Sweden, a little bit larger than California lies on the Scandinavian Peninsula between Norway and Finland. Running 900 miles north to south, it is the third largest country in Western Europe. The southern part of the country lies on the Scandinavian Peninsula between Norway and Finland and is home to 85% of the population. Its strict neutrality left the country undamaged during two world wars. It is a country of forests, sparkling lakes, unspoiled wilderness, a fascinating folk culture, and an expensive place to be for travelers. Because of its long, narrow shape and northerly location, the landscape is highly diversified. The ever-varying Swedish coastline stretches 1500 miles from Haparanda on the Finnish border, high up in the Gulf of Bothnia, all the way to Norway and the North Sea to the west. Sweden has majestic mountains and glaciers, 100,000 lakes, as well as wide-open countryside, interspersed by small idyllic villages and vibrant cities. The north enjoys the midnight sun in the summer.
Sweden
has more than 25,000 protected Iron Age graveyards and burial mounds, 1140
prehistoric fortresses, 2500 open air Rune stones and 3000 churches, almost
one–third of them medieval. There are thousands of nature reserves, 28 national
parks, more than 10,000 kilometers of trekking and bicycle paths, not to
mention 10 royal castles in the Stockholm area.
The country can be divided into three regions with the mountains being
in the northern region, the lakes in the hilly central region and the broad
plateau in the southern part of the country. Oland and Gotland are the largest
and most populated islands.
The
ancient Svea tribe inhabited the country east and west for thousands of years.
They were followed by the Swedish Vikings or Russ who traveled east naming that
area Russia. They sailed around Europe and then the Mediterranean. The three crowns represent these three
tribes. In the 17th century Sweden was a major European power with a
large naval fleet. The empire included the Baltics, Finland, part of Poland,
Russia and Germany. By the 19th century the war wary empire shrunk
and the present borders were drawn in 1809. About one-third of the population
emigrated in the 19th century and many Swedes came to the United States.
Instead
of fighting in WW II Sweden spent those years building its economy. A recession
in the 1990s was buoyed by multi-national companies. Think Saab, Volvo,
Ericsson, and forest products from IKEA. Sweden joined the European Union.
Although
Sweden has a sex-pot reputation, teen pregnancy and STD infections are very
low. Ninety percent of the population is Lutheran, but only five percent attend
church. Swedes find religion in nature such as fishing, hiking and relaxing at
their summer cabins. Eighty percent of the country is wilderness. At work
Swedes are diligent, but relaxed and a bit wild at play. Summer is festival
season. Sweden is the most populous Scandinavian country, but a low birth and
mortality rate make the population among the oldest in the world. Seventeen
percent of the people are over 65 years old.
Scandinavian
design, with its roots in social idealism, natural forms and balance between
aesthetic and functionality, is much more than an imposed sense of style. It is
a way of life and is apparent in homes, businesses and public spaces.
Well
to do families desired red brick homes. Less fortunate people painted their
houses red as a substitute. Immigrants make up eight percent of the country’s
five million population. Sweden is a monarchy with a parliamentary
government.
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