LanguageSwedish
 • DialectScanian
Culture
 • FlowerOxeye daisy
 • AnimalRed deer
 • BirdRed kite
 • FishEel
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal codes
20000–29999
Area codes040–046

To the north, Scania borders the former provinces of Halland and Småland, to the northeast Blekinge, to the east and south the Baltic Sea, and to the west Öresund. Since 2000, a road and railway bridge, the Öresund Bridge,[4] bridges the Sound and connects Scania with Denmark. Scania forms part of the transnational Øresund Region.[5]

From north to south Scania is around 130 km; it covers less than 3% of Sweden's total area. The population of over 1,340,000[6] represents 13% of the country's population. With 121 inhabitants per square kilometre (310/sq mi) Scania is the second-most densely populated province of Sweden.

Historically, Scania formed part of the kingdom of Denmark until the signing of the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658.[7] Denmark regained control of the province (1676–1679) during the Scanian War and again briefly in 1711 during the Great Northern War. Scania has been an undisputed part of Sweden since 1720.[8][9]

Name edit

Endonym and exonyms edit

The endonym used in Swedish and other North Germanic languages is Skåne (formerly spelled Skaane in Danish and Norwegian). The Latinized form Scania is an exonym in English.[3] Sometimes the endonym Skåne is used in English text, such as in tourist information,[10] even sometimes as Skane with the diacritic omitted.[11][12] Scania (as also Dalarna) is one of the few Swedish provinces for which exonyms are widely used in many languages, such as French Scanie, Dutch and German Schonen, Polish Skania, Spanish Escania, Italian Scania, etc. For the province's modern administrative counterpart, Skåne län, the endonym Skåne is used in English.[13]

In the Alfredian translation of Orosius's and Wulfstan's travel accounts, the Old English form Sconeg appears.[14][15] Frankish sources mention a place called Sconaowe; Æthelweard, an Anglo-Saxon historian, wrote about Scani;[16] and in Beowulf's fictional account, the names Scedenige and Scedeland appear as names for what is a Danish land.[14]

Etymology edit

The names Scania and Scandinavia are considered to have the same etymology.[17][18][19][20] The southernmost tip of what is today Sweden was called Scania by the Romans and thought to be an island. The actual etymology of the word remains dubious and has long been a matter of debate among scholars. The name is possibly derived from the Germanic root *Skaðin-awjã, which appears in Old Norse as Skáney [ˈskɑːnˌœy].[21] According to some scholars, the Germanic stem can be reconstructed as *Skaðan- meaning "danger" or "damage" (English scathing, German Schaden, Swedish skada).[22] Skanör in Scania, with its long Falsterbo reef, has the same stem (skan) combined with -ör, which means "sandbanks".

Administration edit

 
The two counties of Scania from 1719 to 1996

Between 1719 and 1996, the province was subdivided in two administrative counties (län), Kristianstad County and Malmöhus County, each under a governor (landshövding) appointed by the central government of Sweden.

When the first local government acts took effect in 1863, each county also got an elected county council (landsting). The counties were further divided into municipalities.

The local government reform of 1952 reduced the number of municipalities, and a second subdivision reform, carried out between 1968 and 1974, established today's 33 municipalities[23] (Swedish: kommuner) in Scania. The municipalities have municipal governments, similar to city commissions, and are further divided into parishes (församlingar). The parishes are primarily entities of the Church of Sweden, but they also serve as a divisioning measure for the Swedish population registration and other statistical uses.

In 1999, the county council areas were amalgamated, forming Skåne Regional Council (Region Skåne), responsible mainly for public healthcare, public transport and regional planning and culture.

Heraldry edit

 
Letter from Eric of Pomerania dated 1437, with a description of the arms granted to the city of Malmö.
 
The coat of arms of Scania in an engraving from 1712 in Erik Dahlbergh's Suecia Antiqua et Hodierna.

During the Danish era, the province had no coat of arms. In Sweden, however, every province had been represented by heraldic arms since 1560.[24] When Charles X Gustav of Sweden suddenly died in 1660 a coat of arms had to be created for the newly acquired province, as each province was to be represented by its arms at his royal funeral. After an initiative from Baron Gustaf Bonde, the Lord High Treasurer of Sweden, the coat of arms of the City of Malmö was used as a base for the new provincial arms. The Malmö coat of arms had been granted in 1437, during the Kalmar Union, by Eric of Pomerania and contains a Pomeranian griffin's head. To distinguish it from the city's coat of arms the tinctures were changed and the official blazon for the provincial arms is, in English: Or, a griffin's head erased gules, crowned azure and armed azure, when it should be armed.

The province was divided in two administrative counties 1719–1996. Coats of arms were created for these entities, also using the griffin motif. The new Skåne County, operative from 1 January 1997, got a coat of arms that is the same as the province's, but with reversed tinctures. When the county arms is shown with a Swedish royal crown, it represents the County Administrative Board, which is the regional presence of central government authority. In 1999 the two county councils (landsting) were amalgamated forming Region Skåne. It is the only one of its kind using a heraldic coat of arms. It is also the same as the province's and the county's, but with a golden griffin's head on a blue shield.[25] The 33 municipalities within the county also have coats of arms.

The Scania Griffin has become a well-known symbol for the province and is also used by commercial enterprises. It is, for instance, included in the logotypes of the automotive manufacturer Scania AB and the airline Malmö Aviation.

Coat of arms edit

History edit

Historical affiliations

  Kingdom of Denmark 811?-1658
  Kingdom of Sweden 1658-present

 
Ale's Stones, a stone ship (burial monument) from c. 500 AD on the coast at Kåseberga, around ten kilometres (6.2 miles) south east of Ystad.
 
Gerhard von Buhrman's map of Scania, 1684
 
Map of Scania, 1690
 
Map of Denmark in the Middle Ages, Scania was together with the provinces Blekinge and Halland a part of Denmark
 
Front page of the latest and current peace treaty between Denmark and Sweden, Swedish version

Scania was first mentioned in written texts in the 9th century. It came under Danish king Harald Bluetooth in the middle of the 10th century. It was then a region that included Blekinge and Halland, situated on the Scandinavian Peninsula and formed the eastern part of the kingdom of Denmark. This geographical position made it the focal point of the frequent Dano-Swedish wars for hundreds of years.

By the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658, all Danish lands east of Øresund were ceded to the Swedish Crown. First placed under a Governor-General, the province was eventually integrated into the kingdom of Sweden. The last Danish attempt to regain its lost provinces failed after the 1710 Battle of Helsingborg.

 
Detailed map of Skåne, 1805

In 1719, the province was subdivided in two counties and administered in the same way as the rest of Sweden. Scania has since that year been fully integrated in the Swedish nation. In the following summer, July 1720, the last peace treaty between Sweden and Denmark was signed.[26][27]

On 28 November 2017 it was ruled that the Scanian flag would become the official flag of Scania.[28][29]

Politics edit

During Sweden's financial crisis in the early and mid-1990s, Scania, Västra Götaland and Norrbotten were among the hardest hit in the country, with high unemployment rates as a result.[30] In response to the crisis, the County Governors were given a task by the government in September 1996 to co-ordinate various measures in the counties to increase economic growth and employment by bringing in regional actors.[30] The first proposal for regional autonomy and a regional parliament had been introduced by the Social Democratic Party's local districts in Scania and Västra Götaland already in 1993. When Sweden joined the European Union two years later, the concept "Regions of Europe" came in focus and a more regionalist-friendly approach was adopted in national politics.[31] These factors contributed to the subsequent transformation of Skåne County into one of the first "trial regions" in Sweden in 1999, established as the country's first "regional experiment".[31]

The relatively strong regional identity in Scania is often referred to in order to explain the general support in the province for the decentralization efforts introduced by the Swedish government.[32] On the basis of large scale interview investigations about Region Skåne in Scania, scholars have found that the prevailing trend among the inhabitants of Scania is to "[look] upon their region with more positive eyes and a firm reliance that it would deliver the goods in terms of increased democracy and constructive results out of economic planning".[33]

Transportation edit

 
The motorway through western Scania, E6, here at motorway service Glumslöv, is the artery of the western part of the province.
 
All local, regional and inter-regional train services within Scania (2018). In all, 72 stations are served, during day times at least one train per hour and direction. Many stations (especially in the west) have far better service than so. The busiest part is between Hyllie (Malmö) and Lund.

Electrified dual track railroad exists from the border with Denmark at the Øresund Bridge to Malmö and onwards to Lund. The latter part is currently being upgraded to four tracks and expected to enter service in 2023.[34] In Lund, the tracks split into two directions.[35] The dual tracks going towards Gothenburg end at Helsingborg,[36] while the other branch continues beyond the provincial border to neighbouring Småland, close to Killeberg.[37][35] This latter dual track continues to mid-Sweden.[35] There are also a few single track railroads connecting cities like Trelleborg, Ystad and Kristianstad.[35] Just as five Scanian stations are served partly (Hässleholm and Osby) or entirely (Ballingslöv, Hästveda and Killeberg) by Småland local trains, the Scanian Pågatåg trains serve Markaryd in Småland.[38]

There are basically three ticket systems: Skånetrafiken tickets can be purchased for all regional traffic including to Denmark, while the Danish Rejsekort system can only be used at stations served by Øresundståg and equipped with special card readers. Additionally, Swedish national SJ-tickets are available for longer trips to the north.

The E6 motorway is the main artery through the western part of Scania all the way from Trelleborg to the provincial border towards neighbouring Halland. It continues along the Swedish west coast to Gothenburg and most of the way to the Norwegian border. There are also several other motorways, especially around Malmö. Since 2000, the economic focus of the region has changed, with the opening of a road link across the Øresund Bridge to Denmark.[39]

The car ferry service between Helsingborg and Helsingør has 70 departures in each direction daily as of 2014.[40]

There are three minor airports in Sturup, Ängelholm and Kristianstad. The nearby Copenhagen Airport, which is the largest international airport in the Nordic countries, also serves the province.[41]

Geography and environmental factors edit

 
Land usage in Scania, showing hardwood forests (light green), pinewood forests (dark green), fields (yellow), garden and fruit (orange) and residential areas (red)
 
Aerial view of Scania near Lund
 
A typical Beech forest, the Western edge of Karlslund in Northern Landskrona
 
Pruned willows and rapefields are typical for this area of Sweden.

Unlike some regions of Sweden, the Scanian landscape is generally not mountainous, though a few examples of uncovered cliffs can be found at Hovs Hallar, at Kullaberg, and on the island Hallands Väderö. With the exception of the lake-rich and densely forested northern parts (Göinge), the rolling hills in the north-west (the Bjäre and Kulla peninsulas) and the beech-wood-clad areas extending from the slopes of the horsts, a sizeable portion of Scania's terrain consists of plains. Its low profile and open landscape distinguish Scania from most other geographical regions of Sweden which consist mainly of waterway-rich, cool, mixed coniferous forests, boreal taiga and alpine tundra.[42] The province has several lakes but there are relatively few compared to Småland, the province directly to the north. Stretching from the north-western to the south-eastern parts of Scania is a belt of deciduous forests following the Linderödsåsen ridge and previously marking the border between Malmöhus County and Kristianstad County. The much denser fir forests — typical of the greater part of Sweden — are only found in the north-eastern Göinge parts of Scania along the border with the forest-dominated province of Småland. While the landscape typically has a slightly sloping profile, in some places, such as north of Malmö, the terrain is almost completely flat.

The narrow lakes with a long north to south extent, which are very common further north, are lacking in Scania. The largest lake, Ivösjön in the north-east, has similarities with the lakes further north, but has a different shape. All other lakes tend to be round, oval or of more complex shape and also lack any specific cardinal direction. Ringsjön, in the middle of the province, is the largest of such lakes.[citation needed] In the winter, some smaller lakes east of Lund often attract young Eurasian sea eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla).

 
Typical Scanian coastline, here southern peak of Ven island in Øresund. The yellow colour indicates sand rather than chalk, while white colour at similar cliffs indicates chalk rather than sand

Where the sea meets higher parts of the sloping landscape, cliffs emerge. Such cliffs are white if the soil has a high content of chalk. Good examples of such coastlines exist at the southern side of Ven, between the towns of Helsingborg and Landskrona, and in parts of the south and south-east coasts. In other Swedish provinces, steep coastlines usually reveal primary rock instead.

The two major plains, Söderslätt in the south-west and Österlen in the south-east, consist of highly fertile agricultural land. The yield per unit area is higher than in any other region in Sweden. The Scanian plains are an important resource for Sweden since 25–95% of the total production of various types of cereals come from the region. Almost all Swedish sugar beet comes from Scania; the plant needs a long vegetation period. The same applies also to maize, peas and rape (grown for its oil), although these plants are less imperative in comparison with sugar beets.[43][clarification needed] The soil is among the most fertile in the world.[citation needed]

The Kullaberg Nature Preserve in northwest Scania is home to several rare species including spring vetchling, Lathyrus sphaericus.[44]

Geology and geomorphology edit

[T]he present landscape is a mosaic of landforms shaped during widely different ages.

— Karna Lidmar-Bergström and co-workers.[45]

The gross relief of Scania reflects more the preglacial development than the erosion and deposits caused by the Quaternary glaciers.[45] In Swedish the word ås commonly refers to eskers, but major landmarks in Scania, such as Söderåsen, are horsts[46] formed by tectonic inversion along the Sorgenfrei-Tornquist Zone in the late Cretaceous. The Scanian horsts run in a north-west to south-east direction, marking the southwest border of Fennoscandia.[47] Tectonic activity of the Sorgenfrei-Tornquist Zone during the break-up of Pangaea in the Jurassic and Cretaceous epochs led to the formation of hundreds of small volcanoes in central Scania.[48][49] Remnants of the volcanoes are still visible today.[48] Parallel with volcanism a hilly peneplain formed in northeastern Scania due to weathering and erosion of basement rocks.[50][51] The kaolinite formed by this weathering can be observed at Ivö Klack.[51] In the Campanian age of the Late Cretaceous a sea level rise led to the complete drowning of Scania. Subsequently, marine sediments buried old surfaces preserving the rocky shores and hilly terrain of the day.[51][52]

In the Paleogene period southern Sweden was at a lower position relative to sea level but was likely still above it as it was covered by sediments.[45][50] Rivers flowing over the South Småland peneplain flowed also across Scania which was at the time covered by thick sediments.[45] As the relative sea level sank and much of Scania lost its sedimentary cover antecedent rivers begun to incise the Söderåsen horst forming valleys.[45] During deglaciation these valleys likely evacuated large amounts of melt-water.[45] The relief of Scania's south-western landscape was formed by the accumulation of thick Quaternary sediments during the Quaternary glaciations.[47]

Vegetation and vegetation zones edit

The vast majority of Scania belongs to the European hardwood vegetation zone, a considerable part of which is now agricultural rather than the original forest. This zone covers Europe west of Poland and north of the Alps, and includes the British Isles, northern and central France and the countries and regions to the south and southeast of the North Sea up to Denmark. A smaller north-eastern part of Scania is part of the pinewood vegetation zone, in which spruce grows naturally. Within the larger part, pine may grow together with birch on sandy soil. The most common tree is beech. Other common trees are willow, oak, ash, alder and elm (which until the 1970s formed a few forests but now is heavily infected by the elm disease). Also rather southern trees like walnut tree, chestnut and hornbeam can be found. In parks horse chestnut, lime and maple are commonly planted as well. Common fruit trees planted in commercial orchards and private gardens include several varieties of apple, pear, cherry and plum; strawberries are commercially cultivated in many locations across the province. Examples of wild berries grown in domesticated form are blackberry, raspberry, cloudberry (in the north-east), blueberry, wild strawberry and loganberry.

National parks edit

Three of the 29 National parks of Sweden[53] are situated in Scania.

Extremes edit

Population edit

 
Map of the 33 municipalities of Scania. The western, yellow coloured municipalities, close to Øresund, have much higher population densities than the eastern ones

Scania is divided into 33 municipalities with population and land surface as the table below shows. There is a large population difference between the western Scania, that is located by, or close to Øresund sea compared to the middle and eastern parts of the province.

Population of Scania by municipality[58]
Municipality Population (April 2013) Land area (km2) Population density (/km2)
Municipalities that have a coast on Øresund or border a municipality that does (in yellow on the map)
Bjuv 14,813 115.3 128.5
Burlöv 17,079 18.9 903.7
Eslöv 31,761 419.1 75.8
Helsingborg 132,254 344.0 384.4
Höganäs 24,986 150.8 165.7
Kävlinge 29,513 152.6 193.4
Landskrona 42,751 148.3 288.3
Lomma 22,415 55.6 403.1
Lund 118,542 448.5 264.3
Malmö 328,494 166,3 1975.2
Staffanstorp 22,572 106.8 211.3
Svalöv 13,217 387.3 34.1
Svedala 20,039 218.1 91.9
Trelleborg 42,744 339.9 125.8
Vellinge 33,725 142.6 236.5
Åstorp 14,849 92.2 161.0
Ängelholm 39,836 420.1 95.1
Other municipalities (in white)
Bromölla 12,314 162.5 74.4
Båstad * 14,224 209.8 67.8
Hässleholm 50,171 1268.5 39.6
Hörby 14,882 419.4 35.5
Höör 15,591 290.9 53.6
Klippan 16,741 374.3 44.7
Kristianstad 80,854 1246.3 64.9
Osby 12,704 576.2 22.0
Perstorp 7,089 158.8 44.6
Simrishamn 18,950 391.4 48.4
Sjöbo 18,359 492.2 37.3
Skurup 14,997 193.6 77.5
Tomelilla 12,913 395.9 32.6
Ystad 28,562 350.1 81.6
Örkelljunga 9,640 319.6 30.1
Östra Göinge 13,609 432.0 31.5

* A small part of Båstad municipality is located within the neighbouring province of Halland, this includes the village Östra Karup and some area around it, around 500 people live in Båstad municipality, but beyond the historical boundaries of the Scanian province.

  • The western part of Scania (yellow on the map and close to the Øresund sea) covers 3201.3 km2 of land, and had (in April 2013) 925,982 inhabitants, almost 290 inhabitants/km2
  • The other municipalities cover 7281.3 km2of land, and had at the same time only 341,009 inhabitants or 47 inhabitants/km2
  • The same figures for the entire province are 10482.6 km2, 1,266,991 inhabitants and 121 inhabitants/km2

These figures can be compared with around to 21 inhabitants per km2 for entire Sweden.

Population around Øresund edit

Western Scania has a high population density, not only by Scandinavian standards but also by average European standards, at close to 300 inhabitants per square kilometre. But the Danish Copenhagen region at north-east Zealand, on the other side of Øresund Sea, is even more densely populated. The north-east part of Zealand (or the Danish Region Hovedstaden without the Baltic island of Bornholm) has a population density of 878 inhabitants/km2, most of Greater Copenhagen included.

By adding the population of western Scania to the same of Metropolitan area of Copenhagen, then close to 3 million people live around the Øresund sea, within a maximum distance from Øresund of 25 to 30 kilometres, at a land surface of approx. 6100 km2 (approx 460 inhabitants/km2). This is in many ways a better measurement of describing the area around Øresund than what the far wider Øresund Region constitutes, as the latter includes also eastern Scania (whose beaches are Baltic Sea ones and is far less populated) as well as all Denmark east of the Great Belt.

Regardless of counting a smaller area with higher population density or a larger one, the Øresund Strait is located in the largest metropolitan area in Scandinavia with Finland.

Cities edit

 
Eslöv church, built 1890 in Neo-Gothic style, sometimes known in Swedish as Eslöv Gothic.[59]
 
The Øresund Bridge
 
The Annehem neighborhood in Lund

In 1658, the following ten places in Scania were chartered and held town rights: Lund (since approximately 990), Helsingborg (1085), Falsterbo (approximately 1200), Ystad (approximately 1200), Skanör (approximately 1200), Malmö (approximately 1250), Simrishamn (approximately 1300), Landskrona (1413), and Kristianstad (1622). Others had existed earlier, but lost their privileges. Ängelholm got new privileges in 1767, and in 1754, Falsterbo and Skanör were merged. The concept of municipalities was introduced in Sweden in 1863, making each of the towns a city municipality of its own. In the 19th and 20th centuries, four more municipalities were granted city status, Trelleborg (1867), Eslöv (1911), Hässleholm (1914) and Höganäs (1936). The system of city status was abolished in 1971.

Over 90% of Scania's population live in urban areas.[60] In 2000, the Øresund Bridge – the longest combined road and rail bridge in Europe – linked Malmö and Copenhagen, making Scania's population part of a 3.6 million total population in the Øresund Region. In 2005, the region had 9,200 commuters crossing the bridge daily, the vast majority of them from Malmö to Copenhagen.[61]

The following localities had more than 10,000 inhabitants[62] (year 2010).

  1. Malmö, 280,415*
  2. Helsingborg, 97,122
  3. Lund, 82,800
  4. Kristianstad, 35,711
  5. Landskrona, 30,499
  6. Trelleborg, 28,290
  7. Ängelholm, 23,240
  8. Hässleholm, 18,500
  9. Ystad, 18,350
  10. Eslöv, 17,748
  11. Staffanstorp, 14,808
  12. Höganäs, 14,107
  13. Kävlinge & Furulund, 13,200

Population development edit

 
The Turning Torso in Malmö, the second tallest building in Sweden.[63]

It has been estimated that around 1570, Scania had about 110,000 inhabitants.[64] But before the plague in the middle of the 14th century the population of all Danish territory east of Øresund (Scania, Island of Bornholm, Blekinge and Halland) may have exceeded 250,000.

The figures here are from two different sources.[65][66]

Year Population Year Population Year Population
1620 126,000 1820 312,000 1930 757,000
1699 142,000 1830 350,000 1940 778,000
1718 152,000 1840 388,000 1950 843,000
1735 180,000 1850 443,000 1960 882,000
1750 197,000 1860 494,000 1970 983,000
1760 202,000 1870 538,000 1980 1,023,000
1772 216,000 1880 580,000 1990 1,068,000
1780 231,000 1890 591,000 2000 1,129,000
1795 250,000 1900 628,000 2010 1,228,000
1800 259,000 1910 685,000 2015 1,303,600
1810 275,000 1920 728,000 2016 1,322,200

Hundreds edit

Scania was formerly divided into 23 hundreds.

Climate and seasons edit

 
Location of some SMHI temperature stations in Scania

Scania has the mildest climate in Sweden, but there are some local differences.

The table shows average temperatures in degrees Celsius at ten Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (SMHI) weather stations in Scania and three stations further north for comparison issues. Average temperature in this case means the average of the temperature taken throughout both day and night unlike the more usual daily maximum or minimum average. This is done for specific measured periods of thirty years. The last period began at 1 January 1961 and ended at 31 December 1990. The current such period started at 1 January 1991 and will end by 31 December 2020. At that time it will be possible to with a high degree of mathematical certainty to measure possible climate changes, by comparing two separate periods of 30 years with each other.

st.no Station Approx Latitude Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual
5320 Smygehuk 55 −0.1 −0.3 1.4 4.6 9.4 14.0 15.6 15.7 12.9 9.4 5.2 1.7 7.5
5223 Falsterbo 55 0.3 0.0 1.7 5.1 10.1 14.7 16.4 16.4 13.7 10.0 5.7 2.3 8.0
5337 Malmö 2 55.5 0.1 0.0 2.2 6.4 11.6 15.8 17.1 16.8 13.6 9.8 5.3 1.9 8.4
5433 Simrishamn 55.5 −0.1 −0.3 1.7 4.9 9.5 14.6 16.3 16.1 13.1 9.2 4.9 1.6 7.6
5251 Örja 55.5 0.0 0.0 2.2 6.1 11.5 15.3 16.5 16.7 13.5 9.4 5.2 2.2 8.2
6203 Helsingborg 56 0.6 −0.1 2.0 6.0 11.2 15.3 16.7 16.6 13.6 9.9 5.2 1.8 8.3
5343 Lund 55.5 −0.6 −0.5 2.0 6.0 11.5 15.4 16.8 16.5 13.1 9.1 4.5 1.1 7.9
5353 Hörby 55.5 −1.6 −1.5 1.0 5.4 10.4 14.4 15.5 15.3 11.9 8.0 3.6 0.1 6.9
5455 Kristianstad 55.5 −1.0 −1.0 1.4 5.2 10.3 14.7 16.1 15.7 12.3 8.5 4.0 0.6 7.2
6322 Osby 56 −2.2 −2.1 0.6 5.0 10.5 14.4 15.5 14.9 11.3 7.4 2.8 −0.7 6.5
For comparison, some northern locations within Sweden
9749 Stockholm Arlanda 60 −4.4 −4.6 -1.0 4.0 10.2 14.9 16.3 15.2 10.8 6.4 1.2 -2.9 5.5
12731 Sundsvall 62.5 −9.0 −7.9 −3.1 2.0 7.8 13.4 15.3 14.0 9.4 4.5 −2.0 −6.7 3.1
16268 Luleå 66 −11.5 −10.7 −6.0 0.1 6.4 13.0 15.5 13.6 8.3 3.0 −4.0 −9.0 1.6

[67] All three of the northern locations are at low altitude and fairly close to the Baltic Sea.

Compared with locations further north, the Scanian climate differs primary by being far less cold during the winter and in having longer springs and autumns. While the July temperatures does not differ much (see table above).

The highest temperature ever recorded in the province is 36.0 °C (97 °F) (Ängelholm, 30 July 1947) and the lowest ever recorded is −34 °C (−29 °F) (Stehag, 26 January 1942) Temperatures below −15 °C (5 °F) are relatively rare even at night, while summer temperatures above 30 °C (86 °F) occurs once in a while every summer. Precipitation is spread fairly evenly, both across the province and during the year.

Slightly more precipitation falls during July and August than during the other months.

Winter edit

A typical winter, with average temperatures around the freezing point during January and February, means that a period of mild weather (often windy or/and rainy) is followed by a colder period (when precipitation falls as snow)—and then the mild weather returns etc., rather than a stable temperature close to zero degrees. During the colder periods, the temperature often is below freezing point also during daytime while during the milder periods temperatures below freezing point are unusual even at night. During the mild periods temperatures slightly below freezing point only occur if the night is both calm and free of clouds. If the same circumstances occur during a cold period, the nights can get very cold though. All together this adds up to a 24 hrs/day "winter average" of around 0 degrees In the north-eastern corner (and at the top of the ridges) the winter is in general notably colder though, and a snow cover may last for weeks.

Spring edit

March is locally known as the first month of the spring. The colder periods are fewer and sunny days may even feel pleasant. During April and early May temperature rises rather fast. Though spring (especially in the sense "first heat") arrives later compared to northernmost Germany and Poland. This is particularly notable in the south-eastern corner. This is explained by the open coastline and low temperatures in the Baltic sea. Øresund is both narrow and shallow, and gets warmer faster. The most common Scanian tree, the beech, usually comes into leaf during the last days of April or the first days of May, but is often delayed by 10–14 days in the south-east, due to the Baltic Sea chill factor.

Summer edit

Unlike the other seasons, summer is not warmer in Scania compared to many other Swedish provinces. As in winter, the weather usually changes between periods that either are sunny and fairly hot (up to 30 degrees, even higher away from the coastlines), and periods of unstable cloudy and cooler weather. The time between sunset and sunrise during June and earliest July is less than 7 hours, and both the dawn and the dusk are rather long as well. However, there are still a few hours of real night. Further north in Sweden there is no real night, as dusk turns into dawn. (In northernmost Sweden, the sun does not set at all for around two months.)

Autumn edit

The autumn in Scania is a slow process, compared with more northern parts of Sweden (but a faster one, when comparing with any part of the British Isles). During the first half of September, temperatures usually are not so much affected, but the sunset is obviously earlier compared with in June. Temperatures drop in steps. Every new period with sunny weather becomes a bit cooler than the last one. By the end of October the defoliation process becomes evident. But not until late November have all the trees lost their leaves. The period when storms and even hurricanes becomes most likely to occur is between November and February. Most hurricanes come from the Atlantic Ocean and do not involve snow or temperatures below freezing point. Late Scanian autumn is in general benefited from the surrounding waters (the opposite effect early spring).

Culture edit

 
Traditional half-timbered farm house of the southern plains in Scania.

Scania's long-running and sometimes intense trade relations with other communities along the coast of the European continent through history have made the culture of Scania distinct from other geographical regions of Sweden. Its open landscape, often described as a colourful patchwork quilt of wheat and rapeseed fields, and the relatively mild climate at the southern tip of the Scandinavian Peninsula, have inspired many Swedish artists and authors to compare it to European regions like Provence in southern France and Zeeland in the Netherlands.[68] Among the many authors who have described the "foreign" continental elements of the Scanian landscape, diet and customs are August Strindberg and Carl Linnaeus. In 1893 August Strindberg wrote about Scania: "In beautiful, large wave lines, the fields undulate down toward the lake; a small deciduous forest limits the coastline, which is given the inviting look of the Riviera, where people shall walk in the sun, protected from the north wind. [...] The Swede leaves the plains with a certain sense of comfort, because its beauty is foreign to him." In another chapter he states: "The Swedes have a history that is not the history of the South Scandinavians. It must be just as foreign as Vasa's history is to the Scanian."[69]

In Ystad, singer-songwriter Michael Saxell's popular Scanian anthem Om himlen och Österlen (Of Heaven and Österlen), the flat, rolling hill landscape is described as appearing to be a little closer to heaven and the big, unending sky.

Scania's historical connection to Denmark, the vast fertile plains, the deciduous forests and the relatively mild climate make the province culturally and physically distinct from the emblematic Swedish cultural landscape of forests and small hamlets.[70]

Architecture edit

 
The house of magistrate Jacob Hansen in Helsingborg, built in 1641.
 
The Old Church of Södra Åsum in Sjöbo Municipality — a typical example of a medieval Danish Scanian church.

Traditional Scanian architecture is shaped by the limited availability of wood; it incorporates different applications of the building technique called half-timbering. In the cities, the infill of the façades consisted of bricks,[71] whereas the country-side half-timbered houses had infill made of clay and straw.[72] Unlike many other Scanian towns, the town of Ystad has managed to preserve a rather large core of its half-timbered architecture in the city center—over 300 half-timbered houses still exist today.[73] Many of the houses in Ystad were built in the renaissance style that was common in the entire Øresund Region, and which has also been preserved in Elsinore (Helsingør). Among Ystad's half-timbered houses is the oldest such building in Scandinavia, Pilgrändshuset from 1480.[74]

In Göinge, located in the northern part of Scania, the architecture was not shaped by a scarcity of wood, and the pre-17th-century farms consisted of graying, recumbent timber buildings around a small grass and cobblestone courtyard. Only a small number of the original Göinge farms remain today. During two campaigns, the first in 1612 by Gustav II Adolf and the second by Charles XI in the 1680s, entire districts were levelled by fire.[75] In Örkened Parish, in what is now eastern Osby Municipality, the buildings were destroyed to punish the different villages for their protection of members of the Snapphane movement in the late 17th century.[76] An original, 17th century Göinge farm, Sporrakulla Farm, has been preserved in a forest called Kullaskogen, a nature reserve close to Glimåkra in Östra Göinge. According to the local legend, the farmer saved the farm in the first raid of 1612 by setting a forest fire in front of it, making the Swedish troops believe that the farm had already been plundered and set ablaze.[77]

A number of Scanian towns flourished during the Viking Age. The city of Lund is believed to have been founded by the Viking-king Sweyn Forkbeard.[78] Scanian craftsmen and traders were prospering during this era and Denmark's first and largest mint was established in Lund. The first Scanian coins have been dated to 870 AD.[79] The archaeological excavations performed in the city indicate that the oldest known stave church in Scania was built by Sweyn Forkbeard in Lund in 990.[80] In 1103, Lund was made the archbishopric for all of Scandinavia.[81]

Many of the old churches in today's Scanian landscape stem from the medieval age, although many church renovations, extensions and destruction of older buildings took place in the 16th and 19th century. From those that have kept features of the authentic style, it is still possible to see how the medieval, Romanesque or Renaissance churches of Danish Scania looked like. Many Scanian churches have distinctive crow-stepped gables and sturdy church porches, usually made of stone.

The first version of Lund Cathedral was built in 1050, in sandstone from Höör, on the initiative of Canute the Holy.[81] The oldest parts of today's cathedral are from 1085, but the actual cathedral was constructed during the first part of the 12th century with the help of stone cutters and sculptors from the Rhine valley and Italy, and was ready for use in 1123. It was consecrated in 1145 and for the next 400 years, Lund became the ecclesiastical power center for Scandinavia and one of the most important cities in Denmark.[80] The cathedral was altered in the 16th century by architect Adam van Düren and later by Carl Georg Brunius and Helgo Zetterwall.

 
Lund skyline, with the Cathedral towers.

Scania also has churches built in the gothic style, such as Saint Petri Church in Malmö, dating from the early 14th century. Similar buildings can be found in all Hansa cities around the Baltic Sea (such as Helsingborg and Rostock). The parishes in the countryside did not have the means for such extravagant buildings. Possibly the most notable countryside church is the ancient and untouched stone church in Dalby. It is the oldest stone church in Sweden, built around the same time as Lund cathedral. After the Lund Cathedral was built, many of the involved workers travelled around the province and used their acquired skills to make baptism fonts, paintings and decorations, and naturally architectural constructions.

 
Vittskövle Castle.

Scania has 240 palaces and country estates—more than any other province in Sweden.[82] Many of them received their current shape during the 16th century, when new or remodelled castles started to appear in greater numbers, often erected by the reuse of stones and material from the original 11th–15th-century castles and abbeys found at the estates. Between 1840 and 1900, the landed nobility in Scania built and rebuilt many of the castles again, often by modernizing previous buildings at the same location in a style that became typical for Scania. The style is a mixture of different architectural influences of the era, but frequently refers back to the style of the 16th-century castles of the Reformation era, a time when the large estates of the Catholic Church were made Crown property and the abbeys bartered or sold to members of the aristocracy by the Danish king.[83] For many of the 19th century remodels, Danish architects were called in. According to some scholars, the driving force behind the use of historical Scanian architecture, as interpreted by 19th century Danish architects using Dutch Renaissance style, was a wish to refer back to an earlier era when the aristocracy had special privileges and political power in relation to the Danish king.[84]

Language, literature, and art edit

Scanian dialects have various local native idioms and speech patterns, and realizes diphthongs and South Scandinavian Uvular trill, as opposed to the supradental /r/-sound characteristic of spoken Standard Swedish. They are very similar to the dialect of Danish spoken in Bornholm, Denmark. The prosody of the Scanian dialects has more in common with German, Danish and Dutch (and sometimes also with English, although to a lesser extent) than with the prosody of central Swedish dialects.[85]

Famous Scanian authors include Victoria Benedictsson, (1850–1888) from Domme, Trelleborg, who wrote about the inequality of women in the 19th century society, but who also authored regional stories about Scania, such as Från Skåne of 1884; Ola Hansson[86] (1860–1925) from Hönsinge, Trelleborg; Vilhelm Ekelund (1880–1949) from Stehag, Eslöv; Fritiof Nilsson Piraten (1895–1972) from Vollsjö, Sjöbo; Hjalmar Gullberg (1898–1961) from Malmö; Artur Lundkvist (1906–1991) from Hagstad, Perstorp; Hans Alfredsson (1931–2017) and Jacques Werup (1945–2016), both from Malmö. Birgitta Trotzig (1929–2011) from Gothenburg has written several historic novels set in Scania, such as The Exposed of 1957, which describes life in 17th century Scania with a primitive country priest as its main character and the 1961 novel A Tale from the Coast, which recounts a legend about human suffering and is set in Scania in the 15th century. Gabriel Jönsson (1892–1984) from Ålabodarna, Landskrona.

A printing-house was established in the city of Malmö in 1528. It became instrumental in the propagation of new ideas and during the 16th century, Malmö became the center for the Danish reformation.[87]

 
Traditional Scanian nuptial array according to Auguste Racinet, in Le costume historique.

Scanian culture, as expressed through the medium of textile art, has received international attention during the last decade.[88] The art form, often referred to as Scanian Marriage Weavings, flourished from 1750 for a period of 100 years, after which it slowly vanished. Consisting of small textile panels mainly created for wedding ceremonies, the art is strongly symbolic, often expressing ideas about fertility, longevity and a sense of hope and joy.[89] The Scanian artists were female weavers working at home, who had learned to weave at a young age, often in order to have a marriage chest filled with beautiful tapestries as a dowry.[90]

According to international collectors and art scholars, the Scanian patterns are of special interest for the striking similarities with Roman, Byzantine and Asian art. The designs are studied by art historians tracing how portable decorative goods served as transmitters of art concepts from culture to culture, influencing designs and patterns along the entire length of the ancient trade routes.[90] The Scanian textiles show how goods traded along the Silk Road brought Coptic, Anatolian, and Chinese designs and symbols into the folk art of far away regions like Scania, where they were reinterpreted and integrated into the local culture. Some of the most ancient designs in Scanian textile art are pairs of birds facing a tree with a "great bird" above, often symbolized simply by its wings.[90] Regionally derived iconography include mythological Scanian river horses in red (Swedish: bäckahästar), with horns on their foreheads and misty clouds from their nostrils.[90] The horse motif has been traced to patterns on 4th- and 5th-century Egyptian fabrics, but in Scanian art it is transformed to illustrate the Norse river horse of Scanian folklore.[91]

Dukes edit

The title of duke was reintroduced in Sweden in 1772 and since this time, Swedish princes have been created dukes of various provinces, although the titles are purely nominal.

The Dukes of Scania have been:

From his marriage, in 1905, King Gustaf VI Adolf had his summer residence at Sofiero Palace in Helsingborg. He and his family spent their summers there, and the cabinet meetings held there during the summer months forced the ministers to arrive by night train from Stockholm. He died at Helsingborg Hospital in 1973.

Sports edit

Football has always been the most popular arena and team sport within the province, from attendances not least[citation needed]. Clubs are administered by Skånes Fotbollförbund.

Malmö FF has won Allsvenskan 23 times, Helsingborg IF 7 times and was one of the twelve clubs in the league's very first season, 1924/25. Also Landskrona BoIS was among the twelve original clubs, but has never won. These three clubs are historically the most famous football clubs in Scania. But also IFK Malmö, Stattena IF, Råå IF (the latter two clubs are both from Helsingborg) as well as Trelleborgs FF have participated.

Handball is also a relatively popular team sport, whilst Basketball never really has gained much interest.

Ice hockey was for a long time thought of as a sport of northern Sweden, but has nevertheless became a popular attendance sport too. Malmö Redhawks has even become Swedish Champions twice, but also Rögle BK (from Ängelholm) have participated at the highest level of Swedish ice hockey during quite a lot of seasons.

Rugby is played in Scania by the Skåne Crusaders who play in the Sweden Rugby League.

The overwhelmingly largest sport related events in both Scanian as well as Swedish history, were however the motorcycle Saxtorp TT-races during the 1930s, which most of the years gathered crowds of 150.000 or more.[citation needed]

Tennis is associated with Båstad during the Swedish Open.

Golf is the most popular sport to exercise after a certain age, at least. Scania has a large amount of golf courses, of which Barsebäck Golf & Country Club is the most well-known. Most Golf courses are open also during the winter, but may sometimes close temporarily in cases of snowy periods.[citation needed]

See also edit

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  79. ^ Hauberg, P. (1900). Myntforhold og Udmyntninger i Danmark indtil 1146. D. Kgl. Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Skr., 6. Række, historisk og filosofisk Afd. V. I., Chapter III: Danmarks Mynthistorie indtil 1146 20 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine, and Chapter V: Myntsteder 20 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine published online by Gladsaxe Gymnasium. (In Danish). Retrieved 10 January 2007.
  80. ^ a b City of Lund. Touchdowns in the History of Lund 24 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Official site for the City of Lund. Retrieved 10 January 2006.
  81. ^ a b Terra Scaniae. Lunds Domkyrka 31 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. (In Swedish). Retrieved 11 January 2007.
  82. ^ Region Skåne (2006). What is typical Skåne?. Official site. Retrieved 22 January 2007.[dead link]
  83. ^ Terra Scaniae. 1600-talet. (In Swedish). Retrieved 27 January 2007. 30 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  84. ^ Bjurklint Rosenblad, Kajsa. Scenografi för ett ståndsmässigt liv: adelns slottsbyggande i Skåne 1840-1900. Malmö: Sekel, 2005. ISBN 978-91-975222-3-6. Abstract in English at Scripta Academica Lundensia, Lund University. 23 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  85. ^ Gårding, Eva (1974). "Talar skåningarna svenska?" (Do Scanians speak Swedish?). Svenskans beskrivning. Ed. Christer Platzack. Lund: Institutionen för nordiska språk, 1973, p 107, 112. (In Swedish)
  86. ^ "Poems" of 1884 and "Notturno" of 1885 celebrate the natural beauty and folkways of Scania. The result of a globetrotting life style, Ola Hansson's later poetry had various continental influences, but like many other Scanian writers', his authorship often reflected the tension between cosmopolitan culture and regionalism. For larger trends and a historic perspective on Scanian literature, see Vinge, Louise (ed.) Skånes litteraturhistoria del I, ISBN 978-91-564-1048-2, and Skånes litteraturhistoria del II, ISBN 978-91-564-1049-9, Corona: Malmö, 1996–1997. (In Swedish).
  87. ^ Infotek Öresund. Litteraturhistoria, Malmö 5 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Fact sheet produced by Infotek Öresund, a cooperative project between the public libraries of Helsingborg, Elsinore, Copenhagen and Malmö, published online by Malmö Public Library, 4 November 2005. (In Swedish).
  88. ^ See for example: and . Scanian textiles from the Khalili Collection exhibited at the Swedish Cultural Centre in Paris and the Boston University Art Gallery. Retrieved 15 January 2007. . Archived from the original on 18 January 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  89. ^ Keelan, Major Andrew and Wendy Keelan. The Khalili Collection - An Introduction. The Khalili Family Trust. Retrieved 15 January 2007. 18 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  90. ^ a b c d Hansen, Viveka (1997). Swedish Textile Art: Traditional Marriage Weavings from Skåne. Nour Foundation: 1997. ISBN 978-1-874780-07-6.
  91. ^ Lundström, Lena (2003). "Vattenväsen i väverskans händer". Curator's description of the exhibition "Aqvaväsen" at Trelleborgs Museum in Vårt Trelleborg, 2:2003, pp. 20-21. Available online in pdf format 26 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine. (In Swedish).

General references edit

  • Albertsson, Rolf (2007). "Half-timbered houses". Malmö 1692 - a historical project. Malmö City Culture Department and Museum of Foteviken. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  • Anderson, Carl Edlund (1999). Formation and Resolution of Ideological Contrast in the Early History of Scandinavia. PhD dissertation, Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse & Celtic (Faculty of English), University of Cambridge, 1999.
  • Björk, Gert and Henrik Persson. "Fram för ett öppet och utåtriktat Skåne". Sydsvenskan, 20 May 2000. Reproduced by FSF. (In Swedish). Retrieved 3 April 2008.
  • Bjurklint Rosenblad, Kajsa (2005). Scenografi för ett ståndsmässigt liv: adelns slottsbyggande i Skåne 1840-1900. Malmö: Sekel, 2005. ISBN 978-91-975222-3-6.
  • Bonney, Richard (1995). Economic Systems and State Finance. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820545-6.
  • Craig, David J. (2003). "Monument to Love". Boston University Bridge, 29 August 2003,• Vol. VII, No. 1. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  • Danish National Archives (2006). . (In Danish). Retrieved 20 October 2006.
  • City of Lund (2006).. Retrieved 10 January 2006.
  • Gårding, Eva (1974). "Talar skåningarna svenska". Svenskans beskrivning. Ed. Christer Platzack. Lund: Institutionen för nordiska språk, 1973. (In Swedish)
  • Germundsson, Tomas (2005). "Regional Cultural Heritage versus National Heritage in Scania's Disputed National Landscape." International Journal of Heritage Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1, March 2005. ISSN 1470-3610.
  • Hansen, Viveka (1997). Swedish Textile Art: Traditional Marriage Weavings from Scania. Nour Foundation: 1997. ISBN 978-1-874780-07-6.
  • Hauberg, P. (1900). Myntforhold og Udmyntninger i Danmark indtil 1146. D. Kgl. Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Skr., 6. Række, historisk og filosofisk Afd. V. I., , and , Gladsaxe Gymnasium. (In Danish). Retrieved 10 January 2007.
  • Haugen, Einar (1976). The Scandinavian Languages: An Introduction to Their History. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1976.
  • Helle, Knut, ed. (2003). The Cambridge History of Scandinavia. Cambridge University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0-521-47299-9.
  • Hogan, C.M. (2004). Kullaberg environmental analysis. Lumina Technologies, Aberdeen Library Archives, Aberdeen, Scotland, 17 July 2004.
  • Jespersen, Knud J. V. (2004) . A History of Denmark. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-65917-5.
  • Keelan, Major Andrew and Wendy Keelan (2006). . The Khalili Family Trust. Retrieved 1 April 2008.
  • Lidmar-Bergström, Karna and Jens-Ove Näslund (2005). "Uplands and Lowlands in Southern Sweden". The Physical Geography of Fennoscandia. Ed. Matti Seppälä. Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0-19-924590-1.
  • Lindquist, Herman (1995). Historien om Sverige – storhet och fall. Norstedts Förlag, 2006. ISBN 978-91-1-301535-4. (In Swedish).
  • Linnaeus, Carl (1750). Skånska resa. (In Swedish).
  • Lund University School of Aviation (2005). . Retrieved 22 January 2007.
  • Lundström, Lena (2003). "Vattenväsen i väverskans händer". Vårt Trelleborg, 2:2003. (In Swedish).
  • Malmö Public Library (2005). . Infotek Öresund, 4 November 2005. (In Swedish).
  • Nevéus, Clara and Bror Jacques de Wærn (1992). Ny svensk vapenbok. Riksarkivet 1992. (In Swedish)
  • Olin, Martin (2005). . Kungliga rum – maktmanifestation och distribution. Historikermöte 2005, Uppsala University. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  • Olwig, Kenneth R. (2005). "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.
  • Oresundstid (2008). "The Swedification of Scania", "Renaissance Houses: Half-timbered houses". Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  • Österberg, Klas (2001). Forest - Geographical Regions 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine. The Swedish Environmental Protection Agency, 25 January 2001. Retrieved 4 November 2006.
  • Østergård, Uffe (1997). "The Geopolitics of Nordic Identity – From Composite States to Nation States". The Cultural Construction of Norden. Øystein Sørensen and Bo Stråth (eds.), Oslo: Scandinavian University Press 1997.
  • Peter, Laurence (2006). "Bridge shapes new Nordic hub". BBC News, 14 September 2006. Retrieved 20 October 2006.
  • Region Skåne (2007). , Democracy-Increased autonomy.What is typical Skåne?. Retrieved 22 January 2007.
  • Sawyer, Birgit; Sawyer, Peter H. (1993). Medieval Scandinavia: from Conversion to Reformation, Circa 800–1500. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-1739-5.
  • SCB (2007). "Skördar". Jordbruksstatistisk årsbok 2006. Statiska Centralbyrån. (In Swedish). Retrieved 10 January 2007.
  • Skåne Regional Council (1999). Newsletter., No. 2, 1999.
  • Stadin, Kekke (2005). "The Masculine Image of a Great Power: Representations of Swedish imperial power c. 1630–1690". Scandinavian Journal of History, Vol. 30, No. 1. March 2005, pp. 61–82. ISSN 0346-8755.
  • Stiftelsen för fritidsområden i Skåne (2006).. Breanäsleden (In Swedish), . The Foundation for Recreational Areas in Skåne and Region Skåne. Retrieved 11 April 2008.
  • Strindberg, August (1893). "Skånska landskap med utvikningar". Prosabitar från 1890-talet. Bonniers, Stockholm, 1917. (In Swedish).
  • SAOB (2008). Skåneland.(In Swedish). Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  • Sorens, Jason (2005). "The Cross-Sectional Determinants of Secessionism in Advanced Democracies". Comparative Political Studies. 38 (3): 304–326. doi:10.1177/0010414004272538. S2CID 145636533.
  • Språk- och Folkminnesinstitutet (2003). Svenskt Ortnamnslexikon. Uppsala, 2003. (In Swedish)
  • Tägil, Sven (2000). "Regions in Europe – a historical perspective". In Border Regions in Comparison. Ed. Hans-Åke Persson. Studentlitteratur, Lund. ISBN 978-91-44-01858-4.
  • Terra Scaniae (2008). , , , , , .(In Swedish). Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  • Upton, Anthony F. (1998). Charles XI and Swedish Absolutism, 1660–1697. Cambridge University Press, 1998. ISBN 978-0-521-57390-0.
  • Vinge, Louise (ed.) Skånes litteraturhistoria, Corona: Malmö, 1996–1997, Part I, ISBN 978-91-564-1048-2, and Part II, ISBN 978-91-564-1049-9. (In Swedish).
  • Ystad Municipality (2007). and . A walk through the centuries. Retrieved 16 January 2007.

External links edit

Official links edit

  • – The County council
  • Scania's Public Recreational Areas 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine – Region Skåne's public forests and parks
  • – Business Region Skåne's official website for culture, heritage and tourism
  • Länsstyrelsen – County Administration Board
  • Skåneleden – Public nature trails through Scania

Organizations edit

  • – The regional body of the Oresund Region
  • – Museum in Kristianstad
  • Kommunförbundet Skåne – A cooperation between Scania's 33 municipalities
  • Skånes hembygdsförbund (in Swedish) – Heritage conservation organization
  • Terra Scaniae 10 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine – History project established for Scanian schools, financed with subsidies from Skåne Regional Council.

scania, vehicle, manufacturer, other, uses, skåne, disambiguation, disambiguation, skan, also, known, native, name, skåne, swedish, ˈskôːnɛ, danish, ˈskɔːnə, southernmost, historical, provinces, landskap, sweden, located, south, geographical, region, götaland,. For the vehicle manufacturer see Scania AB For other uses see Skane disambiguation and Scania disambiguation Scania ˈ s k ae n i e SKAN ee e also known by its native name of Skane 3 Swedish ˈskoːnɛ Danish ˈskɔːne is the southernmost of the historical provinces landskap of Sweden Located in the south tip of the geographical region of Gotaland the province is roughly conterminous with Skane County created in 1997 Like the other former provinces of Sweden Scania still features in colloquial speech and in cultural references and can therefore not be regarded as an archaic concept Within Scania there are 33 municipalities that are autonomous within the Skane Regional Council Scania s largest city Malmo is the third largest city in Sweden as well as the fifth largest in Scandinavia Scania SkaneHistorical provinceFlagCoat of armsCoordinates 55 48 N 13 37 E 55 800 N 13 617 E 55 800 13 617Country SwedenLandGotalandCountySkane CountyLargest cityMalmoArea 1 Total10 939 km2 4 224 sq mi Population 31 December 2020 2 Total1 389 336 Density130 km2 330 sq mi Ethnicity LanguageSwedish DialectScanianCulture FlowerOxeye daisy AnimalRed deer BirdRed kite FishEelTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal codes20000 29999Area codes040 046To the north Scania borders the former provinces of Halland and Smaland to the northeast Blekinge to the east and south the Baltic Sea and to the west Oresund Since 2000 a road and railway bridge the Oresund Bridge 4 bridges the Sound and connects Scania with Denmark Scania forms part of the transnational Oresund Region 5 From north to south Scania is around 130 km it covers less than 3 of Sweden s total area The population of over 1 340 000 6 represents 13 of the country s population With 121 inhabitants per square kilometre 310 sq mi Scania is the second most densely populated province of Sweden Historically Scania formed part of the kingdom of Denmark until the signing of the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658 7 Denmark regained control of the province 1676 1679 during the Scanian War and again briefly in 1711 during the Great Northern War Scania has been an undisputed part of Sweden since 1720 8 9 Contents 1 Name 1 1 Endonym and exonyms 1 2 Etymology 2 Administration 3 Heraldry 3 1 Coat of arms 4 History 5 Politics 6 Transportation 7 Geography and environmental factors 7 1 Geology and geomorphology 7 2 Vegetation and vegetation zones 7 3 National parks 7 4 Extremes 8 Population 8 1 Population around Oresund 8 2 Cities 8 3 Population development 8 4 Hundreds 9 Climate and seasons 9 1 Winter 9 2 Spring 9 3 Summer 9 4 Autumn 10 Culture 10 1 Architecture 10 2 Language literature and art 11 Dukes 12 Sports 13 See also 14 Citations 15 General references 16 External links 16 1 Official links 16 2 OrganizationsName editEndonym and exonyms edit The endonym used in Swedish and other North Germanic languages is Skane formerly spelled Skaane in Danish and Norwegian The Latinized form Scania is an exonym in English 3 Sometimes the endonym Skane is used in English text such as in tourist information 10 even sometimes as Skane with the diacritic omitted 11 12 Scania as also Dalarna is one of the few Swedish provinces for which exonyms are widely used in many languages such as French Scanie Dutch and German Schonen Polish Skania Spanish Escania Italian Scania etc For the province s modern administrative counterpart Skane lan the endonym Skane is used in English 13 In the Alfredian translation of Orosius s and Wulfstan s travel accounts the Old English form Sconeg appears 14 15 Frankish sources mention a place called Sconaowe AEthelweard an Anglo Saxon historian wrote about Scani 16 and in Beowulf s fictional account the names Scedenige and Scedeland appear as names for what is a Danish land 14 Etymology edit The names Scania and Scandinavia are considered to have the same etymology 17 18 19 20 The southernmost tip of what is today Sweden was called Scania by the Romans and thought to be an island The actual etymology of the word remains dubious and has long been a matter of debate among scholars The name is possibly derived from the Germanic root Skadin awja which appears in Old Norse as Skaney ˈskɑːnˌœy 21 According to some scholars the Germanic stem can be reconstructed as Skadan meaning danger or damage English scathing German Schaden Swedish skada 22 Skanor in Scania with its long Falsterbo reef has the same stem skan combined with or which means sandbanks Administration editSee also Skane County Region Skane Counties of Sweden and Municipalities of Sweden nbsp The two counties of Scania from 1719 to 1996Between 1719 and 1996 the province was subdivided in two administrative counties lan Kristianstad County and Malmohus County each under a governor landshovding appointed by the central government of Sweden When the first local government acts took effect in 1863 each county also got an elected county council landsting The counties were further divided into municipalities The local government reform of 1952 reduced the number of municipalities and a second subdivision reform carried out between 1968 and 1974 established today s 33 municipalities 23 Swedish kommuner in Scania The municipalities have municipal governments similar to city commissions and are further divided into parishes forsamlingar The parishes are primarily entities of the Church of Sweden but they also serve as a divisioning measure for the Swedish population registration and other statistical uses In 1999 the county council areas were amalgamated forming Skane Regional Council Region Skane responsible mainly for public healthcare public transport and regional planning and culture Heraldry editSee also Swedish heraldry and Danish heraldry nbsp Letter from Eric of Pomerania dated 1437 with a description of the arms granted to the city of Malmo nbsp The coat of arms of Scania in an engraving from 1712 in Erik Dahlbergh s Suecia Antiqua et Hodierna During the Danish era the province had no coat of arms In Sweden however every province had been represented by heraldic arms since 1560 24 When Charles X Gustav of Sweden suddenly died in 1660 a coat of arms had to be created for the newly acquired province as each province was to be represented by its arms at his royal funeral After an initiative from Baron Gustaf Bonde the Lord High Treasurer of Sweden the coat of arms of the City of Malmo was used as a base for the new provincial arms The Malmo coat of arms had been granted in 1437 during the Kalmar Union by Eric of Pomerania and contains a Pomeranian griffin s head To distinguish it from the city s coat of arms the tinctures were changed and the official blazon for the provincial arms is in English Or a griffin s head erased gules crowned azure and armed azure when it should be armed The province was divided in two administrative counties 1719 1996 Coats of arms were created for these entities also using the griffin motif The new Skane County operative from 1 January 1997 got a coat of arms that is the same as the province s but with reversed tinctures When the county arms is shown with a Swedish royal crown it represents the County Administrative Board which is the regional presence of central government authority In 1999 the two county councils landsting were amalgamated forming Region Skane It is the only one of its kind using a heraldic coat of arms It is also the same as the province s and the county s but with a golden griffin s head on a blue shield 25 The 33 municipalities within the county also have coats of arms The Scania Griffin has become a well known symbol for the province and is also used by commercial enterprises It is for instance included in the logotypes of the automotive manufacturer Scania AB and the airline Malmo Aviation Coat of arms edit nbsp City of Malmo 1437 nbsp City of Malmo revised 1974 nbsp Skane 1660 revised 1939 nbsp Kristianstad County revised 1939 nbsp Malmohus County revised 1939 nbsp Skane County 1997 History editHistorical affiliations nbsp Kingdom of Denmark 811 1658 nbsp Kingdom of Sweden 1658 present Main article History of Scania nbsp Ale s Stones a stone ship burial monument from c 500 AD on the coast at Kaseberga around ten kilometres 6 2 miles south east of Ystad nbsp Gerhard von Buhrman s map of Scania 1684 nbsp Map of Scania 1690 nbsp Map of Denmark in the Middle Ages Scania was together with the provinces Blekinge and Halland a part of Denmark nbsp Front page of the latest and current peace treaty between Denmark and Sweden Swedish versionScania was first mentioned in written texts in the 9th century It came under Danish king Harald Bluetooth in the middle of the 10th century It was then a region that included Blekinge and Halland situated on the Scandinavian Peninsula and formed the eastern part of the kingdom of Denmark This geographical position made it the focal point of the frequent Dano Swedish wars for hundreds of years By the Treaty of Roskilde in 1658 all Danish lands east of Oresund were ceded to the Swedish Crown First placed under a Governor General the province was eventually integrated into the kingdom of Sweden The last Danish attempt to regain its lost provinces failed after the 1710 Battle of Helsingborg nbsp Detailed map of Skane 1805In 1719 the province was subdivided in two counties and administered in the same way as the rest of Sweden Scania has since that year been fully integrated in the Swedish nation In the following summer July 1720 the last peace treaty between Sweden and Denmark was signed 26 27 On 28 November 2017 it was ruled that the Scanian flag would become the official flag of Scania 28 29 Politics editDuring Sweden s financial crisis in the early and mid 1990s Scania Vastra Gotaland and Norrbotten were among the hardest hit in the country with high unemployment rates as a result 30 In response to the crisis the County Governors were given a task by the government in September 1996 to co ordinate various measures in the counties to increase economic growth and employment by bringing in regional actors 30 The first proposal for regional autonomy and a regional parliament had been introduced by the Social Democratic Party s local districts in Scania and Vastra Gotaland already in 1993 When Sweden joined the European Union two years later the concept Regions of Europe came in focus and a more regionalist friendly approach was adopted in national politics 31 These factors contributed to the subsequent transformation of Skane County into one of the first trial regions in Sweden in 1999 established as the country s first regional experiment 31 The relatively strong regional identity in Scania is often referred to in order to explain the general support in the province for the decentralization efforts introduced by the Swedish government 32 On the basis of large scale interview investigations about Region Skane in Scania scholars have found that the prevailing trend among the inhabitants of Scania is to look upon their region with more positive eyes and a firm reliance that it would deliver the goods in terms of increased democracy and constructive results out of economic planning 33 Transportation edit nbsp The motorway through western Scania E6 here at motorway service Glumslov is the artery of the western part of the province nbsp All local regional and inter regional train services within Scania 2018 In all 72 stations are served during day times at least one train per hour and direction Many stations especially in the west have far better service than so The busiest part is between Hyllie Malmo and Lund Electrified dual track railroad exists from the border with Denmark at the Oresund Bridge to Malmo and onwards to Lund The latter part is currently being upgraded to four tracks and expected to enter service in 2023 34 In Lund the tracks split into two directions 35 The dual tracks going towards Gothenburg end at Helsingborg 36 while the other branch continues beyond the provincial border to neighbouring Smaland close to Killeberg 37 35 This latter dual track continues to mid Sweden 35 There are also a few single track railroads connecting cities like Trelleborg Ystad and Kristianstad 35 Just as five Scanian stations are served partly Hassleholm and Osby or entirely Ballingslov Hastveda and Killeberg by Smaland local trains the Scanian Pagatag trains serve Markaryd in Smaland 38 There are basically three ticket systems Skanetrafiken tickets can be purchased for all regional traffic including to Denmark while the Danish Rejsekort system can only be used at stations served by Oresundstag and equipped with special card readers Additionally Swedish national SJ tickets are available for longer trips to the north The E6 motorway is the main artery through the western part of Scania all the way from Trelleborg to the provincial border towards neighbouring Halland It continues along the Swedish west coast to Gothenburg and most of the way to the Norwegian border There are also several other motorways especially around Malmo Since 2000 the economic focus of the region has changed with the opening of a road link across the Oresund Bridge to Denmark 39 The car ferry service between Helsingborg and Helsingor has 70 departures in each direction daily as of 2014 update 40 There are three minor airports in Sturup Angelholm and Kristianstad The nearby Copenhagen Airport which is the largest international airport in the Nordic countries also serves the province 41 Geography and environmental factors edit nbsp Land usage in Scania showing hardwood forests light green pinewood forests dark green fields yellow garden and fruit orange and residential areas red nbsp Aerial view of Scania near Lund nbsp A typical Beech forest the Western edge of Karlslund in Northern Landskrona nbsp Pruned willows and rapefields are typical for this area of Sweden Unlike some regions of Sweden the Scanian landscape is generally not mountainous though a few examples of uncovered cliffs can be found at Hovs Hallar at Kullaberg and on the island Hallands Vadero With the exception of the lake rich and densely forested northern parts Goinge the rolling hills in the north west the Bjare and Kulla peninsulas and the beech wood clad areas extending from the slopes of the horsts a sizeable portion of Scania s terrain consists of plains Its low profile and open landscape distinguish Scania from most other geographical regions of Sweden which consist mainly of waterway rich cool mixed coniferous forests boreal taiga and alpine tundra 42 The province has several lakes but there are relatively few compared to Smaland the province directly to the north Stretching from the north western to the south eastern parts of Scania is a belt of deciduous forests following the Linderodsasen ridge and previously marking the border between Malmohus County and Kristianstad County The much denser fir forests typical of the greater part of Sweden are only found in the north eastern Goinge parts of Scania along the border with the forest dominated province of Smaland While the landscape typically has a slightly sloping profile in some places such as north of Malmo the terrain is almost completely flat The narrow lakes with a long north to south extent which are very common further north are lacking in Scania The largest lake Ivosjon in the north east has similarities with the lakes further north but has a different shape All other lakes tend to be round oval or of more complex shape and also lack any specific cardinal direction Ringsjon in the middle of the province is the largest of such lakes citation needed In the winter some smaller lakes east of Lund often attract young Eurasian sea eagles Haliaeetus albicilla nbsp Typical Scanian coastline here southern peak of Ven island in Oresund The yellow colour indicates sand rather than chalk while white colour at similar cliffs indicates chalk rather than sandWhere the sea meets higher parts of the sloping landscape cliffs emerge Such cliffs are white if the soil has a high content of chalk Good examples of such coastlines exist at the southern side of Ven between the towns of Helsingborg and Landskrona and in parts of the south and south east coasts In other Swedish provinces steep coastlines usually reveal primary rock instead The two major plains Soderslatt in the south west and Osterlen in the south east consist of highly fertile agricultural land The yield per unit area is higher than in any other region in Sweden The Scanian plains are an important resource for Sweden since 25 95 of the total production of various types of cereals come from the region Almost all Swedish sugar beet comes from Scania the plant needs a long vegetation period The same applies also to maize peas and rape grown for its oil although these plants are less imperative in comparison with sugar beets 43 clarification needed The soil is among the most fertile in the world citation needed The Kullaberg Nature Preserve in northwest Scania is home to several rare species including spring vetchling Lathyrus sphaericus 44 Geology and geomorphology edit T he present landscape is a mosaic of landforms shaped during widely different ages Karna Lidmar Bergstrom and co workers 45 The gross relief of Scania reflects more the preglacial development than the erosion and deposits caused by the Quaternary glaciers 45 In Swedish the word as commonly refers to eskers but major landmarks in Scania such as Soderasen are horsts 46 formed by tectonic inversion along the Sorgenfrei Tornquist Zone in the late Cretaceous The Scanian horsts run in a north west to south east direction marking the southwest border of Fennoscandia 47 Tectonic activity of the Sorgenfrei Tornquist Zone during the break up of Pangaea in the Jurassic and Cretaceous epochs led to the formation of hundreds of small volcanoes in central Scania 48 49 Remnants of the volcanoes are still visible today 48 Parallel with volcanism a hilly peneplain formed in northeastern Scania due to weathering and erosion of basement rocks 50 51 The kaolinite formed by this weathering can be observed at Ivo Klack 51 In the Campanian age of the Late Cretaceous a sea level rise led to the complete drowning of Scania Subsequently marine sediments buried old surfaces preserving the rocky shores and hilly terrain of the day 51 52 In the Paleogene period southern Sweden was at a lower position relative to sea level but was likely still above it as it was covered by sediments 45 50 Rivers flowing over the South Smaland peneplain flowed also across Scania which was at the time covered by thick sediments 45 As the relative sea level sank and much of Scania lost its sedimentary cover antecedent rivers begun to incise the Soderasen horst forming valleys 45 During deglaciation these valleys likely evacuated large amounts of melt water 45 The relief of Scania s south western landscape was formed by the accumulation of thick Quaternary sediments during the Quaternary glaciations 47 Vegetation and vegetation zones edit The vast majority of Scania belongs to the European hardwood vegetation zone a considerable part of which is now agricultural rather than the original forest This zone covers Europe west of Poland and north of the Alps and includes the British Isles northern and central France and the countries and regions to the south and southeast of the North Sea up to Denmark A smaller north eastern part of Scania is part of the pinewood vegetation zone in which spruce grows naturally Within the larger part pine may grow together with birch on sandy soil The most common tree is beech Other common trees are willow oak ash alder and elm which until the 1970s formed a few forests but now is heavily infected by the elm disease Also rather southern trees like walnut tree chestnut and hornbeam can be found In parks horse chestnut lime and maple are commonly planted as well Common fruit trees planted in commercial orchards and private gardens include several varieties of apple pear cherry and plum strawberries are commercially cultivated in many locations across the province Examples of wild berries grown in domesticated form are blackberry raspberry cloudberry in the north east blueberry wild strawberry and loganberry National parks edit Three of the 29 National parks of Sweden 53 are situated in Scania Dalby Soderskog 54 Stenshuvud 55 Soderasen 56 Extremes edit Southernmost point Smygehuk Trelleborg Municipality 55 20 N also the southernmost point of Sweden 57 Northernmost point Gransholmen Osby Municipality Westernmost point Kulla udd Hoganas Municipality Easternmost point Nyhult Bromolla Municipality Highest point Highest peak of Soderasen 212 metres Lowest spot Kristianstad 2 7 metres also the lowest spot in all of Sweden Largest lake Ivosjon 55 km2 Largest island Ven 7 5 km2Population edit nbsp Map of the 33 municipalities of Scania The western yellow coloured municipalities close to Oresund have much higher population densities than the eastern onesScania is divided into 33 municipalities with population and land surface as the table below shows There is a large population difference between the western Scania that is located by or close to Oresund sea compared to the middle and eastern parts of the province Population of Scania by municipality 58 Municipality Population April 2013 Land area km2 Population density km2 Municipalities that have a coast on Oresund or border a municipality that does in yellow on the map Bjuv 14 813 115 3 128 5Burlov 17 079 18 9 903 7Eslov 31 761 419 1 75 8Helsingborg 132 254 344 0 384 4Hoganas 24 986 150 8 165 7Kavlinge 29 513 152 6 193 4Landskrona 42 751 148 3 288 3Lomma 22 415 55 6 403 1Lund 118 542 448 5 264 3Malmo 328 494 166 3 1975 2Staffanstorp 22 572 106 8 211 3Svalov 13 217 387 3 34 1Svedala 20 039 218 1 91 9Trelleborg 42 744 339 9 125 8Vellinge 33 725 142 6 236 5Astorp 14 849 92 2 161 0Angelholm 39 836 420 1 95 1Other municipalities in white Bromolla 12 314 162 5 74 4Bastad 14 224 209 8 67 8Hassleholm 50 171 1268 5 39 6Horby 14 882 419 4 35 5Hoor 15 591 290 9 53 6Klippan 16 741 374 3 44 7Kristianstad 80 854 1246 3 64 9Osby 12 704 576 2 22 0Perstorp 7 089 158 8 44 6Simrishamn 18 950 391 4 48 4Sjobo 18 359 492 2 37 3Skurup 14 997 193 6 77 5Tomelilla 12 913 395 9 32 6Ystad 28 562 350 1 81 6Orkelljunga 9 640 319 6 30 1Ostra Goinge 13 609 432 0 31 5 A small part of Bastad municipality is located within the neighbouring province of Halland this includes the village Ostra Karup and some area around it around 500 people live in Bastad municipality but beyond the historical boundaries of the Scanian province The western part of Scania yellow on the map and close to the Oresund sea covers 3201 3 km2 of land and had in April 2013 925 982 inhabitants almost 290 inhabitants km2 The other municipalities cover 7281 3 km2of land and had at the same time only 341 009 inhabitants or 47 inhabitants km2 The same figures for the entire province are 10482 6 km2 1 266 991 inhabitants and 121 inhabitants km2These figures can be compared with around to 21 inhabitants per km2 for entire Sweden Population around Oresund edit Western Scania has a high population density not only by Scandinavian standards but also by average European standards at close to 300 inhabitants per square kilometre But the Danish Copenhagen region at north east Zealand on the other side of Oresund Sea is even more densely populated The north east part of Zealand or the Danish Region Hovedstaden without the Baltic island of Bornholm has a population density of 878 inhabitants km2 most of Greater Copenhagen included By adding the population of western Scania to the same of Metropolitan area of Copenhagen then close to 3 million people live around the Oresund sea within a maximum distance from Oresund of 25 to 30 kilometres at a land surface of approx 6100 km2 approx 460 inhabitants km2 This is in many ways a better measurement of describing the area around Oresund than what the far wider Oresund Region constitutes as the latter includes also eastern Scania whose beaches are Baltic Sea ones and is far less populated as well as all Denmark east of the Great Belt Regardless of counting a smaller area with higher population density or a larger one the Oresund Strait is located in the largest metropolitan area in Scandinavia with Finland Cities edit nbsp Eslov church built 1890 in Neo Gothic style sometimes known in Swedish as Eslov Gothic 59 See also List of towns in Skane Sweden and Urban areas in Sweden nbsp The Oresund Bridge nbsp The Annehem neighborhood in LundIn 1658 the following ten places in Scania were chartered and held town rights Lund since approximately 990 Helsingborg 1085 Falsterbo approximately 1200 Ystad approximately 1200 Skanor approximately 1200 Malmo approximately 1250 Simrishamn approximately 1300 Landskrona 1413 and Kristianstad 1622 Others had existed earlier but lost their privileges Angelholm got new privileges in 1767 and in 1754 Falsterbo and Skanor were merged The concept of municipalities was introduced in Sweden in 1863 making each of the towns a city municipality of its own In the 19th and 20th centuries four more municipalities were granted city status Trelleborg 1867 Eslov 1911 Hassleholm 1914 and Hoganas 1936 The system of city status was abolished in 1971 Over 90 of Scania s population live in urban areas 60 In 2000 the Oresund Bridge the longest combined road and rail bridge in Europe linked Malmo and Copenhagen making Scania s population part of a 3 6 million total population in the Oresund Region In 2005 the region had 9 200 commuters crossing the bridge daily the vast majority of them from Malmo to Copenhagen 61 The following localities had more than 10 000 inhabitants 62 year 2010 Malmo 280 415 Helsingborg 97 122 Lund 82 800 Kristianstad 35 711 Landskrona 30 499 Trelleborg 28 290 Angelholm 23 240 Hassleholm 18 500 Ystad 18 350 Eslov 17 748 Staffanstorp 14 808 Hoganas 14 107 Kavlinge amp Furulund 13 200Population development edit nbsp The Turning Torso in Malmo the second tallest building in Sweden 63 It has been estimated that around 1570 Scania had about 110 000 inhabitants 64 But before the plague in the middle of the 14th century the population of all Danish territory east of Oresund Scania Island of Bornholm Blekinge and Halland may have exceeded 250 000 The figures here are from two different sources 65 66 Year Population Year Population Year Population1620 126 000 1820 312 000 1930 757 0001699 142 000 1830 350 000 1940 778 0001718 152 000 1840 388 000 1950 843 0001735 180 000 1850 443 000 1960 882 0001750 197 000 1860 494 000 1970 983 0001760 202 000 1870 538 000 1980 1 023 0001772 216 000 1880 580 000 1990 1 068 0001780 231 000 1890 591 000 2000 1 129 0001795 250 000 1900 628 000 2010 1 228 0001800 259 000 1910 685 000 2015 1 303 6001810 275 000 1920 728 000 2016 1 322 2002015 data 6 Hundreds edit See also List of hundreds of Sweden Scania was formerly divided into 23 hundreds Climate and seasons edit nbsp Location of some SMHI temperature stations in ScaniaScania has the mildest climate in Sweden but there are some local differences The table shows average temperatures in degrees Celsius at ten Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute SMHI weather stations in Scania and three stations further north for comparison issues Average temperature in this case means the average of the temperature taken throughout both day and night unlike the more usual daily maximum or minimum average This is done for specific measured periods of thirty years The last period began at 1 January 1961 and ended at 31 December 1990 The current such period started at 1 January 1991 and will end by 31 December 2020 At that time it will be possible to with a high degree of mathematical certainty to measure possible climate changes by comparing two separate periods of 30 years with each other st no Station Approx Latitude Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Annual5320 Smygehuk 55 0 1 0 3 1 4 4 6 9 4 14 0 15 6 15 7 12 9 9 4 5 2 1 7 7 55223 Falsterbo 55 0 3 0 0 1 7 5 1 10 1 14 7 16 4 16 4 13 7 10 0 5 7 2 3 8 05337 Malmo 2 55 5 0 1 0 0 2 2 6 4 11 6 15 8 17 1 16 8 13 6 9 8 5 3 1 9 8 45433 Simrishamn 55 5 0 1 0 3 1 7 4 9 9 5 14 6 16 3 16 1 13 1 9 2 4 9 1 6 7 65251 Orja 55 5 0 0 0 0 2 2 6 1 11 5 15 3 16 5 16 7 13 5 9 4 5 2 2 2 8 26203 Helsingborg 56 0 6 0 1 2 0 6 0 11 2 15 3 16 7 16 6 13 6 9 9 5 2 1 8 8 35343 Lund 55 5 0 6 0 5 2 0 6 0 11 5 15 4 16 8 16 5 13 1 9 1 4 5 1 1 7 95353 Horby 55 5 1 6 1 5 1 0 5 4 10 4 14 4 15 5 15 3 11 9 8 0 3 6 0 1 6 95455 Kristianstad 55 5 1 0 1 0 1 4 5 2 10 3 14 7 16 1 15 7 12 3 8 5 4 0 0 6 7 26322 Osby 56 2 2 2 1 0 6 5 0 10 5 14 4 15 5 14 9 11 3 7 4 2 8 0 7 6 5For comparison some northern locations within Sweden9749 Stockholm Arlanda 60 4 4 4 6 1 0 4 0 10 2 14 9 16 3 15 2 10 8 6 4 1 2 2 9 5 512731 Sundsvall 62 5 9 0 7 9 3 1 2 0 7 8 13 4 15 3 14 0 9 4 4 5 2 0 6 7 3 116268 Lulea 66 11 5 10 7 6 0 0 1 6 4 13 0 15 5 13 6 8 3 3 0 4 0 9 0 1 6 67 All three of the northern locations are at low altitude and fairly close to the Baltic Sea Compared with locations further north the Scanian climate differs primary by being far less cold during the winter and in having longer springs and autumns While the July temperatures does not differ much see table above The highest temperature ever recorded in the province is 36 0 C 97 F Angelholm 30 July 1947 and the lowest ever recorded is 34 C 29 F Stehag 26 January 1942 Temperatures below 15 C 5 F are relatively rare even at night while summer temperatures above 30 C 86 F occurs once in a while every summer Precipitation is spread fairly evenly both across the province and during the year Slightly more precipitation falls during July and August than during the other months Winter edit A typical winter with average temperatures around the freezing point during January and February means that a period of mild weather often windy or and rainy is followed by a colder period when precipitation falls as snow and then the mild weather returns etc rather than a stable temperature close to zero degrees During the colder periods the temperature often is below freezing point also during daytime while during the milder periods temperatures below freezing point are unusual even at night During the mild periods temperatures slightly below freezing point only occur if the night is both calm and free of clouds If the same circumstances occur during a cold period the nights can get very cold though All together this adds up to a 24 hrs day winter average of around 0 degrees In the north eastern corner and at the top of the ridges the winter is in general notably colder though and a snow cover may last for weeks Spring edit March is locally known as the first month of the spring The colder periods are fewer and sunny days may even feel pleasant During April and early May temperature rises rather fast Though spring especially in the sense first heat arrives later compared to northernmost Germany and Poland This is particularly notable in the south eastern corner This is explained by the open coastline and low temperatures in the Baltic sea Oresund is both narrow and shallow and gets warmer faster The most common Scanian tree the beech usually comes into leaf during the last days of April or the first days of May but is often delayed by 10 14 days in the south east due to the Baltic Sea chill factor Summer edit Unlike the other seasons summer is not warmer in Scania compared to many other Swedish provinces As in winter the weather usually changes between periods that either are sunny and fairly hot up to 30 degrees even higher away from the coastlines and periods of unstable cloudy and cooler weather The time between sunset and sunrise during June and earliest July is less than 7 hours and both the dawn and the dusk are rather long as well However there are still a few hours of real night Further north in Sweden there is no real night as dusk turns into dawn In northernmost Sweden the sun does not set at all for around two months Autumn edit The autumn in Scania is a slow process compared with more northern parts of Sweden but a faster one when comparing with any part of the British Isles During the first half of September temperatures usually are not so much affected but the sunset is obviously earlier compared with in June Temperatures drop in steps Every new period with sunny weather becomes a bit cooler than the last one By the end of October the defoliation process becomes evident But not until late November have all the trees lost their leaves The period when storms and even hurricanes becomes most likely to occur is between November and February Most hurricanes come from the Atlantic Ocean and do not involve snow or temperatures below freezing point Late Scanian autumn is in general benefited from the surrounding waters the opposite effect early spring Culture edit nbsp Traditional half timbered farm house of the southern plains in Scania Scania s long running and sometimes intense trade relations with other communities along the coast of the European continent through history have made the culture of Scania distinct from other geographical regions of Sweden Its open landscape often described as a colourful patchwork quilt of wheat and rapeseed fields and the relatively mild climate at the southern tip of the Scandinavian Peninsula have inspired many Swedish artists and authors to compare it to European regions like Provence in southern France and Zeeland in the Netherlands 68 Among the many authors who have described the foreign continental elements of the Scanian landscape diet and customs are August Strindberg and Carl Linnaeus In 1893 August Strindberg wrote about Scania In beautiful large wave lines the fields undulate down toward the lake a small deciduous forest limits the coastline which is given the inviting look of the Riviera where people shall walk in the sun protected from the north wind The Swede leaves the plains with a certain sense of comfort because its beauty is foreign to him In another chapter he states The Swedes have a history that is not the history of the South Scandinavians It must be just as foreign as Vasa s history is to the Scanian 69 In Ystad singer songwriter Michael Saxell s popular Scanian anthem Om himlen och Osterlen Of Heaven and Osterlen the flat rolling hill landscape is described as appearing to be a little closer to heaven and the big unending sky Scania s historical connection to Denmark the vast fertile plains the deciduous forests and the relatively mild climate make the province culturally and physically distinct from the emblematic Swedish cultural landscape of forests and small hamlets 70 Architecture edit See also List of castles in Scania nbsp The house of magistrate Jacob Hansen in Helsingborg built in 1641 nbsp The Old Church of Sodra Asum in Sjobo Municipality a typical example of a medieval Danish Scanian church Traditional Scanian architecture is shaped by the limited availability of wood it incorporates different applications of the building technique called half timbering In the cities the infill of the facades consisted of bricks 71 whereas the country side half timbered houses had infill made of clay and straw 72 Unlike many other Scanian towns the town of Ystad has managed to preserve a rather large core of its half timbered architecture in the city center over 300 half timbered houses still exist today 73 Many of the houses in Ystad were built in the renaissance style that was common in the entire Oresund Region and which has also been preserved in Elsinore Helsingor Among Ystad s half timbered houses is the oldest such building in Scandinavia Pilgrandshuset from 1480 74 In Goinge located in the northern part of Scania the architecture was not shaped by a scarcity of wood and the pre 17th century farms consisted of graying recumbent timber buildings around a small grass and cobblestone courtyard Only a small number of the original Goinge farms remain today During two campaigns the first in 1612 by Gustav II Adolf and the second by Charles XI in the 1680s entire districts were levelled by fire 75 In Orkened Parish in what is now eastern Osby Municipality the buildings were destroyed to punish the different villages for their protection of members of the Snapphane movement in the late 17th century 76 An original 17th century Goinge farm Sporrakulla Farm has been preserved in a forest called Kullaskogen a nature reserve close to Glimakra in Ostra Goinge According to the local legend the farmer saved the farm in the first raid of 1612 by setting a forest fire in front of it making the Swedish troops believe that the farm had already been plundered and set ablaze 77 A number of Scanian towns flourished during the Viking Age The city of Lund is believed to have been founded by the Viking king Sweyn Forkbeard 78 Scanian craftsmen and traders were prospering during this era and Denmark s first and largest mint was established in Lund The first Scanian coins have been dated to 870 AD 79 The archaeological excavations performed in the city indicate that the oldest known stave church in Scania was built by Sweyn Forkbeard in Lund in 990 80 In 1103 Lund was made the archbishopric for all of Scandinavia 81 Many of the old churches in today s Scanian landscape stem from the medieval age although many church renovations extensions and destruction of older buildings took place in the 16th and 19th century From those that have kept features of the authentic style it is still possible to see how the medieval Romanesque or Renaissance churches of Danish Scania looked like Many Scanian churches have distinctive crow stepped gables and sturdy church porches usually made of stone The first version of Lund Cathedral was built in 1050 in sandstone from Hoor on the initiative of Canute the Holy 81 The oldest parts of today s cathedral are from 1085 but the actual cathedral was constructed during the first part of the 12th century with the help of stone cutters and sculptors from the Rhine valley and Italy and was ready for use in 1123 It was consecrated in 1145 and for the next 400 years Lund became the ecclesiastical power center for Scandinavia and one of the most important cities in Denmark 80 The cathedral was altered in the 16th century by architect Adam van Duren and later by Carl Georg Brunius and Helgo Zetterwall nbsp Lund skyline with the Cathedral towers Scania also has churches built in the gothic style such as Saint Petri Church in Malmo dating from the early 14th century Similar buildings can be found in all Hansa cities around the Baltic Sea such as Helsingborg and Rostock The parishes in the countryside did not have the means for such extravagant buildings Possibly the most notable countryside church is the ancient and untouched stone church in Dalby It is the oldest stone church in Sweden built around the same time as Lund cathedral After the Lund Cathedral was built many of the involved workers travelled around the province and used their acquired skills to make baptism fonts paintings and decorations and naturally architectural constructions nbsp Vittskovle Castle Scania has 240 palaces and country estates more than any other province in Sweden 82 Many of them received their current shape during the 16th century when new or remodelled castles started to appear in greater numbers often erected by the reuse of stones and material from the original 11th 15th century castles and abbeys found at the estates Between 1840 and 1900 the landed nobility in Scania built and rebuilt many of the castles again often by modernizing previous buildings at the same location in a style that became typical for Scania The style is a mixture of different architectural influences of the era but frequently refers back to the style of the 16th century castles of the Reformation era a time when the large estates of the Catholic Church were made Crown property and the abbeys bartered or sold to members of the aristocracy by the Danish king 83 For many of the 19th century remodels Danish architects were called in According to some scholars the driving force behind the use of historical Scanian architecture as interpreted by 19th century Danish architects using Dutch Renaissance style was a wish to refer back to an earlier era when the aristocracy had special privileges and political power in relation to the Danish king 84 Language literature and art edit See also Scanian dialects Scanian dialects have various local native idioms and speech patterns and realizes diphthongs and South Scandinavian Uvular trill as opposed to the supradental r sound characteristic of spoken Standard Swedish They are very similar to the dialect of Danish spoken in Bornholm Denmark The prosody of the Scanian dialects has more in common with German Danish and Dutch and sometimes also with English although to a lesser extent than with the prosody of central Swedish dialects 85 Famous Scanian authors include Victoria Benedictsson 1850 1888 from Domme Trelleborg who wrote about the inequality of women in the 19th century society but who also authored regional stories about Scania such as Fran Skane of 1884 Ola Hansson 86 1860 1925 from Honsinge Trelleborg Vilhelm Ekelund 1880 1949 from Stehag Eslov Fritiof Nilsson Piraten 1895 1972 from Vollsjo Sjobo Hjalmar Gullberg 1898 1961 from Malmo Artur Lundkvist 1906 1991 from Hagstad Perstorp Hans Alfredsson 1931 2017 and Jacques Werup 1945 2016 both from Malmo Birgitta Trotzig 1929 2011 from Gothenburg has written several historic novels set in Scania such as The Exposed of 1957 which describes life in 17th century Scania with a primitive country priest as its main character and the 1961 novel A Tale from the Coast which recounts a legend about human suffering and is set in Scania in the 15th century Gabriel Jonsson 1892 1984 from Alabodarna Landskrona A printing house was established in the city of Malmo in 1528 It became instrumental in the propagation of new ideas and during the 16th century Malmo became the center for the Danish reformation 87 nbsp Traditional Scanian nuptial array according to Auguste Racinet in Le costume historique Scanian culture as expressed through the medium of textile art has received international attention during the last decade 88 The art form often referred to as Scanian Marriage Weavings flourished from 1750 for a period of 100 years after which it slowly vanished Consisting of small textile panels mainly created for wedding ceremonies the art is strongly symbolic often expressing ideas about fertility longevity and a sense of hope and joy 89 The Scanian artists were female weavers working at home who had learned to weave at a young age often in order to have a marriage chest filled with beautiful tapestries as a dowry 90 According to international collectors and art scholars the Scanian patterns are of special interest for the striking similarities with Roman Byzantine and Asian art The designs are studied by art historians tracing how portable decorative goods served as transmitters of art concepts from culture to culture influencing designs and patterns along the entire length of the ancient trade routes 90 The Scanian textiles show how goods traded along the Silk Road brought Coptic Anatolian and Chinese designs and symbols into the folk art of far away regions like Scania where they were reinterpreted and integrated into the local culture Some of the most ancient designs in Scanian textile art are pairs of birds facing a tree with a great bird above often symbolized simply by its wings 90 Regionally derived iconography include mythological Scanian river horses in red Swedish backahastar with horns on their foreheads and misty clouds from their nostrils 90 The horse motif has been traced to patterns on 4th and 5th century Egyptian fabrics but in Scanian art it is transformed to illustrate the Norse river horse of Scanian folklore 91 Dukes editMain article Dukes of Swedish Provinces The title of duke was reintroduced in Sweden in 1772 and since this time Swedish princes have been created dukes of various provinces although the titles are purely nominal The Dukes of Scania have been Crown Prince Carl from his birth in 1826 until he became king in 1859 Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf from his birth in 1882 until he became king in 1950 Prince Oscar 2016 From his marriage in 1905 King Gustaf VI Adolf had his summer residence at Sofiero Palace in Helsingborg He and his family spent their summers there and the cabinet meetings held there during the summer months forced the ministers to arrive by night train from Stockholm He died at Helsingborg Hospital in 1973 Sports editFootball has always been the most popular arena and team sport within the province from attendances not least citation needed Clubs are administered by Skanes Fotbollforbund Malmo FF has won Allsvenskan 23 times Helsingborg IF 7 times and was one of the twelve clubs in the league s very first season 1924 25 Also Landskrona BoIS was among the twelve original clubs but has never won These three clubs are historically the most famous football clubs in Scania But also IFK Malmo Stattena IF Raa IF the latter two clubs are both from Helsingborg as well as Trelleborgs FF have participated Handball is also a relatively popular team sport whilst Basketball never really has gained much interest Ice hockey was for a long time thought of as a sport of northern Sweden but has nevertheless became a popular attendance sport too Malmo Redhawks has even become Swedish Champions twice but also Rogle BK from Angelholm have participated at the highest level of Swedish ice hockey during quite a lot of seasons Rugby is played in Scania by the Skane Crusaders who play in the Sweden Rugby League The overwhelmingly largest sport related events in both Scanian as well as Swedish history were however the motorcycle Saxtorp TT races during the 1930s which most of the years gathered crowds of 150 000 or more citation needed Tennis is associated with Bastad during the Swedish Open Golf is the most popular sport to exercise after a certain age at least Scania has a large amount of golf courses of which Barseback Golf amp Country Club is the most well known Most Golf courses are open also during the winter but may sometimes close temporarily in cases of snowy periods citation needed See also edit2008 Skane County earthquake 460 Scania an asteroid discovered in 1900 Sang till Skane a song about the province East Denmark SkanelandCitations edit Statistics Sweden Archived from the original on 20 August 2010 Folkmangd 31 december alder Regionfakta Archived from the original on 24 July 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2021 a b Skane county and province Sweden at the Encyclopaedia Britannica Prices Oresundsbron Uk oresundsbron com Archived from the original on 13 March 2013 Retrieved 3 March 2010 Oresundsregionen se Oresundsregionen se Archived from the original on 30 December 2009 Retrieved 3 March 2010 a b Folkmangd 31 december alder Regionfakta www regionfakta com Archived from the original on 27 October 2016 Retrieved 27 October 2016 Graham Brian and Peter Howard eds 2008 The Ashgate Research Companion to Heritage and Identity Archived 28 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Ashgate Publishing ISBN 978 0 7546 4922 9 p 79 Riksarkivet Riksarkivet Sok i arkiven riksarkivet se Archived from the original on 15 February 2019 Retrieved 16 February 2019 See 3 July 1720 at Swedish National Archive Archived from the original on 15 February 2019 Retrieved 16 February 2019 Sweden Skane Geographia com Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 3 March 2010 Skane Sweden Planetware com Archived from the original on 10 February 2009 Retrieved 3 March 2010 Map of Skane in Sweden Map of sweden co uk Archived from the original on 7 August 2010 Retrieved 3 March 2010 1 Archived 26 February 2010 at the 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Studies Vol 11 No 1 March 2005 p 3 The very name Scandinavia is of cultural origin since it derives from the Scanians or Scandians the Latinised spelling of Skaninger a people who long ago lent their name to all of Scandinavia perhaps because they lived centrally at the southern tip of the peninsula 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 Anderson Carl Edlund 1999 Formation and Resolution of Ideological Contrast in the Early History of Scandinavia PhD dissertation Department of Anglo Saxon Norse amp Celtic Faculty of English University of Cambridge 1999 Helle Knut 2003 Introduction The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Ed E I Kouri et al Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 47299 9 Region Skane Municipalities in Skane Official site Retrieved 24 August 2007 Clara Neveus Bror Jacques de Waern Ny svensk vapenbok Riksarkivet 1992 In Swedish Vart vapen Region Skane In Swedish Retrieved 4 April 2008 3 juli 1720 Riksarkivet Sok i arkiven Archived 28 January 2015 at the Wayback Machine Sok riksarkivet se Retrieved on 24 June 2015 Fredstraktat tillige med dend over bemelte Freds tractat forfattede Google Brger Archived 23 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Books google dk Retrieved on 24 June 2015 Trots motstand skanska flaggan blir officiell sydsvenskan se 28 November 2017 Archived from the original on 29 November 2017 Retrieved 9 December 2017 Trots motstand nu blir skanska flaggan officiell aftonbladet se 29 November 2017 Archived from the original on 10 December 2017 Retrieved 9 December 2017 a b McCallion Malin Stegmann 2004 The Europeanisation of Swedish Regional Government Archived 3 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Policy Networks in Sub National Governance Understanding Power Relations Paper 8 Workshop 25 European Consortium of Political Research 2004 Joint Sessions of Workshops Uppsala 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from the original on 27 October 2017 Retrieved 25 October 2017 a b Lidmar Bergstrom Karna and Jens Ove Naslund 2005 Uplands and Lowlands in Southern Sweden In The Physical Geography of Fennoscandia Ed Matti Seppala Oxford University Press 2005 pp 255 261 ISBN 978 0 19 924590 1 a b Bergelin Ingemar 2009 Jurassic volcanism in Skane southern Sweden and its relation to coeval regional and global events GFF 131 1 2 165 175 Bibcode 2009GFF 131 165B doi 10 1080 11035890902851278 Augustsson Carita 2001 Lapilli tuff as evidence of Early Jurassic Strombolian type volcanism in Scania southern Sweden GFF 123 1 23 28 Bibcode 2001GFF 123 23A doi 10 1080 11035890101231023 S2CID 140544085 a b Lidmar Bergstrom Karna Olvmo Mats Bonow Johan M 2017 The South Swedish Dome a key structure for identification of peneplains and conclusions on Phanerozoic tectonics of an ancient shield GFF 139 4 244 259 Bibcode 2017GFF 139 244L doi 10 1080 11035897 2017 1364293 S2CID 134300755 a b c Lidmar Bergstrom Karna Bonow Johan M Japsen Peter 2013 Stratigraphic Landscape Analysis and geomorphological paradigms Scandinavia as an example of Phanerozoic uplift and subsidence Global and Planetary Change 100 153 171 Bibcode 2013GPC 100 153L doi 10 1016 j gloplacha 2012 10 015 Surlyk Finn Sorensen Anne Mehlin 2010 An early Campanian rocky shore at Ivo Klack southern Sweden Cretaceous Research 31 6 567 576 Bibcode 2010CrRes 31 567S doi 10 1016 j cretres 2010 07 006 Nationalparker och andra fina platser Naturvardsverket Swedish EPA Naturvardsverket se 6 November 2009 Archived from the original on 7 February 2010 Retrieved 4 March 2010 Dalby Soderskog Skane lan Naturvardsverket Swedish EPA Naturvardsverket se 3 August 2009 Archived from the original on 15 October 2008 Retrieved 6 March 2010 Welcome Lansstyrelsen i Skane Lst se 18 June 2009 Archived from the original on 20 August 2010 Retrieved 6 March 2010 Soderasen National Park Nationalpark soderasen lst se Archived from the original on 5 July 2010 Retrieved 6 March 2010 skanebravaden se skanebravaden se Archived from the original on 18 August 2010 Retrieved 4 March 2010 inhabitants Kvartal 1 2013 Statistiska centralbyran Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 4 January 2014 Churches Eslovs kommun Eslov se 30 September 2009 Archived from the original on 14 July 2010 Retrieved 5 March 2010 The Foundation for Recreational Areas in Skane Information about the Skaneled Trails Archived 18 October 2003 at the Wayback Machine Region Skane Retrieved 20 October 2006 Peter Laurence Bridge shapes new Nordic hub Archived 27 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine BBC News 14 September 2006 Retrieved 20 October 2006 Tatortsstatistik fran Statistiska centralbyran permanent dead link Julia Kero 22 September 2022 Nu ar Karlatornet hogst i Norden SVT Nyheter in Swedish SVT Retrieved 10 October 2022 De svenska lanens befolkning Tacitus nu 7 September 2008 Archived from the original on 29 June 2009 Retrieved 5 March 2010 Folkmangden i Sveriges socknar och kommuner 1571 1991 B R Mitchell International Historical Statistics 1750 1993 Source Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute SMHI From http www smhi se polopoly fs 1 2860 ttm6190 5B1 5D pdf Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine the number and name of all Swedish meteorological weather stations are available By the use of the station number the average temperature for each months and annual average is available at http data smhi se met climate time series month year normal 1961 1990 SMHI month year normal 61 90 temperature celsius txt Archived 9 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine The exact location of the stations is given in the internal Swedish Coordinates of the reich however four figured stations numbers that begins with a 5 is located between the 55th and 56th latitude 6 between 56th and 57th latitude etc Linnaeus Carl 1750 Skanska resa Scanian Journey Strindberg August 1893 Skanska landskap med utvikningar Prosabitar fran 1890 talet Bonniers Stockholm 1917 In Swedish Germundsson Tomas 2005 Regional Cultural Heritage versus National Heritage in Scania s Disputed National Landscape International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 11 No 1 March 2005 pp 21 37 ISSN 1470 3610 Albertsson Rolf Half timbered houses Section in Malmo 1692 a historical project Malmo City Culture Department and Museum of Foteviken Retrieved 16 January 2007 Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Oresundstid Images Half timbered house in Scania Retrieved 16 January 2007 Archived 13 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Ystad Municipality Welcome to Ystad Archived 3 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Official site Retrieved 16 January 2007 Ystad Municipality A walk through the centuries section Pedestrian street Official site Retrieved 16 January 2007 Archived 11 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine A letter from the Swedish king Gustav II Adolf describes a raid in 1612 We have been in Scania and we have burned most of the province so that 24 parishes and the town of Va lie in ashes We have met no resistance neither from cavalry nor footmen so we have been able to rage plunder burn and kill to our hearts content We had thought of visiting Arhus in the same way but when it was brought to our knowledge that there were Danish cavalry in the town we set out for Markaryd and we could destroy and ravage as we went along and everything turned out lucky for us Quoted and translated by Oresundstid in the section Skane was ravaged Archived 19 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Herman Lindquist 1995 Historien om Sverige storhet och fall Norstedts Forlag 2006 ISBN 978 91 1 301535 4 In Swedish Skaneleden 6B Breanasleden Archived 23 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine In Swedish Official site by The Foundation for Recreational Areas in Skane and Region Skane See also Goingebygden official site by Skane Nordost Tourism Office and The Snapp hane Kingdom Archived 2 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine Official site by Osby Tourism Office Touchdowns in the History of Lund Lunds kommun Lund se 17 February 2010 Archived from the original on 9 May 2010 Retrieved 30 July 2010 Hauberg P 1900 Myntforhold og Udmyntninger i Danmark indtil 1146 D Kgl Danske Vidensk Selsk Skr 6 Raekke historisk og filosofisk Afd V I Chapter III Danmarks Mynthistorie indtil 1146 Archived 20 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine and Chapter V Myntsteder Archived 20 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine published online by Gladsaxe Gymnasium In Danish Retrieved 10 January 2007 a b City of Lund Touchdowns in the History of Lund Archived 24 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Official site for the City of Lund Retrieved 10 January 2006 a b Terra Scaniae Lunds Domkyrka Archived 31 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine In Swedish Retrieved 11 January 2007 Region Skane 2006 What is typical Skane Official site Retrieved 22 January 2007 dead link Terra Scaniae 1600 talet In Swedish Retrieved 27 January 2007 Archived 30 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine Bjurklint Rosenblad Kajsa Scenografi for ett standsmassigt liv adelns slottsbyggande i Skane 1840 1900 Malmo Sekel 2005 ISBN 978 91 975222 3 6 Abstract in English at Scripta Academica Lundensia Lund University Archived 23 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine Garding Eva 1974 Talar skaningarna svenska Do Scanians speak Swedish Svenskans beskrivning Ed Christer Platzack Lund Institutionen for nordiska sprak 1973 p 107 112 In Swedish Poems of 1884 and Notturno of 1885 celebrate the natural beauty and folkways of Scania The result of a globetrotting life style Ola Hansson s later poetry had various continental influences but like many other Scanian writers his authorship often reflected the tension between cosmopolitan culture and regionalism For larger trends and a historic perspective on Scanian literature see Vinge Louise ed Skanes litteraturhistoria del I ISBN 978 91 564 1048 2 and Skanes litteraturhistoria del II ISBN 978 91 564 1049 9 Corona Malmo 1996 1997 In Swedish Infotek Oresund Litteraturhistoria Malmo Archived 5 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Fact sheet produced by Infotek Oresund a cooperative project between the public libraries of Helsingborg Elsinore Copenhagen and Malmo published online by Malmo Public Library 4 November 2005 In Swedish See for example Monument to Love and Textiles de Skane des XVIIIe et XIXe Siecles Scanian textiles from the Khalili Collection exhibited at the Swedish Cultural Centre in Paris and the Boston University Art Gallery Retrieved 15 January 2007 The KHALILI Collections Archived from the original on 18 January 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2007 Keelan Major Andrew and Wendy Keelan The Khalili Collection An Introduction The Khalili Family Trust Retrieved 15 January 2007 Archived 18 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Hansen Viveka 1997 Swedish Textile Art Traditional Marriage Weavings from Skane Nour Foundation 1997 ISBN 978 1 874780 07 6 Lundstrom Lena 2003 Vattenvasen i vaverskans hander Curator s description of the exhibition Aqvavasen at Trelleborgs Museum in Vart Trelleborg 2 2003 pp 20 21 Available online in pdf format Archived 26 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine In Swedish General references editAlbertsson Rolf 2007 Half timbered houses Malmo 1692 a historical project Malmo City Culture Department and Museum of Foteviken Retrieved 16 January 2007 Anderson Carl Edlund 1999 Formation and Resolution of Ideological Contrast in the Early History of Scandinavia PhD dissertation Department of Anglo Saxon Norse amp Celtic Faculty of English University of Cambridge 1999 Bjork Gert and Henrik Persson Fram for ett oppet och utatriktat Skane Sydsvenskan 20 May 2000 Reproduced by FSF In Swedish Retrieved 3 April 2008 Bjurklint Rosenblad Kajsa 2005 Scenografi for ett standsmassigt liv adelns slottsbyggande i Skane 1840 1900 Malmo Sekel 2005 ISBN 978 91 975222 3 6 Bonney Richard 1995 Economic Systems and State Finance Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820545 6 Craig David J 2003 Monument to Love Boston University Bridge 29 August 2003 Vol VII No 1 Retrieved 2 April 2008 Danish National Archives 2006 Lensregnskaberne 1560 1658 In Danish Retrieved 20 October 2006 City of Lund 2006 Touchdowns in the History of Lund Retrieved 10 January 2006 Garding Eva 1974 Talar skaningarna svenska Svenskans beskrivning Ed Christer Platzack Lund Institutionen for nordiska sprak 1973 In Swedish Germundsson Tomas 2005 Regional Cultural Heritage versus National Heritage in Scania s Disputed National Landscape International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 11 No 1 March 2005 ISSN 1470 3610 Hansen Viveka 1997 Swedish Textile Art Traditional Marriage Weavings from Scania Nour Foundation 1997 ISBN 978 1 874780 07 6 Hauberg P 1900 Myntforhold og Udmyntninger i Danmark indtil 1146 D Kgl Danske Vidensk Selsk Skr 6 Raekke historisk og filosofisk Afd V I Chapter III Danmarks Mynthistorie indtil 1146 and Chapter V Myntsteder Gladsaxe Gymnasium In Danish Retrieved 10 January 2007 Haugen Einar 1976 The Scandinavian Languages An Introduction to Their History Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1976 Helle Knut ed 2003 The Cambridge History of Scandinavia Cambridge University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 521 47299 9 Hogan C M 2004 Kullaberg environmental analysis Lumina Technologies Aberdeen Library Archives Aberdeen Scotland 17 July 2004 Jespersen Knud J V 2004 A History of Denmark Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 65917 5 Keelan Major Andrew and Wendy Keelan 2006 The Khalili Collection The Khalili Family Trust Retrieved 1 April 2008 Lidmar Bergstrom Karna and Jens Ove Naslund 2005 Uplands and Lowlands in Southern Sweden The Physical Geography of Fennoscandia Ed Matti Seppala Oxford University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 19 924590 1 Lindquist Herman 1995 Historien om Sverige storhet och fall Norstedts Forlag 2006 ISBN 978 91 1 301535 4 In Swedish Linnaeus Carl 1750 Skanska resa In Swedish Lund University School of Aviation 2005 Ljungbyhed airport ESTL Retrieved 22 January 2007 Lundstrom Lena 2003 Vattenvasen i vaverskans hander Vart Trelleborg 2 2003 In Swedish Malmo Public Library 2005 Litteraturhistoria Malmo Infotek Oresund 4 November 2005 In Swedish Neveus Clara and Bror Jacques de Waern 1992 Ny svensk vapenbok Riksarkivet 1992 In Swedish Olin Martin 2005 Royal Galleries in Denmark and Sweden around 1700 Kungliga rum maktmanifestation och distribution Historikermote 2005 Uppsala University Retrieved 2 April 2008 Olwig Kenneth R 2005 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 Oresundstid 2008 The Swedification of Scania Renaissance Houses Half timbered houses Retrieved 2 April 2008 Osterberg Klas 2001 Forest Geographical Regions Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Swedish Environmental Protection Agency 25 January 2001 Retrieved 4 November 2006 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 Peter Laurence 2006 Bridge shapes new Nordic hub BBC News 14 September 2006 Retrieved 20 October 2006 Region Skane 2007 Municipalities in Skane Democracy Increased autonomy What is typical Skane Retrieved 22 January 2007 Sawyer Birgit Sawyer Peter H 1993 Medieval Scandinavia from Conversion to Reformation Circa 800 1500 University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 1739 5 SCB 2007 Skordar Jordbruksstatistisk arsbok 2006 Statiska Centralbyran In Swedish Retrieved 10 January 2007 Skane Regional Council 1999 Newsletter No 2 1999 Stadin Kekke 2005 The Masculine Image of a Great Power Representations of Swedish imperial power c 1630 1690 Scandinavian Journal of History Vol 30 No 1 March 2005 pp 61 82 ISSN 0346 8755 Stiftelsen for fritidsomraden i Skane 2006 Skaneleden 6B Breanasleden In Swedish Information about the Skaneled Trails The Foundation for Recreational Areas in Skane and Region Skane Retrieved 11 April 2008 Strindberg August 1893 Skanska landskap med utvikningar Prosabitar fran 1890 talet Bonniers Stockholm 1917 In Swedish SAOB 2008 Skaneland In Swedish Retrieved 2 April 2008 Sorens Jason 2005 The Cross Sectional Determinants of Secessionism in Advanced Democracies Comparative Political Studies 38 3 304 326 doi 10 1177 0010414004272538 S2CID 145636533 Sprak och Folkminnesinstitutet 2003 Svenskt Ortnamnslexikon Uppsala 2003 In Swedish Tagil Sven 2000 Regions in Europe a historical perspective In Border Regions in Comparison Ed Hans Ake Persson Studentlitteratur Lund ISBN 978 91 44 01858 4 Terra Scaniae 2008 Skanes lan efter 1658 Hardare forsvenskning Kuppforsok mot svenskarna 1658 Lunds Domkyrka 1600 talet Generalguvernorens uppgifter In Swedish Retrieved 2 April 2008 Upton Anthony F 1998 Charles XI and Swedish Absolutism 1660 1697 Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 521 57390 0 Vinge Louise ed Skanes litteraturhistoria Corona Malmo 1996 1997 Part I ISBN 978 91 564 1048 2 and Part II ISBN 978 91 564 1049 9 In Swedish Ystad Municipality 2007 Welcome to Ystad and Pedestrian street A walk through the centuries Retrieved 16 January 2007 External links edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Scania Official links edit Region Skane The County council Scania s Public Recreational Areas Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Region Skane s public forests and parks Skane Business Region Skane s official website for culture heritage and tourism Lansstyrelsen County Administration Board Skaneleden Public nature trails through ScaniaOrganizations edit Oresund Region The regional body of the Oresund Region Regional Museum Museum in Kristianstad Kommunforbundet Skane A cooperation between Scania s 33 municipalities Skanes hembygdsforbund in Swedish Heritage conservation organization Terra Scaniae Archived 10 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine History project established for Scanian schools financed with subsidies from Skane Regional Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scania amp oldid 1205336340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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