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Subject: Nordic FAQ - 2 of 7 - NORDEN
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       A Frequently Answered Questions (FAQ) file for the newsgroup
                   S O C . C U L T U R E . N O R D I C
                          *** PART 2: NORDEN ***


   Index
                 2.1
                        How does one define "Scandinavia" and "Nordic
                        Countries"?
                 2.1.1
                        Background
                 2.1.2
                        What is "Nordic"?
                 2.1.3
                        What is "Scandinavia"?
                 2.1.4
                        What is "Baltic"?
                 2.2
                        What makes the Nordic countries a unity?
                 2.2.1
                        Culture
                 2.2.2
                        Religion
                 2.2.3
                        Geography
                 2.2.4
                        Language
                 2.3
                        The S�mi people (not Lapps!)
                 2.3.1
                        Who they are?
                 2.3.2
                        S�mi history
                 2.3.3
                        S�mi cultures
                 2.3.4
                        S�mi mythology
                 2.3.5
                        S�mi languages
                 2.3.6
                        The S�mi as citizens
                 2.3.7
                        The S�mi today
                 2.3.8
                        SANA - The North American S�mi Association
                 2.3.9
                        @ The S�mi in Internet- a linklist
                 2.4
                        What do we know about Scandinavian mythology?
                 2.4.1
                        Short introduction to the sources
                 2.4.2
                        The World Tree Yggdrasill
                 2.4.3
                        The Creation of the world
                 2.4.4
                        Asgard, the realm of the Gods
                 2.4.5
                        The Gods
                 2.4.6
                        The Goddesses
                 2.4.7
                        @ Trolls and other beings
                 2.5
                        Introduction to the History of Norden etcetera,
                        etcetera...
                 2.5.1
                        Norden in prehistoric times
                 2.5.2
                        Iron Age
                 2.5.3
                        Where did the Vikings travel?
                 2.5.3b
                        Place names in Old Norse
                 2.5.4
                        What about those horns in Viking helmets?
                 2.5.5
                        Medieval times
                 2.5.6
                        Christian and pre-Christian laws
                 2.5.7
                        Modern Nordic History in a Nutshell
                 2.5.8
                        Political history & co-operation
                 2.6
                        The essence of Nordishness
                 2.6.1
                        What is Janteloven (the Jante Law)?
                 2.6.2
                        A Nordic national character?
                 2.7
                        @ Sex, drugs and censorship
                 2.7.2
                        Domestic partnership
                 2.7.3
                        Pornography
                 2.7.4
                        Censorship in the Nordic countries
                 2.7.5
                        Drugs in the Nordic countries
                 2.8
                        Nordic socialism and welfare
                 2.8.1
                        Wouldn't the Nordic economies gain from
                        abolishing the Socialism?
                 2.8.2
                        Don't the Nordic states have huge welfare
                        expenditures?
                 2.8.3
                        But you do pay terrible taxes, don't you?
                 2.8.4
                        Now, when the Soviet Union has fallen...
                 2.8.5
                        What are the differences of the economies?
                 2.9
                        @ Valborg, Midsummer and other festivals
                 2.9.1
                        @ Valborg
                 2.9.2
                        @ Midsummer
                 2.9.3
                          !  Lucia
                 2.9.4
                          !  Christmas
                 2.10
                        Nordic alcohol customs
    _________________________________________________________________



Subject: 2.1 How does one define "Scandinavia" and "Nordic Countries"?

  It may seem a bit silly, but this is actually a topic that every now
  and then causes rather heated discussions in s.c.n. So I'm going to be
  pretty thorough here.



 2.1.1 Background

  The Roman historian Pliny the Elder mentions in 67 CE an island called
  "Scadinauia" in the sea at the edge of the world, north of Germania.
  This, as it dawned much later to the civilized world, was in fact no
  island but the southern tip of Sweden, the province of Scania (Sk�ne).
  The name is thought to be related to the word "skada", or "damage"
  that could be done to ships by the sand reefs outside southwestern
  Sweden. The "-avia" ending, on the other hand, probably comes from a
  word meaning "island", cf. contemporary Norwegian "�ya". Thus the
  original definition of the word "Scandinavia" was purely geographical:
  it referred to the Scandinavian peninsula -- contemporary Sweden and
  Norway.

  Later, as people became more conscious of their culture, formed
  political unions, colonized previously uninhabited areas and conquered
  the land of their neighbours, the definition of the word started to
  stretch. "Scandinavia" became more a political and cultural concept
  than a geographic one. And since cultural boundaries tend to be less
  clearly definable than geographic ones, and political boundaries on
  the other hand move around quite a bit, the current use of the word is
  a bit of a mess.



 2.1.2 What is "Nordic"?

  Another term used of the countries covered by this FAQ is, of course,
  "Nordic countries", coming originally from French ("Pays Nordiques").
  It was at first used of "northern" (European) countries in general,
  but with the common political, economic and cultural development of
  Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Iceland, the term has in English
  widely become established as referring exclusively to said five
  countries (still, not everyone agrees; you may, for instance, find
  Canadians who are under the misconception that *they* are Nordic :-> .
  Some examples from dictionaries:

  [Webster's Third New International Dictionary]
  NORDIC
  4. of or relating to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and Finland.

  [Oxford Reference Dictionary]
  NORDIC
  2. of Scandinavia, Finland or Iceland.

  In the Nordic languages, one has the term NORDEN ("Pohjola" or
  "Pohjoismaat" in Finnish) which is commonly used of the five Nordic
  countries which since 1956 cooperate in the Nordic Council. Some have
  tried to implant this term into English, but without much success so
  far. It does, however, occur every now and then in this newsgroup.

  In addition, it should be noted that after the fall of the Soviet
  Union, Latvia and especially Estonia have expressed a wish for
  extensive co-operation with the Nordic countries, emphasizing their
  many historical and cultural ties with Norden. If the Nordic Council
  manages to justify its existence even as Finland and Sweden have
  joined the EU (some politicians in the Nordic countries have
  questioned the importance of the NC in the current political
  situation), we may yet see Estonia and Latvia joining.

  The "Nordic race" is a topic which now and then get brought to the
  groups attention. Mostly by people living abroad. Usually the Nordic
  participants in the discussion produce disappointment on the other
  side, by stating that we consider the typical nordic look as un-exotic
  and un-sexy.

  Arne Kolstad writes:
         This is confusing, but nevertheless:
         While "Nordic" means somewhere a bit North; I think it is
  mostly understood as a (recently) politically defined collection of
  countries, including Scandinavia, Iceland and Finland. At least that
  is how it is understood in these countries. As a linguistic unity,
  Norden hangs well apart. In general, however, we dislike each other
  enough to form an active neighbourhood.
         Cultural relationships with other regions - Westwards for the
  Germanic, Eastwards for the Fennic - are interesting. If there is a
  political process with the outcome of defining them as Nordic (like
  the one some Balts are trying to establish), then so be it. I can't
  see, though, that poor old Scotland stands a chance as long as the
  evil empire rules.



 2.1.3 What is "Scandinavia"?

  The word "Scandinavia" presents a bit more difficulty. In Nordic
  languages, the meaning is quite clear:

  Skandinavien:
  Sweden, Denmark, Norway (and sometimes Iceland)
  -- the ancient lands of the Norsemen.

  The Scandinavian peninsula, on the other hand, is usually simply
  understood as comprising Norway and Sweden, despite the unclear border
  to the Kola peninsula. The northernmost part of Finland is of course
  also situated on the Scandinavian peninsula.

  But in English, alas, there seems to be no standard usage. This is
  mainly due to the fact that English lacks a simple and clear term for
  the five countries, and the word "Scandinavia" tends to be used for
  that purpose instead. The term "Nordic countries", in its current
  definition, is a rather recent invention, its meaning is still a bit
  obscure especially to non-Europeans, it's awkward to use and to some
  people it carries unpleasant connotations of the Aryan "Nordic race".
  Therefore, you will find that it's quite common to define the word
  "Scandinavia" in English like this:

  [Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English]
  SCANDINAVIAN
  1. of the countries Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Iceland
     in northern Europe, or their people or languages.

  On the other hand, it is not uncommon to use the word "Scandinavia" in
  its more limited definition. An example:

  [The Concise Oxford Dictionary]
  SCANDINAVIAN
  1. a native or inhabitant of Scandinavia
     (Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Iceland).

  And some encyclopaedias put it like this:

  [The Random House Encyclopaedia]
  SCANDINAVIA
  1. region of northern Europe consisting of
     the kingdoms of Sweden, Norway and Denmark;
     culturally and historically Finland and Iceland
     are often considered part of this area.

  Despite the term being rather clear for the Scandinavians themselves,
  disputes remain about how the term would be understood and derived in
  English. If the word is understood as a geographic term, how can then
  Denmark be included - as most do. If instead it's deduced from the
  area where the languages are quite similar North-Germanians, should
  Iceland logically be excluded?

  At the risk of disturbing some people's sleep, we will use "Nordic"
  and "Scandinavian" interchangeably throughout this FAQ, for practical
  reasons. You have been warned. :->



 2.1.4 What is "Baltic"?

  "Baltic" as a single word is in itself a bit vague, because it can
  mean either the Baltic peninsula (Balticum) or the Baltic sea (Mare
  Balticum), and it depends on the context where it's used.

  But, when this "Baltic" is used in connection with the word "country",
  there are two distinct concepts:
    * Baltic countries - countries in Baltikum (Estonia, Lathvia,
      Lithuania)
    * Baltic Sea countries - all countries around the Baltic Sea.

  The latter is normally used in connection with environmental issues
  concerning cooperative protection of the Baltic sea, and in some other
  efforts of public utility - such as occasional Miss Baltic Sea
  contests.






------------------------------

Subject: 2.2 What makes Nordic countries a unity?

  From the Viking age onwards, the Nordics have fought each other,
  formed unions with each other and ruled over each other. Sweden ruled
  over Finland for over 600 years, Denmark ruled over southern Sweden
  also for over 600 years (or, alternatively, Sweden has ruled over
  eastern Denmark for the past 300 years) and over Norway for nearly 500
  years, while Norway ruled over Iceland for some 200 years and Denmark
  yet another 500 years, and the list goes on (but Finland hasn't ruled
  over anybody, and is very envious because of that :-> . Unavoidably,
  this has caused some anti-pathies, but it has also made the Nordic
  cultures more uniform.



 2.2.1 Culture

  Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Iceland shared a more or less homogenous
  "Viking" culture in the Viking Age (800 - ~1050 CE), and Finland,
  while not strictly speaking a "Viking" country, did have a "Viking
  age" and a culture very close to its western neighbours, and at the
  close of Viking age was united into the Swedish kingdom. Scandinavian
  culture today could be described as a potpourri of this "original"
  culture, medieval German influence, French influence in the centuries
  that followed, and several other smaller sources, not forgetting local
  development and national romantic inventiveness, of course.

  A significant factor is also the fact that the Nordic countries never
  had an era of feudalism to speak of; personal freedom is highly valued
  here. One of the expressions of this freedom is the Allemansret /
  Allemansr�tt ("Everyman's right") in Norway, Sweden and Finland,
  giving all residents free access to the forests, seas and uncultivated
  land.

  The Nordics are rather heavy drinkers, the "vodkabelt" goes right
  through Finland, Sweden and Norway; the Danes are more of a
  beer-drinking nation, but don't say no to a glass of akvavit either.
  Sm�rg�sbord with pickled herrings and open-faced sandwiches is no rare
  sight. Women are emancipated. Towns are clean and well-functioning
  enough to make a Swiss clocksmith feel at home. And so forth; myths
  and stereotypes about Scandinavia are many. Some of them are, of
  course, less true than others, but their very existence illustrates
  the fact that we do have quite a lot in common.



 2.2.2 Religion

  The Germanic pagan religion has left its mark on customs and
  festivals; celebrations with bonfires and maypoles mark the Finnish
  and Swedish midsummer, and the Nordic Christmas bears many
  similarities to the midwinter feast of the Vikings, starting with the
  word for Christmas (sw. Jul, fin. Joulu) which comes from the Old
  Germanic word "hjul", meaning the wheel of the year. Trolls and gnomes
  still inhabit Nordic households, although the once revered and feared
  mythical beings have been reduced to the lowly caste of soft toys.

  The Finns and the S�mi ought to have a common set of folklore and old
  relicts of religious traditions, but it is rather hard to find a
  common denominator for Fenno-Ugric traditions. For instance are the
  S�mi the only Fenno-Ugrians where shamans are known. Probably the
  Finns and the northern Germanians have made impressions in both
  directions. In any case: Bears had a central role in myths and rites,
  and beings ruling the nature, Haltia in Finnish, are more central in
  the Finnish and S�mi tradition than among other Nordeners.

  The Nordic peoples were converted to Catholicism in the 10th to 12th
  centuries, but the Lutheran reformation embraced in all Nordic
  countries wiped out most of the Catholic customs and memories in the
  course of the 16th century. Having become a stronghold of
  protestantism against Catholics in the south and Greek Orthodox in the
  east had some unifying effect on Scandinavia even though wars between
  the countries kept raging on; religion was, after all, the most
  important basis of one's identity well into the 18th century. The
  Lutheran ideal was to require the common people to be able to read the
  Bible on their own, which had a enormous educating effect on the
  Nordic peoples. This, along with the protestant work ethic, had a
  significant role in the forming of the Scandinavian societies,
  enabling their economic and cultural growth and the pioneering work
  that the Nordics have played in decreasing social inequality. No doubt
  it also shaped the national character of each country to a similar
  direction (a common complaint in Norden: we're such joyless, grey and
  angst-ridden people ---> it's all the Lutheran Church's fault! :->

  Even today, all five Nordic countries have a Lutheran state church to
  which a vast majority of the population belongs (there is of course
  full freedom of religion granted by the constitutions of the five
  countries). Paradoxically, this is probably the reason why
  Scandinavians are among the most secular peoples on the face of the
  earth. Despite its seemingly all-pervasive presence in various state
  institutions and the ceremonies guiding the life of the average
  Scandinavian, Lutheranism has in most parts of Scandinavia retreated
  to the fringes of culture and has little meaning to the average
  person. Church attendance is record-low, the liberal morals hardly
  reflect specifically Lutheran ideals, religion is no major issue in
  politics, etc. The official, institutionalized religion offered by the
  state churches has to a large extent vaccinated the Nordics against
  Christian fundamentalism of the American kind.



 2.2.3 Geography

  Norway, Sweden and northern Finland form the Scandinavian peninsula
  more than 2'000 kilometers from south to north. Denmark is a peninsula
  stretching out from continental Europe, accompanied with an
  archipelago of large and small islands, while Iceland is situated in
  the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. Except for Iceland, the countries
  are situated relatively close to each other, often sharing borders
  with one another. They do not really form a geographical unit, but
  this is rather irrelevant since seas and waterways have historically,
  instead of separating peoples, united them. And we are, after all,
  talking about the best seafarers of ancient Europe.

  Finland, Sweden and Norway receive many tourists camping outdoors and
  hiking in the (relatively) unpolluted wilderness, taking advantage of
  the "Allemansret" (the General Right of Public Access) - the ancient
  right to move over land and waters of others, and to pick berries, and
  mushrooms, as long as one doesn't disturb and doesn't cause harm. Some
  tourists even travel by bicycle.

  Since the kingdom of Denmark includes also the autonomous area of
  Greenland (area: 2.2 mill. km�, pop. 53,000) the area which could be
  regarded as "Norden" is huge.



 2.2.4 Language

  Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic and Faroese are all
  North-Germanic languages developed from the Old Norse spoken in Viking
  age Scandinavia. (Also English is classified as a Germanic language.)
  A Swede, a Dane and a Norwegian can understand each other with varying
  degrees of difficulties, but none of them will fully understand
  Icelandic or Faroese without studying the languages. Finnish is an
  entirely different case, it's a Finno-Ugric language related to
  Estonian and Hungarian. There is, however, a Swedish-speaking minority
  in Finland, which ties it linguistically to Scandinavia. Also, Finnish
  is related to the S�mi languages spoken in Norway, Sweden and Finland
  by the S�mi or Lapps, the aborigines of northern Scandinavia (and the
  Kola peninsula and adjacent lands).

   Melodic accent & glottal stop

  Norwegian and Swedish except Finland-Swedish belong to the few
  European languages with a melodic accent. (Others are Lithuanian and
  Serbo-Croatian.) The way this melodic accent is expressed vary quite a
  lot between different dialects, but the dichotomy exists everywhere
  having an important role to differentiate between words which
  otherways would have been confused.

  Words with one syllable, words stressed on the end and short words
  with an unstressed suffix usually has what could be called "one
  syllable accent" (rarely marked, but then by acute accent). Words
  derived from two-syllable roots usually have an almost equal stress on
  both syllables.

  In south Swedish dialects the "one syllable accent" is expressed as a
  falling tone on the first syllable, while "two syllable accent" is
  expressed as a rise and a fall of the tone on the first syllable.
  Questions are expressed by a rising tone on the second syllable.

  In most Danish dialects (and some Scanian too) this melody accent has
  been replaced by a glottal stop (st�d) in place of the "one syllable
  accents".

   Are linguistic definitions of any value?

  Maybe not, but nevertheless they show up now and then in the group.

  An example:

  Dr. R. Rautiu <[email protected]> writes:
  Contemporary Germanists are dividing the North-West Germanic branch in
  a
   1. Continental branch comprising: Swedish, Danish, Bokm�l (Norwegian)
   2. Insular branch comprising: Icelandic, Faeroese and sometimes
      Nynorsk (closer to insular than continental linguistic traits),
      some specialists put Nynorsk as a transitional language between
      the continental and the insular groups.

  Tor Arntsen <[email protected]> replies:
  About trying to group Nynorsk and Bokm�l to different East/West Nordic
  groups: It's really a red herring as Nynorsk and Bokm�l exist as
  written languages only. No one actually speaks Nynorsk for example.
  The same goes for Bokm�l.

  Some dialects would be "closer" to either one or the other, depending
  on what you end up with if you try to create a "written" form of a
  dialect. Norwegian language has as many dialects as there are cities
  and villages and valleys and fjords, and there is no way to create a
  common written language from that. Bokm�l and Nynorsk are just two
  constructed written languages, where Bokm�l is something that once
  upon a time came from written Danish, and Nynorsk was constructed from
  south-west Norvegian dialects -- and some personal colouring from the
  constructor (cultural and political).


  Eugene Holman writes:
  The majority of the traditional inhabitants of Iceland, the Faroe
  Islands, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and some regions of western Finland
  speak closely related Germanic languages belonging to the North
  Germanic ( = Scandinavian = Nordic) subgroup. North Germanic is a
  subgrouping within Germanic (formerly called Teutonic). Thus English,
  German, Yiddish, Dutch, Afrikaans, Frisian, Lezebuurjesh, and the now
  extinct Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, Old High German, Gothic,
  Burgundian, Vandal, Longobardian, etc. are all Germanic or Teutonic
  languages ( - but they are not Nordic languages).

  The late Einar Haugen, one of the leading authorities on the
  Scandinavian languages, once characterized Norwegian as "Danish spoken
  with a Swedish accent". The essential difference between the three
  Scandinavian languages is that Danish and (Bokm�l) Norwegian have a
  long history of shared culture and vocabulary which Swedish lacks,
  while Norwegian and Swedish have many shared features of
  pronunciation, which Danish lacks. Actually, the truth is somewhat
  more complex, since Norwegian and Danish have radically simplified
  their pronunciation and grammar in a way that Swedish has not, but the
  pronunciation of Danish has subsequently been influenced by that of
  German, while Swedish and Norwegian have not.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq21.html ]







------------------------------

Subject: 2.3 The S�mi people (not Lapps!)

This section by Kari Yli-Kuha
(being revised - last edited 98/03/21)
A more recent version might be found at
<http://www.sqc.fi/~ylikuka/scnordic/sami/>



 2.3.1 Who they are

  The S�mi people are one of the aboriginal peoples of the Fennoscandian
  area, (meaning here: Scandinavia, Finland, eastern Karelia and Kola
  peninsula) and for long they lived more or less disconnected from the
  European civilization.

  They are often referred to as Lapps but they themselves prefer to be
  called S�mi (Saamelaiset/Samerna) because S�pmi is the name they use
  of themselves and their country. There is also a very old name vuowjos
  which has been linked to the S�mi.

  The S�mi languages (there are several of them) are Finno-Ugric
  languages and the closest relatives to the Baltic-Finnic languages
  (Finnish, Estonian).

  S�mi people live nowadays in an area which spreads from J�mtlands L�n
  in Sweden through northern Norway and Finland to the Kola Peninsula in
  Russia.



 2.3.2 S�mi history

  The origins of S�mi people have been researched for long but no
  certain answer has yet been found. The name "S�mi" has the same origin
  as the names "Suomi" (Finnish name for Finland), and "H�me" (Tavastia,
  an area in southern Finland) and comes originally from the Baltic word
  "S�m�" - meaning the area north of Gulf of Finland, i.e. current
  Finland.

  Anthropologically there are two types of S�mi people, the eastern type
  which resembles northern Asian peoples, and the western which is
  closer to Europids; blood survey, especially in this century,
  indicates western rather than eastern heritage.

  Perhaps the S�mi identity should therefore be seen more as a nomadic
  hunter-gatherer way of life, rather than as anything genetic - people
  who adopted the S�mi way of life became S�mi.

  It is believed that the original S�mi people came to areas now known
  as Finland and eastern Karelia during and after the last ice age,
  following herds of reindeer. Prehistoric (some 4000 years old) ski
  findings by the Arctic Sea show that there was some sort of S�mi
  culture living there already at that time. Some 1500 rock drawings
  have been found in the areas where they lived, e.g. by lake Onega and
  in Kola peninsula; the easternmost of them are 5000 years old.

  Some archeologists have linked the oldest known Scandinavian stone age
  culture, the so-called Komsa culture by the Arctic Sea, to the
  ancestors of the S�mi. Historians now also note that Ghengis Khan
  wrote that the S�mi (or, Fenner as they were then called), were the
  one nation he would never try to fight again. The S�mi were not
  warriors in the conventional sense. They simply didn't believe in war
  and so they "disappeared" in times of conflict. The S�mi remain one
  culture that has never been to war but are known as "peaceful
  retreaters" adapting to changing living conditions, whether they were
  caused by nature or by other people.

  Anyway, it is known that the S�mi people are the original people in
  the Fennoscandia area. Many names even in southern Finland and central
  Sweden are of S�mi origin. There was a S�mi population in those areas
  as late as the sixteenth century. The S�mi are known to have fished
  and hunted seals on the west coast of the Gulf of Bothnia, but in the
  late Middle Ages the Swedish agricultural population "invaded" the
  coastal area, pushing the S�mi further north. The same happened in
  Finland so that now the original S�mi people can only be found north
  of the Arctic Circle.



 2.3.3 S�mi cultures

  S�mi people have always settled thinly in a large area, making their
  living mostly hunting and fishing, families having large hunting areas
  around them. Connections to other people were rare although they had a
  strong sense of community thinking when it came to dividing
  hunting/fishing areas between families, and, of course, the marriages
  were made between people in nearby regions. This seems to be the major
  reason why there is no one S�mi culture and language, but several S�mi
  cultures and languages. The cultures have been formed both by
  different surroundings and living conditions and varying contacts with
  other cultures; in Sweden and Norway the Germanic culture, in Finland
  the Finnish culture and in Kola peninsula the Russian and Karelian
  cultures.

     Forest S�mi

  S�mi people living in coniferous forests lived mainly by fishing, but
  hunting was also very important. Most of the Finnish and Swedish S�mi
  people belong to this group. Families formed Lappish villages
  ('siida') normally by some large river. The size of the siida varied
  from just a couple of families up to 20 or 30, totaling some hundred
  individuals. Watersheds were natural borders between these villages.
  It was also common to have some reindeer for transportation and for
  the furs, which were an important material for clothing.

  A special group of forest S�mi are the S�mi north of Lake Inari
  because their language differs from the rest of forest S�mi - it's the
  westernmost dialect of eastern S�mi languages.

     Fjeld S�mi

    [ About the word "fjeld": The ice age has shaped the Scandinavian
    mountains, especially in Lapland, so that the top of them is round,
    and mostly bare. In some Nordic languages there is a special word
    for them (fjell/fjdll/ tunturi) to separate them from other
    mountains. There is also a rarely used English word "fjeld" for the
    same purpose. The word "fjeld" means here a [treeless] mountain in
    Lapland. ]

  The fjeld S�mi are also known as "reindeer S�mi" because the reindeer
  is by far the most important part of their economy.

  They live on the fjelds between Sweden and Norway and on the highlands
  north of it tending their herds. This kind of nomad culture is unique
  in Europe and as such it has been the subject of a lot of interest. It
  has been seen as the most typical form of S�mi culture although as
  such it's only a few hundred years old. It's not nearly as common as
  the half-nomad forest S�mi culture. The fjeld S�mi do also some
  fishing and willow grouse (am. willow ptarmigan) trapping. The
  importance of reindeer in the S�mi culture can be seen in the fact
  that in S�mi languages there are about 400 names for reindeer
  according to gender, age, color, shape etc.

  One special group are the River S�mi living around river �eatnu/Tana
  and its tributaries. They lived mainly fishing salmon but nowadays
  they have some agriculture and domestic animals, and more permanent
  settlements than the fjeld S�mi.

     Sea S�mi

  The first written remark of the sea S�mi living in northern Norway by
  the Arctic Sea was made in year 892 by a Norwegian tribal chief Ottar.
  The remark described that "up in the north there are people who hunt
  in the winter and fish on the sea in the summer". This half-nomad
  culture is strongly affected by both Norwegian and Finnish
  inhabitants. They live in two different areas. The Norwegians call the
  northern people "sj�finner" and the southern "bufinner".

     Kola Peninsula S�mi

  The S�mi living in the Kola peninsula are the original population in
  that area. The number of S�mi there has remained pretty much the same
  throughout the years, slightly below 2000 people. They live mostly
  fishing and reindeering.



 2.3.4 S�mi mythology

  Living of the nature has formed the original conceptions of the world
  among S�mi; the world view was animistic by nature, with shamanistic
  features. They believed that all objects in the nature had a soul.
  Therefore, everybody was expected to move quietly in the wilderness;
  shouting and making disturbance was not allowed. This beautiful
  concept still prevails among the S�mi.

  When speaking about beliefs I deliberately avoid using the word
  "religion", because among S�mi that word is strictly connected to
  christianity - instead one should speak about "world of beliefs", or
  about "a S�mi mindset", however vague that may sound.

  The S�mi believed that alongside with the material world there was an
  underworld, saivo, or (J�bmiid) �ibmu, where everything was more whole
  than in the material world and where the dead continued their lives.
  Eastern S�mi use the word duot ilbmi, "that air" (i.e. afterworld).

  Important places had their divinities. Every force of nature had its
  god and sources of livelihood were guarded by beings in spiritual
  world which could be persuaded to be more favourable.

  St�llu stories are known in all S�mi cultures. St�llu was a large and
  strong but simple humanlike being living in the forest, always
  traveling with a dog, rahkka, and he could some times steal a young
  S�mi girl to become his wife. It is believed that st�llu stories are
  related to early contacts with Vikings.

  Some people were capable to foretell future events, or fortune in
  hunting etc. A person with this special gift could be 'called' and
  accepted by the community as a noaidi (shaman). A noaidi was capable
  of visiting the saivo and people from far away would come to him/her
  for advice. For more demanding "trips" a noaidi sometimes used a
  "magic drum", much in the similar way as the northern Siberian
  shamans.

  In the forest you could find trees which resembled a human body, or
  you could make one. These were called sieidde (in Finnish seita) and
  they were worshipped. Also a strangely shaped stone or rock could be a
  sieidde.

  Christian missionaries and priests normally didn't understand these
  S�mi concepts, but regarded them as satanic. S�mi people were
  converted to Christianity by force and shamanic practices were
  forbidden.

  The disintegration of the hunter/gatherer culture and the transition
  to other forms of occupation meant that the old world view had less
  significance for the S�mi, although at first the christian beliefs
  were adopted alongside with the original beliefs. The "S�mi apostle",
  Norwegian Thomas von Westen (1682-1727) started public education among
  the Sea S�mi in S�mi language. From 1773 on S�mi language teaching was
  forbidden and all teaching had to be in Danish until nineteenth
  century.

  Lars Levi Laestadius (1800-1861) has had the strongest religious
  influence on S�mi people and his thoughts spread all over S�mi region
  although there is evidence that elements of the original religious
  practices of the S�mi were used as late as the 1940's. Characteristic
  to Laestadius' ideas is the central significance of parish. This has
  helped in preserving S�mi culture.



 2.3.5 S�mi languages

  As there are several S�mi cultures there are also several S�mi
  languages and dialects. It is not exactly known what kind of language
  the ancestors of the S�mi originally spoke, obviously it was some kind
  of proto-Uralic language. Now the common theory is that the S�mi
  languages developed from early proto-Finnic languages side by side
  with proto-Finnic language, so that there was some sort of
  proto-Lappic language around 1000 BC - 700 AD. This then developed to
  various languages and dialects as we know them now. The S�mi languages
  are regarded as Finno-Ugric languages and their closest relatives are
  the Baltic-Finnic languages (Finnish, Estonian).

  It's often hard to decide whether two related forms of speech are in
  fact different languages or merely dialects of a single language,
  especially when there are transition areas between them. Commonly the
  S�mi languages are divided into nine main dialectal areas.

  The numbers in brackets represent the approximate number of speakers
  of the language according to the Geographical distribution of the
  Uralic languages made by Finno-Ugric Society in 1993.

1. South S�mi - in central Scandinavia                 [500]
2. Ume language                                        [very few]
3. Pite language                                       [very few]
4. Lule language                                       [2 000]
5. Northern languages (Norwegian S�mi, fjeld language) [30 000]
6. Enare language - north of lake Inari                [400]
7. Skolt language - in Pechenga                        [500]
8. Kildin language - in central Kola peninsula         [1 000]
9. Ter (Turja) language - in eastern Kola peninsula    [500]

  As there are several languages, there are also several grammars and
  orthographies for them. The areas 2 - 5 have more or less the same
  written language but several orthographies. Language 6 has its own
  orthography whereas areas 7 - 9 use mainly Kildin language in
  publications.

  The following description about the history of written S�mi concerns
  mainly the languages spoken in Sweden.

  The first S�mi books were religious literature, used for converting
  the S�mi people to Christianity during Gustav II Adolf's reign in the
  17th century. The first books (ABC book and mass book) were made by
  the priest Nicolaus Andreae in Pite� in 1619, but they were in a very
  clumsy language. The first written grammar was again made in Sweden by
  the priest Petrus Fiellstr�m in Lycksele in 1738.

  For a long time the written texts in S�mi languages were solely for
  religious purposes. Poetry and other literature in S�mi languages is
  rather recent. In 1906 the S�mi teacher Isak Saba (1875-1921)
  published a poem Same soga lavla (the Song of S�mi Family) which is
  known as the national anthem of the S�mi. Four years later Johan
  Turi's (1854-1936) Muittalus S�mid birra (A Story about S�mi) was
  published in Sweden. This is probably the most famous volume written
  in S�mi language. Just as an example what S�mi language looks like
  here's the first verse of Same soga lavla in the orthographic form
  proposed by S�mi Language Board in 1978:

         S�mi soga lavlla                    Song of S�mi Family

 Guhkkin davvin D�vgg�id vuolde         Far in the north under the Plough
 sabm� suolggai S�mieatnan:             looms quietly the land of Lapps:
 duottar laebb� duoddar duohkin,        a fjeld lies behind a fjeld,
 j�vri seabb� j�vrri lahka,             a lake spreads near a lake,
 c�ohkat c�ilggiin, c�orut c�earuin     peaks on ridges, tops on bare fjelds
 all�naddet almmi vuost�;               rise against the sky;
 s��vvet jogat, s�uvvet vuovddit,       rushing rivers, wuthering forests,
 c�hket ceakko st�llinj�rggat           steep steel capes stick
 m�raideaddji mearaide.                 into roaring seas

  [ c� and s� denote c and s with apostrophe ]



 2.3.6 The S�mi as citizens

  Before the 1600s the S�mi lived their own life more or less
  undisturbed. They were gradually pushed further north by new
  inhabitants but it happened peacefully. It is believed that the S�mi
  were mainly following reindeers and other wild animals which were also
  retreating further north.

  In the 1600s, and later, there were some "colonialistic" features in
  the way the S�mi were treated by the kingdoms ruling over their lands.
  It was considered "natural" to subjugate cultures that were regarded
  as "undeveloped" and "primitive". At that time the government of
  Sweden-Finland had a political goal to have permanent agricultural
  settlements in the Swedish Lapland instead of sparse nomad
  inhabitation; it was thought that keeping the area within the state
  would be easier that way. This is why many Finns were also encouraged
  to move there. Although the same basic European colonialistic thinking
  was also common in Scandinavia, it has to be noted that the attitude
  towards the original people has never been as inhuman as it was in
  many colonies elsewhere in the world.

  As a general observation it can be said that as the Nordic countries
  divided the S�mi territories between states they failed to take into
  account the S�mi colonies and to let them develop naturally. Instead
  the S�mi people were forced to adapt to the cultural system of each
  country.

  The Swedish king Gustav Vasa declared that "all permanently
  uninhabited land belongs to God, Us and the Swedish crown". This
  declaration concerned also the territories where S�mi lived. Because
  of their nomad way of living they were not seen as "permanent
  inhabitants". Later the S�mi's right for land was stabilized as
  certain "family areas". In 1867 in Sweden a new administrational
  "cultivation border" was formed. It goes several tens of kilometers
  from the Norwegian border all the way from Karesuando to J�mtlands
  L�n. All land in the Swedish territory was given to the S�mi and only
  S�mi people were allowed to live there without a separate permission.
  All activities that are done there need a permission and the money
  goes to "Lapland fund". The money of this fund is used for
  reindeering, building bridges, etc. in that area. All this is done by
  the state and the S�mi people have very little to say about how the
  money is to be used.

  There have been discussions about the S�mi's right for the natural
  resources in their areas between the Nordic Council and the Nordic
  S�mi Council but so far there has been little progress in this issue.

  There have been several agreements between the Nordic countries and
  the S�mi people but they are beyond the scope of this document.

  All in all, the Nordic countries have not been indifferent about S�mi
  but due to lack of ethnosociological knowledge the S�mi have been
  treated as "children who don't know what's best for them".

  Because arctic occupations favour the individual mind, and the S�mi
  population is sparse, their own activities as Nordic citizens have
  developed very slowly. Also, belonging to four different countries
  doesn't make it easier - on the other hand crossing borders between
  the Nordic countries has never been a problem. This belonging to
  different countries has been one factor which has increased the common
  sense of ethnicity among the S�mi people during this century. Only a
  few decades ago it was not desirable that S�mi children spoke S�mi
  with each other in school whereas now, in principle, it's possible to
  complete university degrees in S�mi language.

  How many S�mi are there, then? Well, that depends on who is counted as
  a S�mi and who isn't, as there has been much assimilation and mixing
  with the rest of the population. Some figures were presented in the
  chapter concerning S�mi languages. Another often presented statistic
  tells that there are 25,000 S�mi in Norway, 17,000 in Sweden, 4000 in
  Finland and 2,000 in Russia. Yet another statistic which only counts
  people who speak S�mi languages as their mother tongue says: 10,000 in
  Norway, 5,000 in Sweden, 3,000 in Finland and 1,000 in Russia.



 2.3.7 The S�mi Today

  For centuries the majority population has had a patronizing attitude
  towards the S�mi, which has affected cultural policy and politics.
  This policy was abandoned after World War II. This phase was signalled
  in 1948 in Norway by the official "Proposals for S�mi School and
  Educational Affairs" from the Coordinating Commission for the School
  System. A definitive change did not come before 1963, however, when
  the Norwegian parliament discussed the recommendations of the S�mi
  Committee of 1956. The official policy then adopted is expressed in
  the Parliamentary Records for 1962-1963 as follows:

    "The policy of the national state must be to give the S�mi-speaking
    population the opportunity to preserve its language and other
    cultural customs on terms that accord with the expressed wishes of
    the S�mi themselves."

  Later in 1980 the Norwegian government appointed two new commissions
  with very extensive mandates: the S�mi Rights Committee and the S�mi
  Cultural Committee. At the moment demands for clarification and
  legalization of local rights in areas traditionally used by the S�mi
  are under consideration by the S�mi Rights Committee. Since much of
  this area has diversified use by different S�mi and non-S�mi groups,
  it has been difficult to arrive at a just and nationwide solution.

  The Nordic S�mi Council was established in 1956 to promote cooperation
  among the S�mi in Finland, Norway and Sweden. The Council has twelve
  members, four from each country. Both state authorities and the Nordic
  Council have recognized the S�mi Council as a legitimate spokesman for
  the S�mi and have met many of its demands.

  The S�mi have their own flag which was officially acknowledged in the
  13th Nordic S�mi Conference in 1986. The flag is designed by Astrid
  Behl from Ivgubahta/Skibotn in Norway. The basic idea in the flag is a
  symbol from a drum. The circle is a symbol of sun and moon - the sun
  ring is red and the moon ring blue. The colours are also the colours
  used in S�mi costumes.

  The Cultural Heritage Act, passed in 1978 in Norway, states that
  everything which is more than 100 years old and related to the
  cultural heritage of the S�mi, is automatically protected by law
  - this is to protect historic sites and monuments.

  S�mi as an elective language is taught in primary schools in several
  places in Lapland. Special S�mi high schools are located in
  Guovdageaidnu/Kautokeino and K�r�sjohka/Karasjok. S�mi language and
  culture courses are taught at several universities in the Nordic
  countries.

  Modern S�mi applied art has largely extended the development of
  traditional S�mi handicrafts such as horn- and wood-carving, basketry,
  leather work, etc. S�mi art appears at present to be undergoing an
  important period of creativity - this applies to music as well. The
  traditional S�mi folk song, the joik, has won increasing recognition
  and interest. The Norwegian S�mi Singer Mari Boine Persen has won
  international fame among world music fans, while in Finland e.g
  Nils-Aslak Valkeap�� (who sang joik in the opening ceremonies of
  Lillehammer Olympics), Wimme Saari (who mixes joik with ambient techno
  backgrounds) and the band Angelin Tyt�t have gained acclaim. There are
  five S�mi newspapers, or newspapers intended for S�mi readers, in the
  three Nordic countries but the circulation figures for them are small.
  The newspapers and magazines are dependent on state funds for their
  existence. Radio programs are broadcast in all three countries, in
  K�r�sjohka/Karasjok (Norway), Giron/Kiruna (Sweden) and Anar/Inari
  (Finland). Plans exist for the establishment of a Nordic-S�mi
  production center for radio and television programs, but the extent
  and form of cooperation have not yet been agreed upon.

  Because of growing S�mi cultural consciousness and sympathetic
  official minority policies, there is good cause for believing that the
  S�mi will survive as a viable ethnic and cultural group in
  Scandinavia. The meaning of "S�mi" will change as the way of life
  itself changes. The S�mi's own actions and self-conception will be
  decisive in forming the future meaning of the term - or, as one S�mi
  scholar put it when asked about the S�mi tradition:

    "Tradition? As of when? Fifty years ago, a hundred years ago, or a
    thousand years ago? We adapt our ways to fit the times."
    _________________________________________________________________

  Acknowledgments:
  I would like to thank Jari Oksanen of Troms� University and John Blood
  <[email protected]> of S�mi Association of North America for their
  help, opinions and references.

  References:
  Karl Nickul: Saamelaiset kansana ja kansalaisina, 1970
  Mikko Korhonen: Johdatus lapin kielen historiaan, 1981 ISBN
  951-717-248-6
  Bj�rn Aarseth: The S�mi Past and Present, Norsk Folkemuseum, Oslo 1993
  ISBN 82-90036-32-9
  Johan Turi: Kertomus saamelaisista, 1979 ISBN 951-0-08410-7 (based on
  Muittalus samid birra, 1910)
  SANA S�mi Association of North America
  ODIN  (Offentlig dokumentasjon og informasjon i Norge)


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq23.html ]



 2.3.8 SANA - The S�mi Association of North America

  (from: Ruth M. Sylte)

  SANA was formed on 10 April 1994 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.

  The purpose of SANA is to create a strong S�mi presence and an
  understanding of the S�mi people and S�mi culture in North America.
  Membership includes a subscription to the North American S�mi Journal,
  which will continue to function as the official organ of communication
  for the group.

  SANA encompasses both the United States and Canada. It has recently
  been given permanent observer status at the S�mi Governing Council.

  For more information, contact:

         Susan Gunness Myers, SANA USA
         10010 Monticello Lane North
         Maple Grove, MN 55369 USA
         E-mail: <[email protected]>
         Faith Fjeld, Editor
         BAIKI
         3548 14th Avenue South
         Minneapolis, MN 55407 USA



 2.3.9 The S�mi in Internet

  (I'd hate to say this, but... this chapter is still very much under
  construction...)

  S�mi links:
    * The S�mi "Parliament" of Sweden.
    * The S�mi of Norway by Elina Helander, ODIN.
    * The Sami in Finland by the Foreign Ministry of Finland.
    * An introduction to the Sami people a web-site associated to the
      magazine Samefolket.
    * The magazine Samefolket did a survey of www-sites, and delivered
      for instance murderous critics of this very site.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq239.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.4 What do we know about Scandinavian mythology?

  Not very much, I'm afraid, and we're lucky to know even as much as we
  do. For example, most of the ancient poems about pagan deities
  (they're the most authentic source of Norse mythology) that survived
  to this date are from a certain book called Codex Regius, the only
  extant copy of which was rescued in half-rotten condition from an
  abandoned Icelandic barn in the 17th century.



 2.4.1 Short introduction to the sources

  Although the Vikings were, in theory, a literate people, the runic
  script was never used for anything more complicated than a few
  sentences, usually commemorating some person or event, e.g "Bjorn had
  these runes carved in the memory of Hofdi. He died in S�rkland." The
  runestones and other archaeological material offer clues as to the
  nature of the Norse religion, and there are some accounts by Christian
  and Moslem contemporaries of the Vikings -- e.g the bishop of Hamburg,
  Adam von Bremen, and the Arab traveler Ibn Fadlan -- but the main
  sources of information are the Eddas, written down in Iceland in the
  early middle ages. The Poetic Edda is a collection of poems on
  mythological themes by anonymous poets; even more important is the
  Prose Edda written by the Icelandic scholar Snorri Sturluson in about
  1220, which is a collection of old heathen myths in prose form. For
  more about sagas and Eddas, see section 5.5. The medieval Danish
  historian Saxo Grammaticus can also be mentioned, but he is less
  reliable and perhaps less interesting to read.

  The problem with those sources is that they were written down hundreds
  of years after the conversion of Scandinavians to Christianity, indeed
  some of the authors (e.g Saxo) were members of the Catholic clergy,
  and their work is to some extent influenced by Christian and classical
  ideas. Also, the picture given is no doubt biased towards the
  particular form of pagan religion practiced in Iceland; while the main
  deities Odin, Thor and Freyr seem to have been worshiped all over
  Scandinavia, there must have been a lot of local variation, local
  deities, differences in emphasis given to the main deities and their
  aspects, etc.

  Nevertheless, the stories of the Eddas have become a common cultural
  heritage of the Scandinavian countries, and at least a basic knowledge
  of it is a must for anybody interested in Scandinavian culture.

  The following summary of the main features of Scandinavian mythology
  is taken from the excellent book Gods and Myths of Northern Europe, by
  H.R.Ellis Davidson, 1964, pages 26-30, Penguin Books.



 2.4.2 The World Tree Yggdrasill

  This world had for its centre a great tree, a mighty ash called
  Yggdrasill. So huge was this tree that its branches stretched out over
  heaven and earth alike. Three roots supported the great trunk, and one
  passed into the realm of the Aesir, a second into that of the
  frost-giants, and a third into the realm of the dead. Beneath the root
  in giant-land was the spring of Mimir, whose waters contained wisdom
  and understanding. Odin had given one of his eyes to drink a single
  draught of that precious water.

  Below the tree in the kingdom of the Aesir was the sacred spring of
  fate, the Well of Urd. Here every day the gods assembled for their
  court of law, to settle disputes and discuss common problems. All came
  on horseback except Thor, who preferred to wade through the rivers
  that lay in his path, and they were led by Odin on the finest of all
  steeds, the eight-legged horse Sleipnir. The gods galloped over the
  bridge Bifrost, a rainbow bridge that glowed with fire. They alone
  might cross it, and the giants who longed to do so were held back.
  Near the spring of fate dwelt three maidens called the Norns, who
  ruled the destinies of men, and were called Fate (Urdr), Being
  (Verdandi), and Necessity (Skuld). They watered the tree each day with
  pure water and whitened it with clay from the spring, and in this way
  preserved its life, while the water fell down to earth as dew.

  The tree was continually threatened, even as it grew and flourished,
  by the living creatures that preyed upon it. On the topmost bough sat
  an eagle, with a hawk perched on its forehead: the same eagle,
  perhaps, of whom it is said that the flapping of its wings caused the
  winds in the world of men. At the root of the tree lay a great
  serpent, with many scores of lesser snakes, and these gnawed
  continually at Yggdrasill. The serpent was at war with the eagle, and
  a nimble squirrel ran up and down the tree, carrying insults from one
  to the other. Horned creatures, harts and goats, devoured the branches
  and tender shoots of the tree, leaping at it from every side.



 2.4.3 The Creation of the world

  The tree formed a link between the different worlds. We are never told
  of its beginning, but of the creation of the worlds of which it formed
  a centre there is much to tell. In the beginning there were two
  regions: Muspell in the south, full of brightness and fire; and a
  world of snow and ice in the north. Between them stretched the great
  emptiness of Ginnungagap. As the heat and the cold met in the midst of
  the expanse, a living creature appeared in the melting ice, called
  Ymir. He was a great giant, and from under his left arm grew the first
  man and woman, while from his two feet the family of frost-giants was
  begotten. Ymir fed upon the milk of a cow called Audhumla, who licked
  the salty ice-blocks and released another new being, a man called
  Buri. He had a son called Bor, and the sons of Bor were the three
  gods, Odin, Vili, and Ve. These three slew Ymir the ancient giant, and
  all the frost-giants save one, Bergelmir, were drowned in his surging
  blood. From Ymir's body they formed the world of men:

    ... from his blood the sea and the lakes, from his flesh the earth,
    and from his bones the mountains; from his teeth and jaws and such
    bones as were broken they formed the rocks and the pebbles.

  From Ymir's skull they made the dome of sky, placing a dwarf to
  support it at each of the four corners and to hold it high above the
  earth. This world of men was protected from the giants by a wall, made
  from the eyebrows of Ymir, and was called Midgard. The gods created
  inhabitants for it from two trees on the sea-shore, which became a man
  and a woman. They gave to them spirit and understanding, the power of
  movement, and the use of senses. They created also the dwarfs,
  creatures with strange names, who bred in the earth like maggots, and
  dwelt in hills and rocks. These were skilled craftsmen, and it was
  they who wrought the great treasures of the gods. The gods caused time
  to exist, sending Night and Day to drive round the heavens in chariots
  drawn by swift horses. Two fair children, a girl called Sun and a boy
  called Moon, were also set by them on paths across the sky. Sun and
  Moon had to drive fast because they were pursued by wolves, who meant
  to devour them. On the day when the greatest of the wolves succeeded
  in swallowing the Sun, the end of all things would be at hand.



 2.4.4 Asgard, the realm of the Gods

  Once heaven and earth were formed, it was time to set about the
  building of Asgard, the realm of the gods. Here there were many
  wonderful halls, in which the gods dwelt. Odin himself lived in
  Valaskjalf, a hall roofed with silver, where he could sit in his
  special seat and view all the worlds at once. He had another hall
  called Valhalla, the hall of the slain, where he offered hospitality
  to all those who fell in battle. Each night they feasted on pork that
  never gave out, and on mead which flowed instead of milk from the
  udders of the goat Heidrun, one of the creatures that fed upon
  Yggdrasill. Odin's guests spent the day in fighting, and all who fell
  in the combat were raised again in the evening to feast with the rest.
  Horns of mead were carried to them by the Valkyries, the maids of
  Odin, who had also to go down to the battlefields of earth and decide
  the course of war, summoning fallen warriors to Valhalla. Somewhere in
  Asgard there was a building with a roof of gold, called Gimli, to
  which it was said that righteous men went after death. There were
  other realms beyond Asgard, like Alfheim, where the fair elves lived,
  and as many as three heavens, stretching one beyond the other.



 2.4.5 The Gods

  As to the gods who dwelt in Asgard, Snorri twice gives their number as
  twelve, excluding Odin himself. Odin was the father and head of the
  Aesir; he was called All-Father, but had many other names, among them
  One-Eyed, God of the Hanged, God of Cargoes, and Father of Battle. He
  journeyed far and wide over the earth, and had two ravens to bring him
  tidings from afar. His eldest son was Thor, whose mother was Earth.
  Thor was immensely strong, and drove in a chariot drawn by goats. He
  possessed three great treasures: the hammer Mjollnir, which could slay
  giants and shatter rocks; a belt of power which doubled his strength;
  and iron gloves with which to grasp the terrible hammer.

  Another son of Odin was Balder, said to be the fairest of all and most
  deserving of praise; he was white of skin and bright-haired, and was
  both wise and merciful. The gods Njord and Freyr were also dwellers in
  Asgard, but were not of the race of the Aesir. Njord came of the
  Vanir, and was sent to Asgard as a hostage when the two races were at
  war, and Freyr was his son. Njord controlled the winds and the sea,
  helped in fishing and seafaring, and brought men wealth, while Freyr
  gave sunshine and rain and the gifts of peace and plenty. Freyr
  possessed the ship Skithblathnir, large enough to hold all the gods,
  but small enough when folded to lie in a pouch, and also a wonderful
  boar with golden bristles.

  Another god was Tyr, who could give victory in battle, and it was he
  who bound the monster Fenrir and was left as a result with only one
  hand. There was also Bragi, who was skilled in the use of words and in
  making poetry. We hear, too, of Heimdall, who was called the white
  god, and was said to be the son of nine maidens. His dwelling was
  beside the rainbow bridge, for he acted as the gods' warden, guarding
  heaven from the frost-giants. He could see for an immense distance,
  while his ears were sharp enough to catch the sound of grass growing
  on earth, and wool on sheep. He owned the Gjallarhorn, whose ringing
  blast could be heard through all the worlds.

  There was also among the gods Loki, the son of a giant, who was
  handsome to look upon but given to evil ways. He was a cunning
  schemer, who both helped and hindered the gods, and he gave birth to
  the wolf Fenrir, to the World Serpent, and to Hel, the ruler of the
  land of death. These were the chief of gods, and beside them were
  others of whom we know little: Ull, a famous archer and skier,
  Forseti, the son of Balder and a good law-giver, Hoder, a blind god,
  and Hoenir, who was sometimes the companion of Odin and Loki in their
  wanderings. The sons of the great gods, like Vali, Vidar, and Magni,
  had special parts to play, for they were to inherit the world of
  Asgard when the older generation had perished.



 2.4.6 The Goddesses

  There were also certain mighty goddesses. Frigg was the wife of Odin,
  and like him knew the future of gods and men. Freyja was Freyr's twin
  sister, and the most renowned of all the goddesses; she helped in
  affairs of love and had some power over the dead. She drove in a
  chariot drawn by cats. Freyja was said to have husband called Od, who
  left her to weep tears of red gold at his disappearance. Skadi, the
  wife of Njord, came from the mountains to marry the sea god. The
  marriage was not a success, because neither was willing to live away
  from home, and in the end Skadi went back to the hills, where she went
  on skis and hunted with the bow. Bragi's wife was Idun, who had one
  important part to play: she guarded the apples of immortality, on
  which the gods feasted in order to keep their perpetual youth. Other
  goddesses are little more than names. Thor's wife, Skif, had wonderful
  golden hair. Balder's wife was Nanna, and Loki's Sigyn, while Gna and
  Fulla are mentioned as servants of Frigg. There is also Gefion, to
  whom unmarried girls went after death.

  ... do you want to know more?

  The Lule� University has a web-site with more information at
  <http://www.luth.se/luth/present/sweden/history/viking_level.html>.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq241.html ]



 2.4.7 Trolls and other beings

  Except for the Gods, who haven't belonged to the Nordic reallity for
  centuries, there are some other important beings:
    _________________________________________________________________

brownie

  Sw: tomte
  Fi: tonttu
  Sw: g�rdbo
  Da: nisse

  Tomten is a shy, solitary and longlived human-like being, very bound
  to the ground of his. Tomten regards the humans as temporary lodgers
  in his domain. Tomtar are not known to reside in urban settings, but a
  few less reliable reports say that Tomtar might dwell in the Woods as
  well.

  Tomten is known to form families, but very little is known about the
  female tomte, Tomtemor. Tomte-children do not approach humans.

  Although he is more keen on the animals than on the humans, his
  guardiance can, if he is friendly disposed, be very valuable for the
  humans too. In case of fire or other dangers he can take help by the
  humans by alarming or wakening up the master of the house. A few less
  reliable reports say that Tomtar might dwell in the Woods as well.

  To show the tomte appropriate respect is very important. Otherwise he
  would get averse and cause misfortune; and the humans could be forced
  to move on. Misdeeds from children or negligent employees the tomte
  might punish directly. The Nordic version of Sancta Claus is dressed
  as a Tomte of human size.

  For drawings of tomtar and trolls, you could for instance examine the
  drawings by Hasse Bredenberg at
  <http://www.lysator.liu.se/runeberg/bredberg/>.
    _________________________________________________________________

v�ttar

  V�ttar are smallish guardians, maybe distantly related to the tomte.


  landv�ttar

  Families living under stones, in the ground, guarding a wood, an
  island or certain places. They dislike foreigners but are in principle
  friendly.

  Sw: g�rdsv�ttar
  Fi: maahinen

  Families living under dwelling-houses or maybe beneath the stable.
  V�ttar like cleanliness, order and warmth. They are said to move from
  a house if abandoned by the people and thereby made cold, but they
  might also get angered if rainwater or sink-water leak in to their
  dwelling.

  When provoked they might cause illness, particularly among the
  children.
    _________________________________________________________________

dwarfs

  Sw: dv�rgar
  Fi: k��pi�

  Dwarfs are social human-like male beings of asexual generation, living
  in mountains and mines. They are very fond of metals and beautiful
  stones, and can get hostile when disturbed or robbed. It's dubious if
  they are seen in recent years.
    _________________________________________________________________

gnomes

  Gnomes are smallish men who mostly dwells on the European continent
  and only rarely visit our northern latitudes. The gnome travels alone
  through the earth as fishes swim through water. He guards the
  treasures hidden in the earth and mountains.
    _________________________________________________________________

rulers

  It's unclear whether Huldra, Vittra and N�cken are to group together
  or not, but they seem all somehow to support the Nature and its
  animals against the dangerous humans.


  No: huldra
  Sw: skogsr�
  Fi: mets�nhaltija

  Huldror and skogsr�n (wood nymphs) are solitary female beings of
  extreme beauty, but without a spine (being "empty" in the back).
  Skogsr� do mostly approach hunters, probably to defend the animals or
  the wood from the sufferings caused by human hands.

  The hunter falls in love and forgets his duties toward wife and
  family. He can also get allured astray or into a fog and die in the
  wood he thought he knew so well.

  vittra

  Vittror are female invisible beings, probably solitary. Maybe
  smallish. Dwelling in Norrland, in the high woods and on the fjeld.
  Often with dwellings under earth, but also in abandoned human chalets.
  Vittror are experts in milking, getting fatter and more abundant milk
  both from own (invisible) cattle and from the humans' cows and goats.

  Vittror can be heard sometimes when they milk or when they call for
  their cattle. And the bell of their leading cow might be heard too.
  The vittror do however not normally seek human company.

  It is unclear whether they rule over the fjeld and its woods like the
  skogsr� rules over the grand woods. But it is probable.

  Sw: N�cken
  Fi: N�kki
  Sw: Str�mkarlen
  Sw: B�ckakarlen

  N�cken is a very attractive man-like fiddle player or singer.
  Appearing at rivers and in waterfalls. He is fond of women, who
  sometimes are found drowned at places where he appears. N�cken is said
  to dislike clothes.
    _________________________________________________________________

follower

  fylgja

  In old times powerful men were often accompanied by an invisible
  animal, fitting to their personality, as for instance a bear or a
  bull. The fylgja followed the person throughout life, and they died
  together. Occasionally the fylgja might be seen by others, but by the
  owner only at the end of his life.


  family-fylgja

  Some families also had a family-fylgja: a female being who followed
  the head of the family, and when he died turned to the heir. She could
  assist in battles, and in general cause problems for enemies.

  People with a powerful family-fylgja had much luck, and were therefore
  often elected as leaders for a village, a ship or a province.
    _________________________________________________________________

elfs

  Elfs are little known beings who originally were closely related to
  the goods. Signs suggest that they in later times have interbred with
  the hidden people of the vittror.


  alver

  Alver are human-like beings of both sexes. They often get very old and
  wise but they never look really old. They live their life with minimal
  contacts with humans, why we know very little about alver of today.

  Sometimes they change infants with humans, with the sad consequence
  that the human family gets a very gifted child which however has less
  of solidarity with its relatives than one could expect.

  In old times people used to sacrifice to the alver. Nowadays this
  custom is forgotten, but we guess that such rites could improve the
  harvest, the fertility of the cattle or the health of the family.

  Sw: �lvor
  Fi: keiju
  fairies

  Fairies are beautiful female beings, usually invisible but sometimes
  with visible veils. They are fond of pleasures and beauty, and also
  very enjoyable to meet. Sometimes they dance, sometimes they sing or
  giggle. Often shy for humans. They can be seen or heard at some
  distance, but use to disappear, or become invisible, when humans
  approach. They dislike to be disturbed, but might fall in love with
  beautiful men, and can then be very persistent.

  Fairies are rather young - or at least do they behave like
  light-hearted teenage girls. Open meadows, shallow tarns and sheltered
  water mirrors can sometimes attract great parties of fairies.
    _________________________________________________________________

norns

  Norns are female beings who at birth determine the fate of the
  newborn. The best known has the name Ver�andi.


  valkyrior
  valkyrias

  Valkyrias are probably a kind of norns who is responsible for the
  collection of the warriors whos time it is to die. One is known under
  the name Skuld (of the same root as in "shall").

  dis

  A dis is a nowadays almost forgotten female being, related to norns
  and valkyrias, with the power to protect against ones enemies. In old
  times death in late winter was explained by insufficient sacrifice to
  the dises. These sacrifices took place at midwinter time or at fall.
    _________________________________________________________________

troll

  Fi: peikko
  No: troll
  Sw: troll
  Da: troll

  Trolls are human-like beings living in families or clans in for
  instance woods, mountains and hillocks. Some trolls live in
  pre-Christian graves after great kings and chieftains. They are very
  interested in jewelry in general and gold, silver and beautiful stones
  in particular.

  Trolls usually get very old, but not even as young they are
  particularly beautiful. Trolls are fertile, but they fancy young
  beautiful women and infants seemingly hoping for offspring less ugly
  than they are themselves. Human women, and rarely young handsome men,
  have now and then been captured. Except for sexual services the humans
  have had hard labor as the foreigners they are, and their life at the
  trolls is said to be full of sufferings. Trolls don't seem to
  understand that humans are not as strong and endurant as they are
  themselves.

  When trolls rob infants from their mother they usually leave an own
  infant, a changeling, in exchange. the changeling has however a hard
  time to follow human morals, and is not rarely quite stupid.

  For views of trolls you could for instance examine the drawings at
  <http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/ill/titta/troll.html>.
    _________________________________________________________________

giants

  risar
  Sw: j�ttar
  Fi: j�ttil�inen

  Giants dwell in caves, mountains and deep woods. Often in harsh
  landscape were humans can not survive for longer times. Giants are
  said to be insensitive for ice and snow.

  Some people (Mots 1984) believe the giants and the trolls to have been
  the Gods of the pre-Germanic population.
    _________________________________________________________________

ghosts

  Sw: geng�ngare
  Fi: haamu
  Sw: v�lnad
  Fi: aave
  (Fi: kummitus)
  Sw: sp�ke
  ghosts

  Deceased persons who live on after death have usually committed an
  evil deed in their lifetime. They cause illness, insanity and death.

  In medieval times the law punished production of ghosts (i.e. people
  who disturbed the dead).


  mara

  The mara is a female being who likes riding horses in their stable,
  and humans in their house, causing unrest, anguish, fear, bad dreams
  and feeling of suffocating. The mara is maybe the ghost of an
  unfortunate woman who died as a unsatisfied virgin.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq247.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.5 Introduction to the History of Norden
..etcetera, etcetera...

  Once upon a time, a very long time ago, as the ice-cap already for
  long had continued its slow and irregular retraction up to the North,
  Europe was inhabited by mammoths, bears, bisons, reindeers and woolly
  rhinos.
  ...and some hunting families of humans.

  The first recognizable event was when a culture in southwestern Europe
  seems to have concentrated very much on the reindeers. In the cave
  paintings in France and Spain from over 15'000 years ago we can see
  the people knew how to use bows and arrows.

  After year 9'000 B.C. the climate of Europe changed, and the reindeers
  came to remain only in the farthest North, along the ice-cap which
  still covered what today is Finland, Norway and the most of Sweden
  in-between. Also Scotland had for long time a glacier remnant of the
  ice-cap.

  The Creator hadn't yet constructed the Danish straits or the English
  Channel, and hence there was land connection from Scotland and the
  Scandinavian ice-border in V�sterg�tland all the way to the Ural
  mountains and beyond.

  Most of Europe passed on to the Middle Stone Age (marked for instance
  by the invention of saws); in the fertile crescent along River Tigris,
  and along the Palestinian coast, crops began to be planted and sown.

  As we all know, the Agrarian Revolution in the fertile crescent came
  in due time to lead forward to
    * domestication of goats, sheep, pigs & cattle
    * knowledge to polish the stone tools
    * knowledge to produce fired pottery

  ...and later:
    * usage of slash-and-burn (or wood burning) technique

  And this latter technique came to be spread from the Black Sea along
  River Danube, through Central Europe almost to the coast of
  present-day Holland, Germany & Poland. The people utilizing the wood
  burning technique could populate the land much more densely than their
  hunting and gathering neighbors, thus it is commonly believed that the
  migration of the slash-and-burn knowledge represents a real migration
  and propagation of a wood-burning people.

  These migrants are commonly acknowledged as Indo-Europeans. At the
  border of their expanding culture some of the neolithic novelties got
  adopted: hence, pottery and polished stone tools were used by the
  pre-neolithic cultures along the North Sea and along the southernmost
  Baltic shores, as among the Erteb�lle folk of Denmark. That's how our
  forefathers learned to polish stone tools and to fire pottery
  approximately 4,500 B.C.

  At this time the coast- and lake-region of Finland was inhabited by
  nomadic people using Russian flint-stone, pottery and polished stone
  tools.

  Two thousand years later the Indo-European culture had made further
  progress, approximately to the River Vistula in North-East and in
  Scandinavia to the River Dal�lven and up along most of the Norwegian
  coast.

  Meanwhile, high cultures with towns and irrigation had emerged in
  Mesopotamia, Egypt and the Indus valley.

  Then, around year 2,000 B.C. the know-how of copper-working (which for
  thousands of years only slowly had expanded from Turkey and the
  fertile crescent) now in a high speed became known in all of the world
  inhabited by Indo-Europeans. And Indo-European cultures seem to have
  expanded from River Vistula all the way up to Gulf of Finland and
  River Volga. Grain and cattle became a complement to hunting for
  people living along the waters.

  (This was, by the way, the time of the Palace Culture of Crete.)

  For the following years, 2,000 B.C. - 200 B.C., the map of cultures in
  Northern Europe looks almost static:
    * In the North there are proto-S�mis hunting and moving all the way
      from the Ural mountains to the Norwegian coast.
    * From Gulf of Finland to River Volga there are proto-Finns,
    * and south of them Indo-European Balts and Slavs.
    * Denmark, Pomerania and the south-western Scandinavian peninsula
      were inhabited by proto-Germanic people.
    * In the South the domain of the Celts was south of River Elbe,
      stretching to the Pyren�es, to the Mediterranean and over the Alps
      and the Carpats.

  (Despite important ideas continue to spread in the same well known
  South-East to North-West direction.)

  Bronze working was learned by the Slavs, the Balts, the Germanics, the
  Estonian Finns and the S�mis around year 1,500 B.C.

  Then around year 1,000 B.C. the new technique of iron-working had
  begun to expand out of its original area in Turkey. A process mirrored
  in the tales from ancient Greece and in the Old Testament of the
  Bible. And the Aryans conquered the Indus valley.

  It came, however, to last until year 500 B.C. till this knowledge
  reached beyond the Celts' northern border.

  The times were turbulent east of the Mediterranean. In the 9th
  century B.C. the Assyrians flourished with trade and genocide. Around
  year 600 B.C. Egypt falls for Assyria, then Assyria falls for Persia
  constituting a realm from Indus to Italy, where they were stooped by
  Etruscs and Cartagians. Monotheism is advocated by Zaratustra in
  Persia, and by the Prophet Jesaia (the second), during the 6th
  century B.C.

  During the 4th century Alexander the Great conquers Persia, and then,
  after his death, his realm is split in several large parts, whereafter
  Rome starts to expand.

  Then the Germanic culture began a slow expansion in southern
  direction: At year 100 B.C. the woods of Central Europe were home to
  both several Germanic tribes as well as to Celtic tribes, but in the
  North the Germanics dominated from Trondheim and �land to the plains
  between River Rhine and River Nei�e.

  The Roman Empire expanded through France; the Celtic area diminished
  and disappeared, and Germanic peoples became a major hassle for the
  Roman Army. The solution was in the long run that Germanic men came to
  take over the administration of the Empire and its armies at the same
  time as the Germanics were Romanized in culture, beliefs and language.

  As the Celts' dominance over Western Europe dissolved, the influences
  from the Mediterranean region again reached the Baltic Sea and
  Scandinavia. Trade with the Roman Empire increased, and might have
  contributed to the peculiar phase of the European history called the
  Migration Period when Germanic tribes and Asian tribes came to move
  around on the European continent.

  But before that the Slavs had started to expand. First in the East,
  along the River Dnieper, at the expense of the Balts, and then to the
  River Don and to upper River Volga.

  Around the turn of millennium, good iron was produced at the
  Oslo-fjord in southern Norway; at the same time, some important
  Germanic tribes inhabited the coasts of North Sea and the Baltic Sea,
  and the shores of the rivers:
    * Gepids around River Vistula
    * Goth around River Oder
    * Burgundians further south between the rivers Oder & Vistula
    * Marcomanni further south, around the upper River Elbe
    * Frisians at the North Sea coast between the rivers Elbe and Rhine

  Then, around year A.D. 200, the Goths and the Gepids moved down from
  the coast, through (?) the Burgundian area, toward River Danube. The
  Goths expanded over River Volga to River Don.

  Concurrently the Norsemen increased in number also in the very
  Scandinavia, expanding along the water routes between Norway and
  Jutland.

  Jutland was the richest territory as that was the key position from
  where all Scandinavian and Baltic trade to and from Rome and the Rhine
  valley could be controlled. The people on Gotland, the Guthes (Gutar),
  dominated the Baltic sea and its trade. [ We are not(!) taking any
  stand in the discussion whether Jutes, Guthes and Goths are
  etymologically equivalents. In any case: these people came to inhabit
  different areas and to constitute different peoples. ]

  The Goths were split in a lesser part, the Visigoths, who later came
  to create a kingdom on the Iberian peninsula, and the Ostrogoths who
  for a long time came to dominate all of the land between River Don and
  River Oder.

  Beside the Goths and the Norsemen there existed more than a dozen of
  distinguishable Germanic tribes:
    * Jutes and Angles on Jutland
    * Frisians, Franks, Burgundians and Allemans on the eastern side of
      River Rhine
    * Saxons, Thuringians, Lombards and Marcomanni on both sides of
      River Elbe
    * Vandals, Rugians, Gepids and Visigoths north of River Danube

  During early 4th century the Goths were Christianized, and from
  A.D. 325 the Bible is translated to Gothic. The Goths were however
  Arian Christians, and not Catholics as the Franks would become.

  Then the Huns came from the East, defeating almost any enemy. In the
  370s the Ostrogoths and soon also the Visigoths started a great move.
  The Visigoths went through Greece, along the Adriatic Coast to Naples
  and Rome and further to Spain where they defeated the Vandals (who had
  arrived five years before). The Vandals moved on to what today is
  Libya.

  As the Ostrogoths and the Huns had moved on, it turned out that the
  Slavs popped up as the successors after the abdicated Ostrogothian
  lords. While the Baltic languages and culture almost disappeared, the
  Slavic area now greatly increased. After the Huns are defeated, Slavic
  tribes are identified along the southern Baltic shore, in all of the
  area east of River Elbe and (beside Magyars) in the area east of the
  Alps.

  Examples of these nowadays almost forgotten names are:

   Finnic tribes:

    * Karelians at lake Ladoga and further north
    * Votes at river Narva
    * Estonians in present day Estonia
    * Livonians at Gulf of Riga

   Baltic tribes:

    * Curonians (as in Curland/Kurland) at Gulf of Riga
    * Lithuanians at the rivers Neman & Dvina
    * Notangians at river Pregola
    * Prussians at, and east of, River Vistula
      (had migrated from the Neman/Dvina area circa 200 A.D.)
    * (other Baltic tribes there around had names as
      Jotwings/Jatvingians, Lettigallians, Notangians, Samen, Schalauer,
      Schamaiten, Selens & Semigallians)

   Slavic tribes:

    * Novgorods in North-East, at Lake Ilmen.
    * Pomeranians between the Rivers Oder & Vistula
    * Poles around River Warta (between Vistula & Oder) (actually they
      were sooner half a dozen of tribes, united around year 1.000 A.D.
      with names as Polanes, Vislanes, Slenzanes, Opolinis and others)
    * Wends/Sorbs around the rivers Nei�e & Saale (between upper Oder &
      Elbe)
    * Abodritic/Obodritic tribes at the Baltic coast (between lower Oder
      & Elbe)
    * Czech tribes south of the Sudeten mountains
    * Daleminci at River Elbe in present day Saxony.

  During the 6th century the Gutar from Gotland island established
  colonies at the eastern shore of the Baltic sea, for instance at the
  estuary of River Dvina. Later, in the 9th century, Curland/Courland
  was conquered by Swedish Vikings.

  In western Europe the Franks conquered all the land from River Rhine
  to the Pyren�es; the Angles and a lot of Jutes and Saxons conquered
  England; and the Langobards came to conquer the Ostrogothian realm in
  today's Yugoslavia and Italy.

  In eastern Scandinavia, the Uppland region north of Lake M�laren
  (Roslagen - the Rus people) increased its dominance. ...a dominance
  which has been held ever since. Gutar, G�tar, Finns and S�mis
  constitute contemporary cultures.

  In southern Scandinavia the Danes dominated. Saxo Grammaticus tells,
  if we ought to confide in his tales, that Saxonians and Slavs from
  time to time paid tributes to Danish kings. According to Saxo also
  Scania, Gotland, V�rmland, J�mtland and H�lsingland in present-day
  Sweden were lands of the Danes, although usually not under a common
  king.

  Then, during the 8th century Muslims conquered the Germanic realms on
  Africa's northern coast and on the Iberian peninsula. Left was the
  region of Franks, which after a split in the 9th century came to
  constitute the states of France and Germany.

  At this time trade through Russia to the muslim Persia became
  important. The Russian waterways are dominated by Svear and Gutar
  (Svenonians and Guths) called Varyagi or Varangians by the Slavs, and
  according to written sources present at the Sea of Azov in 739 A.D.
  The castles in Russia evolve to separate kingdoms and get
  Christianized.

  With Christianity (if not before) Germanic lords began to conquer many
  lands inhabited by Slavs, Balts and Estonians/Finns claiming supremacy
  - but as constituting a minute minority often soon assimilated.

  ...but with the arrival of Christian religion, the prehistoric era
  ends, and so does this tale.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq25a.html ]



 2.5.1 Norden in prehistoric times

  Ice has covered almost all of Norden most of the last 500,000 years.
  Exceptionally there have been four inter glacial periods, each
  extending 10,000-15,000 years. The latest period of ice-withdrawal
  started some 13,000 years ago. (And hence we can expect most of Norden
  to again become covered with ice within some 2,000 years.)

  The pre-history of Norden literally starts when the ice withdrew. Very
  little has been found from earlier interglacial periods. (Actually a
  piece of south eastern Jutland never got covered by the ice during the
  last ice-time, and there traces of human living have been found and
  dated to an approximate age of a hundred thousand years - but that was
  The Exception until a recent finding of a cave in Finland used as a
  human dwelling some 100,000 years ago.) Iceland seems not to have been
  populated before Viking time - but mind you! The first colonizer then
  arrived from Ireland and not from Scandinavia.

  13,000 years ago hunting and fishing people left traces along rivers
  and lakes in Denmark and Scania. And from around 8,000 B.C. hunters
  have dwelled also in western and northern Scandinavia; and in Finland
  which started to pop up through the sea.

  Up to this time there had been a continuous land connection from
  Britain to Scania, but now (5,500 B.C.) Norden develops into a huge
  archipelago. Finland emerged as the archipelago on the coast of
  northern Russia and keeps culturally connected with Russia.
  Like-wisely Denmark and the southern Scandinavian peninsula keeps
  connected with western and central Europe. Along the coast of Norway
  hunters persist more or less isolated.

  Around 5,000 B.C. pottery came into use, indicating new methods to
  store food (Erteb�lle culture); and marks of wheat in the pottery
  suggest the beginning of agriculture, however established archaeology
  defines the Erteb�lle culture as a hunter/gatherer culture which came
  to persist for centuries beside the agricultural villages of the
  Pit-pottery (trattb�gar) culture.

  Agriculture is believed to have reached Denmark and the southern
  Scandinavian peninsula approximately 4,200 B.C. with wood-burning
  technique, wheat, barley, sheep, goats, pigs and cows. [ This, and
  many other datings, is disputed. A recent Danish scholarly work says
  4,000 B.C. while a recent Swedish work says agriculture was introduced
  in southernmost Scandinavia around 3,000 B.C. ]

  The megalithe graves are the most visible trace of our prehistoric
  ancestors, erected 3,700-2,300 B.C. in Denmark and on the southern
  Scandinavian peninsula. During this period of over a thousand years
  the agricultural megalithe societies seem to have co-existed with
  coastal hunters and fishers; obvious at least in Denmark, Scania,
  along the Swedish west coast, and at lake M�laren west of Stockholm.

  These hunters/fishers stood in contact with Gotland and Eastern
  Europe, agriculture was not entirely unknown to them and they had
  domesticated swine. In other words: It is important not to take these
  classifications and datings too literally. [ A large recent Swedish
  work dates the megalithe graves to 2,500-1,500 B.C. ]

  Agriculture was introduced along the fjords of southern Norway about
  year 2,500 B.C. At the same time a new mode for burying was introduced
  in southern Scandinavia and southern Finland. Unburned corpses in
  sleeping position, always followed by the battle-axe, and without
  stones or similar signs on the ground above. The battle-axe culture
  followed rivers and lakes, where before the Erteb�lle and the
  Pit-pottery people had dwelled.

  We do not take a position in the dispute whether a change of pottery
  type or burying technique indicate a migration of people or only of
  ideas.

  The battle-axes of stone were initially made after the model of bronze
  axes, very true imitation indeed including the seam of the mould in
  which the bronze axe was cast. The agricultural districts preserved
  their megalithe culture for some time, and then it seems as the
  cultures merged. It is believed that this change in the archaeological
  findings more likely represents a true immigration of people instead
  of a diffusion of ideas and beliefs. If so, it also seems plausible
  that horses and the wheel were introduced by these battle-axe people.

  Around year 2,000 B.C. trade increased. Copper and bronze items
  followed dead chieftains into their graves. With increasing trade it
  didn't last long until bronze (the alloy of copper and tin) was
  produced in Denmark and on the Scandinavian peninsula. The metals
  themselves must however be imported. In exchange for the imported
  copper and tin export of amber and furs and maybe slaves must be
  assumed.

  The Bronze age is dated to the years 1,800-500 B.C. in Denmark, and
  1,500-500 B.C. in Sweden and Finland. Bronze age did barely reach
  Norway or the central parts of Scandinavia and Finland, where the life
  seems to have continued as before.



 2.5.2 Iron Age

  Around year 100 B.C. Lombards are believed to have migrated from
  Scania to Jutland and then further to the area of lower River Elbe,
  from where they attacked Roman Provinces for the following hundreds of
  years, ...until it was time for the great re-settlement of the
  Migration Period. The Lombards finally came to find a warmer sun in
  Lombardy in Italy.

   Western Scandinavia 3rd to 5th century

  Around the turn of millennium, good iron was produced at the
  Oslo-fjord in southern Norway. During the 3rd century A.D. the Iron
  Age Culture begins to spread from the Oslo fjord region, expanding
  along the water routes between Norway and Jutland. (Some scholars
  propose that a tribe with good knowledge of Iron-making thus gained
  military advantages and expanded to the south from the Oslo-fjord
  area. Basing their theories on place names, some even propose that
  these were the Danes, and that the Danes finally reached to
  present-day Svealand in their expansion along the Baltic Sea. In late
  5th century the Lake M�laren region was reported to be subordinate to
  Danish kings.)

  In any case: at the 5th century it seems as the area from Southern
  Norway to Jutland is dominated by related tribes, the "Danes"
  - the flatlanders.

   Eastern Scandinavia 5th to 8th century

  In late 5th century the Lake M�laren region was reported to be
  subordinate to Danish kings, but then Svenonians (Svear) emerge as
  dominating tribe north of Lake M�laren. Guths (Gutar on Gotland),
  Goths (G�tar west and south of Lake M�laren), Finns (in the East) and
  S�mis (in the North) constitute contemporary cultures. The people on
  Gotland, the Guthes (Gutar), dominated the Baltic sea and its trade.

  The agriculture was improved, and the size of farms became more
  diverse. On Gotland the arable fields were enclosed by stone walls,
  and almost all the common lands were split too.

   Western Scandinavia 6th to 11th century

  Danes inhabit western & southern Scandinavia including Jutland. They
  trade with West-Rome and Germans via the Rhine estuary. Jutland was
  the richest territory as that was the key position from where all
  Scandinavian and Baltic trade to and from Rome and the Rhine valley
  could be controlled. Danes (including people from present-day Norway
  and Scania) have a stronghold in England and Ireland which is lost to
  the romanized Normands in 1066.

   Eastern Scandinavia 8th to 11th century

  Svear and Gutar dominate trade with East-Rome and the islamic Persia
  along water-ways in Russia. The castles along the trade routes evolve
  to separate kingdoms and get Christianized.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq25.html ]



 2.5.3 Where did the Vikings go?

  There came to develop clearcut borders between the zones of interest
  for Norwegian, Danish and Svea Vikings. Below the main routes for the
  Viking trades are given with the modern names in some cases
  supplemented with the old Norse names.

  The Danes dominated
    * England between York and London (Danelagen),
    * Normandie,
    * Holland
    * and the southern coast of the Baltic sea between Jutland and
      Gdansk with Stettin/Szczecin (Jomsborg) as the main port to the
      continent.
    * trade contacts with the Mediterian area - both indirect over the
      continent and direct through the Gibraltar.
      The Norwegians travelled to
    * Iceland,
    * the Faroe Islands,
    * Ireland,
    * Scotland
    * and Wales.
    * Like also the Danes they kept trade contacts with the cities of
      the Mediterian Sea.
      The Svear went to what today is Russia (G�rdarike):
    * via the seas Ladoga and Onega to the river Volga and all the way
      over the Caspic Sea to the flourishing Islam Persia.
    * via Riga and the river Dvina/D�na to Smolensk.
    * via Petersburg and the rivers Neva and Volkhov to Novgorod
      (Holmg�rd).
    * from Novgorod and Smolensk they followed the river Volga to Kiev
      (K�nug�rd) and further over the Black Sea to Istanbul (Micklag�rd)
      in the Byzantian Empire where the first written source reports
      Varangians in the Emperor's guard year 837.



 2.5.3b Place names in Old Norse

  The Vikings had Norse names on a lot of towns and markets, of which a
  few still might be heard. The following list is far from complete:


Vendland       Pommerania
Jomsborg       Stettin

Haithabu       Hedeby  (near Slesvig)

Saxland        between Rhine & Elbe
Dorestad       Utrecht
Bretland       Britanic islands

Valland        Flanders
Norva sund     Strait of Gibraltar
Sikel�         Sicily

S�rkland       Persia
Miklag�rd      Istanbul

G�rdarike      between Volga & Black Sea
K�nug�rd       Kijev
Holmg�rd       Novgorod



 2.5.4 What about those horned Viking helmets?

  Surprising though it may sound, the Vikings have never worn even the
  tiniest little horns in their helmets. Viking helmets did sometimes
  have neat figures and all kinds of decorations, but not horns. There
  are some Danish bog-findings of ritual helmets that do have metal
  horns in them, but these date from the Bronze age -- some 2000 years
  before the Vikings.

  The idea has its roots in the art of the Romantic period -- first half
  of the 19th century -- when the artists started to introduce native
  myths and legends in painting and sculpture instead of Greco-Roman
  ones. But since archaeology as a science didn't really even exist yet,
  they had a very poor idea of what sort of equipment the heroes of the
  sagas had used. So they used their creative imagination. Later,
  despite the fact that we now know we now know better, the myth has
  been further popularized by Hollywood movies and comics such as Hagar
  the Horrible, and nowadays a "Viking" is almost by definition "someone
  who wears a pair of horns in his head".


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq253.html ]



 2.5.5 Common Nordic History; Medieval times

   Western Scandinavia 1066-1319

  Denmark and Norway are separate kingdoms. Christian faith is
  established. Denmark is heavily engaged along the southern and eastern
  shores af the Baltic Sea competing with Slavic Viking-like tribes and
  later with Germans. The Germans grow in strength and come through the
  Hanseatic League to dominate both the Baltic and the North Seas.

   Eastern Scandinavia 1164-1319

  Christian faith is established. Trade through Russia is no longer
  possible. Agriculture increase in importance. Finland and Norrland is
  incorporated in the Swedish realm (the question of when G�taland was
  united with Svealand is complicated). The Hanseatic League compete
  successfully with the Guthnish and Swedish traders. The League
  establish Visby on Gotland as a major Hanseatic town.

   Western & Eastern Scandinavia 1319-1521/1536

  The Hanseatic League dominates all of Norden. The modern feudalism has
  led to splitted realms both in Sweden (1310-19) and Denmark (1320-40)
  and is countered by centralistic tendencies by king Magnus Eriksson of
  Sweden, King Valdemar Atterdag of Denmark, and his daughter Queen
  Margrete of Norway. The high aristocracy does of course obstruct. The
  kingdoms are several times united in personal unions.
  Danish kings struggle with Swedish magnates over the relation to
  Germany. The Swedes (and Norwegians?) prioritize trade, the kings want
  to fight first and trade then.



 2.5.6 Christian and pre-Christian laws

  The Christianization of Scandinavia came in particular to influence
  the law-system. The written recording of laws was probably introduced
  by arch-bishop Absalon in Lund, who at the university in Paris around
  year 1150 had studied not only theology and philosophy but also laws
  and political science.

  In the 12th and 13th century the papal administration showed a great
  interest in secular laws, and now we are grateful for this, since the
  archives in Rome have some of our earliest sources. The conflict
  between pope and emperor in Europe was mirrored also in Scandinavia.
  The church had three major demands: Investiture, tax exemption and
  internal jurisdiction (i.e. secular immunity) for priests.

  Year 1200 the Swedish king agreed on the latter two points, but as
  with the German emperor 100 years before the royal (noble) custom to
  appoint bishops (and priests) remained. 1258 it was agreed that
  priests were to be ordained by bishops.

  From year 1200 we also have the first source claiming royal right to
  make and change laws. King Knud VI in Denmark proclaimed issues of
  maintenance of internal peace, as manslaughter, to be within his
  authority according to the Church's laws and teachings. The Things
  argued however that the king's power was limited to suspending laws in
  case they are in direct violation of God's commandments.

  Marriage was a topic where Christian laws differed much from the older
  Germanic. Prior men had become independent of their fathers at
  puberty, but women were subordinated to their husband, their father or
  their brothers. With Christianity the bride's consent was demanded for
  marriage, prohibiting also the formerly customary marriage by capture,
  as well as concubines.

  Dowry and bride price (the latter paid at the betrothing) remained
  customary. Divorces, which prior had been an equal right of booth
  spouses, without demands on certain causes, were also prohibited.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq255.html ]



 2.5.7 Modern Nordic history

   Western Scandinavia 1536-1645

  After a civil war 1534-36 the Hanseatic Leaugue lost its influence in
  the Danish realm. Lutheran Reformation follows. Norway is formally
  incorporated. Until the Thirty Years' War Denmark keeps her position
  as the leading power of Norden.

   Eastern Scandinavia 1521-1560

  Lutheran Reformation contributes to the creation of a National State
  in Sweden with a strong central administration and a king independent
  of the nobility and the pope.

   Eastern Scandinavia 1560-1660

  Territorial gains in Germany, the Baltic lands and in Scandinavia. The
  state administration gets controlled by the nobility.

   The Thirty Years' War 1618-1648

  The Thirty Years' War results in a radically weakened Holy Roman
  Empire of the German Nation. After an unsuccessful mission in the
  early phase of the war Denmark keeps out of it, and does not gain any
  direct favors from Germany's weakness. Sweden have more luck in the
  war, and comes out of it as Europe's leading Lutheran Power.

   Western Scandinavia 1645-1814

  Denmark (with Norway) lose several provinces to Sweden, and after
  having been literally threatened by eradication in 1658 and having
  lost its richest province, Scania, the High Nobility is deemed unfit
  for governing the realm and Royal Autocracy is enforced. Denmark
  balances between revanchism and careful foreign policy aimed at peace
  with the strengthened Sweden. After several unsuccessful attempts to
  regain at least Scania, and after Sweden again is weakened after 1709,
  Denmark (with Norway) experience a peacful century until the
  Napoleonic wars hit also Denmark, leeding to Norway 1814 being ceeded
  to Sweden (75% of the realm's territory, however only a minute
  proportion of its population and tax-incomes).

   Eastern Scandinavia 1660-1808

  Successive losses of territories in south eastern Finland and outside
  of Fennoscandia. The nobility's position is step by step weakened.
  Royal Autocracy is enacted by the Estates in 1680. After the
  disastrous war with Russia 1700-1721 the government is taken over by
  the Estates, and then again in 1771-1809 succeeded by Royal Autocracy.

   Nortern Scandinavia 1809-1918

  Sweden lose the eastern half of the realm to Russia. Revolution in
  Sweden: Governmental power is shared by king and Estates. Finland as a
  Grand Duchy ruled by the Emperor of Russia gets isolated from the rest
  of Norden.

  Rest-Sweden is in personal union with Norway 1814-1905, whereafter the
  union is peacefully abolished and Norway again a totally independent
  kingdom of its own.

   Southern Scandinavia 1814-1901

  Social, educational and constitutional reforms in Denmark. The Royal
  Authocracy is abolished in 1848. In 1864 also Schleswig, Holstein and
  Lauenburg are lost to Prussia.

   20th century

    * Norway gains independency from Sweden; Finland gains independency
      from Russia; and Iceland gains independency from Denmark.
      Greenland, the Faroe Islands and the �land islands get self rule.
    * Parliamentarism, democracy and great social reforms are introduced
      in all Nordic states.
    * Norden is spared from the First World War, however Finland
      experience a bitter and bloody Civil War between Reds and Whites
      parallel with the War in Russia between Reds and Whites after the
      Communist Revolution.
    * Denmark and Norway are occupied during World War II. Finland is
      involved in two wars with Russia (the second in co-operation with
      Germany) and then another war to chase German troops out of
      Northern Finland.
    * Norway and Denmark joins Nato. Denmark, Sweden and Finland joins
      the European Union.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq257.html ]



 2.5.8 Political history & cooperation

  The forming of what we today know as the Nordic countries is a rather
  complex historical process. This is also the reason why it's not a
  very tight unit. While the common cultural heritage and even political
  unions of the Nordic peoples go well beyond the Renaissance, a
  conscious supra-national identity is a relatively recent development.
  After the splitting up of the Kalmar Union in early 16th century,
  Sweden (with Finland) and Denmark (with Norway) remained arch-enemies
  for almost three hundred years, fighting each other for the dominance
  of Scandinavia. Political cooperation was for the most part out of the
  question.

  In the learned circles of the late 18th century, however, a movement
  known as Scandinavism started to spread with the growing realization
  of national identity on one hand and common cultural heritage on the
  other hand. At first this was limited to promoting cultural exchange,
  but in the 1830s a political Scandinavism was born among the students
  of Sweden and Denmark; it aimed to create a Nordic defense alliance
  and even to unite the countries as a single state.

  King Oskar I of Sweden, who was an enthusiastic Scandinavist,
  supported Denmark when the country was subjected to strong political
  pressure from Prussia in 1848-49, which increased the popularity of
  Scandinavism in Denmark. During the Crimean War of 1853-56 efforts
  were made to get Finns to embrace Scandinavism and Sweden planned to
  liberate Finland from the yoke of the Russian Empire so that it could
  rejoin the Scandinavian family, but at that time Finns were quite
  content with their autonomy and didn't show much enthusiasm for
  Scandinavism.

  Political Scandinavism collapsed by and large in 1864 when Denmark was
  attacked by Prussia and Austria. Although the reigning Swedish King
  Karl XV was an advocate of Scandinavism, the Riksdag (the Swedish
  parliament which had grown in power) had a more sceptical attitude,
  and decided not to send any troops to aid the Danes. In addition to
  this, the Norwegian independence movement started to cause tension
  between Norwegians and Swedes.

  Thus the dreams of a unified Scandinavia were abandoned, and
  Scandinavism came to be focused on cultural and economic cooperation,
  standardizing legislation and acting together in international
  conferences. This cooperation has continued up to this date, although
  the word "Scandinavism" itself is no longer used.

   So, how then do the Nordic countries cooperate today?

  The main Nordic cultural and political organs are the Norden-societies
  in each country (founded in Swe/No/Dk in 1919, in Iceland in 1922,
  Finland 1924, Faroes 1955, �land 1970), their umbrella organization
  (founded in 1965), the Nordic Minister Council (1971), and most
  importantly the Nordic Council (1952/1956), through which free
  movement of labour, passport-free travel and common legislation have
  been introduced in the Nordic countries. A similar political profile
  has led all the Nordic countries to develop into welfare states with a
  high social security and a high standard of living.

  Behind the political cooperation lie the factors that have enabled it
  in the first place. These include common cultural background,
  linguistic relationship, shared history, religion and geography. With
  the exception of religion, none of them is fully shared by all five
  countries, but even so, there are more things that unite us than ones
  that separate us.

  In 1946 Scandinavian Airlines Systems, SAS, was founded in cooperation
  between the states of Denmark, Norway and Sweden.

   I've heard the Scandinavian countries failed to agree on a union in the
   1940s.

  That's correct. Actually three times. First in October 1939 the Nordic
  kings and presidents met to discuss the serious situation at the eve
  of the World War. Soviet's demand on Finnish territory was one of the
  main problems discussed, and the Finns must have hoped for guarantees
  from the other states for support against the Russian threats. But the
  result was the opposite. Each state declared its intention to follow a
  strict policy of neutrality, which was the same as telling the Soviet
  Union that none of the other Nordic countries would interfere in the
  Soviet-Finnish conflict.

  Then after the Winter War 1939-40 between the Soviet Union and Finland
  a regular union was discussed for Sweden and Finland - like the
  personal union 1814-1905 between Sweden and Norway. But the Soviet
  Union didn't like the idea.

  Finally after the second world war a defense alliance was planned
  between Norway, Denmark and Sweden. (Finland's participation was again
  vetoed by the Soviet Union.) But the Norwegians' bad impression of the
  19th-century union with Sweden was the obstacle on which the idea
  fell. Instead Norway took up discussions with the USA about
  participation in the planned NATO, and soon also Denmark followed.

   Was that for the first time after the split of the Kalmar-union?

  Well, actually there was a Currency-union between Denmark, Norway and
  Sweden 1873-1914 with the purpose to make trading easier. And people
  who are careful with the notions would maybe object that the last
  trace of the Kalmar-union lasted until 1944 when Iceland declared its
  independence from Denmark. :->

  But otherwise you are right. The personal union 1814-1905 between
  Norway and Sweden was not at all voluntary from the side of the
  Norwegians, and before that the idea of a Nordic union had been stone
  dead since the 16th century.

   How come the Kalmar-union was ever accepted?

  It wasn't.  :->>
  It was the result of a long and complicated chain of coincidences:

    * The Hanseatic League had become a superior power in the Baltic sea
      region. Their strategy was always to support the second strongest
      part in every conflict, thereby contributing to the political
      instability.
    * The first years of the 14th century were particularly unstable.
      Norway's King H�kon H�legg, who recently had gained superiority
      over Iceland, supported the Swedish Duke Erik in an alliance
      against Denmark and the Swedish King Birger.
    * To make a long history short: Sweden was split in three Duchies;
      King Birger imprisons the dukes when they visit him for a
      Christmas party; the dukes are left to starve to death; the king
      is chased out of the country; the Crown-Prince is executed; King
      H�kon of Norway dies; and his grandson, the three years old son of
      Duke Erik, is appointed King Magnus of Norway - and Sweden; his
      mother rules as regent until she starts a war against Denmark;
      then she gets disposed.
    * While the Danish kingdom temporarily was weakened King Magnus
      Eriksson ruled 1332-1355 over Finland and all of the Scandinavian
      peninsula in a loose union between Norway, Sweden, Scania and
      Gotland.
      For its time it was the greatest realm in Europe.

    [ Henrik Ern� writes: ]
    During the period of 1315 to 1331 the Kings' power in Denmark was
    steadily weakened by the powerful noble families, which successed
    in limiting the King's position significantly both politically and
    financially. The King compensated by borrowing money to raise his
    armies from both the Hansa, the Counts of Holstein, the Kings of
    Brandenburg, and anybody else. As surety for the loans various
    parts of the kingdom were pawned out to the moneylenders, who then
    often resold the rights of the pawned province to third parties.

    [ Johan Olofsson writes: ]
    The Scanian nobility (alternatively the Thing in Lund) had in the
    beginning of the 1330s chosen the young Magnus Eriksson to be king
    also for the Scanian provinces, as also Gotland had done, after his
    regents had promised to pay Count Johan of Holstein to whom Scania
    was pawned. At that time Magnus Eriksson was the under-age king of
    both Norway and Sweden.

    [ Jan B�hme replies: ]
    It should be stressed that this was a much more drastic step to
    take for the Scanians.

    The Gutnish quite regularly pledged allegiance to the Swedish King
    in the early Middle Ages, on the routine understanding that this
    would mean as little as possible on the island in practice.

    For the Scanians, it really implied a shift of allegiance.

    Which means that Valdemar Atterdag's later re-conquest of Scania
    only meant a restoration more or less to status quo ante, whereas
    his conquest of Gotland meant an important change of the "facts on
    the ground".

    * When King Magnus' younger son H�kon comes to age, he is appointed
      king of Norway despite Crown-Prince Erik being the rightful heir
      to the throne. The discontent Crown-Prince starts a rebellion and
      gets most of the realm, but soon he and all of his family die in
      an epidemic disease. After this the balance had definitely
      changed: Sweden was weakened and Denmark the strongest again.
    * King Valdemar Atterdag of Denmark conquers Scania and Gotland,
      King Magnus seeks support by the strong Hanseatic League but is
      forced to abdicate in favor of his son H�kon (king of Norway), who
      allies with the Danish king where-after the German Duke Albrecht
      of Mecklenburg is appointed king of Sweden and imprisons the
      ex-King Erik until six years later he is rescued by his son King
      H�kon of Norway.
    * In 1368-70 Valdemar Atterdag had gained courage enough to
      challenge the Hanseatic League. Denmark tried to master the
      southwestern Baltic and end the Hansa's economic control there.
      But instead the League was united (the Cologne-federation) and
      decided to raise an armed force that then defeated the Danes
      decisively. The league then tried to dominate Denmark by means of
      a 15 year's contracted possession of castles and towns along
      �resund.
    * After Valdemar Atterdag's death his five years old grandson Olav
      is elected King of Denmark - the alternative would have been the
      nephew of King Albrecht supported by the German emperor. But the
      emperor died. Olav's father was King H�kon of Norway, but the
      Danish realm is in the hands of his mother, Queen Margrete of
      Norway, the daughter of Valdemar Atterdag, who wasn't on speaking
      terms with her husband the king.
    * When King H�kon died his son Olav was still under age, only nine
      years old, and the queen ruled over both Norway and Denmark. The
      King Olav died however also (at the age of seventeen) and the
      son-son of the Swedish King Albrecht of Mecklenburg was closest to
      the throne.
    * The Danish nobility did however prefer the Norwegian queen for the
      German king and appointed her to regent with support of the Thing
      in Lund. Then the Norwegians elected her to regent, and finally
      the Swedish State Council and aristocracy chose to support her
      against King Albrecht in Sweden, who was beaten in a battle with
      Queen Margrete and together with his son Erik captured and
      imprisoned. (1395 he was rescued through Mecklenburg's war against
      the queen.)
    * Finally Bugislav, the nephew of Queen Margrete, is elected king
      (known as Erik of Pomerania) by the Norwegian state council with
      the queen as regent until he comes to age; then he is elected king
      in province after province of Denmark (1387) and so also by the
      Swedish state council (1389). Thereby the union was made
      legitimate, and in contrast to earlier occasions when one king
      ruled over two Scandinavian countries, this came to last for a
      long time. (Although the Swedes made a lot of problems all the
      time.)

   Is it true that Scandinavia was a united Norse Realm before Christianity?

  Well, ...yes and no!
  There existed short-lived kingdoms with considerable size also before
  the 14th century, but they all disintegrated when the king in question
  died - if not before. Maybe the army which was raised to defend
  Jutland against the Huns was the first.

  During the 11th century there are for instance King Canute the Great's
  realm including most of England, Norway, maybe Sweden and (of course)
  Denmark. But the first years of the millenium was rich in power-play:
    * Olof Sk�tkonung, King of Svealand, allies with his step-father
      Svend Fork-beard, King of Denmark, and the exiled Jarl Eirik from
      Norway. [ "Jarl" is the same word as "Earl". ] They defeat King
      Olav Tryggvason of Norway. Jarl Eirik gets a third of Norway as
      his own, and the part of Olof Sk�tkonung's as his vassal. This
      happened in year 1000 according to Snorre.
    * Then the viking chieftain, King Olav Haraldsson defeats and slays
      the son of Jarl Eirik, but unites with Eirik against King Olof of
      Svealand. Unpease pesters the life in J�mtland and Bohusl�n.
    * According to Snorre (not too sure in other words) the leaders at
      the Thing in Uppsala compelled King Olof to peace-negotiations
      with King Olav.
    * King Canute the Great (of Denmark) conquered also Norway. King
      Olav escaped to his relative King Jaroslav in Novgorod, where he
      raised an army. They landed in Sweden where meanwhile the
      Svenonians (Svear) had lost their patience with the self-willed
      King Olof Sk�tkonung, who had taken the unprcedented step of
      conversion to Christianity. King Olof was expelled (and on his
      escape given refuge in Skara in G�taland, where his confessor and
      spiritual father proclaimed Sweden's first bishopric).
    * The new King of Sweden, Amund Jakob, supports king Olav
      Haraldsson, who however is killed in the battle of Stiklestad in
      Tr�ndelag.
    * When King Canute the Great dies in 1035 the Danish supremacy over
      Norway is exchanged in a Treaty of Friendship, Co-operation and
      Mutual Assistance. It was settled that if one of the two realm's
      kings should die without heirs, then the other would succeed him.
    * King Hardeknud of Denmark dies without an heir in 1042, and
      Denmark and Norway is again united - now under King Magnus.
    * But soon a retired colonel from Constantinople, the uncle of King
      Magnus, returned to his native country and made demands on half of
      the kingdom. As King Magnus refused, the uncle, who came to be
      called Harald H�rdr�de by the way, allied with Svend Estrids�n, a
      claimant to the Danish kingdom. King Magnus was defeated in the
      year 1047, and the union between Denmark and Norway was split.
           ____________________________________________________

   That's rather messy, isn't it?
   Could you please make a table?

  - At your service!
  1022-35 King Canute the Great united Denmark, Norway and parts of
  England.
  1042-47 King Magnus of Norway inherits the Crown of Denmark.
  1262-1536 Iceland is governed by Norway
  1319-55 Personal union between Norway and Sweden
  1332-60 Personal union between Sweden, Scania and Gotland
  1362-64 Personal union between Norway and Sweden
  1387-1536 Personal union between Denmark and Norway
  1389-1523 Personal union between Denmark, Norway and Sweden
  1536-1814 Norway is incorporated� in the Danish realm
  1536-1918 Iceland is incorporated in the Danish realm
  and 1918-1944 in personal union with Denmark
  1536-- The Faroe islands are incorporated in the Danish realm
  1814-1905 Personal union between Norway and Sweden �/ There remains
  some dispute regarding if Norway regained sort of a status as
  a kingdom again, in personal union with Denmark, in 1660.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq258.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.6 The essence of Nordishness

  The Nordic states, cultures or languages are of course very different
  if judged by us Nordeners ourself. :->> But seen from the outside the
  cultural characteristics are not more different than we all well could
  have belonged to the same nation. Not quite seriously, I here use the
  unconventional term "Nordishness" for the characteristics of us - as
  if Norden had been one state or nation.



 2.6.1 What is Janteloven?

  The word "Janteloven" occasionally pops up in s.c.n, often with no
  hint given as to what it's supposed to mean since apparently it's
  common knowledge in most Nordic countries. Not so with the rest of the
  world, however, or Finland for that matter, so a brief explanation
  warrants a place. It derives from the the novel "En flygtning krysser
  sitt spor" ("A refugee crosses his tracks") by the Norwegian/Danish
  author Aksel Sandemose. The book takes place in an imaginary Danish
  small town called Jante, based on Sandemose's hometown Nyk�bing Mors.
  The book is about the ugly sides of Scandinavian smalltown mentality,
  and the term "Janteloven" meaning "the Jante Law" has come to mean the
  unspoken rules and jealousy of such communities in general.

  The form and style of the Ten Commandments in Norwegian are
  "straight," i.e. unencumbered by the "thous" and "thys" of the older
  English translations of the Bible. I've made the assumption that
  Sandemose deliberately chose 10 laws and that his style was
  intentionally reminiscent of the Ten Commandments. It's also
  interesting to note that the Ten Commandments (and the other laws of
  Leviticus) are often referred to as Moseloven (or the Mosaic Law) in
  Norwegian.

  Also, there are some messages that are implied in these laws that are
  not explicit.I've included those in brackets so as to convey the
  meaning better, although they should properly be construed as
  editorializing on my part.

  This translation of the Jante Laws was suggested by Leif Knutsen
  (except that I replaced "venture to think" with "to presume", as
  suggested by someone in the group):

 The Jante Law

   1. Du skal ikke tro at du *er* noe.
      Thou shalt not presume that thou art anyone [important].
   2. Du skal ikke tro at du er like saa meget som *oss*.
      Thou shalt not presume that thou art as good as us.
   3. Du skal ikke tro at du er klokere en *oss*.
      Thou shalt not presume that thou art any wiser than us.
   4. Du skal ikke innbille deg du er bedre enn *oss*.
      Thou shalt never indulge in the conceit of imagining that thou art
      better than us.
   5. Du skal ikke tro du vet mere enn *oss*.
      Thou shalt not presume that thou art more knowledgeable than us.
   6. Du skal ikke tro du er mere enn *oss*.
      Thou shalt not presume that thou art more than us [in any way].
   7. Du skal ikke tro at *du* duger til noe.
      Thou shalt not presume that that thou art going to amount to
      anything.
   8. Du skal ikke le av *oss*.
      Thou art not entitled to laugh at us.
   9. Du skal ikke tro at noen bryr seg om *deg*.
      Thou shalt never imagine that anyone cares about thee.
  10. Du skal ikke tro at du kan l�re *oss* noe.
      Thou shalt not suppose that thou can teach us anything.



 2.6.2 A Nordic national character?

  Since nordishness can be depicted only in contrast to other cultural
  patterns, the following features have been collected among immigrants
  to Sweden, as representative for their impression of their new
  compatriots. The cultural anthropologist �ke Daun has written quite a
  few articles and books on this topic in the Swedish language. The
  following is an attempt to concentrate the most important of his
  points.

  Many point out how they never get invited to neighbors or colleagues.
  This is easy to interpret as a suppressed hostility, i.e. as
  xenophobia or discrimination. To a limited extent such interpretations
  might be justified, but it could also be explained by the social
  pattern among the Swedes. Also Nordeners can be good colleagues - year
  after year - without this making them meeting privately. We tend to
  draw a clear border between our private life on one side with a few
  close friends and a bunch of relatives, and on the other side social
  contacts with others. To one's home one receives siblings with
  families maybe an old schoolmate or some friend since the childhood,
  and maybe one or two "recent" friends with their families, for
  instance a former or actual neighbor or colleague.

  But it's typical how this circle is rather narrow and additionally
  stable over the years. A consequence is that it's rather hard for
  newcomers to a town or a village to break into such a narrow circle,
  particularly for aliens.

  This feature is enforced by the strong tendency among Swedes to
  achieve socio-cultural homogeneity. Another typical Nordic feature
  contributes to this tendency: the wish for conflict free encounters in
  the private life.

  Swedes are particularly prone to achieve consensus in attitudes and
  opinions, and avoid socializing with others than like-minded people.
  Confrontations are regarded as particularly unpleasant. Nordeners are
  not curious enough to balance for this fear for the different. We do
  also not believe ourselves to be interesting enough to wake the
  curiousness of others, and to compensate for this there must be food
  and beverages, and maybe particular activities, when meeting others.

  Another feature worth to note is shyness, which is particularly
  prevalent among Finns and Scandinavians. People feel inhibited around
  others one doesn't know well, and one is very observant on one's own
  behavior since it is regarded as very important to control which
  impression others get of oneself. Among less well known people, one
  gets extra careful since it is harder to anticipate their perceptions
  and reactions.

  Another reason to not visiting others and not inviting others is the
  high requirement one wish to comply to regarding food and cleanliness
  when foreigners visit one's home. To feel comfortable with foreigners
  at home, one needs a long time for emotional and practical
  preparations.

  A sign of the borderline between the private sphere and work is the
  Nordic resistance against small talk about private matters with
  strangers, which has been reported to be a great hinder in business
  contacts in foreign countries.

  The lack of passions strangers might perceive in Nordics is surely
  both reflecting a genuine trait and the fact that most strangers don't
  meet Nordics in a context the Nordics would regard as private and
  unrestrained (except for drunk appearances - see section 2.10!).

  Rational reasons have a strong precedence over for emotional reasons.
  Emotions are not at all disapproved in all contexts, but they are
  regarded as "pure" emotions of no further value than to signal one's
  general unhappiness with life or fate.

  Quietness is regarded as the commonly accepted norm, and noisy fellows
  are strongly disapproved. Vociferous stubbornness is deemed as very
  ill-mannered. As is interrupting and talking in the mouth of others.

  The Nordic ideal is to think twice before one speaks, and to utter
  only one's most firm beliefs, and only when there is a considered
  intention. What one says is remembered for ages, and if one says
  something stupid or "wrong" it will be proof of one's stupidness and
  general incompetence,
  ...and can be used against one in encounters ages afterward...

  To be kind and good-natured is important. One prefer to be quiet or
  agreeable instead of uttering an opposing opinion, unless one really
  aims at hurting.

  Leaving the professional ethnologist �ke Daun aside, we can note how
  the Norwegians and the Finns, who gained independence first in the
  20:th century tend to be much more nationalistic than Danes or Swedes.
  Tor Slettnes points out how Norwegians are generally strongly affected
  by their own culture. Norwegian national romanticism has of course its
  roots in the independence movements from Denmark, Sweden, and German
  occupants, and is much more accepted and appreciated by Norwegians
  themselves, than by outsiders. Because nationalism often (in Germany,
  Sweden, USA etc) has been a political taboo, later to be picked up by
  anti-establishment semi-nazi groups, citizens of these places might
  find the Norwegian national pride hard to swallow.

  ...oh, and I almost forgot! Nordeners usually think we are very good
  at upbringing children, condemning the "cold" and unfriendly attitudes
  to children in for instance France or the UK. Spanking of children is
  not acceptable anymore, and actually unlawful in most countries.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq26.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.7 Sex, drugs and censorship

  Usenet being what it is, dominated by Americans, makes some issues
  more confusing than others. How come the Nordic societies are so
  liberal on pornography and promoting indecent lifestyles (also known
  as homosexuality) but so repressive against prostitution, smokers (of
  usual cigarettes as well as joints) and other drug users? Isn't it a
  contradiction that films get censored due to "excessive violence" in
  the countries which all over the world are notorious for their free
  sex and as the base for Nazi propaganda? What a strange mixture of
  liberalism and intolerant censure!



 2.7.1 Sex in the Nordic cultures

  Section 2.7.1 is unwritten.

  Please write and ask in the newsgroup if there are any particular
  questions you would like answered!



 2.7.2 Domestic partnership (Same-sex "marriages")

  In all Scandinavian countries (i.e. Denmark, Norway, Sweden and also
  Iceland, but not Finland or the Faroe Islands) same-sex marriages,
  officially called "Registered Partnerships", are recognized by the law
  - with more or less the same rights and duties as in bi-gender
  marriages. In Sweden two very well-known female performing artists,
  Eva Dahlgren and Efva Attling, married publicly the spring 1996 with
  much fanfare.

  Denmark, Norway, Greenland, Sweden and Iceland have (in that order)
  made the cohabition between people of the same sex possible to get
  officially registered, which in most non-religious respects makes the
  status of the relationship equal to that of a married couple. As late
  as June 27th 1996 the law took effect on Iceland.

  Finland has not yet joined the other Nordic states, but is rapidly and
  under unusual parliamentarian means catching up. Being last will
  probably also mean that they will end up with the most radical laws.

  The laws are very short - what they do is state that gay couples who
  register are entitled to all of the benefits (and responsibilities) of
  their country's respective marriage laws. They do this by simply
  referring the Registered Partnership Acts to the respective sections
  of the country's Marriage Act that applies.

  The ceremony is performed much like a civil wedding ceremony. The
  Church does not perform such ceremonies, but some priests have chosen
  to bless partners in connection with the ceremony. The registration of
  a partnership makes no big practical change compared to living
  together without it, however for instance rules regarding inheritance
  are affected. The meaning is most of all emotional, as an act making
  the relationship "officially" acknowledged.

  The laws requires at least one of the partners to be a citizen in the
  actual country.

  Until recent years homosexuals in all Nordic countries have been in a
  situation where their partners have not been recognized by the
  official society at all, for instance often have not been properly
  informed in case of accidents and hospitalizations, and with severe
  problems to keep the lease of a shared flat in case of a divorce or a
  death. During the 1970s this started to change, and gay couples became
  equal to unmarried couples without children at the same time as most
  social benefits became depending on cohabition instead of marriage.
  And 1989 Denmark was first out with a specific law regulating the
  rights and duties of gay couples who live in recognized partnerships,
  i.e. common law marriages.

  Due to the Swedish Registered Partnership Act women who have entered
  into partnerships have also been granted social benefits in connection
  with a birth equal to if the other woman had been the married father
  of the child. It is likely that this implementation will be normal in
  the future.

  Still the authorities in Finland treat cohabiting same sex couples as
  single persons and not like unmarried heterosexual couples (common law
  marriage) which leads to an increased financial burden. This has
  implications to taxation, health insurance, and so on and on...

  In none of the Nordic states does the law permit the adoption of
  children by gay or lesbian couples, nor does it give the right to
  artificial insemination. Insemination is in Sweden illegal outside of
  the public health care system and the requirements make it impossible
  for lesbians without an infertile male husband to get inseminated. In
  Denmark insemination for lesbians is not illegal, however not financed
  through the health-care insurances.

  There has been some discussion about these laws, involving both
  requests for more radical steps and urging of Conservatism. Many
  homosexuals would probably agree that the partnership laws are the
  best possible result of pragmatic compromises by gay-rights activists
  and the straight [heterosexual] politicians who supported the law.
  It's a typical example of Scandinavian step-by-step reforms. And it
  will be improved further.

  The Icelandic law is similar to those passed in Norway, Denmark and
  Sweden, but it also gives gay couples joint custody of the children of
  either partner. Both partners then become the childrens' guardians and
  should the natural parent die, the other partner - the childrens' step
  parent - automatically becomes their sole guardian. Nowhere have gay
  couples had such rights up to now. In addition to this the Al�ingi
  (the Parliament of Iceland) is scheduled to change several provisions
  in the criminal law, making it a punishable offense to defame or
  persecute gays and lesbians in public. In addition, the law only
  permits gay and lesbian couples to confirm their partnership in a
  civil ceremony; this in light of the Church of Iceland's firm
  opposition to church marriages of gay and lesbian couples. The new law
  enjoys the support of all political parties represented in parliament
  and only one member voted against the bill.

  Top politicians have in some cases chosen to be quite open regarding
  their own experiences and feelings of homosexual nature, as for
  instance Andreas Carlgren, the vice chairman of the Center party in
  Sweden; and in other cases chosen to regard these matters as strictly
  personal which well might be acknowledged in an interview or two, but
  which are not allowed to become a part of their image, as for instance
  the Norwegian minister of Justice, Anne Holt, and the Danish minister
  of Health, Yvonne Herlov Andersen. In the Nordic countries it's
  customary to respect the individual's choice in these cases.



 2.7.3 Pornography

  [ Lennart Regebro writes: ]
  Norway and Iceland don't allow pornography, but through the years the
  definition of what is pornography has got more liberal.

  Sweden has one of the world's best protections for Freedom of Speech,
  which made it hard to outlaw pornography. Thus, Sweden got its
  reputation of being the land of free sex, because in Sweden you could
  actually make porn magazines.

  Some time during the sixties, Denmark removed its laws prohibiting
  pornography, and became a mecca for Nordic porn. It still is in many
  senses. For example, the view on "unusual" sex seems much more relaxed
  in Denmark. Sado-Masochism seems pretty accepted, for example,while it
  in Sweden seems to be taboo. There is even a law against distrubuting
  "violence-sex", something that seems to be aimed against
  sado-masochistic pornography.

  Sweden (just like Denmark) doesn't allow distribution of
  child-pornography. Although you legally can own it, the police can
  take it, if it is evidence for child-misuse. Owning it is not an
  offense, although the law in Sweden is proposed to change on that
  point. [ someone else: ]
  Finland has its own major contribution to the porn industry in the
  famous (and newly deceased) artist Touko Laaksonen (alias: Tom of
  Finland), who from the 1940s and forward published a lot of often
  overt erotic drawings of Nordic males as forest workers, bikers,
  firemen and policemen with pretty faces, huge dicks, and a shameless
  amount of appetite for each other.



 2.7.4 Censorship in the Nordic countries

  [ Gunnar Medin writes: ]
  Denmark is an easy case. There is no censorship at all. Not for adults
  anyway. A film can be prohibited for viewing in a movie theater by
  children below 12 or 16, but no censor decide what adult people can
  see. (But some kind of pictures are unlawful to show, i.e. child
  pornography.) This does not mean that charges cannot subsequently be
  brought against publishers of the material for breaking of laws like
  racist allegations, libel slander or perhaps copyright issues. But the
  main thing is that there is never any preemptive censorship.

  Another thing is what the audience like! American films seem sometimes
  to get distributed in two versions. One cut for Northern Europe with
  more sex and less violence, and one for US with less nakedness but
  more violence. US films with relatively explicit sex scenes, e.g.
  Basic Instinct, are often made in one version for Europe and one
  shorter ("censored") version for the USA. The only reason I have heard
  of for censoring films in Sweden in modern times is violence.

  [ someone else: ]
  In Sweden, the same laws apply to what you can and what you can not
  show on movies and video. The difference is, that movies are checked
  for violations before being shown, while videos are only checked if
  there is a complaint.

  This means that a movie distributor /theater can never be convicted
  for what they show in movies since the censoring system absolves them
  from responsibility. In contrast, video distributors can be convicted
  for selling and renting videos with prohibited content.

  The same rule also holds for printed matter in Sweden. Books which are
  libelous, infringes copyrights, prints military secrets and so on, can
  never be censored before publication.

  The problem with doing this for movie theaters is that it takes so
  long time to get a conviction, so that the movie would have stopped
  showing anyway. In effect, it would "remove" the censoring, unless you
  would get long jail sentence. That would in turn lead to the much
  worse "self-censoring" system that exists in the US.

  [ Otto-Ville Ronkainen: ]
  In Finland, all films are subject to a preview by the State Film
  Approval Office, which can approve the film for all audiences or for
  audiences above a certain age. The highest age limit is K-18. If a
  film can't be shown as K-18 as such, it must be cut or it can't be
  shown. Nowadays the standards on sex are more lenient than in the US.
  Movies that are R-rated in the US can be K-12 or K-10 here.

  For video films, the Finnish system requires the limit to be K-16 or
  less, so K-18 films have to be cut to be released on video. However,
  such restrictions don't exist on import for own use, so the real
  enthusiasts can get their films uncut from England or Denmark, for
  instance.

  [ Kari Yli-Kuha: ]
  Currently, the Finnish censorship is about to be abolished, since with
  the current information technology it's practically impossible to
  prevent people from seeing whatever they want. It's not so important
  what the adults see or do not see, but removing censorship, the main
  purpose of which has been to guard children from the most hard-core
  violence, emphasizes the role of parents.



 2.7.5 Drugs in the Nordic countries

  This is a controversial theme, which maybe can be illustrated by the
  following quotes from the news group:

  [ Stein J. Rypern writes: ]
  At least Norwegian culture is pretty clear on this - drugs are out.

  Alcohol and nicotine are allowed, but with some restrictions:
    * advertising for either alcohol or cigarettes are prohibited
    * there are hefty "sin taxes" on both products,
    * there is a law against smoking in many public places
    * spirits, wine and beer in tax group 3 (with more than about 4.5%
      alcohol per volume unit) is only sold in the government monopoly
      shops (and licensed bars and restaurants, of course).

  Norway is culturally a part of the "vodka belt", where occasional
  drinking yourself into a stupor at parties is socially acceptable, but
  not really done all that much by people who are above the age of 20.

  There is a fairly strong taboo against drinking and driving. It still
  happens, of course - but most people have the sense to park the car
  and take a cab home or arrange for one person to stay sober and drive
  the others home when they have been drinking.

  What has all this got to do with drugs? Not a lot, I guess :-)

  Drugs just aren't socially acceptable. Might be part of the
  puritanical heritage of Norwegians; might be common sense - we know
  how to deal with drinking (we drink, get drunk, fall down, no problem
  :-), but not with using drugs. Several decades of good propaganda work
  by the health authorities have also firmly fixed the idea that
  "smoking marihuana leads to the use of heavier drugs" in our minds. It
  may or may not be true - I don't much care either way - I see no need
  for people to use drugs when we have the time-honored way of getting
  blasted - alcohol. :-)

  I guess people also see using drugs as something done by junkies and
  prostitutes and people who are down and out. There are no role models
  who advocate the use of drugs.

  I accept my neighbor's right to meddle in my decisions when what I do
  affect him. When I expect him to pay my medical bills (through taxes)
  if I need surgery or when I drive my car down the street where his
  kids go to school after drinking or using drugs. In those cases it is
  not just my personal choice, it is also my neighbors problem. Most
  Norwegians seem to be somewhat more inclined toward the common good
  than individual freedom.

  The "relaxed" attitudes of the Scandinavian countries are mostly an US
  myth, I suspect. Just because we don't have all your hang-ups about
  sex and don't pay lip service to "godliness" doesn't mean that
  anything goes over here :-)

  Coffee, loud music, fat food, skiing slopes too steep for you - all
  these things might cause some kind of damage to your health. It is
  neither desirable nor practical to try to ban everything that "is bad
  for you". I am willing to accept some risks.
  After all - life is dangerous - must be close to a 100% fatality rate,
  eh?
  ;-)

  Keeping drugs banned is practical politics as long as the number of
  drug (ab)users is fairly limited. Politics is doing what we believe is
  right, within the confines of what is possible in the real world.

  I don't think you can cure most drug addicts from their addiction. I
  would prefer to spend whatever resources we can afford to spend on
  preventing or actively hindering people from being recruited into drug
  addiction. Based on the principle "one stitch in time saves nine".
  Prevention tend to be less expensive both in terms of money and human
  suffering than trying to cure an existing condition. I don't know what
  is the cheapest alternative. I believe that it is that as few people
  as possible use drugs. I also believe that making drugs illegal, hard
  to get and as expensive as possible will make fewer people start doing
  drugs. I draw my line between smoking /drinking on one side and doing
  drugs on the other side. For practical reasons - it is a line I
  believe can be enforced.

  [ Mikko Hakala <[email protected]> writes: ]
  The situation also varies from country to country. Denmark is most
  tolerable, and in contrast, Sweden's attitude towards drugs has become
  something close to paranoia, planning to criminalize even
  prostitution. I feel that since Palme's murder Sweden hasn't been the
  country it used to be. As if the nation had lost her faith in
  tomorrow.

  Norway and Finland are somewhere between. Probably more close to
  Sweden than Denmark. Most Scandinavians don't come personally in touch
  with drugs. They see drugs only in (American) movies. Therefore the
  Nordic sense of reality hasn't become part of their drug-policy.

  If one is caught in Finland with, say, with 2 grams of hash, there
  won't be any prosecution. BUT the considering, which takes one minute
  for a policeman in the streets of Helsinki, may take several days for
  a rural police chief in Kajaani. - Meanwhile the "criminal" stays in
  custody!

  [ From: Anders Nordseth <[email protected]> ]
  In Copenhagen, Denmark, they also sell cannabis in the open, in the
  so-called Pusher Street in Christiania. There they have sale-stands
  where they sell hashish, and the police bothers only once in a while.

  I would agree that Norway and Finland are closer to Sweden than
  Denmark. For smuggling cannabis products in larger amounts you might
  in Norway risk 21 years in prison, which is the highest sentences one
  can get in Norway (the same as homicide).

  Recently, a person from Denmark was caught smuggling 30 kg of hashish
  from Denmark to Norway. He escaped from Norway and went back to
  Denmark. The Norwegian authorities wanted to seek extradition for him,
  but the Danish authorities didn't look at the crime as serious enough,
  so they didn't extradite him. He is a free man in Denmark, in Norway
  he would have been a "very dangerous criminal".

  Possessing smaller amounts of cannabis, is not that serious. In the
  bigger cities (like Oslo) you would usually get a fine, in smaller
  places in Norway you might risk some days in prison.

  The crimes involved with drugs are caused by drug addicts who need
  money to finance their use of drugs. If it wasn't prohibited, the
  price would not have been as high, and they wouldn't have to resort to
  theft, prostitution or robbery to finance their drug use.

  Use of alcohol leads to violent behavior more often than the use of
  drugs. A stoned person is quite harmless. I've been driving cab in
  Oslo for several years on weekend nights while studying. Drug addicts
  or stoned people have never caused me any problems, drunk people have
  very often caused me problems.

  It's a dilemma, what problems should we choose? My opinion is that it
  would be a more fair distribution of the problems if we legalize
  drugs. Today a lot of innocent people suffer for the criminal acts
  done by drug-addicts hunting for money. By legalizing drugs, more
  people will probably have personal problems, but less innocent people
  will have problems caused by drug-use. And remember, everyone has that
  choice to "Just say no". It might be a cynical view, but freedom has
  its costs.

  [ From: Nils Ek <[email protected]> ]
  The serious health risks imposed by cannabis, cocaine, heroin, etc.
  have been well established (at least to the satisfaction of most
  educated people) by responsible medical groups. In Scandinavia, those
  who abuse their bodies with alcohol and/or drugs are entitled to
  publicly-funded health-care. So perhaps it's no wonder that the
  governments decide they'd rather not put up with the medical as well
  as social costs of de-criminalized intoxicant drugs. Of course these
  arguments and conclusions have been vehemently denied by the addicts
  (or counter-culture drug proponents, if you will).

  Rather than tolerance, the issue may be one of: whom do you believe?
  The Nordics probably have more respect for their medical community
  than elsewhere, e.g. compared to U.S. where it's perceived as
  "big-business". Meanwhile the counter-culture types typically believe
  they have tapped into some ancient secrets of the orient. However, I
  believe that for many people, this has to be a turn-off because of the
  use in oriental "natural" medicine of bears' gall-bladders, tiger
  penises, and rhino horns. Perhaps this is why pro-drug arguments of
  (American) counter-culture seem to have less of a foothold there.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq27.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.8 Nordic Socialism and welfare

  The Nordic societies can be characterized as countries with rather
  subtile class differences. To define which class people belong to has
  become harder in the last 50 years, when the democracy has led to
  compulsory education and social insurances for everyone. Equality has
  been the slogan best remembered from the French revolution, and strong
  labor unions have achieved many of their goals, with for instance
  manual workers often earning well as much as lower officials and
  teachers.



 2.8.1 Wouldn't the Nordic economies gain from abolishing Socialism?

  Let's make a few things straight!

  The words "Socialism" - "Liberalism" - "Conservatism" are used in a
  very different way in the USA compared to the usage in the continental
  Europe and in Norden. In soc.culture.nordic we use these words as they
  are understood in Europe:

  Liberalism and Socialism are in Europe basically defined as ideas with
  a great deal of heritage from early Liberal and Socialistic writers.
  Liberalism could be said to revolve around freedom from the power of
  the mighty, and Socialism around freedom from the power of the rich.

  Democratic freedom is per definition a Liberal virtue.
  Some Social democrats might be classified as much of a Liberal, but
  most are definitely not. The program of the Social Democratic parties
  are not understood as Liberal, but when it comes to practical
  pragmatic politics and policies the outcome might be a mixture between
  the own program and other ideas.

  Conservatism is likewise defined as ideas succeeding the writings of
  Burke, Disraeli and other classical political writers. There are two
  major branches among the Conservatives: the Social-Conservatives and
  the Value-Conservatives. The Value-Conservatives? Oh, that's people
  who speak a lot of the importance of the church, the army, the family
  and maybe the crown (king/ government) and are very happy to spend all
  the tax money on those institutions instead of extravagances on
  children, disabled and unemployed.

  Socialism is the people's control over the means of production.

  High spending government is something different.
  This phenomenon comes in different wrappings: Feudal, Authoritarian
  Conservative, Fascist, Social Liberal, Social Democrat, Christian
  Democrat and so on.

  As an ideology, Socialism deals more with the political basis than
  with the implementation. Nobody can justify taxation as a goal, that
  politicians and civil servants are always right, that it is a goal to
  confiscate any kind of private property. There are some Socialist
  ideologies that want society to build upon omnipotence. All but tiny
  extremist groups have survived. Most were slaughtered in Eastern
  Europe.

  The Socialist ideology was more a visionary romantic one than a
  practical political theory. There is a little bit of the rhetoric left
  (for internal use) in the Social Democratic parties, so maybe one
  could call them Socialist. Then there are the proper Socialists on the
  left of the Social Democrats. Some of the Nordic still worship Karl
  Marx.



 2.8.2 Don't the Nordic states have huge welfare expenditures?

  "Welfare" in this context has nothing to do with welfare as the word
  is understood in the USA. It stands for a word ("v�lf�rd" as spelled
  in Swedish) approximately translated by the intention to control
  un-employment and poverty by governmental regulation and actions. This
  is not a particular phenomenon for Scandinavia, or for recent times,
  but have to greater or lesser extent been on the program for nearly
  all parties ruling in the industrialized Europe (i.e. for over a
  hundred years).

  Subsidies to industries have been popular among nearly all parties,
  for instance. The health care system, the tax financed school system
  (including student loans) and the mandatory participation in schemes
  for loss of income at retirement, disability, sickness or unemployment
  has got a solid support by something like 90% of the politicians and
  95% of the Nordic voters. The differences regard adjustments, not the
  idea as such.



 2.8.3 But you do pay terrible taxes, don't you?

  Also people who are Conservative, by Nordic standards, support the
  basic concept of sharing a public responsibility for education and
  health care. We can discuss the efficiency of the government in
  running these programs, but you're not going to convince many
  Nordeners that the solution to inefficiencies is to move the
  responsibility to the individual.

  Since the education of the youths is paid for through taxes instead of
  parent's earnings, the most intelligent kids get educated regardless
  of wealth. This is an advantage for the country as a whole. You can
  also say: The educated pay back for their education through taxes.

  The same applies to the health care, which additionally seems to be
  remarkably cost efficient in the Nordic countries (compared to the US
  at least).

  We all will need support around our birth, during the time when we
  grow up, when we get ill and when we get old. We all need education.
  Those needs are as common as our general need for streets and law and
  order and protection by an army. All will probably become seniors. In
  any case, all have reason to prepare for that. If the preparation is
  made by individual savings or by mandatory contribution to a general
  system is the difference. The cost for living and health care during
  your last years won't change if you live in a libertarian state or in
  the nanny-states of Europe. The only difference is the method of
  paying. Here you pay in advance via the tax system.

  The same goes for primary and secondary education. All who earn money
  have once upon a time used the pre-schools and schools, and in our
  society you pay for it through the tax some years later. In other
  systems you "borrow" it from your parents when you use the service,
  and then "pay back" to your kids when they grow up.

  Neoclassical economists use to argue that the high taxations in the
  Nordic countries must lead to high unemployment, low productivity, low
  rates of investments and too little incentives to work and innovate.
  Now and then these arguments are presented in s.c.n., and regularly
  the following will be presented:

  The Nordic experience shows that 50% taxation is not too high to keep
  most people from working. In the 80s there was full employment despite
  high taxes and an extensive social security system. People still
  prefer work to unemployment. Sweden could maintain full employment
  until 1990s, but now the open unemployment is higher than in the US,
  although the criteria of the statistics differ.

  The Nordic model worked well till the 90'ies economic depression, but
  it may have gotten into trouble in some of the countries now. On the
  other hand, one could argue that thanks to this model the recession in
  the beginning of the 90'ies became moderated in a very favorable way,
  compared for instance to the development in the United Kingdom.

  It's often noted that the level of investments in Finland only some
  5-10 years ago was very high, maybe too high, and that Sweden has a
  trade surplus (i.e. producing to a higher value than they consume)
  whereas USA has a trade deficit.

  Productivity is relatively high in Norden. Social security does not
  lower productivity. In fact U.S. style low pay employment does not
  have as great incentives to high productivity as the Nordic union
  negotiated pay model.

  Among the positive sides of this high-taxation system, one can note:
    * almost no poverty or starvation, as is the case in American
      ghettos
    * virtually no homelessness problem
    * very little crime
    * equal opportunity to education & health care, regardless of the
      wallets

  Another example is that if a US worker is forced to have an expensive
  car and drive for two hours each way to get to work, spending money
  burning gasoline, that shows up as a bigger contribution to GDP than
  that of the Finnish worker who lives in a comfortable cogeneratively
  heated house out in K�pyl�, doesn't need a car, and rides an
  inexpensive tram in to work.



 2.8.4 Now, when the Soviet Union has fallen, you are free to liberate your
 economies!

  What often seems to be forgotten is that the Nordic countries have the
  same balance in political life as Canada and the US - namely
  (apparent) democracy. Nordics have a right to choose whether they want
  to spend public money on welfare, health care and education or not.
  They do so by participating in elections, in numbers varying between
  70% and 90% of those eligible to vote (unlike the U.S. where 50% of
  registered voters is considered a great turnout). Our representatives
  come from many parties in approximate proportion to the vote (whereas
  the U.S. is often "winner-takes-all"). They enjoy (relative) freedom
  of speech, freedom of religion, and (most) benefits of market
  economies. That's why you'll get a cold shoulder if you try to label
  them Socialists, plainly state that their welfare system is broken and
  needs fixing, that their culture needs to be preserved from outside
  influence, and so on. It's a choice, and the Nordics are doing their
  best in exercising this choice in a manner consistent with their
  values and their culture.

  But it is a fact that the countries in the western (democratic) part
  of Europe never became "free capitalistic" states as the USA, and
  Americans see clear similarities between the western European
  societies and the communist ideals.

  Some writers use to argue that it's because the US didn't introduce
  any of what is now known as libertarian thought, that hardly any
  countries in this part of Europe bothered to try them. Or that the
  Nazi influence scared most countries off in trying a political
  ideology other than communism.

  It's a misconception to believe that all of Europe was forced or
  tended to adopt a "Socialistic" policy after the 2nd World War. After
  the war, the only thing which with force could have been an agent for
  Socialist or collectivist policies where the politic, economic and
  historic realities in the respective countries. What happened in East
  could not enforce Leninism (or related ideologies) in the democracies
  west of the iron curtain. Quite the contrary.

  An alternative view is that Marxism is a product of collectivist
  Old-world thinking, and that it's the Old-world customs which
  Americans recognize in Socialism.

  One outgrow of this Old-world collectivism and stress on homogeneity
  is most probably the way people feel responsible for each other, and
  each other's kids, in Scandinavia. Maybe it's wrong to connect this
  with press reports on scientifically determined sign of how unpaid
  voluntary work is more prevalent in Scandinavia than in any other part
  of Europe. But it's tempting when Yanks stress this aspect of their
  society as something where they are world leading.
  :->>>

  One could say that after ww2 not much changed. The societies were as
  centralistic and non-individualistic as they had been since
  god-knows-when. Democracy was re-established in the parts of Europe
  which weren't governed by Soviet troops. That was the main influence
  of UK/USA - except for the economical and cultural.

  Liberalism was not at all unknown to Europeans. Nor Conservatism. All
  the time from the 1848-revolutions is marked by the reaction on the
  danger of the urban concentrations of proletarians. Marxism, late
  19:th century Social Conservatism and Liberalism are the most obvious
  signs. What happened after the first world war, 1918, was the success
  of Liberalism with full democracy in all countries, and then a
  backlash when non-democrats came to power either through democratic
  elections, or as a response to the unstable governmental situation
  which the democracy had led to: In short the political map of the
  pre-ww2-societies in Europe could be described as consisting of three
  blocks. Socialists, Liberals and Conservatives. All three in
  opposition to the other two. (The fascistic movements are then
  associated with the Conservatives, which is true if one regards
  alliances, but not quite true if one looks more directly on propaganda
  and programs.)

  The Socialistic block was split between reformists and revolutionists.
  And in some countries it was the reformists and the Liberals who
  together were strong enough to compete with the anti-democratic
  forces.

  After the second world war the Fascist parties had lost all
  credibility.

  For the people in the destroyed Europe (well, west of the iron
  curtain) non-individualistic solutions were judged as most fit, as
  typical in the German sick insurance system or centralized accords for
  agreement on wages. I think one could say that most people
  (sympathizing with all three blocks, the Conservative, Liberal and
  Socialist) favored collectivist solutions, seeing democracy as
  collectivist. The most individualistic tendencies were to be
  discovered among Liberals.

  The difference between Germany and Norden was not the intentions, but
  the different positions the societies had to start from.
  Germany was destroyed. The Nordic societies were not.

  The eastern part of Europe (if Russia included, far more than the
  half) learned to know the Russian masters and their ideology. It was
  however only a tiny minority in West who aimed at a development as in
  the Soviet satellite states.



 2.8.5 What are the differences of the economies of the respective Nordic
 countries?

Norway  - the oil incomes, the fish industry.
Denmark - virtually none. (Lower beer taxation.)
Sweden  - lower income taxes; other taxes and national debt higher.
Finland - the highest unemployment rate.
Iceland - the dependency on fishing.





[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq28.html ]






------------------------------

Subject: 2.9 Valborg, Midsummer and other festivals


(in production)



 2.9.1 Valborg

  Val Davies <[email protected]> wrote:
  I recently came across a reference to an occasion called "Valborg" and
  on looking it up in the dictionary find that it apparently translates
  into English as "Walpurgis Night". I confess to being none the wiser.
  :-(

  [ Henrik Ernoe: ]
  Valborg is the Scandinavian name for the Catholic Saint Walpurgis.
  Walpurgis is believed to be the patron of witches (this is of course
  not certified by the Church). Her day is the 1st of May. Walpurgis
  night is the night before May 1st. On which nature was suppossed to be
  potent. So if a girl wanted to get pregnant the following year she
  would go and bathe in a holy well or creek on that night. There was
  also a number of magical rituals supposed to make livestick fertile
  that were carried out on Valborgs eve.

  [ Antti Lahelma: ]
  It's the 1st of May. A important holiday in these parts; you wear a
  white student cap (supposing you ever graduated), a silly nose
  (optional), drink a whole lot of alcohol and walk aimlessly in the
  crowd downtown. In Helsinki, one of the main events is the crowning of
  a statue of a mermaid (Havis Amanda, a symbol of the city) with said
  white cap. I presume it's old pagan festival to welcome the spring;
  the Christian excuse for celebrating it has to do with a certain St.
  Valborg, a German 9th (?) century abbess who probably did something
  pious that has nothing to do with Valborg (Vappu in Finnish) as we
  know it.

  [ Alo Merilo: ]
  In Estonia the Walpurgis Night (in Estonian "Volbri��") is basically
  when all self-respecting present or past university students who
  belong to either a fraternity /sorority ("korporatsioon") or a student
  society, have probably the biggest party of the year. The tradition
  probably has its roots in Germany.

  [ Johan Olofsson: ]
  The festival has its roots in on of the pagan rites to honour the
  return of Spring. In Sweden the important part is the Eve, the last
  day in April, when people make big bonfires and greet the Spring with
  a lot of singing.



 2.9.2 Midsummer

  Midsummer's eve is The Greatest Festival during the year. This day
  huge phallic poles are dressed in green leaves and lot's of flowers,
  erected, and then people dance ring dances around it, and play games
  and make babies.

  It's easy to see the connection with the pagan rite with the purpose
  to help give good harvests in the autumn. Due to the heavy partying
  no-one is able to work the day after, why at least the Swedish
  government has moved the holliday from the real midsummer's eve to the
  nearest Friday.






------------------------------

Subject: 2.10 Nordic alcohol customs

  There are a few facts which often tend to be forgotten when discussing
  the alcohol habits of North-Europeans.

  The maybe most important explanation for the Nordic behavior is the
  very long tradition of mead and beer drinking. At least since the
  stone age Germanians have left traces of brewing intoxicating
  beverages from grain. Wine was grown by Germans first at the time of
  Charlemagne, when the Nordics since long had established our own
  cultural identity, and still today it's almost impossible to grow wine
  in Scandinavia.

  Mead can however not be stored. Mead has to be prepared for each time
  there is a need for it, as at festivals, and then all of the mead has
  to be consumed or it will be wasted. The Nordic all-or-nothing
  attitude to alcohol has a plausible explanation in our historic and
  geographic conditions.

  Secondly beer and mead are made from grain, which otherwise would be
  used as food. Richness and power made it possible to afford brewing;
  poverty, failure of the crops and starving meant "no booze or you'll
  die!" To be able to serve ones guests a plenty of alcohol is a deeply
  rooted signal of richness, authority and good times worthy lords and
  magnates.

  The holiday behavior of Finns staggering off and on their ferries in
  Tallin, Sundsvall and Stockholm, and the Swedes reeling off and on the
  ferries in Helsing�r, Fredrikshavn and Copenhagen, is nothing but the
  traditional way of celebration for a people not used to wine.
  Parallels are seen in the traditions on Ireland and in Scotland.

  Wine has become available and affordable outside of its traditional
  areas since only a few decades (no time at all compared to the
  millenniums the beer tradition has had to root in the culture) - let's
  see if we Northerners will learn to use alcohol in a wine-like manner
  before the good times have changed and we are back at the home brewed
  mead again. Other cultures have had long time to learn a suitable
  pattern for wine consumption: regularly but in dosages so small that
  one will be able to function as a human, as a parent and as a worker
  also the day after the consuming - and immediately as a witty
  companion and a good lover.


[ the sections above are available at the www-page
 http://www.lysator.liu.se/nordic/scn/faq29.html ]


-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- END OF PART 2 -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

  � Copyright 1994-98 by Antti Lahelma and Johan Olofsson.
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