Overview
The Danish Realm, officially the Kingdom of Denmark, or simply Denmark, is a sovereign state consisting of a collection of constituent territories united by the Constitutional Act, which applies to the entire territory. It consists of metropolitan Denmark (sometimes called "Denmark proper")—the kingdom's territory in continental Europe and its proximate islands—and the realm's two autonomous (but not sovereign) regions: the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic and Greenland in North America. The relationship between the three parts of the kingdom is known as Rigsfællesskabet (The Unity of the Realm, which has also been translated as the Danish Commonwealth or the United Kingdom of Denmark). The Kingdom of Denmark is not a federation, but a concept encompassing the three autonomous legal.
Historical Periods
Kingdom of Denmark (936–946)
936 CE – 946 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 57,120 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (947–959)
947 CE – 959 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 57,205 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (960–969)
960 CE – 969 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 82,718 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (970–989)
970 CE – 989 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 110,311 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (990–1002)
990 CE – 1002 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 82,676 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (1003–1014)
1003 CE – 1014 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 303,659 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (1015–1017)
1015 CE – 1017 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 146,567 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (1056–1146)
1056 CE – 1146 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 82,676 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (1147–1168)
1147 CE – 1168 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 82,718 km²
Kingdom of Denmark (1169–1176)
1169 CE – 1176 CE
Capital: CopenhagenArea: 87,229 km²
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