Regions of Europe  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Europe is often divided into regions due to geographical, cultural or historical criteria. Some common divisions are as follows.

Contents

Directional divisions

Groupings by compass directions are the hardest to define in Europe, since (among other issues) the pure geographical criteria of "east" and "west" are often confused with the political meaning these words acquired during the Cold War Era.

The geographic scheme in use by the United Nations includes all of the above subregions, save Central Europe.

There are also physical geographic regions such as the central up-lands and the European plain

Historical divisions

Europe can be divided along many differing historical lines, normally corresponding to those parts that were inside or outside a particular cultural phenomenon, empire or political division. The areas varied at different times, and so it is arguable as to which areas fell into certain areas (e.g. are Germany or Britain to be considered Roman Europe as they were only part of the Empire for a brief period, or are the countries of the former communist Yugoslavia to be considered part of Eastern Europe since it was not in the Warsaw Pact ).

Peninsulas

The Balkan peninsula is located in southeast Europe and is generally considered to comprise the following countries:
Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Kosovo, Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania (some parts), Serbia, Slovenia (depending on the definition) and Turkey (European part)
Located in southwestern Europe this peninsula contains Spain, Portugal, Gibraltar, and Andorra
Located in the south of Europe, the Italian peninsula contains the states of Italy, San Marino and the Vatican City
Located in the north of Europe, Sweden and Norway.

Other groupings

Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania
Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg
the United Kingdom, the Isle of Man, and the Republic of Ireland
Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Iceland
The states which have the Alps as a prominent part of their geography.
Austria, Switzerland (Swiss Alps), Liechtenstein, Slovenia, Germany (Bavaria) France and Italy.
The states that lie along the River Danube.
Austria, Bulgaria, Croatia, Germany, Hungary, Moldova, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Ukraine.
A Central European group representing a historical alliance.
Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary
Mediterranean nations are those nations bordering the Mediterranean Sea. Excluding African countries these are the following:
Spain, France, Italy, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania, Greece, Turkey, Cyprus, and Malta and the British territory of Gibraltar
Describing the concentration of the wealth/economic productivity of Europe in a banana-shaped band running from London, through Benelux, eastern France, western Germany to northern Italy.





Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Regions of Europe" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools