Denmark
Denmark officially Kingdom of Denmark, kingdom (2005 est. pop. 5,432,000),
16,629 sq mi (43,069 sq km), N Europe. It borders on Germany in the south, the
North Sea in the west, the Skagerrak in the north, and the Kattegat and the
Oresund in the east. Copenhagen is Denmark's capital, largest city, and chief
industrial center. In addition to the capital, other important cities include
Alborg, Arhus , Esbjerg , Frederiksberg and Gentofte (suburbs of Copenhagen),
Lyngby, Odense , and Roskilde .
Land and People
The southernmost of the Scandinavian countries, Denmark proper includes most of
the Jutland peninsula; several major islands, notably Sj?lland , Fyn , Lolland
, Falster , Langeland , Als , Mon , Bornholm , and Amager ; and about 450 other
islands. The Faeroe Islands and Greenland , in the North Atlantic, are
self-governing dependencies within the Danish realm. A part of the European
plain, the country is almost entirely low-lying, and more than 65% of its land
area is cultivated. The North Atlantic Drift (a warm ocean current) usually
ensures a relatively mild climate, but occasionally ice closes the Baltic Sea,
thus cutting off warmer waters and making the winter quite severe.
In addition to Denmark's Scandinavian majority, there are Eskimo, Faeroese and
German minorities. Almost all the inhabitants of Denmark speak Danish (there
are several dialects), and Faeroese, Greenlandic (an Eskimo dialect), and
German are also spoken. The great majority of Danes belong to the established
Lutheran Church; there are small minorities of other Protestants and Roman
Catholics. Denmark has an excellent system of public education, developed
largely in the 19th cent. There are universities at Arhus, Copenhagen, and
Odense.
Economy
Once essentially an agricultural country and still possessing a visibly rural
landscape, Denmark after 1945 greatly expanded its industrial base so that by
the 1990s industry contributed over 25% of the gross domestic product and
agriculture less than 5% (Denmark's other traditional industries of fishing and
shipbuilding have also declined). Financial and other services, trade,
transportation, and communication are also important.
The main commodities raised are livestock (pigs, cattle, and poultry), root
crops (beets, kohlrabi, and potatoes), and cereals (barley, oats, and wheat).
There is a large fishing industry, and Denmark possesses a commercial shipping
fleet of considerable size. The leading manufactures include food products
(especially meat and dairy goods), chemicals, machinery, metal products (made
almost entirely from imported raw materials, since Denmark has practically no
mineral resources), electronic and transport equipment, beer, textiles, and
paper and wood products. Tourism is also an important industry.
Denmark's main exports are agricultural and industrial machinery, teak and oak
furniture, meat, fish, and metals and metal manufactures; the chief imports are
machinery, metals, motor vehicles, and fuels. The country's leading trade
partners are Germany, Sweden, Great Britain, and other European Union countries
as well as the United States. Denmark suffered severe economic problems
throughout the 1980s, and in the 1990s it had a high unemployment rate, large
public-sector expenses, and a massive foreign debt. However, tight fiscal and
monetary policies combined with an increasing export base held some promise of
economic recovery.
Government
Denmark is a
constitutional monarchy, governed according to the 1953 constitution.
Legislative power is vested in the monarch (who is also head of state) in
conjunction with the unicameral Folketing (parliament) of 179 elected members.
Executive power is exercised by the monarch through his or her ministers, led
by the prime minister, who is the head of government. The cabinet of ministers
is responsible to the Folketing and must have the support of the majority of
that body. Administratively, Denmark proper is divided into 14 counties and one
city, Copenhagen.
The reigning monarch is Queen Margaret (Margrethe) II, who succeeded her father,
King Frederick IX, upon his death in 1972. In the period following 1945, the
Social Democratic party has been the leading political party.
History
Ancient History to 1448
The Danes probably
settled Jutland by c.10,000 BC and later (2d millennium BC) developed a Bronze
Age culture there. However, little is known of Danish history before the age of
the Vikings (9th-11th cent. AD), when the Danes had an important role in the
Viking (or Norse) raids on Western Europe and were prominent among the invaders
of England who were opposed by King Alfred (reigned 871-99) and his successors.
St. Ansgar (801-65) helped convert the Danes to Christianity; Harold Bluetooth
(d. c.985) was the first Christian king of Denmark. His son, Sweyn (reigned
c.986-1014), conquered England. From 1018 to 1035, Denmark, England, and Norway
were united under King Canute (Knut). The southern part of Sweden (Skane,
Halland, and Blekinge) was, with brief interruptions, part of Denmark until
1658. After Canute's death, Denmark fell into a period of turmoil and civil
war. Later, Waldemar I (reigned 1157-82) and Waldemar II (reigned 1202-41) were
energetic rulers who established Danish hegemony over N Europe. With the end of
the Viking raids and the development of a strong and independent church, the
nobles were able to impose their will on the weaker kings. In 1282, Eric V
(reigned 1259-86) was forced to submit to the Great Charter, which established
annual parliaments and a council of nobles who shared the king's power. This
form of government persisted until 1660. Waldemar IV (reigned 1340-75) again
brought Danish power to a high point, but he was humiliated by the Hanseatic
League in the Treaty of Stralsund (1370). Waldemar's daughter, Queen Margaret ,
achieved (1397) the union of the Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish crowns in her
person (see Kalmar Union ). Sweden soon escaped effective Danish rule, and with
the accession (1523) of Gustavus I of Sweden the union was dissolved. However,
the union with Norway lasted until 1814.
Denmark and Norway
In 1448, Christian I became king and established on the Danish throne the house
of Oldenburg, from which the present ruling family
(Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glucksburg) is descended. He also united (1460)
Schleswig and Holstein with the Danish crown. The Reformation (early 16th
cent.) gradually gained adherents in Denmark, and during the reign of Christian
III (1534-59) Lutheranism became the established religion. In the late 16th and
early 17th cent., Denmark had a brilliant court, with a brisk intellectual and
cultural life; the astronomer Tycho Brahe (1546-1601) was a major figure, and
the Danish Renaissance style of architecture (strongly influenced by that of
the Low Countries) was developed.
The division of power in Denmark between the king and the nobles seriously
handicapped the country's attempt to gain supremacy in the Baltic region.
Denmark was involved in numerous wars with Sweden and other neighbors; the
participation of Christian IV (reigned 1588-1648) in the Thirty Years War (1618-48)
and the wars of Frederick III (reigned 1648-70) with Sweden caused Denmark to
lose its hegemony in the north to Sweden. The Danish-Swedish Treaty of
Copenhagen (1660) confirmed most of the Danish losses imposed by the Treaty of
Roskilde (1658).
The wars weakened the nobility by reducing its numbers and strengthened the
monarchy by increasing the power and importance of the royal army. Frederick
III and Christian V (reigned 1670-99), aided by their minister Count
Griffenfeld , were able to make the kingdom an absolute monarchy with the
support of the peasants and townspeople. Denmark maintained an imperial status
by continuing to rule over Iceland and by establishing (late 17th cent.) the
Danish West Indies (see Virgin Islands ). In the Northern War (1720-21) against
Charles XII of Sweden, Frederick IV (reigned 1699-1730) gained some financial
awards and the union of ducal Schleswig with royal Schleswig.
The later 18th cent. was
marked by important social reforms carried out by the ministers Johann Hartwig
Ernst Bernstorff , Andreas Peter Bernstorff , and Johann Friedrich Struensee .
Serfdom was abolished (1788), and peasant proprietorship was encouraged. In the
French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, Denmark, having sided with Napoleon
I, was twice attacked by England (see Copenhagen, battle of ; Copenhagen ). By
the Treaty of Kiel (1814), Denmark lost Norway to Sweden and Helgoland to
England, but retained possession of Greenland, the Faeroe Islands, and Iceland.
1814 to the Present
In the early 19th cent., Denmark's modern system of public education was
started, and there was a flowering of literature and philosophy (led by Hans
Christian Andersen and Soren Kierkegaard). As a result of plans for a liberal,
centralized constitution, Frederick VII (reigned 1848-63) became involved in a
war with Prussia (1848-50) over the status of Schleswig-Holstein . Denmark was
defeated and agreed in the London Protocol of 1852 to preserve a special status
for the two duchies. In the meantime, a new constitution was promulgated
(1849), ending the absolute monarchy and establishing wide suffrage.
The new government
attempted (1855) to incorporate Schleswig into the Danish constitutional
system, and soon after the accession (1863) of Christian IX war broke out again
(1864), this time with Prussia and Austria. Denmark was defeated badly and lost
Schleswig-Holstein. This loss of about one third of the Danish territory was,
however, offset by great economic gains that transformed Denmark, in the second
half of the 19th cent., from a land of poor peasants into the nation with the
most prosperous small farmers in Europe. This change was achieved largely by
persuading the farmers to specialize in dairy and pork products rather than in
grain (which was more expensive to produce than the grain imported from the
United States). The folk high schools , originated by N. F. S. Grundtvig
(1783-1872), played an important role in reeducating the Danish farmers. At the
same time, the cooperative movement flourished in Denmark. Electoral reforms
(1914-15) granted suffrage to the lower classes and to women and strengthened
the lower chamber of the legislature.
Denmark remained neutral in World War I and recovered North Schleswig after a
plebiscite in 1920. In the interwar period and after World War II, Denmark
adopted much social welfare legislation and a system of progressive taxation.
Although the Social Democratic government of Denmark had signed a 10-year
nonaggression pact with Germany in 1939, the country was occupied by German
forces in Apr., 1940. Christian X (reigned 1912-47) and his government
remained, but in Aug., 1943, the Germans established martial law, arrested the
government, and placed the king under house arrest.
Most of the Jewish population (including refugees from other countries)
escaped, with Danish help, to Sweden. Among the escapees was Neils Bohr, the
Danish physicist who went on to the United States and worked on the atomic bomb
project at Los Alamos. The Danish minister in Washington, although disavowed by
his government, signed an agreement granting the United States military bases
in Greenland. Danish merchant vessels served under the Allies, and a Danish
resistance force operated (1945) under the supreme Allied command. Denmark was
liberated by British troops in May, 1945. After the war, Denmark recovered
quickly, and its economy, especially the manufacturing sector, expanded
considerably.
Denmark became (1945) a
charter member of the United Nations and, breaking a long tradition of
neutrality, joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1949. In 1960,
Denmark became part of the European Free Trade Association, which it left in
1972 in order to join the European Community (now the European Union). Denmark
granted independence to Iceland in 1944 and home rule to the Faeroe Islands in
1948 and to Greenland in 1979. In 1982, the first Conservative-led government
since 1894, a center-right coalition headed by Poul Schluter, came to power.
Having initially rejected (June, 1992) the European Community's Maastricht Treaty,
an agreement that represented a major step toward European unification, Danish
voters approved the treaty with exemptions in May, 1993. In 1993, Schluter
resigned; Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, a Social Democrat, became prime minister,
heading a center-left coalition that was returned to office in 1998. In a blow
to Rasmussen, Danish voters rejected adoption of the euro (see European
Monetary System ) in a referendum in Sept., 2000. Parliamentary elections in
2001 brought a Liberal party-led conservative coalition to power; Prime
Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's heads the minority government.
The publication of cartoons with images of the Prophet Muhammad in a Danish
newspaper in Sept., 2005, brought protests from Danish Muslims and ambassadors
from Muslim nations, because of Islamic prohibitions on any representation of
Muhammad. The protests initially drew tepid responses from the newspaper and
Danish officials. The subsequent distribution by Muslim clerics of the cartoons
combined with even more offensive images, and the republication of the original
cartoons in some other Western and non-Western papers, sparked sometimes
violent anti-Danish and anti-Western protests and boycotts of Danish goods in
many Muslim nations in early 2006 and led to apologies for causing offense from
the newspaper and Denmark.
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