Finland: Difference between revisions

From Constructed Worlds Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 112: Line 112:
{{Sovereign states of Europe}}
{{Sovereign states of Europe}}
{{Altverse II}}
{{Altverse II}}
 
{{En-WP attribution notice}}
[[Category:Finland|*]]
[[Category:Finland|*]]
[[Category:Northern European countries]]
[[Category:Northern European countries]]

Revision as of 19:00, 3 March 2023

 This article is part of Altverse II.
Kingdom of Finland

Suomen kuningaskunta (Finnish)
Konungariket Finland (Swedish)
Flag of Finland
Flag
Coat of arms of Finland
Coat of arms
Anthem: Maamme (Finnish)
Vårt land (Swedish)
(English: "Our Land")
Capital
and largest city
Helsinki
Official languages
Religion
Christianity
Demonym(s) Finnish
Membership  European Community
Government Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• King
Karl Adolf
Oskari Härkönen
Legislature Parliament
History
• Autonomy in the Russian Empire
29 March 1809
• Declaration of independence
6 December 1923
• Finnish Civil War
January – July 1923
• Constitution
3 April 1927
GDP (PPP) estimate
• Total
TBD
GDP (nominal) estimate
• Total
TBD
Gini 25.7
low
HDI .940
very high
Time zone UTC+2 (Eastern European Time)
Date format dd.mm.yyyy (AD)
Driving side right
ISO 3166 code FI

Finland, officially the Kingdom of Finland (Finnish: Suomen kuningaskunta, Swedish: Konungariket Finland), is a country in Northern Europe. It shares land borders with Sweden to the west, Russia to the east and south, and Norway to the north, and is defined by the White Sea to the east, the Gulf of Bothnia to the west, and the Gulf of Finland to the south, across which lies Estonia.

Finland largely remained an agrarian country until the 1950s. After Great War II, it rapidly industrialized and developed an advanced economy, while building an extensive welfare state based on the Nordic model; the country soon enjoyed widespread prosperity and a high per capita income. It is a member of the League of Nations, the European Community, and the Northern Treaty Organization.

Etymology

Finland

The earliest written appearance of the name Finland is thought to have come from three runestones. Two of the runestones were found in the province of Uppland in Sweden and have the inscription finlonti (U 582). The third one was found in Gotland with the inscription finlandi (G 319) and dates back to the 13th century. The name can be assumed to relate to the tribes name Finns, of which the first known record is from 98 AD.

Suomi

The name Suomi (Finnish for Finland), but a common etymology with saame (the Sami, the native people of Lapland) and Tavastia (a province in the inland) has been suggested (Proto-Finnic *hämä from the older term *šämä, possibly loaned into Proto-Saami as *sāmē), whose source could be the Proto-Baltic word *źemē, meaning '(low) land'.

History

Geography

Government and politics

Foreign relations

Military

Economy

Demographics

Culture

See also

Wikipedia logo This page uses material from the Wikipedia page Finland, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (view authors).