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  2. History of Scandinavia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Scandinavia

    The history of Scandinavia is the history of the geographical region of Scandinavia and its peoples. The region is located in Northern Europe , and consists of Denmark , Norway and Sweden . Finland and Iceland are at times, especially in English-speaking contexts, considered part of Scandinavia.

  3. Scandinavian prehistory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandinavian_prehistory

    In southern Scandinavia it replaced the Ertebølle culture, which had maintained a Mesolithic lifestyle for about 1500 years after farming arrived in Central Europe. [3] Tribes along the coasts of Svealand , Götaland , Åland , northeastern Denmark and southern Norway learnt new technologies that became the Pitted Ware culture (3200–2300 BC).

  4. Prehistoric Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prehistoric_Sweden

    Sweden's southern third was part of the stock-keeping and agricultural Nordic Bronze Age Culture's area, most of it being peripheral to the culture's Danish centre. The period began in c. 1,700 BC with the start of bronze importation; first from Ireland and then increasingly from central Europe.

  5. Scandinavia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scandinavia

    In modernity, Scandinavia is a peninsula, but between approximately 10,300 and 9,500 years ago the southern part of Scandinavia was an island separated from the northern peninsula, with water exiting the Baltic Sea through the area where Stockholm is now located.

  6. Danes (tribe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danes_(tribe)

    The Danes were a North Germanic tribe inhabiting southern Scandinavia, including the area now comprising Denmark proper, northern and eastern England, and the Scanian provinces of modern-day southern Sweden, during the Nordic Iron Age and the Viking Age. They founded what became the Kingdom of Denmark.

  7. Nordic Stone Age - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_Stone_Age

    In the 7th millennium BCE, the climate in Scandinavia was warming as it transitioned from the former Boreal age to the Atlantic period. Reindeer and their hunters had already migrated and inhabited the lands of northern Scandinavia, and forests had established. A culture called the Maglemosian culture lived in the areas of Denmark and southern ...

  8. Nordic countries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordic_countries

    The Nordic countries have much in common in their way of life, history, religion and social and economic model. They have a long history of political unions and other close relations but do not form a singular entity today. The Scandinavist movement sought to unite Denmark, Norway and Sweden into one country in the 19th century.

  9. Skåneland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skåneland

    Skåneland (Swedish and Danish) or Skånelandene is a region on the southern Scandinavian peninsula.It includes the Swedish provinces of Blekinge, Halland, and Scania.The Danish island of Bornholm is traditionally also included. [1]