Book contents
- A History of World Egyptology
- A History of World Egyptology
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- A Note on Academic Titles
- Abbreviations and Conventions Used in Text
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Prehistory of Egyptology
- Chapter 2 Egypt
- Chapter 3 France
- Chapter 4 The British Isles
- Chapter 5 The Netherlands
- Chapter 6 Belgium
- Chapter 7 The Nordic Countries
- Chapter 8 Prussia and Germany
- Chapter 9 The Empire of Austria-Hungary and the Republic of Austria
- Chapter 10 Switzerland
- Chapter 11 Hungary
- Chapter 12 Czechoslovakia
- Chapter 13 Poland
- Chapter 14 Russia
- Chapter 15 Italy
- Chapter 16 Spain
- Chapter 17 United States of America
- Chapter 18 Canada
- Chapter 19 Japan
- Chapter 20 Australasia
- Chapter 21 Ancient Egypt in the Cinema
- Chapter 22 Past and Future
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 7 - The Nordic Countries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2021
- A History of World Egyptology
- A History of World Egyptology
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- A Note on Academic Titles
- Abbreviations and Conventions Used in Text
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Prehistory of Egyptology
- Chapter 2 Egypt
- Chapter 3 France
- Chapter 4 The British Isles
- Chapter 5 The Netherlands
- Chapter 6 Belgium
- Chapter 7 The Nordic Countries
- Chapter 8 Prussia and Germany
- Chapter 9 The Empire of Austria-Hungary and the Republic of Austria
- Chapter 10 Switzerland
- Chapter 11 Hungary
- Chapter 12 Czechoslovakia
- Chapter 13 Poland
- Chapter 14 Russia
- Chapter 15 Italy
- Chapter 16 Spain
- Chapter 17 United States of America
- Chapter 18 Canada
- Chapter 19 Japan
- Chapter 20 Australasia
- Chapter 21 Ancient Egypt in the Cinema
- Chapter 22 Past and Future
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The Nordic countries comprise Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Iceland, and have a shared history of wars, alliances and common rulers. By 1831, Denmark had lost Norway (held in personal union since the fourteenth century) to Sweden in 1814 under the Treaty of Kiel. Norway remained in a personal union with Sweden until 1905, when it broke away and elected its own king. Iceland, under Norwegian rule since the thirteenth century, remained under the Danish crown, in personal union from 1918, and gained complete independence in 1944. Finland had been under Swedish rule prior to 1809 and a Russian grand duchy from 1809 to 1917, after which it became independent. It is obvious that Egyptology developed individually in the respective countries, but at the same time there are many points of contact, parallel developments and collaborations, never more so than when the Scandinavian Joint Expedition was formed in 1963 to help document Nubia’s heritage before much of it was lost to the rising waters created by the Aswan High Dam.
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- A History of World Egyptology , pp. 188 - 209Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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