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Europe and the Mediterranean

Europe and the Mediterranean . Austria. History Occupied by Celtic tribes in pre-Roman times Bavarians, Slavs and Avars invaded after the Roman Empire fell First record showing the name Austria was in 996 Habsburgs dynasty ruled until World War I. Geography Mountainous In the Alps

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Europe and the Mediterranean

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  1. Europe and the Mediterranean

  2. Austria • History • Occupied by Celtic tribes in pre-Roman times • Bavarians, Slavs and Avars invaded after the Roman Empire fell • First record showing the name Austria was in 996 • Habsburgs dynasty ruled until World War I • Geography • Mountainous • In the Alps • Only a quarter of the land is considered low lying • Divided into five areas • Eastern Alps-62% • Foothills at base of Alps-12% • Foothills to east-12% • Austrian granite plateau-10% • Vienna basin-4%

  3. Austria cont. • Culture • Broad contribution to various forms of art • Mostly in music • Rose in 16th century • European power • Contributions to cinema and theater • Places to visit • Vienna • Salzburg • Innsbruck • Graz • Danube Valley • Klagenfurt • Eisenstadt

  4. Belarus • History • Derives from the term “White Ruthenia” • Mostly populated by early Christian Slavs • Often been referred to as “White Russia” • Named Belorussia in the time of the Russian Empire • Only used until 1991 • Geography • Landlocked country • The Neman, the Pripyat, and the Dnieper are the three major rivers that run through the country • Cold winters and moist summers

  5. Belarus cont. • Culture • Product of a millennium of development under the impact of many diverse factors • Catholicism, Orthodoxy, Judaism, and Islam • Places to visit • Belarusian State Museum of the History of the Great Patriotic War • Brest Fortress • Brest Railway Museum • Cathedral of Holy Wisdom • Island of Tears memorial

  6. Belgium • History • Derived from Gallia Belgica, which was a Roman province • Inhabited by a mix of Celtic and Germanic peoples before the Roman invasion in 100 BC • Gradual immigration of Germanic Frankish tribes during 5th century • Geography • Shares borders with France, Germany, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands • Coastal plain in north-west and central plateau in Anglo-Belgian Basin; Ardennes uplands in the south-east are part of the Hercynianorogenic belt; Paris Basin reaches a small fourth area at Belgium's southernmost tip, Belgian Lorraine

  7. Belgium cont. • Culture • Political and linguistic divisions • Flourishing of major art movements • Cultural life concentrated within each language community • Places to visit • Bruges • Brussels • Antwerp • Ghent

  8. Bulgaria • History • Thracians were one of the three primary ancestral groups of modern day Bulgarians • Taken over by Roman Empire • Tervel strengthened the borders of Bulgaria as a major military power by defeating a 26,000-strong Arab army • Geography • Apline snow-capped peaks, Balkan mountains, mild and sunny Black Sea coast • 30% of land is plains, 41% plateaus and hills • Southwest is mountainous • Overall temperate climate

  9. Bulgaria cont. • Culture • Mostly Thracian, Slavic and Bulgar heritage, but with Greek, Roman, Ottoman and Celtic influences • Archaeological discoveries from Roman times • Hub of Slavic culture during Middle Ages • Places to visit • Sunny Beach • Sofia • Varna • Bansko • Plovdiv • Burgas • VelikoTurnovo

  10. Crete • History • Hominids settled there at least 130,000 years ago • During Neolithic and Bronze Age periods Crete was ruled by Minoans • Ruled by: • Roman Empire • Byzantine Empire • Emirate of Crete • Republic of Venice • Ottoman Empire • Geography • Elongated shape • Extremely mountainous • Mountains create valleys, fertile plateaus, caves, and gorges • Two climactic zones, but primarily temperate

  11. Crete cont. • Culture • Has it’s own heritage, as well as some Greek heritage • Distinct Cretan dialect of Greek with an extended vocabulary that is Crete-specific • Known for its Mantinades-based music • Places to visit • Chania • Heraklion • AgiaGallini • AgiosNikolaos • Hersonisos • Ierapetra • Kissamos

  12. Croatia • History • Inhabited throughout the prehistoric period • Neolithic • Starčevo, Vučedol and Hvar cultures • Iron Age • Hallstatt culture and La Tène culture • Became part of the Roman Empire in 9 AD • Geography • Shape resembles a crescent or horseshoe • Slovenia and Hungary in the north • Plains • Densely wooded mountains • Rocky coastlines

  13. Croatia cont. • Culture • Result of a fourteen century-long history • Adoptions from ancient Greek, Roman and Illyrian cultures • Culture divided into two cultural circles: • Central European • Mediterranean • Places to visit • Dubrovnik • Split • Opatija • Zagreb • Hvar • Rabac • Korcula

  14. Cyprus, Turkish Fed. State • History • Aetokremnos was the first site where human activity was located • Hunter-gatherer societies starting around 10,000 BC • Part of Hittite Empire from late Bronze Age to when Greek settlement arrived • Geography • Syria and Lebanon to east, Israel to southeast, Egypt to south, Greece to northwest • Dominated by two mountain ranges: • Troodos Mountains • Kyrenia Range • Highest point is Mount Olympus

  15. Cyprus, Turkish Fed. State cont. • Culture • Divided into two distinct cultures: • Greek • Turkish Cypriots • No unified culture • Greeks and Turkish cultures do not mix/interact much • Traditional folk music has common elements with Greek, Turkish, and Arabic music • Places to visit • PaphosHarbour & Castle • Courion/Kolossi Castle • Larnaca Salt Lake & Hala Sultan Tekke • Ayia Napa and Protaras • Nicosia 'within the walls' and the House of HadigeorgakisKornesios • Cedar Valley • PanayiatouAraka • Choirokitia • Lefkara • The Paphos mosaic

  16. Czech Republic • History • Evidence of prehistoric settlements back to the Neolithic era • Slavic people from the Black Sea and Carpathian regions settled in the area • Bohemian or Czech state emerged in the late 9th century, when it was unified by the Přemyslid dynasty • Geography • Landscape is varied: • Bohemia, consists of a basin drained • Vltava rivers surrounded by low mountains • East is hilly • Landlocked state • Temperate continental climate

  17. Czech Republic cont. • Culture • Music has roots of over 1000 years old • Influenced by general folk music • Czech language is used most in literature • Old Church Slavonic, Latin or German have also been used • Places to visit • The Prague Castle • Charles Bridge • The Old Town • Josefov • New Town of Prague • The Lesser Town • City Center of Brno • Spilberk Castle • Vankovka Gallery

  18. Denmark • History • Earliest archaeological findings date back to Eem interglacial period (130,000–110,000 BC) • Inhabited since around 12, 500 BC and farming since 3900 BC • Nordic Bronze Age in Denmark was marked by burial mounds, which left an abundance of findings including lurs and the Sun Chariot • Geography • Bordered by Germany in the south • Rest is surrounded by water; peninsula of Jutland • 443 named islands, only 72 are inhabited • Flat with little elevation • Temperate climate

  19. Denmark cont. • Culture • Known as one of the most socially progressive cultures in the world • Hans Christian Andersen and his fairy tales • The Little Mermaid, The Emperor’s New Clothes, The Ugly Duckling • Most popular sport is football • Places to visit • Copenhagen • Odense • Århus • Herning • Silkeborg • Esbjerg • Aalborg

  20. England • History • Earliest known human presence in the area is from approximately 780,000 years ago • Permanent settlements established within the last 6,000 years even though humans were thought to have been there during the Upper Paleolithic period • Geography • Pennines Mountains are known as the “backbone of England” • Lowlands to the south of mountains • Green, rolling hills • Temperate maritime climate

  21. England cont. • Culture • Stonehenge, Devil's Arrows, Rudston Monolith and Castlerigg built in prehistoric times • Folklore has developed over many centuries • pixies, giants, elfs, bogeymen, trolls, goblins and dwarves • Places to visit • Stonehenge • Hadrian’s Wall • London • Westminster Abbey • Big Ben • Tower Of London • Bath • York • Canterbury • Oxford

  22. Estonia • History • Settlement became possible 11,000 to 13,000 years ago when the glaciers melted • Pulli settlement is the oldest known settlement • Fishing and hunting communities existed around 6500 BC • Geography • situated in the northern part of the temperate climate zone and in the transition zone between maritime and continental climate • Coastline marked by numerous bays, straits, and inlets

  23. Estonia cont. • Culture • Culture incorporates indigenous heritage with mainstream Nordic and European cultural aspects • Been influenced by influenced by the traditions of the adjacent area's various Finnic, Baltic, Slavic and Germanic peoples • Places to visit • The Jagala Falls • The Art Museum of Estonia • The Tannenberg Line • The Baltic Clint • Narva Castle • Tallinn • Tartu • Haapsalu

  24. Finland • History • Settled, at the latest, around 8500 BCE during the Stone Age • Artifacts from the first settlers found are similar to those found in Estonia, Russia and Norway • Earliest people were hunter-gatherers who used stone tools • Geography • Country of thousands of lakes and islands • Landscape is mostly flat • Forests covers 86% of the area • Largest forested area in Europe • Surface area is still expanding, because of the post-glacial rebound

  25. Finland cont. • Culture • Combines indigenous heritage with common Nordic and European culture • Finnish culture may be seen to build upon the relatively ascetic environmental realities • Cultural differences between Finland's regions and minor differences in accents and vocabulary • Places to visit • Helsinki • Oulu • Espoo • Rovaniemi • Rauma • Kuopio • Tampere

  26. France • History • Originates from the Latin word Francia, which means “country of the Franks” • Oldest traces of human life date from approximately 1,800,000 years ago • Strong demographic and agricultural development between the 4th and 3rd millennia, metallurgy appeared at the end of the 3rd millennium, work of gold, copper and bronze, and later with iron • Geography • There are a number of territories in North America, the Caribbean, South America, the southern Indian Ocean, the Pacific Ocean, and Antarctica • Coastal plains in north and west • Mountain ranges • Alps in south-east • Massif Central in south-central • Pyrenees in south-west

  27. France cont. • Culture • Center of cultural creation for centuries • Creation of the Ministry of Culture in 1959 helped preserve the cultural heritage of the country and make it available to the public • Places to visit • Paris • Alsace • Aquitaine • Auvergne • Brittany • Burgundy • Champagne-Ardenne • Corsica

  28. Germany • History • Germanic tribes are thought to date from the Nordic Bronze Age or the Pre-Roman Iron Age • Roman Empire resulted from the eastern portion of the Carolingian Empire that was divided in 843 • Geography • Alps in south • Shores in north-west and north-east • Temperate seasonal climate

  29. Germany cont. • Culture • Culture in Germany has been shaped by major intellectual and popular currents in Europe • Been called Das Land derDichter und Denker (the land of poets and thinker) • Places to visit • Neuschwanstein • Heidelberg Castle • Checkpoint Charlie • Church of Our Lady, Dresden • Marienplatz, Munich • Bremerhaven

  30. Gibraltar • History • Evidence of Neanderthal habitation between 128,000 and 24,000 BCE • Last known holdout of the Neanderthals • First inhabitants were the Phoenicians, around 950 BCE • Geography • Two coasts • East side • Sandy Bay • Catalan Bay • Westside • Subtropical-Mediterranean climate

  31. Gibraltar cont. • Culture • Culture reflects the diverse origins • British influence remains strong • English is the language of government, commerce, education, and the media • Places to visit • St. Michael's Cave • A City Under Siege • Apes' Den

  32. Greece • History • First area in Europe where advanced civilization emerged • Mix of Roman and Hellenistic cultures formed the Byzantine Empire in 330 ADaround Constantinople • Recognized under the London protocol in 1830 • Geography • Mountainous • Peninsular • Between 1200 and 6000 islands • Only 227 are inhabited • 8% of Greece is mountains or hills • Mediterranean climate

  33. Greece cont. • Culture • Culture evolved over thousands of years ago • Ottoman Empire had an influence on the culture • Birth place of the Olympic Games • Places to visit • Mount Olympus • Athens • Meteora • Delphi • Corinth • Monemvasia

  34. Hungary • History • From 9 BC to 4th century it was part of the Roman Empire • Officially established in 895 • Transformed into a Christian realm in 10th century • Saint Stephen was the first king of Hungary • Geography • Flat to rolling plains • Mostly hilly, but with a few low mountains • Divided into two by its main waterway: the Danube River • Continental climate

  35. Hungary cont. • Culture • Has a rich folk tradition: embroideries, decorated potteries, buildings, and cravings • Hungarian Music: Rhapsodies, folk music, composed folk music influenced songs, and Roma music • Rich and colorful literature • Places to visit: • Budapest • Debrecen • Kiskunsag National Park • Lake Balaton • Danube Bend • Visegrad

  36. Ionian Islands • History: • Settled by Greeks by an early date • The early Eretrian settlement at Kerkyra was displaced by colonists at Corinth • Backwater during ancient Greek times • Geography: • Extend from the coast of southern Albania and to the northwest coast of the Peloponneseus. • Comprise of 1.8% of Greece’s land area • Comprised of seven principal islands and several smaller ones

  37. Ionian Islands cont. • Culture: • Various depredations: occupation, piracy, earthquakes and time • Weaving, embroidery and ceramic tableware have been significant industries • Popular cultural expressions include: dances performed on saint days and weddings. • Food is strongly linked to each island’s history. • Places to visit: • Holistic heaven day retreat • Trail riders horse trekking • Fantasy mini golf • Splash fun water park • Mirtiotissa Beach • Kassiopi • Gerakas Bay • St. George's castle

  38. Ireland • History: • First known settlement was around 8000 BC • Covered with ice until the end of the last ice age • 9th century Viking raiders plundered Irish monasteries and towns • Often called the Irish Republic • Ireland’s economy began to grow rapidly in the 1990s, fuelled by foreign investment • Geography • Northerly point-Inishtrahull island • Easterly point- Big Bow Meel Island • Southerly point- Fastnet Rock • Westerly Point- Tearaught Island • Most populated county- Dublin • Longest River- Shannon • Tallest waterfall- Powerscourt Falls • Wettest Place- Maumturk and Partry mountains • Driest Place- Dublin city

  39. Ireland cont. • Culture • Warm hospitality • Traditional dishes • Vibrant music and breath-taking scenic landscapes • Take care of their elders • Hurling and Camogie are popular sports • Fishing and Golfing are favorite pastimes • Equestrian team is very popular • Pub is the social venue • Holidays replete with customs and traditions • Produced famous literary works • Places to visit: • Giant’s Causeway • Newgrange • Glendalough • Bunratty castle • Marble Arch caves • Craggaunowen • Hill of Tara • Cliffs of Moher • KilmainhamGaol

  40. Italy • History • Migrations of Indo-European people began around 2000 B.C. till 1000B.C • The Estruscan civilization was dominant • Overthrown by Romans in the 3rd century B.C\ • By 264 B.C the south of Italy was led by Cisalpine Gaul • Cultural center of the Western World from 13th-16th century • Geography • Slightly larger than Arizona, long peninsula shaped like a boot • Surrounded on the West by the Tyrrhenian Sea and east by the Atlantic • Bounded by France, Switzerland, Austria, and Slovenia to the North • Largest lake is Garda • Several islands form part of Italy, two largest are Sicily and Sardinia

  41. Italy cont. • Culture • Family is the center of the social structure and provides stabilizing influence • In the north, nuclear family lives together while in the south the extended family lives together. • Both families provide emotional and financial support • Appearance calculates social status • First impressions last a life time • Primary Religion is Roman Catholic • Places to visit • Rome • Florence • Venice • Cinque Terra • Sicily • Turin • Capri • Sorrento • Abruzzo • San Gimignano • Milan • Verona and the lakes • Bologna • Sardinia • Puglia

  42. Kosovo • History • First inhabitants of the Balkan Peninsula were the ancient people known as Illiyrians • Ruled by Bulgaria from the 9th century until the Serbs took over in the 12th century • Under Ottoman rule, the region grew increasingly more populated by Albanian speakers • In 1918, Kosovo became part of the Yugoslav Federation • Geography • Land locked and mostly mountainous • Borders Serbia to the North and East • Montenegro to the northwest, Albania to the west, and Macedonia to the south • Roughly the size of Connecticut

  43. Kosovo cont. • Culture • Most widespread religion is Islam • Spoken dialect is Gheg • Folk music is very popular • Modern music has its origin from western music • Closely related to Albanians in Albania • Traditions and customs differ from town to town in Kosovo itself • Places to visit • Pristina • Mother Teresa Boulevard • Decani • Frontline crossing • Gracania • Peja • Prizren • Gjeravica Mountain

  44. Latvia • History • Poland conquered the territory in 1562 and occupied it until Sweden took over in 1629-1721, and then was passed to Russia in 1721-1918. • Latvians remained Russian subjects and preserved their folklore, language and customs • Russian Revolution gave Latvia freedom, Latvian republic lasted more than 20 years • Latvia eventually became a dictatorship and was occupied with Russian troops and incorporated with the Soviet Union in 1940. • German troops occupied the nation from 1941-1944, 1944 Russia took control. • Geography • Borders Estonia in the North, Lithuania in the South, Baltic Sea with the Gulf of Riga in the West, Russia in the East, and Belarus in the South. • Largely a fertile low land with numerous hills, lakes to the east

  45. Latvia cont. • Culture • Tradition lives on in folk songs, legends, and festivals. • Large populations of Lutheran, Catholic, and Orthodox religions • Daina the oval art and is a symbol that has shaped and epitomized Lativa’s national identity in the last 2 centuries. • Moving from area to area is uncommon, families are huge • Children are expected to take care of parents, parents are expected to provide financial and emotional support to children • Reserved and formal when dealing with outsiders • Personal life is kept separate from business • Places to visit • Pedvale Open Air Art Museum, Sabile • The Dome Cathedral, Riga • Jurmala Beach • Aglona Basilica • Tervete Nature Park

  46. Malta • History • Recognized by the Phoenicians who occupied it and so did the Greeks, Romans, and Carthaginians • Dominated by Constantinople • Napoleon seized Malta in 1798 • Geography • Five Maltese Islands: Malta, Gozo, Comino, Comminoto, and Filflawith have a combined land area smaller than Philadelphia • Located in the Mediterranean Sea • South of the Southeast tip of Sicily

  47. Malta cont. • Culture • 91% Roman Catholic • Maltese and English are the common languages • Music is largely western but consists of background folk guitar music • Food is important historically in the development of national identity • Maltese folktales • Most generous people in the world • Places to visit • Comino Tower • Kenuna Tower • Folklore Museum • The old prison • Gozo 360 • Calypso’s cave • The Inland Sea • The Citadel • Aurora Opera House • Astra Theatre

  48. Moldova • History • Used to occupy Bessarabia • 16th century Ottoman’s ruled • In 1791 Russia acquired most of their territory • 1924, USSR established Maldova as an Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic • Sept. 1991 Maldova claimed its Independence • Geography • Landlocked Republic of hilly planes lying east of the Carpathian Mountains between the Prut and Dniester rivers • In between Romania and Ukraine • Fertile region with rich black soil covering three quarters of the territory

  49. Moldova cont. • Culture • Highly influenced by Byzantine culture, Slavic, Magyar, and the Ottoman Turks • Present culture has significant impact of Russia, and the urban lifestyle is influenced from the way of living • Beginning of the 19th century, a strong west European influence was evident in the Romanian literature and arts • Ancient folk ballad “Miorita” plays a main role • Places to visit • Chisinau town • OrheiulVechi • Ivancea Village • Soroca town • Transnistria • Saharnamonestary • Monastic structure of Tipova

  50. Monaco • History • Originated from the Greek Surname “Monoikos” meaning mythological hero • Independent country for 800 years • 1793- annexed to France, and was placed under Sardinia’s protection by 1815 • 1861, went under French guardship, but continued to be independent • Geography • Tiny, hilly wedge driven into the French Mediterranean coast • 9 miles east of Nice, France

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