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of the Nordic countries and associated territories.
The
Nordic countries make up a region in Northern Europe, sometimes called the
Nordic region, consisting of Denmark, Finland,
Iceland,
Norway and
Sweden and their associated territories which include the
Faroe Islands, Greenland, and
Åland.
The region's five nation-states and Nordic Council#Membership share much common history as well as common traits in their respective
societies, such as political systems. Politically, Nordic countries do not form a separate entity, but they co-operate in the
Nordic Council. Linguistically, the area is heterogeneous, with two unrelated language groups, the
North Germanic branch of
Indo-European languages and the
Baltic-Finnic languages and
Sami languages branches of
Uralic languages. The Nordic countries have a combined population of approximately 25 million spread over a land area of 3.5 million km² (Greenland accounts for 60% of the total area).
Recently, Estonia has also projected itself as a Nordic country, although it is widely considered to be a Baltic states. Estonia has close linguistic, ethnic and cultural ties with Finland, some cultural ties with Sweden and Denmark, and most of its investment and trade is with the Nordic countries.
Etymology and terminology
The term is
Etymology from the
French language term
Pays Nordiques as an equivalent of the local terms
Norden (Scandinavian languages),
Pohjola /
Pohjoismaat (
Finnish language),
Norðurlönd (
Icelandic language) and
Norðurlond (Faroese language) with the meaning of "
The North(ern lands)".
In English usage, the term
Scandinavia (disambiguation) is also used — though incorrectly — as a synonym for the Nordic countries. From the 1850s,
Scandinavia came to include, political geography and
cultural geographyly, Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland
Physical geography, the Scandinavian Peninsula includes mainland Sweden and mainland Norway, and also a part of Finland, while the
Jutland Peninsula includes mainland Denmark and a small part of Germany. (Denmark proper has not included any territory on the Scandinavian Peninsula since
Treaty of Roskilde). The Faroe Islands and
Iceland are "Scandinavian" in the sense that they were settled by Scandinavians and speak Scandinavian languages, but geographically they are not part of Scandinavia. Finland was once part of Sweden, and has been significantly influenced by Swedish culture, but it is geographically part of Scandinavia either nor is Finnish related to the Scandinavian languages. Greenland was settled by the Norse, and is currently part of the Danish realm, with the Danish language spoken by some, but geographically it is part of North America.
In geology, the term for the land area which lies above sea level on the
Baltic shield (also known as the
Fennoscandian Shield) is Fennoscandia (from the
Latin toponyms
Fennia and
Scania).
Before the 19th century, the term
Nordic may have been used more as a synonym for
Northern to mean Northern Europe, including European Russia, the Baltic countries (at that time
Estonia,
Livonia and Courland) and occasionally the British Isles and other lands on the shores of the
Baltic Sea and North Seas.
History
The Nordic countries are characterised by similar structures of their societies and cultural traits. This results not only from similar environmental realities and thus traditional livelihoods but also from a shared history.
During the Middle Ages, what are now Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland, they shared a similar
culture,
language (
Old Norse) and
religion (
Norse mythology) environment. From ca. the 12th century onwards what is now Finland (linguistically
Baltic-Finnic and broader Finno-Ugric languages) started sharing the common developments as it was increasingly integrated into the kingdom of Sweden. As another example of a deeply rooted unifying past could be taken the indigenous Sami lifestyle (linguistically Finno-Ugric) across what is now northern Norway, Sweden and Finland (and beyond). Indeed, all Nordic countries have minority groups deriving or claiming heritage of a population residing within another Nordic state.
After being Christianised around the year 1000, the process of local unification established Denmark, Norway and Sweden as separate
monarchy. Finland became part of Sweden in the mid 1200s, whereas Iceland, the Faroe Islands, the
Shetland Islands, Orkney, History_of_Greenland#Norse_settlement and large parts of Scotland and
Ireland belonged to Norway. All Nordic countries followed the Protestant Reformation of the Western church during the 16th century and adopted
Lutheran Church state churches - still having a large membership count, although state church status varies. Finland also has a much smaller
Eastern Orthodoxy state church whose members mainly come from the areas that were outside the Swedish realm when Christianity was introduced.
In the 14th century, Denmark, Norway (with Iceland) and Sweden (with Finland) were united under one regent, in the
Kalmar Union. Denmark quickly gained the upper hand, but in the early 16th century Sweden reestablished itself as a separate kingdom. Denmark's domination over Norway lasted until 1814 when the king was forced to cede Norway to the king of Sweden. Iceland, Greenland and the Faroe Islands remained Danish.
After establishing itself as one of the Great powers in Europe during the 17th century Sweden ultimately lost its foreign
Dominions of Sweden one by one. This process culminated in the loss of Finland to
Russia in 1809 which became an autonomous
Grand Duchy of Finland under the Russian tsar.
The 19th century saw a personal union between Sweden and Norway which was dissolved in 1905 due to growing dissatisfaction from the Norwegian part. At the same time
Scandinavism emerged in Scandinavia. This movement strove to unite the three Scandinavian countries into one kingdom without much success.
During World War I and in the midst of the Russian revolution of 1917, Finland emerged for the first time as an independent nation and the perspective of a Nordic community replaced the idea of a united Scandinavia alone. During World War II in 1944, Iceland gained its independence from Denmark. The member states of the Nordic council (founded in 1952) had thus emerged.
The Nordic countries share similar traits in the policies implemented under the postwar period, especially in the socioeconomic area. All Nordic countries have large tax-funded
Welfare state sectors and extensive socialist legislation. In most cases, this is due to the political ambitions of the many Social Democrats governments that came to power during the interwar period in each of the Nordic countries.
Chronology of the Nordic countries
{| class="wikitable"|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center|
Century||colspan=6|
Nordic Political Entities|-| width=10% bgcolor=#f6faff align=center | 21st| width=14% colspan=1 bgcolor=gold align=center|Denmark (European Union)| width=14% colspan=1 rowspan=2 bgcolor=#ffc0c0 align=center|Faroe Islands| width=14% colspan=1 rowspan=2 bgcolor=#fafaff align=center|Iceland| width=14% colspan=1 bgcolor=gold align=center|[Sweden (European Union)| width=14% colspan=1 bgcolor=gold align=center|Finland (European Union)|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center|20th| bgcolor=#ffc0c0 align=center|Denmark| bgcolor=#efffef align=center|[Finland| colspan=2 bgcolor=#fafaff|[Union between Sweden and Norway| bgcolor=#ff8080|Grand Duchy of Finland|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 18th| rowspan=3 colspan=4 bgcolor=#ffc0c0|Denmark-Norway|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 17th|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 16th|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 15th|colspan=6 bgcolor=#fff8f8|[Kalmar Union| colspan=3 rowspan=2 bgcolor=#ccccff|[Norway|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 13th|- bgcolor=#f6faff align=center| 12th| bgcolor=#fafaff|[Faroe Islands| bgcolor=#fafaff|Icelandic Commonwealth| bgcolor=#ccccff|Norway||[Faroese people||Icelanders||[Swedish people||Finnish people|}
Nordic Passport Union
, Finland,
Iceland,
Norway, and Sweden.
The
Nordic Passport Union, created in
1954, and implemented on May 1,
1958, allows
citizens of the Nordic countries (Denmark (
Faroe Islands included since
January 1,
1966, Greenland not included), Sweden, Norway (Svalbard, Jan Mayen,
Bouvet Island and
Queen Maud's Land not included), Finland and Iceland (since
September 24,
1965)) to cross approved border districts without carrying and having their passport checked. Other citizens can also travel between the Nordic countries' borders without having their passport checked, but still have to carry a passport or another kind of approved travel identification papers.
Since 1996, these countries have joined the larger EU directive Schengen Agreement area, comprising 30 countries in
Europe. Border checkpoint have been removed within the Schengen zone and only a national ID card is required. Within the Nordic area any ID card, e.g.
driving licence is valid for Nordic citizens, because of the Nordic Passport Union.
From
March 25 2001, the Schengen
acquis fully applied to the five countries of the Nordic Passport Union (except for the
Faroe Islands, which remain outside of Schengen). There are some areas in the Nordic Passport Union that gives extra rights for Nordic citizens, not covered by Schengen, such as less paperwork if moving to a different Nordic country, and less requirements for
naturalisation of
citizenship.
Political dimension and divisions
The Nordic region has a mild political dimension in joint official bodies called the
Nordic Council and the Nordic Council. In this context, several aspects of the
common market as in the
European Union have been implemented decades before the EU implemented them.
In the European Union, the Northern Dimension refers to external and cross-border policies covering the Nordic countries, the Baltic countries, and
Russia.
Politically, the Nordic dimension has grown increasingly irrelevant, since the member states disagree on memberships in the European Union,
Eurozone, and NATO. Norway and Iceland are only members of NATO, while Finland and Sweden are only members of the European Union. Denmark alone participates in both organizations. Only Finland is a member of the Eurozone. The tasks and policies of the European Union overlap with the Nordic council significantly, e.g. the Schengen Agreement partially supersedes the Nordic
passport free zone and a common labor market.
Flags and symbols
Flags
All Nordic countries, including the autonomous territories of
Faroe and
Åland Islands, have a similar flag design, all based on the
Flag of Denmark, the Danish flag. They display an off-center cross with the intersection closer to the hoist, the "
Nordic cross".{]|
Flag of the Faroe Islands|
Flag of Finland| Flag of Iceland|
Flag of Norway| Flag of Sweden| Flag of Åland|}
Flag of Greenland and the Sami flag people have adopted flags without the Nordic cross, but they feature a circle which is placed off-center like the cross.{| align=center style="text-align:center;"|-| | |-|
Flag of Greenland| Sami flag|}
Areas with close relations to the Nordic countries
Several areas have a long and close relationship with and often identify with some or all of the Nordic countries. These are however for the most part not regarded as part of the Nordic group themselves.
Shetland and Orkney
{| align=center style="text-align:center;"|-| | |-| Flag of Orkney| Flag of Shetland|}
The Northern Isles of
Scotland -
Orkney Islands and
Shetland Islands - have a long-established Nordic identity. The islands were Norwegian Colony for more than 500 years, but ownership defaulted to the
List of monarchs of Scotland in 1472 following non-payment of the marriage dowry of Margaret of Denmark and Norway, queen of
James III of Scotland.
During
World War II Shetland and Orkney were important bases for the Norwegian armed forces in exile. The Shetland Bus was based in Shetland and smuggled refugees, agents and supplies to and from Norway.
In later years financial relations, particularly in the maritime industries, have been important. Cultural and sporting exchanges are frequent. A genetic survey showed that 60% of the male population of Shetland and Orkney had Norwegian genes.
The traditional links to Scandinavia are reflected in the islands' flags, both of which are based around a Nordic cross:
Other regions of the British Isles have adopted symbols to allude to a similar Norse or Norse-Gaels heritage.
Estonia
Estonians consider themselves a Nordic people rather than Baltic states, "Estonian Life". Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs publication, 2004. "Estonian Life". Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs publication, 2002. based on strong linguistic, cultural and historical ties with Finland in particular, and also with Sweden and Denmark. The
Estonian language is closely related to the
Finnish language and
Estonians, as an ethnic group, are a
Finnic people. Estonia was part of the Danish and Swedish
empires for many centuries: it is generally thought that the name of the Estonian capital,
Tallinn, derives from the
Estonian language taani linn, meaning 'Danish town.'
{| align=center style="text-align:center;"|-| | |-| Flag of Estonia| Proposed Estonian flag
featuring a Nordic cross|}
Estonia was part of the
Swedish Empire and Danish Empire for centuries prior to its absorption into the
Russian Empire. Historically, large parts of Estonia’s north-western coast and islands have been populated by an indigenous ethnically Swedish population (
Estonian Swedes). The majority of Estonia's Swedish population fled to Sweden in 1944, escaping the advancing Soviet Army. Only about a thousand Swedes were left.
Since regaining History of Estonia#regaining independence in 1991, Estonia has expressed interest in identifying with the Nordic community. In 1999, Estonian Foreign Minister — and current president since 2006 —
Toomas Hendrik Ilves delivered a speech entitled "Estonia as a Nordic Country" to the Swedish Institute for International Affairs.Ilves, Toomas Hendrik. "Estonia as a Nordic Country". December 14, 1999. In 2003, the
foreign ministry also hosted an exhibit called "Estonia: Nordic with a Twist." "Estonia - Nordic with a Twist". Estonian Ministry of Social Affairs, 2004 (last updated). In 2005, Estonia also joined the European Union's
Nordic Battle Group and shows interest in joining the Nordic Council.
Today there is a great deal of economic interdependence between Estonia and some of its Nordic neighbors. Three quarters of investments into Estonia come from Nordic states (principally Finland and Sweden), to which Estonia sends 58% of its exports. On the other hand, the Estonian political system and non-welfare-state model distinguish it from the other Nordic states, and from many other European countries.
Others
The North of
England, particularly the North East England was once part of the Danish Viking Empire, and the modern
Geordie dialect spoken in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne shares some similarity to the modern Germanic languages of the Nordic countries. The region and its culture does not have a Nordic character however.
Finally, the northernmost part of
Germany, Southern Schleswig on the
Jutland peninsula, had a Nordic identity up until its transfer to Germany in the mid 19th century and its subsequent Germanisation. Today, the Nordic character of Southern Schleswig's society and its inhabitants is not very prominent.
See also
References
External links
- Norden — the Nordic Council and the Nordic Council of Ministers' website.
- Nordregio — a European centre for research, education and documentation on spatial development, established by the Nordic Council of Ministers.
- NordRegio Statistics — a collection of thematic maps and figures of Nordic and Baltic countries by NordRegio.
- Go Scandinavia — official website of the Scandinavian Tourist Boards in North America.
- Scandinavia House — the Nordic Center in New York, run by the American-Scandinavian Foundation.
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