
Northern Europe
'Northern Europe' is a term for the northern part of
Europe, though its precise boundaries are vague and defined variously. It is a term that groups the
Nordic countries (which are present in all definitions):
★
Denmark,
Finland,
Iceland,
Norway and
Sweden, as well as
Ã…land, the
Faroe Islands,
Jan Mayen and
Svalbard. (Though politically and historically closely tied to Northern Europe, the Nordic territory of
Greenland is nevertheless geographically closer to the continent of
North America.)
along with a selection of the following which varies from definition to definition:
★ The
Baltic states:
Estonia,
Latvia, and
Lithuania.
★ The
British Isles:
Ireland,
Great Britain, the
Channel Islands and the
Isle of Man (see also
Western Europe).
★ Areas bordering, or in close proximity to, the
Baltic Sea and the
North Sea, i.e.
north-western Russia (including
Kaliningrad), northern
Poland,
northern Germany,
the Netherlands,
Belgium,
Luxembourg, and the
French region of
Nord-Pas de Calais.
★ Occasionally
Ingria,
Karelia and the
Kola Peninsula.
The
United Nations Statistics Division defines 'Northern Europe' as:
★ (Finland)
★
Channel Islands: and (United Kingdom)
★
★
★ (Denmark)
★
★
★
★ (United Kingdom)
★
★
★
★
Svalbard and
Jan Mayen (Norway)
★
★

A Dutch map of Northern Europe, printed in 1601.
Before the
19th century, the term 'Nordic' or 'Northern' was commonly used to mean Northern Europe in a sense that included the Nordic countries,
European Russia, the
Baltic countries (at that time
Livonia and
Courland) and
Greenland.
In earlier eras, when Europe was dominated by the Mediterranean region (i.e. the
Roman Empire), everything not near this sea was termed Northern Europe, including
Germany, the
Low Countries, and
Austria. This meaning is still used today in some contexts, such as in discussions of the
Northern Renaissance. In
medieval times, the term (Ultima)
Thule was used to mean a semi-
mythical place in the extreme northern reaches of the continent.
Today the term is of subjective nature with its meaning usually determined by the geo-political outlook of the speaker. This also means that the definition of the term is largely socio-political as there is no rationale to include
Great Britain as being part of Northern Europe while excluding the
Netherlands.
References