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The five Regions of Denmark (Danish: regioner) were created as administrative entities at a level above the municipalities and below the central government in the public sector as part of the 2007 Danish Municipal Reform, when the 13 counties (amter) were abolished. At the same time, the number of municipalities (kommuner) was cut from 270 ...
Arresø. 40.72 km 2. Exclusive economic zone. 105,989 km 2 (40,923 sq mi) (excludes the Faroe Islands and Greenland) Denmark is a Nordic country located in Northern Europe. It consists of the Jutland Peninsula and several islands in the Baltic Sea, referred [citation needed] to as the Danish Archipelago. Denmark is located southwest of Sweden ...
The provinces of Denmark (Danish: Landsdele) are statistical divisions of Denmark, positioned between the administrative regions and municipalities. They are not administrative divisions, nor subject for any kind of political elections, but are mainly for statistical use. [1] This is a list of the eleven Danish provinces and the regions they ...
Overview map of EU Countries - NUTS level 1. Overview map of EU Countries - Country level; Overview map of EU Countries - NUTS level 1; Correspondence between the NUTS levels and the national administrative units; List of current NUTS codes Archived 2012-02-27 at the Wayback Machine. Download current NUTS codes (ODS format) Archived 2015-07-16 ...
The three lands of Denmark historically formed the Danish kingdom from its unification and consolidation in the 10th century: Jutland (Jylland), the western peninsula, and the island of Fyn, with Viborg as a centre. Each of the lands retained their own thing (ting) and statute laws until late medieval time (Jutlandic Law, Zealandic Law and ...
Subcategories. This category has the following 29 subcategories, out of 29 total. Geography of Denmark by city (4 C) Geography of Denmark by island (3 C) Geography of Denmark by municipality (34 C)
The Central Denmark Region (Danish: Region Midtjylland), or more directly translated as the Central Jutland Region[5] and sometimes simply Mid-Jutland, [6][7][8][9] is an administrative region of Denmark established on 1 January 2007 as part of the 2007 Danish municipal reform. The reform abolished the traditional counties (amter) and replaced ...
The current version of the standard defines codes for the five regions of Denmark created during the municipal reform of 2007. [1] Each code consists of two parts, separated by a hyphen. The first part is DK, the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code for Denmark. The second part is a two-digit number between 81 and 85.