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Archaeological research suggests that Denmark was populated
as early as 100,000 years ago, though at this time these
people were not related to the modern Danes. The modern
Danish people are related to the Indo-Europeans who migrated
from an area around the Black Sea some 6,000 years ago.
Germanic people were living in this area at the time
of Tacitus, around the first century c.e. and perhaps
earlier.
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An Iron Age
Village in
Denmark
Photo
by S. Brantly |
The first mention of the kingdom of Denmark comes from
the medieval period. Denmark claims the longest continuous
monarchy. The first king of Denmark is noted to be Gorm
the Old from the 10th century. The expansion of Charlemagne's
Frankish empire in the late 8th century brought Denmark
into closer contact with the rest of Europe. Frankish
conquests were halted in the early 9th century, and a
treaty signed in 811 made the Eider River the frontier
between Denmark and its neighbors to the south. In the
early medieval period, Danes, along with the other Scandinavians
often collectively called Vikings, expanded their area
of influence beyond their borders by raiding and trading
with people as far as Constantinople and North America.
Under King Knut, an Anglo-Danish empire came into being
that included parts of modern England and modern Sweden
and lasted until his death in 1035. Christianity arrived
in Denmark in the 10th century.
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Krononborg
Castle at Elsinore:
The site of Hamlet
Photo by S. Mellor |
During the medieval period of Danish history there was
heavy competition between the Danish nobility and kings.
In 1282, King Erik V was forced to sign a charter giving
the nobility some rights and power.
During the 14th and 15th centuries Danish trade was
largely controlled by the German-dominated Hanseatic
League. Due to problems with succession and the desire
to create a greater nation, in 1397 a union under the
Danish crown and Margarethe I was created between Denmark,
Norway, and Sweden called the Kalmar Union. It lasted
until 1523, when Sweden left the union. Norway and Denmark
continued to be a province until the early 19th century.
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Rosenberg
Palace
Photo by S.
Mellor |
The 16th century was marked by civil war. During this
time and under Christian III, Denmark broke from the
Catholic church, and like many of its neighbors established
a Lutheran state church with the king as its head. The
17th century was a tumultuous time throughout Europe
with fighting between Catholic and Protestant. Denmark,
like many other nations was drawn into the Thirty Years
War in the 1620s under Christian IV. Further, due largely
to rivalries with Sweden, Denmark pursued a series of
debilitating wars in an attempt to assert its hegemony
over the Baltic, though they were mostly unsuccessful.
The result was the Treaty of Copenhagen in 1660, which
established
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The Danish
Countryside
Photo by S. Mellor |
the present borders of Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.
A further result of these wars and of the economic losses
by a disgruntled growing merchant class, was the growing
power of the king. In 1660, Frederick III carried out
a coup d'état against the aristocratic nobility's Council
of the Realm. This coup was largely possible because
of the popular discontent with the nobility after its
poor military performance in the Swedish Wars in the
Baltic. The monarchy, which until then had largely depended
on the aristocracy for its power, was made hereditary,
and in 1661 it became absolute. The absolute monarchy
would last until Andersen's time in the middle of the
19th century.
The costly wars on the continent and with Sweden were
followed by economic hardships, though some international
markets opened in the 18th century. Denmark began the
colonization of Greenland and opened trade with the West
Indies.
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A
Danish Vicarage from the
1800s
Photo by
S. Brantly |
Andersen's time, the 19th century, was a time of tremendous
change for Denmark. Andersen was born in 1805, the middle
of the Napoleonic wars, from 1799 to 1815, which bankrupted
the country. In1814, due to Denmark's support of Napoleon,
Denmark had to cede Norway to Sweden. In 1849, the absolute
monarchy was abolished and a constitutional monarchy
was set in its place. In 1864-66 Denmark lost Schleswig-Holstein
to the Prussians. All these changes influenced Andersen
and his writings
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Denmark's relative
size
compared with Wisconsin |
Denmark went through three constitutions between 1849
and 1915. In 1920, Denmark regained the northern portion
of Schleswig. In 1945 Denmark recognized the independence
of Iceland, a former colony, and in 1948 granted home
rule autonomy to the Faeroe Islands. Greenland became
an official part of Denmark in 1953 and was granted autonomy
in 1979. Denmark was one of the founding members of NATO
in 1949.
Today, Denmark is a nation of about 6 million people.
It is a constitutional monarchy. The current monarch
is Queen Magarethe II. Denmark is a member of the European
Union.
S. Mellor |