Northern EuropeNorthern Europe includes Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Subdivisions within the group includes:\n*Scandinavia, i.e. Sweden, Norway, Denmark\n*Nordic countries, i.e. Scandinavia plus Finland and Iceland.\n*Baltic States, i.e. Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania\n*British Isles, which includes United Kingdom and Ireland\n* others, e.g. Northern parts of Germany, The Netherlands, partly PolandRemarks\n# The Baltic sea countries, as a related term, also include the Germany, Poland and Russia\n# The Baltic States often are considered to be part of Eastern Europe, although they are separate peoples and not directly related by blood or language to, say, Russians. This is especially the case with Estonia, which has stronger ties with Finland than with Eastern Europe. Also, the Baltic States share many common traits with Northern Europe. \n# In a European Union context, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Germany and the Netherlands are often seen as belonging to the Northern group. \n |
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"The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds, and the pessimist fears this is true." - James Branch Cabell |
