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History of Denmark
History of Denmark
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Homann's map of the Scandinavian Peninsula and Fennoscandia with their surrounding territories: northern Germany, northern Poland, the Baltic region, Livonia, Belarus, and parts of Northwest Russia. Johann Baptist Homann (1664–1724) was a German geographer and cartographer; map dated around 1730.

The history of Denmark as a unified kingdom began in the 8th century, but historic documents describe the geographic area and the people living there—the Danes—as early as 500 AD. These early documents include the writings of Jordanes and Procopius. With the Christianization of the Danes c. 960 AD, it is clear that there existed a kingship. King Frederik X can trace his lineage back to the Viking kings Gorm the Old and Harald Bluetooth from this time, thus making the Monarchy of Denmark the oldest in Europe.[1] The area now known as Denmark has a rich prehistory, having been populated by several prehistoric cultures and people for about 12,000 years, since the end of the last ice age.

Denmark's history has particularly been influenced by its geographical location between the North and Baltic seas, a strategically and economically important placement between Sweden and Germany, at the center of mutual struggles for control of the Baltic Sea (dominium maris baltici). Denmark was long in disputes with Sweden over control of Skånelandene and with Germany over control of Schleswig (a Danish fief) and Holstein (a German fief).

Eventually, Denmark lost these conflicts and ended up ceding first Skåneland to Sweden and later Schleswig-Holstein to the German Empire. After the eventual cession of Norway in 1814, Denmark retained control of the old Norwegian colonies of the Faroe Islands, Greenland and Iceland. During the 20th century, Iceland gained independence, Greenland and the Faroes became integral parts of the Kingdom of Denmark and North Schleswig reunited with Denmark in 1920 after a referendum. During World War II, Denmark was occupied by Nazi Germany, but was eventually liberated by British forces of the Allies in 1945,[2] after which it joined the United Nations. In the aftermath of World War II, and with the emergence of the subsequent Cold War, Denmark was quick to join the military alliance of NATO as a founding member in 1949.

Prehistoric Denmark

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The Scandinavian region has a rich prehistory, having been populated by several prehistoric cultures and people for about 12,000 years, since the end of the last ice age. During the ice age, all of Scandinavia was covered by glaciers most of the time, except for the southwestern parts of what we now know as Denmark. When the ice began retreating, the barren tundras were soon inhabited by reindeer and elk, and Ahrenburg and Swiderian hunters from the south followed them here to hunt occasionally. The geography then was very different from what we know today. Sea levels were much lower; the island of Great Britain was connected by a land bridge to mainland Europe and the large area between Great Britain and the Jutlandic peninsula – now beneath the North Sea and known as Doggerland – was inhabited by tribes of hunter-gatherers. As the climate warmed up, forceful rivers of meltwater started to flow and shape the virgin lands, and more stable flora and fauna gradually began emerging in Scandinavia, and Denmark in particular. The first human settlers to inhabit Denmark and Scandinavia permanently were the Maglemosian people, residing in seasonal camps and exploiting the land, sea, rivers and lakes. It was not until around 6,000 BC that the approximate geography of Denmark as we know it today had been shaped.

Denmark has some unique natural conditions for preservation of artifacts, providing a rich and diverse archeological record from which to understand the prehistoric cultures of this area.

Stone and Bronze Age

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Stone Dolmen near Vinstrup, Nørhald. Built in the 3rd millennium BC.

History of Denmark

The Weichsel glaciation covered all of Denmark most of the time, except the western coasts of Jutland. It ended around 13,000 years ago, allowing humans to move back into the previously ice-covered territories and establish permanent habitation. During the first post-glacial millennia, the landscape gradually changed from tundra to light forest, and varied fauna including now-extinct megafauna appeared. Early prehistoric cultures uncovered in modern Denmark include the Maglemosian culture (9,500–6,000 BC); the Kongemose culture (6,000–5,200 BC), the Ertebølle culture (5,300–3,950 BC), and the Funnelbeaker culture (4,100–2,800 BC).

The famous Trundholm sun chariot (called Solvognen in Danish), a sculpture of the sun pulled by a mare. Scholars have dated it to some time in the 15th century BC and believe that it illustrates an important concept expressed in Nordic Bronze Age mythology.

The first inhabitants of this early post-glacial landscape in the so-called Boreal period, were very small and scattered populations living from hunting of reindeer and other land mammals and gathering whatever fruits the climate was able to offer. Around 8,300 BC the temperature rose drastically, now with summer temperatures around 15 degrees Celsius (59 degrees Fahrenheit), and the landscape changed into dense forests of aspen, birch and pine and the reindeer moved north, while aurochs and elk arrived from the south. The Koelbjerg Man is the oldest known bog body in the world and also the oldest set of human bones found in Denmark,[3] dated to the time of the Maglemosian culture around 8,000 BC.[4][5] With a continuing rise in temperature the oak, elm and hazel arrived in Denmark around 7,000 BC. Now boar, red deer, and roe deer also began to abound.[6]

A burial from Bøgebakken at Vedbæk dates to c. 6,000 BC and contains 22 persons – including four newborns and one toddler. Eight of the 22 had died before reaching 20 years of age – testifying to the hardness of hunter-gatherer life in the cold north.[7] Based on estimates of the amount of game animals, scholars estimate the population of Denmark to have been between 3,300 and 8,000 persons in the time around 7,000 BC.[8] It is believed that the early hunter-gatherers lived nomadically, exploiting different environments at different times of the year, gradually shifting to the use of semi permanent base camps.[9]

With the rising temperatures, sea levels also rose, and during the Atlantic period, Denmark evolved from a contiguous landmass around 11,000 BC to a series of islands by 4,500 BC. The inhabitants then shifted to a seafood based diet, which allowed the population to increase.

Agricultural settlers made inroads around 4,000 BC. Many dolmens and rock tombs (especially passage graves) date from this period. The Funnelbeaker farmers replaced the Ertebølle culture, which had maintained a Mesolithic lifestyle for about 1500 years after farming arrived in Central Europe. The Neolithic Funnelbeaker population persisted for around 1,000 years until people with Steppe-derived ancestry started to arrive from Eastern Europe.[10] The Single Grave culture was a local variant of the Corded Ware culture, and appears to have emerged as a result of a migration of peoples from the Pontic–Caspian steppe. The Nordic Bronze Age period in Denmark, from about 1,500 BC, featured a culture that buried its dead, with their worldly goods, beneath burial mounds. The many finds of gold and bronze from this era include beautiful religious artifacts and musical instruments, and provide the earliest evidence of social classes and stratification.

Iron Age

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The silver Gundestrup Cauldron, with what some scholars interpret as Celtic depictions, exemplifies the trade relations of the period.

During the Pre-Roman Iron Age (from the 4th to the 1st century BC), the climate in Denmark and southern Scandinavia became cooler and wetter, limiting agriculture and setting the stage for local groups to migrate southward into Germania. At around this time people began to extract iron from the ore in peat bogs. Evidence of strong Celtic cultural influence dates from this period in Denmark, and in much of northwest Europe, and survives in some of the older place names.

The Roman provinces, whose frontiers stopped short of Denmark, nevertheless maintained trade routes and relations with Danish or proto-Danish peoples, as attested by finds of Roman coins. The earliest known runic inscriptions date back to c. 200 AD. Depletion of cultivated land in the last century BC seems to have contributed to increasing migrations in northern Europe and increasing conflict between Teutonic tribes and Roman settlements in Gaul. Roman artifacts are especially common in finds from the 1st century. It seems clear that some part of the Danish warrior aristocracy served in the Roman army.[11]

Occasionally during this time, both animal and human sacrifice occurred and bodies were immersed in bogs. In recent times some of these bog bodies have emerged very well-preserved, providing valuable information about the religion and people who lived in Denmark during this period. Some of the most well-preserved bog bodies from the Nordic Iron Age are the Tollund Man and the Grauballe Man.

From around the 5th to the 7th century, Northern Europe experienced mass migrations. This period and its material culture are referred to as the Germanic Iron Age.

Middle Ages

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Earliest literary sources

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Key Information

In his description of Scandza (from the 6th-century work, Getica), the ancient writer Jordanes says that the Dani were of the same stock as the Suetidi (Swedes, Suithiod?) and expelled the Heruli and took their lands.[12]

The Old English poems Widsith and Beowulf, as well as works by later Scandinavian writers — notably by Saxo Grammaticus (c. 1200) — provide some of the earliest references to Danes.

Viking Age

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The extent of the Danish Realm before the expansion of the Viking Age. It is not known when, but the tribal Danes divided the realm into "herreder" (marked by red lines).

With the beginning of the Viking Age in the 9th century, the prehistoric period in Denmark ends. The Danish people were among those known as Vikings, during the 8th–11th centuries. Viking explorers first discovered and settled in Iceland in the 9th century, on their way from the Faroe Islands. From there, Greenland and Vinland (probably Newfoundland) were also settled. Utilizing their great skills in shipbuilding and navigation they raided and conquered parts of France and the British Isles.

The Ladby ship, the largest ship burial found in Denmark.
The fortified Viking town of Aros (Aarhus), 950 AD.

They also excelled in trading along the coasts and rivers of Europe, running trade routes from Greenland in the north to Constantinople in the south via Russian and Ukrainian rivers, most notably along the River Dnieper and via Kiev, then being the capital of Kiev Rus, which was founded by Viking conquerors.[b] The Danish Vikings were most active in Britain, Ireland, France, Spain, Portugal and Italy where they raided, conquered and settled (their earliest settlements included sites in the Danelaw, Ireland and Normandy). The Danelaw encompassed the Northeastern half of what now constitutes England, where Danes settled and Danish law and rule prevailed. Prior to this time, England consisted of approximately seven independent Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. The Danes conquered (terminated) all of these except for the kingdom of Wessex. Alfred the Great, king of Wessex, emerged from these trials as the sole remaining English king, and thereby as the first English Monarch.

In the early 9th century, Charlemagne's Christian empire had expanded to the southern border of the Danes, and Frankish sources (e.g. Notker of St Gall) provide the earliest historical evidence of the Danes. These report a King Gudfred, who appeared in present-day Holstein with a navy in 804 where diplomacy took place with the Franks; In 808, King Gudfred attacked the Obotrites and conquered the city of Reric whose population was displaced or abducted to Hedeby. In 809, King Godfred and emissaries of Charlemagne failed to negotiate peace, despite the sister of Godfred being a concubine of Charlemagne, and the next year King Godfred attacked the Frisians with 200 ships.

Viking raids along the coast of France and the Netherlands were large-scale. Paris was besieged and the Loire Valley devastated during the 10th century. One group of Danes was granted permission to settle in northwestern France under the condition that they defend the place from future attacks. As a result, the region became known as "Normandy" and it was the descendants of these settlers who conquered England in 1066.

The oldest parts of the defensive works of Danevirke near Hedeby at least date from the summer of 755 and were expanded with large works in the 10th century. The size and number of troops needed to man it indicates a quite powerful ruler in the area, which might be consistent with the kings of the Frankish sources. In 815 AD, Emperor Louis the Pious attacked Jutland apparently in support of a contender to the throne, perhaps Harald Klak, but was turned back by the sons of Godfred, who most likely were the sons of the above-mentioned Godfred. At the same time St. Ansgar travelled to Hedeby and started the Catholic Christianisation of Scandinavia.

Gorm the Old was the first historically recognized ruler of Denmark, reigning from c. 936 to his death c. 958.[14] He ruled from Jelling, and made the oldest of the Jelling Stones in honour of his wife Thyra. Gorm was born before 900 and died c. 958. His rule marks the start of the Danish monarchy and royal house (see Danish monarchs' family tree).[14]

The Danes were united and officially Christianized in 965 AD by Gorm's son Harald Bluetooth (see below), the story of which is recorded on the Jelling stones. The extent of Harald's Danish Kingdom is unknown, although it is reasonable to believe that it stretched from the defensive line of Dannevirke, including the Viking city of Hedeby, across Jutland, the Danish isles and into southern present day Sweden; Scania and perhaps Halland and Blekinge. Furthermore, the Jelling stones attest that Harald had also "won" Norway.[15]

In retaliation for the St. Brice's Day massacre of Danes in England, the son of Harald, Sweyn Forkbeard mounted a series of wars of conquest against England. By 1014, England had completely submitted to the Danes. However, distance and a lack of common interests prevented a lasting union, and Sweyn's son Cnut the Great barely maintained the link between the two countries, which completely broke up during the reign of his son Hardecanute. A final attempt by the Norwegians under Harald Hardrada to reconquer England failed, but did pave the way for William the Conqueror's takeover in 1066.[15]

Christianity, expansion and the establishment of the Kingdom of Denmark

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Often regarded as Denmark's "birth certificate", the large Jelling Stone announces the unification and Christianization of Denmark by Harald Bluetooth c. 980

The history of Christianity in Denmark overlaps with that of the Viking Age. Various petty kingdoms existed throughout the area now known as Denmark for many years. Between c. 960 and the early 980s, Harald Bluetooth appears to have established a kingdom in the lands of the Danes which stretched from Jutland to Skåne. Around the same time, he received a visit from a German missionary who, according to legend,[16] survived an ordeal by fire, which convinced Harald to convert to Christianity.

Sweyn Estridson (1020–1074) re-established strong royal Danish authority and built a good relationship with Archbishop Adalbert of Hamburg-Bremen – at that time the archbishop of all of Scandinavia.

The new religion, which replaced the old Norse religious practices, had many advantages for the king. Christianity brought with it some support from the Holy Roman Empire. It also allowed the king to dismiss many of his opponents who adhered to the old mythology. At this early stage there is no evidence that the Danish Church was able to create a stable administration that Harald could use to exercise more effective control over his kingdom, but it may have contributed to the development of a centralising political and religious ideology among the social elite which sustained and enhanced an increasingly powerful kingship.

England broke away from Danish control in 1035 and Denmark fell into disarray for some time. Sweyn Estridsen's son, Canute IV, raided England for the last time in 1085. He planned another invasion to take the throne of England from an aging William I. He called up a fleet of 1,000 Danish ships, 60 Norwegian long boats, with plans to meet with another 600 ships under Duke Robert of Flanders in the summer of 1086. Canute, however, was beginning to realise that the imposition of the tithe on Danish peasants and nobles to fund the expansion of monasteries and churches and a new head tax (Danish: nefgjald) had brought his people to the verge of rebellion. Canute took weeks to arrive where the fleet had assembled at Struer, but he found only the Norwegians still there.

Ecclesiastical map of Denmark from the tenth to twelfth century

Canute thanked the Norwegians for their patience and then went from assembly to assembly (Danish: landsting) outlawing any sailor, captain or soldier who refused to pay a fine, which amounted to more than a year's harvest for most farmers. Canute and his housecarls fled south with a growing army of rebels on his heels. Canute fled to the royal property outside the town of Odense on Funen with his two brothers. After several attempts to break in and then bloody hand-to-hand fighting in the church, Benedict was cut down, and Canute was struck in the head by a large stone and then speared from the front. He died at the base of the main altar on 10 July 1086, where he was buried by the Benedictines. When Queen Edele came to take Canute's body to Flanders, a light allegedly shone around the church and it was taken as a sign that Canute should remain where he was.[citation needed]

The death of St. Canute marks the end of the Viking Age. Never again would massive flotillas of Scandinavians meet each year to ravage the rest of Christian Europe.

In the early 12th century, Denmark became the seat of an independent church province of Scandinavia. Not long after that, Sweden and Norway established their own archbishoprics, free of Danish control. The mid-12th century proved a difficult time for the kingdom of Denmark. Violent civil wars rocked the land. Eventually, Valdemar the Great (1131–82), gained control of the kingdom, stabilizing it and reorganizing the administration. King Valdemar and Absalon (ca 1128–1201), the bishop of Roskilde, rebuilt the country.

Danish Empire and campaigns 1168-1227

During Valdemar's reign construction began of a castle in the village of Havn, leading eventually to the foundation of Copenhagen, the modern capital of Denmark. Valdemar and Absalon built Denmark into a major power in the Baltic Sea, a power which later competed with the Hanseatic League, the counts of Holstein, and the Teutonic Knights for trade, territory, and influence throughout the Baltic. In 1168, Valdemar and Absalon gained a foothold on the southern shore of the Baltic, when they subdued the Principality of Rügen.

In the 1180s, Mecklenburg and the Duchy of Pomerania came under Danish control, too. In the new southern provinces, the Danes promoted Christianity (mission of the Rani, monasteries like Eldena Abbey) and settlement (Danish participation in the Ostsiedlung). The Danes lost most of their southern gains after the Battle of Bornhöved (1227), but the Rugian principality stayed with Denmark until 1325.

Northern countries in 1219
  Norway
  Sweden
  Conquered by Denmark in 1219 (Pomerania conquered in 1219, lost in 1227. Ösel purchased in 1559, lost in 1645)
The flag of Denmark falling from the sky during the Battle of Lyndanisse on 15 June, 1219. Painted by C.A Lorentzen, 1809.

In 1202, Valdemar II became king and launched various "crusades" to claim territories, notably modern Estonia. Once these efforts were successful, a period in history known as the Danish Estonia began. Legend has it that the Danish flag, the Dannebrog fell from the sky during the Battle of Lindanise in Estonia in 1219. A series of Danish defeats culminating in the Battle of Bornhöved on 22 July 1227 cemented the loss of Denmark's north German territories. Valdemar himself was saved only by the courageous actions of a German knight who carried Valdemar to safety on his horse.

From that time on, Valdemar focused his efforts on domestic affairs. One of the changes he instituted was the feudal system where he gave properties to men with the understanding that they owed him service. This increased the power of the noble families (Danish: højadelen) and gave rise to the lesser nobles (Danish: lavadelen) who controlled most of Denmark. Free peasants lost the traditional rights and privileges they had enjoyed since Viking times.

The king of Denmark had difficulty maintaining control of the kingdom in the face of opposition from the nobility and from the Church. An extended period of strained relations between the crown and the Popes of Rome took place, known as the "archiepiscopal conflicts".

By the late 13th century, royal power had waned, and the nobility forced the king to grant a charter, considered Denmark's first constitution. Following the Battle of Bornhöved in 1227, a weakened Denmark provided windows of opportunity to both the Hanseatic League and the Counts of Holstein. The Holstein Counts gained control of large portions of Denmark because the king would grant them fiefs in exchange for money to finance royal operations.

Valdemar spent the remainder of his life putting together a code of laws for Jutland, Zealand and Skåne. These codes were used as Denmark's legal code until 1683. This was a significant change from the local law making at the regional assemblies (Danish: landsting), which had been the long-standing tradition. Several methods of determining guilt or innocence were outlawed including trial by ordeal and trial by combat. The Code of Jutland (Danish: Jyske Lov) was approved at meeting of the nobility at Vordingborg in 1241 just prior to Valdemar's death. Because of his position as "the king of Dannebrog" and as a legislator, Valdemar enjoys a central position in Danish history. To posterity the civil wars and dissolution that followed his death made him appear to be the last king of a golden age.

The Middle Ages saw a period of close cooperation between the Crown and the Roman Catholic Church. Thousands of church buildings sprang up throughout the country during this time. The economy expanded during the 12th century, based mostly on the lucrative herring-trade, but the 13th century turned into a period of difficulty and saw the temporary collapse of royal authority.

Count rule

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The kingless time 1332–1340. Danish Estonia not shown on the map was under the protection of the Livonian Order.

During the disastrous reign of Christopher II (1319–1332), most of the country was seized by the provincial counts (except Skåne, which was taken over by Sweden) after numerous peasant revolts and conflicts with the Church. For eight years after Christopher's death, Denmark had no king, and was instead controlled by the counts. After one of them, Gerhard III of Holstein-Rendsburg, was assassinated in 1340, Christopher's son Valdemar was chosen as king, and gradually began to recover the territories, which was finally completed in 1360.

The Black Death in Denmark, which came to Denmark during these years, also aided Valdemar's campaign. His continued efforts to expand the kingdom after 1360 brought him into open conflict with the Hanseatic League. He conquered Gotland, much to the displeasure of the League, which lost Visby, an important trading town located there.

The Hanseatic alliance with Sweden to attack Denmark initially proved a fiasco since Danish forces captured a large Hanseatic fleet, and ransomed it back for an enormous sum. Luckily for the League, the Jutland nobles revolted against the heavy taxes levied to fight the expansionist war in the Baltic; the two forces worked against the king, forcing him into exile in 1370. For several years, the Hanseatic League controlled the fortresses on the Sound, the strait between Skåne and Zealand.

Margaret and the Kalmar Union (1397–1523)

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The Kalmar Union, c. 1400

Margaret I, the daughter of Valdemar Atterdag, found herself married off to Håkon VI of Norway in an attempt to join the two kingdoms, along with Sweden, since Håkon had kinship ties to the Swedish royal family. The dynastic plans called for her son, Olaf II to rule the three kingdoms, but after his early death in 1387 she took on the role herself (1387–1412). During her lifetime (1353–1412) the three kingdoms of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden (including the Faroe Islands, as well as Iceland, Greenland, and present-day Finland) became linked under her capable rule, in what became known as the Kalmar Union, made official in 1397.

The tomb of Margaret I in Roskilde Cathedral.

Her successor, Eric of Pomerania (King of Denmark from 1412 to 1439), lacked Margaret's skill and thus directly caused the breakup of the Kalmar Union. Eric's foreign policy engulfed Denmark in a succession of wars with the Holstein counts and the city of Lübeck. When the Hanseatic League imposed a trade embargo on Scandinavia, the Swedes (who saw their mining industry adversely affected) rose up in revolt. The three countries of the Kalmar Union all declared Eric deposed in 1439.

However, support for the idea of regionalism continued, so when Eric's nephew Christopher of Bavaria came to the throne in 1440, he managed to get himself elected in all three kingdoms, briefly reuniting Scandinavia (1442–1448). The Swedish nobility grew increasingly unhappy with Danish rule and the union soon became merely a legal concept with little practical application. During the subsequent reigns of Christian I (1450–1481) and Hans (1481–1513), tensions grew, and several wars between Sweden and Denmark erupted.

In the early 16th century, Christian II (reigned 1513–1523) came to power. He allegedly declared, "If the hat on my head knew what I was thinking, I would pull it off and throw it away." This quotation apparently refers to his devious and machiavellian political dealings. He conquered Sweden in an attempt to reinforce the union, and had about 100 leaders of the Swedish anti-unionist forces killed in what came to be known as the Stockholm Bloodbath of November 1520. The bloodbath destroyed any lingering hope of Scandinavian union.

Map of Denmark–Norway, c. 1780

In the aftermath of Sweden's definitive secession from the Kalmar Union in 1521, civil war and the Protestant Reformation followed in Denmark and Norway. When things settled down, the Privy Council of Denmark had lost some of its influence, and that of Norway no longer existed. The two kingdoms, known as Denmark–Norway, operated in a personal union under a single monarch. Norway kept its separate laws and some institutions, such as a royal chancellor, separate coinage and a separate army. As a hereditary kingdom, Norway's status as separate from Denmark remained important to the royal dynasty in its struggles to win elections as kings of Denmark. The two kingdoms remained tied until 1814.

Early Modern Denmark

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Abraham Ortelius's 1570 map of Denmark including parts on the Scandinavian peninsula.

The Reformation

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Hans Tausen was one of the first Lutheran preachers, and later a bishop, in Denmark.

The Reformation, which originated in the German lands in the early 16th century from the ideas of Martin Luther (1483–1546), had a considerable impact on Denmark. The Danish Reformation started in the mid-1520s. Some Danes wanted access to the Bible in their own language. In 1524 Hans Mikkelsen and Christiern Pedersen translated the New Testament into Danish; it became an instant best-seller.[17]

Those who had traveled to Wittenberg in Saxony and come under the influence of the teachings of Luther and his associates included Hans Tausen, a Danish monk in the Order of St John Hospitallers. On Good Friday in 1525, Tausen used the pulpit at Antvorskov Abbey Church to proclaim Luther's reforms. His scandalized superiors ordered him out of Zealand and held him in the priory at Viborg under close confinement until he should come to his senses.[17]

Townspeople came to see the troublesome monk, and Tausen preached to them from the window of his cell. Within days Tausen's ideas swept through the town. The then radical ideas of Luther found a receptive audience. Tausen's preaching converted ordinary people, merchants, nobles, and monks and even the Prior grew to appreciate Tausen and ordered his release. Tausen preached openly: much to the consternation of Bishop Jøn Friis, who lost his ability to do anything about the Lutherans and retreated to Hald Castle.[17]

After preaching in the open air, Tausen gained the use of a small chapel, which soon proved too small for the crowds who attended services in Danish. His followers broke open a Franciscan Abbey so they could listen to Tausen, who packed the church daily for services. The town leaders protected Tausen from the Bishop of Viborg.[17] Viborg became the center for the Danish Reformation for a time. Lutheranism spread quickly to Aarhus and Aalborg.

Within months King Frederick appointed Tausen as one of his personal chaplains (October 1526) in order to protect him from Catholics. Tausen's version of Luther's ideas spread throughout Denmark. Copenhagen became a hotbed of reformist activity and Tausen moved there to continue his work. His reputation preceded him and the excitement of hearing the liturgy in Danish brought thousands of people out to hear him. With the kings' permission, churches in Copenhagen opened their doors to the Lutherans and held services for Catholics and for Lutherans at different times of the day.

At Our Lady Church, the main church of Copenhagen, Bishop Ronnow refused to admit the "heretics". In December 1531, a mob stormed the Church of Our Lady in Copenhagen, encouraged by Copenhagen's fiery mayor, Ambrosius Bogbinder. They tore down statues and side-altars and destroyed artwork and reliquaries. Frederick I's policy of toleration insisted that the two competing groups share churches and pulpits peacefully, but this satisfied neither Lutherans nor Catholics.

Luther's ideas spread rapidly as a consequence of a powerful combination of popular enthusiasm for church reform and a royal eagerness to secure greater wealth through the seizure of church lands and property. In Denmark the reformation increased the crown's revenues by 300%.

Dissatisfaction with the Catholic Church

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Dissatisfaction with the established Catholic Church had already been widespread in Denmark. Many people viewed the tithes and fees — a constant source of irritation for farmers and merchants — as unjust. This became apparent once word got out that King Frederick and his son, Duke Christian had no sympathy with Franciscans who persistently made the rounds of the parishes to collect food, money, and clothing in addition to the tithes. Between 1527 and 1536 many towns petitioned the king to close the Franciscan houses.[18]

Frederick obliged by sending letters authorizing the closure of the monasteries, often offering a small sum of money to help the brothers on their way. With the royal letter in hand, mobs forcibly closed Franciscan abbeys all over Denmark. They beat up monks, two of whom died.[18] The closure of Franciscan houses occurred systematically in Copenhagen, Viborg, Aalborg, Randers, Malmö and ten other cities; in all, 28 monasteries or houses closed. People literally hounded Franciscan monks out of the towns.[18]

No other order faced such harsh treatment. Considering how strongly many people felt about removing all traces of Catholic traditions from Danish churches, surprisingly little violence took place. Luther's teaching had become so overwhelmingly popular that Danes systematically cleared churches of statues, paintings, wall-hangings, reliquaries and other Catholic elements without interference. The only exceptions came in individual churches where the local churchmen refused to permit reform.

King Christian III carried out the Protestant Reformation in Slesvig, Holsten, Denmark and Norway.

Frederick I died in 1533; the Viborg Assembly (Danish: landsting) proclaimed his son, Duke Christian of Schleswig, King Christian III. The State Council (Danish: Rigsråd) on Zealand, led by the Catholic bishops, took control of the country and refused to recognize the election of Christian III, a staunch Lutheran. The regents feared Christian's zeal for Luther's ideas would tip the balance and disenfranchise Catholics — both peasants and nobles.

The State Council encouraged Count Christopher of Oldenburg to become Regent of Denmark. Christian III quickly raised an army to enforce his election, including mercenary troops from Germany. Count Christopher raised an army (including troops from Mecklenburg and Oldenburg and the Hanseatic League, especially Lübeck) to restore his Catholic uncle King Christian II (deposed in 1523). This resulted in a three-year civil war called the Count's Feud (Danish: Grevens Fejde).

Count's Feud (1534–1536)

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Armed rebellion by Catholic peasants led by Skipper Clement started in northern Jutland. Rebellion swept across Funen, Zealand and Skåne. Christian III's army soundly defeated an army of Catholic nobles at Svenstrup on 16 October 1534. Christian forced a truce with the Hanseatic League, which had sent troops to help Count Christopher. Christian III's army, under Johan Rantzau, chased the rebels all the way back to Aalborg and then massacred over 2,000 of them inside the city in December 1534.

The Protestants captured Skipper Clement (1534), and later executed him in 1536. Christian III's mercenary troops put an end to Catholic hopes on Zealand and then Funen. Skåne rebels went as far as proclaiming Christian II king again. King Gustav Vasa of Sweden sent two separate armies to ravage Halland and Skåne into submission. Besiegers finally starved the last hold-outs in the rebellion, Copenhagen and Malmø, into surrender in July 1536. By the spring of 1536, Christian III had taken firm control.

State Lutheranism

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Denmark became officially Lutheran on 30 October 1536 by decree of King Christian III, and in 1537 the reconstituted State Council approved the Lutheran Ordinances which was worked out by Danish theologians and Johannes Bugenhagen, based on the Augsburg Confession and Luther's Little Catechism. The government established the Danish National Church (Danish: Folkekirken) as the state church. All of Denmark's Catholic bishops went to prison until such time as they converted to Luther's reform. The authorities released them when they promised to marry and to support the reforms.

If they agreed, they received property and spent the rest of their lives as wealthy landowners. If they refused conversion, they died in prison. The State confiscated Church lands to pay for the armies that had enforced Christian III's election. Priests swore allegiance to Lutheranism or found new employment. The new owners turned monks out of their monasteries and abbeys. Nuns in a few places gained permission to live out their lives in nunneries, though without governmental financial support. The Crown closed churches, abbeys, priories and cathedrals, giving their property to local nobles or selling it.

The King appointed Danish superintendents (later bishops) to oversee Lutheran orthodoxy in the church. Denmark became part of a Lutheran heartland extending through Scandinavia and northern Germany. The Catholic Church everywhere in Scandinavia had sealed its fate by supporting hopeless causes: Christian II and the emperor Charles V in Denmark, Norwegian independence in that country, and in Sweden the Kalmar Union. Geographical distance also prevented them from receiving anything more than a sympathetic ear from Rome.

The 17th century saw a period of strict Lutheran orthodoxy in Denmark, with harsh punishments visited on suspected followers of either Calvinism or Huldrych Zwingli. Lutheran authorities treated Catholics harshly — in the fear that they might undermine the king, government, and national church. In a delayed result of the Reformation, Denmark became embroiled in the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) on the Protestant side.

The loss of Eastern Denmark

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The Dano-Norwegian Kingdom grew wealthy during the 16th century, largely because of the increased traffic through the Øresund, which Danes could tax because Denmark controlled both sides of the Sound. The trade in grain exports from Poland to the Netherlands and to the rest of Europe grew enormously at this time, and the Danish kings did not hesitate to cash in on it. The Sound duty was only repealed in the 1840s.

The Danish economy benefited from the Eighty Years' War (1568–1648) in the Netherlands because a large number of skilled refugees from that area (the most economically advanced in Europe) came to Denmark. This helped to modernize many aspects of society and to establish trading links between Denmark and the Netherlands.

Denmark–Norway had a reputation as a relatively powerful kingdom at this time. European politics of the 16th century revolved largely around the struggle between Catholic and Protestant forces, so it seemed almost inevitable that Denmark, a strong, unified Lutheran kingdom, would get drawn into the larger war when it came. The Thirty Years' War went badly for the Protestant states in the early 1620s, and a call went out to Denmark–Norway to "save the Protestant cause".

King Christian IV, who was also a duke of the Holy Roman Empire on the basis of his possessions in Holstein, decided to intervene in the conflict raging in northern Germany. The campaign ended in defeat, and Jutland was occupied by the imperial army of Albrecht von Wallenstein. In the Treaty of Lübeck, Christian made peace and agreed to not intervene in Germany again. The war in Germany had been very expensive and Christian IV saw no other recourse than to raise the Sound tolls. Unfortunately, this act pushed the Netherlands away from Denmark and into the arms of Sweden.

Torstenson War (1643–1645)

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Denmark before 1645

In 1643, Sweden's armies, under the command of Lennart Torstensson, suddenly invaded Denmark without declaring war. The ensuing conflict became known as the Torstenson War. The Netherlands, wishing to end the Danish stranglehold on the Baltic, joined the Swedes in their war against Denmark–Norway. In October 1644, a combined Dutch-Swedish fleet destroyed 80 percent of the Danish fleet in the Battle of Femern. The result of this defeat proved disastrous for Denmark–Norway: in the Second treaty of Brömsebro (1645) Denmark ceded to Sweden the Norwegian provinces Jemtland, Herjedalen and Älvdalen as well as the Danish islands of Gotland and Øsel. Halland went to Sweden for a period of 30 years and the Netherlands were exempted from paying the Sound Duty.

Denmark before 1658
Treaty of Roskilde, 1658.
  Halland, previously occupied by Sweden for a 30-year period under the terms of the Peace of Brömsebro negotiated in 1645, was now ceded
  the Scanian lands and Bohus County were ceded
  Trøndelag and Bornholm provinces, which were ceded in 1658, but rebelled against Sweden and returned to Danish rule in 1660.

Nevertheless, Danes remember Christian IV as one of the great kings of Denmark. He had a very long reign, from 1588 to 1648, and has become known as "the architect on the Danish throne" because of the large number of building projects he undertook. Many of the great buildings of Denmark date from his reign. After the death of Christian IV in 1648, his son Frederick succeeded him.

Second Northern War (1655–1660)

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In 1657, during the Second Northern War, Denmark–Norway launched a war of revenge against Sweden (then distracted in Poland) which turned into a complete disaster. The war became a disaster for two reasons: Primarily, because Denmark's new powerful ally, the Netherlands, remained neutral as Denmark was the aggressor and Sweden the defender. Secondly, the Belts froze over in a rare occurrence during the winter of 1657–1658, allowing Charles X Gustav of Sweden to lead his armies across the ice to invade Zealand.

In the following Treaty of Roskilde, Denmark–Norway capitulated and gave up all of Eastern Denmark (Danish: Skåne, Halland, Blekinge and Bornholm), in addition to the counties of Bohuslän (Norwegian: Båhuslen) and Trøndelag in Norway. Holstein-Gottorp was also tied to Sweden, providing a gateway for future invasions from the south.

But the Second Northern War was not yet over. Three months after the peace treaty was signed, Charles X Gustav of Sweden held a council of war where he decided to simply wipe Denmark from the map and unite all of Scandinavia under his rule. Once again the Swedish army arrived outside Copenhagen. However, this time the Danes did not panic or surrender. Instead, they decided to fight and prepared to defend Copenhagen.

March across the Belts in 1658

Frederick III of Denmark had stayed in his capital and now encouraged the citizens of Copenhagen to resist the Swedes, by saying he would die in his nest. Furthermore, this unprovoked declaration of war by Sweden finally triggered the alliance that Denmark–Norway had with the Netherlands. A powerful Dutch fleet was sent to Copenhagen with vital supplies and reinforcements, which saved the city from being captured during the Swedish attack. Furthermore, Brandenburg-Prussia, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Habsburg monarchy had gathered large forces to aid Denmark–Norway and fighting continued into 1659.

Battle of Køge Bay in 1677

Charles X Gustav of Sweden suddenly died of an illness in early 1660, while planning an invasion of Norway. Following his death, Sweden made peace in the Treaty of Copenhagen. The Swedes returned Trøndelag to Norway and Bornholm to Denmark, but kept both Bohuslän and Terra Scania. The Netherlands and other European powers accepted the settlement, not wanting both coasts of the Sound controlled by Denmark. This treaty established the boundaries between Norway, Denmark, and Sweden that still exist today. All in all, Sweden had now surpassed Denmark as the most powerful country in Scandinavia.

Absolutism

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As a result of the disaster in the war against Sweden, King Frederick III (reigned 1648–1670) succeeded in convincing the nobles to give up some of their powers and their exemption from taxes, leading to the era of absolutism in Denmark. The country's main objective in the following decades was the recovery of its lost provinces from Sweden. In the 1670s, Denmark–Norway had regained enough strength to start a war with Sweden to recover its lost provinces. However, in spite of Denmark's outside support, naval dominance and initial support from the population of the former eastern provinces, the war ended in a bitter stalemate.

Great Northern War (1700–1721)

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A renewed attack during the Third Northern War (1700–1721) first resulted in the unfavourable Peace of Travendal, but after Denmark's re-entry into the war and Sweden's ultimate defeat by a large alliance, Sweden was no longer a threat to Denmark. However, the great powers opposed any Danish territorial gains, which meant the Treaty of Frederiksborg did not return the former eastern provinces to Denmark. Furthermore, Denmark was even forced to return Swedish Pomerania, held by Danish forces since 1715, to Sweden. Denmark now had no hope of recovering its lost provinces from Sweden. As noted earlier, the rest of Europe was simply against the Sound being controlled by a single nation ever again.

Unification process of Holstein

For most of the 18th century, Denmark was at peace. The only time when war threatened was in 1762, when the Duke of Holstein-Gottorp became Tsar Peter III of Russia and declared war on Denmark over his ancestral claims in Schleswig. Before any fighting could begin, however, he was overthrown by his wife, who took control of Russia as Tsarina Catherine II (Catherine the Great).[19] Empress Catherine withdrew her husband's demands and negotiated the transfer of ducal Schleswig-Holstein to the Danish crown in return for Russian control of the County of Oldenburg and adjacent lands within the Holy Roman Empire, an exchange that was formalized with the 1773 Treaty of Tsarskoye Selo. The alliance that accompanied the territorial exchange tied Denmark's foreign policy to Russia's and led directly to Denmark's involvement in a series of wars over the succeeding decades.

With the suspension of the Danish diet, that body disappeared for a couple of centuries. During this time power became increasingly centralized in Copenhagen. Frederick's government reorganized itself in a much more hierarchical manner, built around the king as a focal point of administration. Crown officials dominated the administration, as well as a new group of bureaucrats, much to the dismay of the traditional aristocracy, who saw their own influence curtailed even further. The absolutist kings of Denmark were quite weak compared to their Swedish counterparts, and non-noble landlords became the real rulers of the country. They used their influence to pass laws that favored themselves.

The administration and laws underwent "modernization" during this period. In 1683, the Danske lov 1683 (Danish Code) standardized and collected all the old provincial laws. Other initiatives included the standardization of all weights and measures throughout the kingdom, and an agricultural survey and registry. This survey allowed the government to begin taxing landowners directly, moving it beyond dependence on revenue from crown lands.

The population of Denmark rose steadily through this period, from 600,000 in 1660 (after the loss of territory to Sweden) to 700,000 in 1720. By 1807, it had risen to 978,000.

Changes in the agricultural economy

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Attempts to diversify the economy away from agriculture failed. During this period, little industry existed, except for a very small amount in Copenhagen (population: 30,000). In the late 17th century a small amount of industry did develop, catering to the military. Denmark suffered in part because of its lack of natural resources. It had nothing much to export except agricultural products. The Netherlands bought the largest share of Denmark's exports. The landlords, only about 300 in number, nevertheless owned 90% of the land in the country.

Rural administration remained primarily the preserve of the large landholders and of a few law-enforcement officials. In 1733, low crop prices caused the introduction of adscription, an effort by the landlords to obtain cheap labor. The effect of this was to turn the previously free Danish peasantry into serfs. The adscription system tied rural laborers to their place of birth and required them to rent farms on the estates.

As rent, peasants were required to work the landlords' plots and could not negotiate contracts or demand payment for improvements made to the farm. Peasants who refused to rent a farm were subject to six years of military service. Danish agriculture was very inefficient and unproductive as a result, since the peasants had no motivation to perform anything more than the absolute minimum of work. Attempts to sell Danish grain in Norway failed because of its low quality compared to grain from the Baltic.

In the late 18th century, extensive agricultural reforms took place, involving the abolition of the old open-field system and the amalgamation of many smaller farms into larger ones. With the abolition of the adscription system, the military could now only obtain manpower through conscription. These reforms were possible because agricultural prices steadily rose in the second half of the century.

Throughout the 18th century, the Danish economy did very well, largely on the basis of expanded agricultural output to meet growing demand across Europe. Danish merchant ships also traded around Europe and the North Atlantic, venturing to new Danish colonies in the Caribbean and North Atlantic.

The Enlightenment and Danish nationalism

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Denmark's social reformers Struensee and Brandt quartered and displayed on the wheel on 28 April 1772

New propriety and Enlightenment ideas became popular among the middle classes of Denmark, arousing increased interest in personal liberty. In the last 15 years of the 18th century, the authorities relaxed the censorship which had existed since the beginning of the 17th century. At the same time, a sense of Danish nationalism began to develop. Hostility increased against Germans and Norwegians present at the royal court. Pride in the Danish language and culture increased, and eventually a law banned "foreigners" from holding posts in the government. Antagonism between Germans and Danes increased from the mid-18th century on.

In the 1770s, during the reign of the mentally unstable Christian VII (1766–1808), the queen Caroline Matilda's lover, a German doctor named Johann Friedrich Struensee, became the de facto ruler of the country. Filled with the ideas of the Enlightenment, he attempted a number of radical reforms including freedom of the press and religion. But it was short-lived and saw open revolt. The landlords feared that the reforms were a threat to their power, while the commoners believed that religious freedom was an invitation to atheism.

In 1772, a court faction involving the king's stepmother had Struensee arrested, tried, and convicted of crimes against the majesty, his right hand was cut off following his beheading, his remains were quartered and put on display on top of spikes on the commons west of Copenhagen. The next 12 years were a period of unmitigated reaction until a group of reformers gained power in 1784.

Reforms
[edit]

Denmark became the model of enlightened despotism, partially influenced by the ideas of the French Revolution. Denmark thus adopted liberalizing reforms in line with those of the French Revolution, with no direct contact. Danes were aware of French ideas and agreed with them, as it moved from Danish absolutism to a liberal constitutional system between 1750 and 1850. The change of government in 1784 was caused by a power vacuum created when King Christian VII took ill, and influence shifted to the crown prince (who later became King Frederick VI) and reform-oriented landowners. Between 1784 and 1815, the abolition of serfdom made the majority of the peasants into landowners. The government also introduced free trade and universal education. In contrast to France under the ancien regime, agricultural reform was intensified in Denmark, civil rights were extended to the peasants, the finances of the Danish state were healthy, and there were no external or internal crises. That is, reform was gradual and the regime itself carried out agrarian reforms that had the effect of weakening absolutism by creating a class of independent peasant freeholders. Much of the initiative came from well-organized liberals who directed political change in the first half of the 19th century.[20]

Newspapers
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Danish news media first appeared in the 1540s, when handwritten fly sheets reported on the news. In 1666, Anders Bording, the father of Danish journalism, began a state paper. The royal privilege to bring out a newspaper was issued to Joachim Wielandt in 1720. University officials handled the censorship, but in 1770 Denmark became one of the first nations of the world to provide for press freedom; it ended in 1799. In 1795–1814, the press, led by intellectuals and civil servants, called out for a more just and modern society, and spoke out for the oppressed tenant farmers against the power of the old aristocracy.[21]

In 1834, the first liberal newspaper appeared, one that gave much more emphasis to actual news content rather than opinions. The newspapers championed the Revolution of 1848 in Denmark. The new constitution of 1849 liberated the Danish press. Newspapers flourished in the second half of the 19th century, usually tied to one or another political party or labor union. Modernization, bringing in new features and mechanical techniques, appeared after 1900. The total circulation was 500,000 daily in 1901, more than doubling to 1.2 million in 1925. The German occupation brought informal censorship; some offending newspaper buildings were simply blown up by the Nazis. During the war, the underground produced 550 newspapers—small, surreptitiously printed sheets that encouraged sabotage and resistance.[22]

Colonial ventures

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Map showing Denmark–Norway and its colonial possessions.

Denmark maintained a number of colonies outside Scandinavia, starting in the 17th century and lasting until the 20th century. Denmark also controlled traditional colonies in Greenland[23] and Iceland[24] in the north Atlantic, obtained through the union with Norway. Christian IV (reigned 1588–1648) first initiated the policy of expanding Denmark's overseas trade, as part of the mercantilist trend then popular in European governing circles. Denmark established its own first colony at Tranquebar, or Trankebar, on India's south coast, in 1620.

In the Caribbean Denmark started a colony on St Thomas in 1671, St John in 1718, and purchased Saint Croix from France in 1733. Denmark maintained its Indian colony, Tranquebar, as well as several other smaller colonies there, for about two hundred years. The Danish East India Company operated out of Tranquebar. The Danes also established themselves in the Gold coast and fought against other European powers like Sweden and the Netherlands there.

During its heyday, the Danish East Indian Company and the Swedish East India Company imported more tea than the British East India Company – and smuggled 90% of it into Britain, where it sold at a huge profit. Both of the Scandinavia-based East India Companies folded during the course of the Napoleonic Wars. Denmark also maintained other colonies, forts, and bases in West Africa, primarily for the purpose of slave-trading.

19th century

[edit]

Danish Unitary State
Helstaten (da)
Dänischer Gesamtstaat (de)
1814–1864
Territories that were part of the Kingdom of Denmark from 1814 to 1864
Territories that were part of the Kingdom of Denmark from 1814 to 1864
Statuspersonal union between Schleswig, Holstein, Lauenburg and Denmark
Common languagesDanish, Frisian, German
Religion
Lutheranism
King of Denmark, Duke of Schleswig, Holstein and Lauenburg  
• 1808–1839
Frederik VI
• 1839–1848
Christian VIII
• 1848–1863
Frederik VII
• 1863–1906
Christian IX
Prime ministers
(1848–1855)
Council Presidents
(1855–1864)
 
• 1848–1852
Adam Wilhelm Moltke
• 1852–1853
Christian Albrecht Bluhme
• 1853–1854
Anders Sandøe Ørsted
• 1854–1856
Peter Georg Bang
• 1856–1857
Carl Christoffer Georg Andræ
• 1857–1859
Carl Christian Hall
• 1859–1860
Carl Edvard Rotwitt
• 1863–1864
Ditlev Gothard Monrad
Historical eraLate Modern Period
• Established
1814
14 January 1814
1848–1851
• Disestablished
1864

The Napoleonic Wars

[edit]
The Battle of Copenhagen, 1801.

The long decades of peace came to an abrupt end during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars. Denmark-Norway initially attempted to stay neutral in the ongoing conflict in order to maintain their trade with both France and Britain. However, British fears that the Dano-Norwegians would ally with France led to a naval battle outside of Copenhagen in 1801, in which a Royal Navy fleet delivered a crushing blow to the Dano-Norwegian navy. Despite this, Denmark-Norway continued to remain neutral until 1807, when a British fleet bombarded Copenhagen and captured most of the Dano-Norwegian navy in order to prevent it from assisting Napoleon against Britain. This led to the Gunboat War, in which Danish gunboats fought against the British navy until 1814, though major engagements ended after the last Danish frigate was captured by the Royal Navy at Lyngør in 1812.

In 1809 Danish forces fighting on the French side participated in defeating the anti-Bonapartist German rebellion led by Ferdinand von Schill, at the Battle of Stralsund. By 1813, Denmark could no longer bear the war costs, and the state was bankrupt. When in the same year the Sixth Coalition isolated Denmark by clearing Northern Germany of French forces, Frederick VI had to make peace. Accordingly, the Treaty of Kiel was concluded in January 1814 with Sweden and Great Britain, and another peace was signed with Russia in February.

The post-Napoleonic Congress of Vienna demanded the dissolution of the Dano-Norwegian union, and this was confirmed by the Treaty of Kiel in 1814. The treaty transferred Heligoland to Great Britain and Norway from the Danish to the Swedish crown, Denmark was to be satisfied with Swedish Pomerania. But the Norwegians revolted, declared their independence, and elected crown-prince Christian Frederick (the future Christian VIII) as their king. However, the Norwegian independence movement failed to attract any support from the European powers. After a brief war with Sweden, Christian had to abdicate in order to preserve Norwegian autonomy, established in a personal union with Sweden. In favour of the Kingdom of Prussia, Denmark renounced her claims to Swedish Pomerania at the Congress of Vienna (1815), and instead was satisfied with the Duchy of Lauenburg and a Prussian payment of 3.5 million talers. Prussia also took over a Danish 600,000-taler debt to Sweden.

This period also counts as "the Golden Age" of Danish intellectual history. A sign of renewed intellectual vigor was the introduction of compulsory schooling in 1814. Literature, painting, sculpture, and philosophy all experienced an unusually vibrant period. The stories of Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875) became popular not only in Denmark, but all over Europe and in the United States.[25] The ideas of the philosopher Søren Kierkegaard (1813–1855) spread far beyond Denmark, influencing not only his own era, but proving instrumental in the development of new philosophical systems after him. The sculptures of Thorvaldsen (1770–1834) grace public buildings all over Denmark and other artists appreciated and copied his style. Grundtvig (1783–1872) tried to reinvigorate the Danish National Church and contributed to the hymns used by the church in Denmark.

Nationalism and liberalism

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Den Grundlovgivende Rigsforsamling
The Constitutional Assembly created The Danish constitution, 1860–1864 painting by Constantin Hansen.

The Danish liberal and national movements gained momentum in the 1830s, and after the European revolutions of 1848 Denmark became a constitutional monarchy on 5 June 1849. The growing bourgeoisie had demanded a share in government, and in an attempt to avert the sort of bloody revolution occurring elsewhere in Europe, Frederick VII gave in to the demands of the citizens. A new constitution emerged, separating the powers and granting the franchise to all adult males, as well as freedom of the press, religion, and association. The king became head of the executive branch. The legislative branch consisted of two parliamentary chambers; the Folketing, comprising members elected by the general population, and the Landsting, elected by landowners. Denmark also gained an independent judiciary.

Another significant result of the revolution was the abolition of slavery in the Danish West Indies, the Danish colony in the Caribbean, which at an earlier part of its history witnessed the biggest slave auctions in the world.[26] In 1845 Denmark's other tropical colony, Tranquebar in India, was sold to Britain.

The Danish king's realm still consisted of the islands, the northern half of the Jutland peninsula, and the Duchy of Schleswig in real union with the Duchy of Holstein.

Danish Infantry regiment in a fight with regiment "Martini". Contemporary illustration of the 1864 Second Schleswig War.

The islands and Jutland together constituted the kingdom, whereas the monarch held the duchies in personal union with the kingdom. The duchy of Schleswig constituted a Danish fief, while the Duchy of Holstein remained a part of the German Confederation.

Since the early 18th century, and even more so from the early 19th century, the Danes had become used to viewing the duchies and the kingdom as increasingly unified in one state. This view, however, clashed with that of the German majority in the duchies, also enthused by liberal and national trends, which led to a movement known as Schleswig-Holsteinism. Schleswig-Holsteinists aimed for independence from Denmark. The First Schleswig War (1848–1851) broke out after constitutional change in 1849 and ended with the status quo because of the intervention of Britain and other Great Powers.

Much debate took place in Denmark as to how to deal with the question of Schleswig-Holstein. National-Liberals demanded permanent ties between Schleswig and Denmark, but stated that Holstein could do as it pleased. However, international events overtook domestic Danish politics, and Denmark faced war against both Prussia and Austria in what became known as the Second Schleswig War (1864). The war lasted from February to October 1864. Denmark was easily beaten by Prussia and Austria, and obliged to relinquish both Schleswig and Holstein.

The war caused Denmark as a nation severe trauma, forcing it to reconsider its place in the world. The loss of Schleswig-Holstein came as the latest in the long series of defeats and territorial loss that had begun in the 17th century. The Danish state had now lost some of the richest areas of the kingdom: Skåne to Sweden and Schleswig to Germany, so the nation focused on developing the poorer areas of the country. Extensive agricultural improvements took place in Jutland, and a new form of nationalism, which emphasized the "small" people, the decency of rural Denmark, and the shunning of wider aspirations, developed.

Industrialisation

[edit]

Industrialisation came to Denmark in the second half of the 19th century. The nation's first railroads were constructed in the 1850s, and improved communications and overseas trade allowed industry to develop in spite of Denmark's lack of natural resources. Trade unions developed starting in the 1870s. There was a considerable migration of people from the countryside to the cities.

Danish agriculture became centered around the export of dairy and meat products, especially to Great Britain. Instead of relying on German middlemen in Hamburg, the Danes opened new direct trade routes to England after the defeat by the Germans.[27] Lampke and Sharp argue that Denmark's success as in the dairy industry was not based on co-operatives, which came in the late nineteenth century. Instead leadership was in the hands of the landed, intellectual and political elites. They made land reforms, adopted new technologies, and started educational and trading systems. Together these made Denmark a major exporter of butter after 1850. Land reform enabled the growth of a middle ranking class of farmers. They copied the innovations pioneered by wealthy estate owners, and implemented them through newly formed co-operatives.[28]

Internationalism and nationalism have become very much part of the history of the Danish Labour movement. The Labour movement gathered momentum when social issues became associated with internationalism. Socialist theory and organisational contact with the First International, which linked labour movements in various countries, paved the way. Louis Pio emerged as the driving force. In 1871, following the bloody defeat of the Paris Commune, he started publishing socialist journalism. He campaigned strongly for an independent organisation of the workers under their own management, and organised a Danish branch of the First International. This became the foundation stone for the Social Democratic Party under the name of Den Internationale Arbejderforening for Danmark (The International Labour Association for Denmark). As a combination of union and political party, it adroitly brought together national and international elements.[29]

Pio saw internationalism as vital for the success of the workers' struggle: without internationalism, no progress. He pointed out that the middle classes cooperated across national frontiers and used nationalistic rhetoric as a weapon against the workers and their liberation.[30]

The Danish section started organising strikes and demonstrations for higher wages and social reforms.[31] Demands were moderate, but enough to provoke the employers and the forces of law and order. Things came to a head in the Battle of Fælleden on 5 May 1872. The authorities arrested the three leaders, Louis Pio, Poul Geleff and Harald Brix, charged them and convicted them of high treason. The three left Denmark for the United States to set up the ill-starred and short-lived socialist colony near Hays City, in Ellis County, Kansas.

Back in Denmark, the emerging political situation made possible by the new Danish door of independence alarmed many of the existing elites, since it inevitably empowered the peasantry. Simple men with little education replaced professors and professionals in positions of power. The peasants, in coalition with liberal and radical elements from the cities, eventually won a majority of seats in the Folketing. Even though constitutional changes had taken place to boost the power of the Landsting, the Left Venstre Party demanded to form the government, but the king, still the head of the executive branch, refused. However, in 1901, king Christian IX gave in and asked Johan Henrik Deuntzer, a member of Venstre, to form a government, the Cabinet of Deuntzer. This began a tradition of parliamentary government, and with the exception of the Easter Crisis of 1920, no government since 1901 has ruled against a parliamentary majority in the Folketing.

Monetary union

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Two golden 20 kr coins from the Scandinavian Monetary Union, which was based on a gold standard. The coin to the left is Swedish and the right one is Danish.

The Scandinavian Monetary Union, a monetary union formed by Sweden and Denmark on 5 May 1873, fixed both their currencies against gold at par to each other. Norway, governed in union with Sweden, entered the monetary union two years later in 1875 by pegging its currency to gold at the same level as Denmark and Sweden (.403 gram).[32] The monetary union proved one of the few tangible results of the Scandinavist political movement of the 19th century.

The union provided fixed exchange-rates and stability in monetary terms, but the member-countries continued to issue their own separate currencies. In an outcome not initially foreseen, the perceived security led to a situation where the formally separate currencies circulated on a basis of "as good as" the legal tender virtually throughout the entire area.

The outbreak of World War I in 1914 brought an end to the monetary union. Sweden abandoned the tie to gold on 2 August 1914, and without a fixed exchange rate the free circulation came to an end.

20th century

[edit]

1901–1939

[edit]

In the early decades of the 20th century the new Danish Social Liberal Party and the older Venstre Party shared government. During this time women gained the right to vote (1915), and the United States purchased some of Denmark's colonial holdings: the three islands of Saint John, Saint Croix, and Saint Thomas in the West Indies. The period also saw Denmark inaugurating important social and labour-market reforms, laying the basis for the present welfare state.

Denmark remained neutral during World War I, but the conflict affected the country to a considerable extent. As its economy was heavily based on exports, the unrestricted German submarine warfare was a serious problem. Denmark had to sell many of its exports to Germany instead of overseas nations. Widespread war profiteering took place, but commerce also suffered significant disruption because of the conflict and because of the ensuing financial instability in Europe. Rationing was instituted, and there were food and fuel shortages. In addition, Berlin forced Denmark to mine the Sound to prevent British ships from entering it. Following the defeat of Germany in the war (1918), the Treaty of Versailles (1919) mandated the Schleswig Plebiscites, which resulted in the return of Northern Schleswig (now South Jutland) to Denmark. The king and parts of the opposition grumbled that Prime Minister Carl Theodor Zahle (in office 1909–1910 and 1913–1920) did not use Germany's defeat to take back a bigger portion of the province, which Denmark had lost in the Second Schleswig War in 1864. The king and the opposition wanted to take over the city of Flensburg, while the cabinet insisted on only claiming areas where a majority of Danes lived, which led to a plebiscite in the affected areas over whether they wanted to become a part of Denmark or remain within Germany. Believing that he had the support of the people, King Christian X used his reserve power to dismiss Zahle's cabinet, sparking the Easter Crisis of 1920. As a result of the Easter Crisis, the king promised to no longer interfere in politics. Although the Danish Constitution was not amended at that time, Danish monarchs have stayed out of politics since then. The end of the war also prompted the Danish government to finish negotiating with Iceland, resulting in Iceland becoming a sovereign Kingdom on 1 December 1918 while retaining the Danish monarch as head of state.

In the 1924 Folketing election the Social Democrats, under the charismatic Thorvald Stauning, became Denmark's largest parliamentary political party, a position they maintained until 2001. Since the opposition still held a majority of the seats in the Landsting, Stauning had to co-operate with some of the right-wing parties, making the Social Democrats a more mainstream party. He succeeded in brokering an important deal in the 1930s which brought an end to the Great Depression in Denmark, and also laid the foundation for a welfare state.

Denmark joined the League of Nations in 1920 and during the interwar period was active in promoting peaceful solutions to international issues. With the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany during the 1930s, the country found itself in a very precarious situation. Berlin refused to recognize its post-1920 border with Denmark, but the Nazi regime was preoccupied with more important matters and did not make any issue of it. The Danes tried unsuccessfully to obtain recognition of the border from their neighbor, but otherwise went out of their way to avoid antagonizing Germany.

Second World War

[edit]
During the German occupation, King Christian X became a powerful symbol of national sovereignty. This image dates from the King's birthday, 26 September 1940. Note the lack of a guard.

In 1939, Hitler offered non-aggression pacts to the Scandinavian nations. While Sweden and Norway refused, Denmark readily accepted. When WWII began that fall, Copenhagen declared its neutrality. Nevertheless, Germany (so as to secure communications for its invasion of Norway) invaded and subsequently occupied Denmark on 9 April 1940, meeting limited resistance. British forces, however, occupied the Faroe Islands (12 April 1940) and invaded Iceland (10 May 1940) in pre-emptive moves to prevent German occupation. Following a plebiscite, Iceland declared its independence on 17 June 1944 and became a republic, dissolving its union with Denmark.

The Nazi occupation of Denmark unfolded in a unique manner. The Monarchy remained. The conditions of occupation started off very leniently (although the authorities banned Danmarks Kommunistiske Parti (the Communist party) when the Wehrmacht invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941), and Denmark retained its own government. The new coalition government tried to protect the population from Nazi rule through compromise. The Germans allowed the Folketing to remain in session. Despite deportations of nearly 2,000 of its members, the police remained largely under Danish control, and the German authorities stayed one step removed from the population. However, the Nazi demands eventually became intolerable for the Danish government, so, in 1943, it resigned and Germany assumed full control of Denmark. From that point, an armed resistance movement grew against the occupying forces. Towards the end of the war, Denmark grew increasingly difficult for Germany to control, but the country remained under occupation until near the end of the war. On 4 May 1945, German forces in Denmark, North West Germany, and the Netherlands surrendered to the Allies. On 5 May 1945, British troops liberated Copenhagen. Three days later, the war ended.

Denmark succeeded in smuggling most of its Jewish population to Sweden, in 1943, when the Nazis threatened deportation; see Rescue of the Danish Jews. Danish doctors refused to treat German citizens fleeing from Germany. More than 13,000 died in 1945 from various causes, among them some 7,000 children under five.[33]

Post-war

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In 1948, Denmark granted home rule to the Faroe Islands. 1953 saw further political reform in Denmark, abolishing the Landsting (the elected upper house), colonial status for Greenland and allowing female rights of succession to the throne with the signing of a new constitution.

Although not one of the war-time United Nations, Denmark succeeded in obtaining a (belated) invitation to the UN Charter conference, and became a founding member of the United Nations organisation in 1945.[34] With the Soviet occupation of Bornholm, the emergence of what evolved to become the Cold War and with the lessons of World War II still fresh in Danish minds, the country abandoned its former policy of neutrality and became one of the original founding members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO) in 1949. Denmark had originally tried to form an alliance with Norway and Sweden only, but this attempt had failed. A Nordic Council later emerged however, with the aim of co-ordinating Nordic policies. Later on, in a referendum in 1972, Danes voted in favour of joining the European Community, the predecessor of the European Union, and Denmark became a member on 1 January 1973. Since then, Denmark has proven a hesitant member of the European community, opting out of many proposals, including the Euro, which the country rejected in a referendum in 2000.[35]

21st century

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Denmark went through some of its most serious post-war crises in the early 21st century, such as the SARS outbreak in 2003, Indian Ocean tsunami in December 2004,[36][37][38] Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy in 2005, Danish embassy bombing in Islamabad in 2008, Copenhagen attacks in 2015, and with the COVID-19 pandemic (including Deltacron hybrid variant) in between January 2020 and March 2022, which has further damaged the economy.

In 2001, the Folketing agreed to enter the war in Afghanistan.[39] A total of 43 Danish soldiers were killed in Afghanistan since the first deployment in 2002.

Venstre leader Anders Fogh Rasmussen won the 2001, 2005, and 2007 Folketing elections and formed a new government and was in his first few months challenged after the Social Democrat prime minister Poul Nyrup Rasmussen admitted defeat. Eight years later, he resigned from his office in April 2009 due to upcoming as the NATO Secretary-General, and then Lars Løkke Rasmussen was sworn in as prime minister in his first term from 2009 to 2011.[40]

In the 2011 Folketing elections, the incumbent centre-right coalition led by Venstre lost power to a centre-left coalition led by the Social Democrats, making Helle Thorning-Schmidt the country's first female prime minister. The Social Liberal Party and the Socialist People's Party became part of the three-party government. The new parliament convened on 4 October 2011.[41]

In 2015, Lars Løkke Rasmussen won the Folketing election and formed a government for the second time. Although the ruling Social Democrats became the largest party in the Folketing and increased their seat count, the opposition Venstre party was able to form a minority government headed by Lars Løkke Rasmussen with the support of the Danish People's Party, the Liberal Alliance and the Conservative People's Party.[42] Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen held the office between 2009 and 2011, and again between 2015 and 2019, with backing from the Danish People's Party (DF).

In the 2019 Folketing election, comprising parties that supported the Social Democrats' leader Mette Frederiksen as candidate for Prime Minister. The "red bloc", consisting of the Social Democrats, the Social Liberals, Socialist People's Party, the Red–Green Alliance, the Faroese Social Democratic Party and the Greenlandic Siumut, won 93 of the 179 seats, securing a parliamentary majority. Meanwhile, the incumbent governing coalition, consisting of Venstre, the Liberal Alliance and the Conservative People's Party was reduced to 76 seats (including the Venstre-affiliated Union Party in the Faroe Islands) despite receiving external parliamentary support from the Danish People's Party and Nunatta Qitornai. Following the 2019 general election the Social Democrats, led by leader Mette Frederiksen, formed a single-party government with support from the left-wing coalition.[43] Frederiksen became prime minister on 27 June 2019.[44]

Then-Crown Prince Federik with his wife Mary in 2015.

In the November 2022 snap general election, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen's Social Democrats remained the biggest party with two more seats, its best result in two decades.[45] The second biggest was the Liberal Party (Venstre), led by Jakob Ellemann-Jensen. The recently formed Moderates party, led by two-time former Prime Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen, became the third-biggest party in Denmark.[46] In December 2022, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen formed a new coalition government with her Social Democrats and the Liberal Party and the Moderates party. Jakob Ellemann-Jensen became deputy prime minister and defence minister while Lars Løkke Rasmussen was appointed foreign minister.[47]

In her 52nd New Year's speech on the last day of 2023, Queen Margrethe II announced her abdication of the Danish throne in favor of her son, Frederick. This was the first willing abdication of a Danish monarch since Eric III in 1146.[48] On 14 January, 52 years to the day after Margrethe ascended the throne, Frederik X was proclaimed king of Denmark.[49]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The history of Denmark traces the region's habitation from Mesolithic hunter-gatherers who arrived after the retreat of the last Ice Age around 10,000 BCE, through Bronze and Iron Age developments marked by advanced metallurgy and ritual artifacts, to the emergence of a unified kingdom under Harald Bluetooth in the 10th century CE, who erected runestones proclaiming Denmark's Christianization and territorial consolidation. During the (c. 800–1050 CE), conducted extensive raids, , and settlements across , establishing footholds in , , and , while fostering early around and the Danish islands. Medieval Denmark expanded under kings like Valdemar I and Canute VI, incorporating Baltic territories and briefly forming a , before entering the in 1397, a Scandinavian dominated by Danish monarchs until Sweden's secession in 1523. The 16th-century Lutheran Reformation centralized power, leading to absolutist rule from 1660, and a dual monarchy with Norway until the 1814 Treaty of Kiel, which ceded Norway to Sweden following Denmark's Napoleonic alignments, prompting constitutional reforms in 1849 that established parliamentary democracy. Denmark maintained armed neutrality in World War I but was swiftly occupied by Germany in 1940 despite pre-war non-aggression pacts, enduring collaboration and resistance until liberation in 1945, after which it joined NATO in 1949 and built a robust social welfare system amid post-war economic growth. Key achievements include pioneering maritime prowess and cultural artifacts like the Golden Horns and Gundestrup Cauldron, alongside modern innovations in cooperative economics and environmental policy, though territorial contractions—such as the 1864 loss of Schleswig-Holstein—highlighted vulnerabilities in great power rivalries. Controversies encompass the Viking-era slave trade and WWII-era Jewish rescue operations, which saved over 7,000 lives through civilian networks to Sweden, underscoring pragmatic adaptation over ideological confrontation.

Prehistoric Denmark

Stone Age Settlements and Hunter-Gatherers

The retreat of the Weichselian glaciation around 11,700 years ago allowed the first human groups to enter the territory of modern Denmark, initially as mobile reindeer hunters during the Late Upper Paleolithic. Evidence from sites like Jels 3 indicates open-air settlements associated with the Hamburgian tradition, featuring lithic tools such as tanged points adapted for hunting large game in a tundra-like environment. These early inhabitants, arriving circa 13,000–11,000 BCE, left sparse traces due to the harsh post-glacial conditions and low population densities, with artifacts including reindeer antler weapons confirming Paleolithic presence. By the early , around 9,500–8,000 BCE, the emerged in forested landscapes, marking a shift to more diverse adaptations. Settlements at sites like Lundby , a kettle-hole lake in southern , reveal the earliest activity, with and tools for and amid rising levels that submerged many coastal areas. These groups exploited aquatic resources intensively, using microlithic tools and early watercraft, as evidenced by dugout canoe fragments, while inland sites show seasonal camps focused on deer and wild boar. The Middle Mesolithic Kongemose culture (circa 6,000–5,200 BCE) built upon this foundation, with settlements concentrated near water bodies for optimal foraging. Transitioning into the Late Mesolithic Ertebølle culture (5,400–3,950 BCE), hunter-gatherers developed semi-permanent coastal villages, particularly where streams met the sea, yielding rich kitchen middens of shellfish, fish, and seal remains that attest to marine specialization. Sites like those in the Limfjord and Aarhus Bay, now partially submerged due to post-glacial isostatic rebound and sea-level rise, preserve organic artifacts including pottery—the earliest in northern Europe—and elaborate bone harpoons, indicating sophisticated fishing technologies without reliance on agriculture. Inland Ertebølle variants supplemented marine diets with terrestrial game, reflecting adaptive resilience in a landscape of bogs and woodlands until the Neolithic transition around 4,000 BCE.

Bronze Age Trade and Cultural Developments


The Bronze Age in Denmark, integrated within the broader Nordic Bronze Age, extended from approximately 1700 to 500 BC, characterized by the widespread adoption of bronze metallurgy, advanced burial practices, and extensive trade connections across Europe. Societies maintained mixed economies of agriculture, animal husbandry including newly domesticated horses, and maritime activities, with metal imports pivotal due to Scandinavia's scarcity of copper and tin ores. Hierarchical structures emerged, evidenced by elite burials in large oak-log coffin interments beneath barrows, such as the Egtved Girl (c. 1370 BC), preserved in a bog with woolen clothing and bronze jewelry, indicating status differentiation and ritual significance.
Trade networks were dynamic, relying on imports of raw metals and finished goods from Central and Western Europe, facilitating the production of weapons, tools, jewelry, and ceremonial items like lurs and helmets. Early phases (c. 1700–1500 BC) drew copper primarily from Slovakian Ore Mountains, eastern Alps (e.g., Mitterberg), and British sources like Great Orme, with tin likely from Cornwall or Erzgebirge, transported via maritime routes across the North Sea and riverine paths. By the middle phase (c. 1500–1300 BC), copper sourcing shifted dominantly to northern Italy's AATV deposits (63% of analyzed artifacts), reflecting adaptations to disruptions like the Únětice culture collapse and integration with Tumulus cultures, while local recycling and alloying intensified metal availability. These exchanges, quantified through lead isotope and trace element analyses of over 500 artifacts, underscore Denmark's role in north-south corridors, exporting amber in return and enabling technological and social complexity. Cultural developments emphasized solar and equine motifs, as seen in the Trundholm Sun Chariot, discovered in 1902 in Trundholm Bog, Zealand, dating to c. 1400 BC. This artifact, comprising a gold-plated bronze disc affixed to a horse-pulled wheeled frame (one side gilded to represent daylight, the other tinned for night), symbolizes the sun's diurnal journey drawn by a divine horse, highlighting cosmological beliefs and high craftsmanship. Other icons include Viksø helmets from Brøns Mose, Zealand (c. 1400–1200 BC), adorned with gold spirals evoking solar rays, and rock petroglyphs at sites like Madsebakke, Bornholm, featuring ships, wagons, cup marks, and fertility figures, though less abundant in Denmark than in Sweden or Norway. These elements suggest ritual practices tied to maritime prowess, fertility, and celestial worship, with open-sea voyages between Denmark and Norway inferred from artifact similarities, predating later Viking expansions.

Iron Age Societies and Early Germanic Tribes

The Iron Age in Denmark commenced around 500 BC with the introduction of ironworking technology, marking a shift from bronze to more abundant and versatile iron tools that improved agricultural efficiency and enabled larger settlements. Pre-Roman Iron Age societies (c. 500 BC–1 AD) were agrarian, centered on farmsteads with longhouses up to 30 meters long housing extended families and livestock, as evidenced by excavations near Aalborg revealing field systems, banks, and domestic structures covered by later drift sand. These communities cultivated cereals like barley and emmer wheat, raised cattle and pigs, and practiced ritual depositions in bogs, including weapons, jewelry, and human remains, suggesting sacrificial practices tied to fertility or warfare. Population density increased, with villages forming small clusters, though social organization remained kin-based without centralized authority. Archaeological finds like the Gundestrup cauldron, a large silver vessel (diameter 69 cm) dismantled and deposited in a around 150 BC–1 AD, illustrate artistic and possibly religious influences, with panels showing warriors, deities, and potentially linking to Celtic or Thracian motifs via or migration, though crafted in local or imported styles. Bog bodies provide direct insight into individuals; the Tollund Man, discovered in 1950 near Silkeborg and dated to c. 405–380 BC via radiocarbon analysis, was a 40-year-old male strangled with a leather cord, placed in a fetal position after a last meal of porridge with seeds, interpreted as a ritual sacrifice rather than criminal execution based on the careful preparation and lack of defensive wounds. Similar preservations, numbering over 200 in Danish bogs, indicate widespread elite or communal rituals involving violence, possibly to appease gods during environmental stresses like cooler climates. In the Roman Iron Age (c. 1–400 AD), Denmark's position facilitated trade with the Roman Empire, exchanging amber, furs, and slaves for glassware, bronze vessels, and coins, enriching elite burials and indicating hierarchical societies with chieftains controlling resources. Evidence of conflict abounds, such as the Alken Enge site in Jutland, where analysis of 2,095 bone fragments from c. AD 50 revealed 380 young male warriors killed in battle, their remains dismembered, exposed, and ritually deposited in Lake Mossø over two years, likely from inter-tribal warfare rather than Roman incursions. The inhabitants were early Germanic-speaking peoples, with ancient accounts identifying tribes like the Cimbri and Teutons originating from northern Jutland (Cimbric Peninsula), who migrated southward around 120–113 BC, clashing with Roman forces in Gaul and contributing to the tribe's proto-Germanic linguistic and cultural roots. Later, groups such as the Angles from southern Jutland and the Jutes from its northern and eastern coasts emerged, migrating to Britain from the 5th century AD onward, reflecting fluid tribal movements amid pressures from climate shifts and resource competition. These societies laid the groundwork for the consolidation of Danish identity in the subsequent Germanic Iron Age (c. 400–800 AD), characterized by fortified villages and runic inscriptions in Elder Futhark.

Formation of the Kingdom and Viking Era

Migration Period and Earliest Danish Identity

The , spanning approximately to AD, marked a phase of significant upheaval among , including those in the territories of modern , characterized by migrations, conflicts, and cultural shifts rather than large-scale depopulation. In southern Scandinavia, populations in Jutland and the Danish islands experienced continuity in settlement patterns, with stable village communities and evidence of formal plot divisions persisting through the era, countering notions of widespread abandonment. While groups such as the Angles and Jutes from Jutland and southern Schleswig migrated southward to Britain starting around 400 AD, core areas maintained habitation and economic activity tied to the North Sea. The earliest historical references to the , or Dani, emerge in mid-6th-century sources, denoting a North Germanic inhabiting eastern regions of the Danish and islands. of Caesarea, in his Gothic War (c. 550 AD), describes exiled Heruli warriors passing through the of the Dani to seek allies in , portraying the Dani as a settled group with territorial control. Jordanes, in his Getica (551 AD), similarly identifies the Dani as kin to the Suetidi (Swedes) who expelled the Heruli from their Scandza homelands, suggesting the Danes had asserted dominance in southern by this time. These accounts indicate the ethnonym "Dani" referred to a confederation centered on Zealand and Funen, distinct from western Jutland , fostering an emerging collective identity rooted in shared language and customs. Archaeological evidence from the period underscores a warrior-oriented society with advanced craftsmanship and ritual practices, supporting the textual hints of tribal consolidation. At Nydam Mose in southern Jutland, excavations uncovered sacrificial deposits including an oak clinker-built boat dated to 310–320 AD, approximately 23 meters long with 15 pairs of oars, alongside weapons and another vessel, reflecting maritime capabilities and votive traditions linked to elite warfare. The Golden Horns of Gallehus, discovered near Møgeltønder and dated to around 400 AD, consist of two spiral gold horns weighing nearly 7 kg total, adorned with animal motifs blending Nordic and Roman influences, and inscribed with Elder Futhark runes such as "ek Hlewagastiz Holtijaz horna tawido" (I, Hlewagast of Holt, made the horn). These artifacts, likely ceremonial or symbolic of status, evidence literacy, wealth accumulation through trade or plunder, and cultural exchanges during the era's turbulence. By the late , around AD, stabilization occurred amid the decline of continental migrations, allowing the to develop proto-state structures without centralized kingship. Genetic analyses confirm continuity in from the , with minor admixtures rather than replacement, aligning with archaeological stability and the textual of the Danish name as a marker of ethnic cohesion. This identity, forged through local resilience and interactions with migrating kin, laid foundational elements for the later unified kingdom, distinct from broader Germanic dispersals.

Viking Age Raids, Expansion, and Trade (c. 793–1066)


Danish Vikings initiated and sustained raids across Europe from the late 8th century, targeting coastal regions for plunder, captives, and land due to population pressures and opportunities in fragmented Carolingian and Anglo-Saxon realms. While the 793 raid on Lindisfarne monastery is often cited as the Viking Age's onset, it was likely Norwegian-led; Danish expeditions escalated in the 820s, with assaults on Frisia and the Rhineland, including the sack of Dorestad trading hub around 834 by unidentified Scandinavians, followed by Danish king Harald Klak's campaigns. By the 840s, Danish fleets struck England repeatedly, such as the 851 incursion up the Thames reaching London, exploiting weak defenses amid civil strife. These operations yielded silver hoards, slaves for markets, and tribute like Danegeld, funding further ventures as evidenced by coin finds and annals.
The Great Heathen Army, a coalition of Danish forces under leaders like Ivar the Boneless and Ubba, invaded East Anglia in 865, wintering there before conquering Northumbria (866), Mercia (874), and pressuring Wessex, culminating in the late 9th-century partition of England. This expansion established the Danelaw, a vast eastern and northern territory under Danish customary law, fortified settlements (e.g., Five Boroughs: Derby, Leicester, Lincoln, Nottingham, Stamford), and hybrid Norse-Anglo-Saxon governance, with archaeological traces of Scandinavian place-names, artifacts, and legal terms persisting. Danish settlers integrated, boosting agriculture and trade, though reconquests by Alfred the Great's successors like Edward the Elder eroded holdings by 954. Further afield, Danish Vikings raided Francia extensively, besieging Paris in 845 under Ragnar Lodbrok (per Frankish annals paying 7,000 pounds silver ransom) and continuing through the 860s-880s, prompting fortifications like the Danevirke rampart extensions. In 911, Rollo's Norse-Danish band, after ravaging the Seine valley, secured Normandy via the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte with Charles the Simple, receiving land in exchange for baptism and homage, transitioning raiders to feudal counts with lasting dynastic impact. Irish Sea ventures yielded Dublin as a Danish stronghold from c. 840, blending raiding with slave-trading hubs. Trade paralleled aggression, with Denmark's emporia facilitating exchange amid raids' disruptions. Hedeby (Haithabu), at the Jutland base of the Schlei inlet, emerged c. 770 as Scandinavia's premier entrepôt, minting coins, crafting goods (amber, iron, textiles), and handling Baltic imports (furs, honey, slaves) alongside Frankish wines, Islamic silver dirhams, and Byzantine silks, per excavations revealing over 100 workshops and a diverse population. Linked by overland routes to Ribe and waterways to the North Sea, it bridged eastern (Volga-Baltic) and western networks, with Arab traveler Ibn Fadlan noting Scandinavian merchants c. 922; decline followed 10th-century shifts to urbanizing kingdoms. Other sites like Aarhus (Aros) supported local commerce in agrarian surpluses. This dual economy—plunder fueling trade investments—sustained Denmark's 10th-11th century consolidations under kings like Gorm the Old, though overt raiding tapered post-1016 Cnut's English throne seizure.

Christianization and Monarchical Consolidation (10th–11th Centuries)

Gorm the Old, reigning approximately from 936 to 958, is recognized as the first reliably attested king of Denmark, establishing Jelling as a central power base amid predominantly pagan tribal structures. He commissioned the smaller Jelling stone in memory of his wife Thyra, reflecting early efforts to consolidate authority through monumental constructions, though Christianity had not yet taken hold. Harald Bluetooth, Gorm's son, succeeded around 958 and markedly advanced monarchical unification and Christianization. Baptized circa 965, likely influenced by military pressures from Holy Roman Emperor Otto I following defeats in the 960s, Harald proclaimed on the larger Jelling stone—erected in memory of his parents—that he had "won for himself all of Denmark and Norway and made the Danes Christian." This top-down conversion, driven more by political alliances and royal decree than widespread popular adoption, marked Denmark's official entry into Christendom, with Harald organizing initial church structures and building ring forts for defense and control. His realm encompassed Jutland, Zealand, and parts of Norway, fostering administrative cohesion through Christian institutions that provided literate clergy and tithe systems to support royal power. Harald's push for provoked resistance, culminating in a by his Sweyn Forkbeard around , who ousted his and briefly reverted to pagan practices, expelling German bishops amid perceptions of overreach in foreign influence. Sweyn ruled until 1014, conquering in and nominally accepting for diplomatic gains, though his saw intermittent . His , Canute the Great, ascending in by 1018 after securing in 1016 and by 1028, further solidified the through ruthless suppression of , strategic marriages, and church , including laws mandating Christian observance and pilgrimages to . Canute's , reliant on naval power and loyal jarls, integrated Danish territories under a centralized Christian framework, with bishops appointed to key sees like Lund by the early 11th century, enhancing royal legitimacy and administrative reach despite underlying tensions from incomplete grassroots conversion. By the mid-11th century, under successors like Hardecanute, the interplay of royal ambition and ecclesiastical embedding had transformed Denmark from fragmented chieftaincies into a cohesive kingdom, where Christianity served as a tool for internal unity and external alliances, though pagan elements persisted in rural areas for generations. This era's consolidations laid enduring foundations, evidenced by archaeological finds of early churches and runestones blending Norse and Christian motifs.

Medieval Expansion and Union

High Medieval Empire under Valdemar Dynasty

The Valdemar dynasty's rule marked a period of aggressive expansion for , transforming it into a dominant Baltic power between 1157 and 1241, often termed the Valdemarian Age. Following decades of , Valdemar I ascended as sole in 1157 after defeating Sweyn III at the Battle of Grathe Heath on October 23, 1157, ending the immediate of internal fragmentation. His reign focused on securing Denmark's southern borders through participation in the Wendish Crusade, including the decisive conquest of the island of Rügen in 1168, where Danish forces under Absalon destroyed the pagan temple of Svantevit at Arkona, facilitating Christianization and tribute extraction from Slavic peoples. Valdemar I's diplomatic maneuvering also gained papal recognition for Danish independence from Holy Roman imperial oversight, strengthening monarchical authority. Under Canute VI (1182–1202) and especially Valdemar II (1202–1241), Danish ambitions extended further into and the eastern Baltic. Valdemar II initiated conquests by seizing in 1201 and in 1207, incorporating these territories into the and asserting control over key routes. The 1219 campaign against culminated in the on , 1219, where Danish forces Estonian pagans, leading to the establishment of the of under Danish rule; this is traditionally associated with the origin of the Dannebrog , purportedly falling from the as a divine sign. By 1220, a treaty with the Livonian Brothers of the Sword divided , with Denmark holding the northern provinces of Revala and Harria, marking the zenith of Danish imperial reach that included vassalage over Pomerania, Mecklenburg, and Estonian lands. However, overextension and regional coalitions led to reversal. Valdemar II's captivity from 1223 to 1224 by Henry of Schwerin weakened Danish positions, and the Battle of Bornhöved on July 22, 1227, saw his army decisively defeated by a North German alliance led by Adolf IV of Holstein, resulting in the loss of Holstein, Lübeck, and other southern territories, confining Danish influence primarily to and . Despite these setbacks, Valdemar II's domestic reforms, including the promulgation of the in 1241, codified feudal rights and royal privileges, laying foundations for centralized governance. The dynasty's later rulers, such as Eric IV (1241–1250), faced internal strife and further erosions of Baltic holdings, signaling the empire's decline amid rising German and Swedish pressures.

Civil Conflicts and Decline (13th–14th Centuries)

The death of Christopher I in 1259 marked the end of the direct Valdemar dynasty, leading to a succession contested by rival claimants from collateral branches of the . Christopher's young son, V, ascended under the regency of his mother, Margaret Sambiria, who defeated challengers including I, , in battles such as at Lo Heath in 1259, securing Eric V's position through force and papal support. These early conflicts weakened central authority, as regional dukes and nobles exploited the instability to assert local control. Eric V's (1259–1286) intensified tensions between and the and church, culminating in the håndfæstning of 1282, Europe's first that formally royal prerogatives, including taxation and judicial powers, in exchange for noble support. Efforts to centralize power and fund wars against provoked backlash; Eric V's alleged favoritism toward lowborn advisors fueled noble discontent, leading to his assassination at Finds in 1286 by a group of magnates, an act never fully prosecuted despite trials. This underscored the 's growing leverage, as subsequent kings faced enforced charters and fragmented loyalties. Eric VI Menved (1286–1319) inherited a throne amid minority rule by his mother Ingeborg and heavy financial burdens from ongoing wars with German counts, resulting in burdensome taxation that alienated peasants and towns. His childless death led to his brother Christopher II (1320–1326, 1329–1332), whose reign saw desperate measures including pawning crown lands—such as Funen and Jutland—to Holstein counts for loans, effectively ceding de facto control to foreign creditors. Exiled in 1326 after noble uprisings, Christopher's brief return ended with his death in 1332, triggering the interregnum of 1332–1340, during which Holstein nobles ruled much of Denmark as pledge holders, fostering anarchy and territorial losses. The 14th century compounded decline through demographic catastrophe: the Black Death arrived in 1349, ravaging Denmark with mortality estimates of 30–50% of the population, disrupting agriculture, trade, and labor in Jutland and beyond. This plague, alongside prior civil strife and economic strain from pawned estates, eroded royal fiscal base and administrative capacity, elevating noble estates into semi-autonomous domains while central monarchy teetered on collapse until Valdemar IV's election in 1340. The era's causal chain—succession vacuums enabling noble entrenchment, fiscal desperation prompting alienations, and pandemic shock—illustrated how internal divisions hastened Denmark's transition from imperial ambitions to fragmented vulnerability.

Kalmar Union and Scandinavian Hegemony (1397–1523)

The was established on , 1397, when I, who had assumed regency in in 1387, in 1388, and in 1389 following the deposition of their respective kings, orchestrated the and of her grandnephew Eric of Pomerania as over all three realms at in . This aimed to consolidate power against external threats like the and internal noble factions, with the stipulating mutual defense but preserving each kingdom's laws and councils. retained effective control until her in 1412, during which emerged as the union's dominant partner due to its centralized monarchy and economic strength relative to the more fragmented Swedish and Norwegian aristocracies. Under Eric's rule from 1397 to 1439, Danish hegemony intensified through policies favoring hereditary succession over elective traditions, heavy taxation to fund wars against the Hanseatic League, and appointments of Danish officials in Norway and Sweden, provoking resistance. A major Swedish revolt erupted in 1434 under Engelbrekt Engelbrektsson, who captured key castles and forced Eric's deposition in Sweden by 1436, though Denmark and Norway upheld his kingship until 1439. Eric's successor, Christopher of Bavaria (1440–1448), briefly restored unity but died without heirs, leading to the election of Christian I of the Oldenburg dynasty in 1448 for Denmark and Norway, and 1457 for Sweden after further unrest. Christian I's reign (1450–1481) saw Denmark solidify control over Norway via hereditary ties and pawn Orkney and Shetland to Scotland in 1468–1469 for funds, while Sweden intermittently broke away under regents like Karl Knutsson. The union's later phase under Hans (1483–1513) and Christian II (1513–1523) featured ongoing Swedish opposition, exemplified by Sture the Elder's victories, including the Battle of Brunkeberg in 1471 against Christian I. Christian II temporarily reconquered in but alienated nobles through the on November 4–10, 1520, where approximately 80–100 opponents were executed, sparking a liberation led by . Vasa's forces defeated Danish troops, culminating in Christian II's deposition and 's declaration of independence on June 6, , with Vasa elected king, effectively dissolving the union while Norway remained under Danish rule until 1814. This period underscored Denmark's Scandinavian hegemony, as it enforced monarchical authority and Baltic trade dominance despite persistent rebellions, but ultimate Swedish secession highlighted the union's fragility due to divergent national interests and Danish overreach.

Reformation, Wars, and Absolutism

Lutheran Reformation and State Church (1536)

The death of Frederick I on April 10, 1533, precipitated a in Denmark-Norway, as his successor , the Catholic archbishop-elected , faced opposition from Protestant nobles and the of , Christian, who sympathized with Lutheran reforms. This tension escalated into the Count's War (1534–1536), a pitting Christian's forces against a coalition supporting Christopher and exiled King Christian II, with Lutheran preachers like Hans Tausen rallying Jutland peasants and burghers to the Protestant cause amid widespread anti-clerical sentiment fueled by decades of Lutheran agitation. Christian's armies, led by commanders such as Johan Rantzau, secured victories across Jutland, Funen, and Zealand, culminating in the siege and surrender of Copenhagen on July 29, 1536, after which Christian III entered the city on August 6. On August 12, 1536, Christian III ordered the arrest of three leading Catholic bishops—Jens Andersen Beldenak of Funen, Ronnow of Roskilde, and Iver Skram of Bergen—to neutralize ecclesiastical resistance and secure church revenues for war indemnities, a pragmatic move that underscored the Reformation's fiscal motivations alongside theological ones. The decisive Handelsdag assembly in Copenhagen on October 30, 1536, formalized the Lutheran Reformation through two key ordinances: one restructuring the realm's governance to balance royal authority with noble privileges, and the other proclaiming the Danish Church's adoption of Lutheran doctrine, severing ties with the Roman papacy and vesting ecclesiastical jurisdiction in the crown. This established the Church of Denmark as a national Lutheran institution under royal supremacy, with the king as summus episcopus (supreme bishop), enabling direct state oversight of doctrine, appointments, and finances. The Reformation's involved the of —estimated at one-third of Denmark's —which were auctioned to nobles and burghers to repay debts and royal finances, thereby weakening the old episcopal power and aligning the with the new order. In , the Pomeranian reformer Johannes Bugenhagen, invited by Christian III, drafted the church ordinance (Kirkeordinansen) and consecrated the first seven Lutheran superintendents (replacing bishops) on in Copenhagen's Church of Our Lady, standardizing Augsburg Confession-based , in Danish, and while prohibiting monastic orders. This top-down princely , extending to and , prioritized monarchical consolidation over theological , though it faced sporadic Catholic resistance until the 1540s; by then, the state church's framework ensured Lutheran orthodoxy's dominance, facilitating vernacular Bible translations like Christiern Pedersen's New Testament (1535, revised post-1536) and Hans Hanson's full Bible (1550).

17th-Century Wars and Loss of Eastern Territories

Denmark–Norway's involvement in the initially remained neutral under Christian IV, but 's growing dominance in the Baltic prompted preemptive Danish actions that escalated into conflict. , seeking to dismantle Denmark's toll monopoly and secure unchallenged naval access, launched invasions that Denmark's overstretched resources and internal divisions. These wars, occurring amid broader European power shifts, resulted from 's militarized post-1630s victories, contrasting with Denmark's defensive posture reliant on fortifications and alliances that proved insufficient against Swedish mobility. The Torstenson War (1643–1645) ignited when Swedish Lennart Torstenson, commanding 16,000 troops, invaded and in December 1643, bypassing Danish defenses to ravage supply lines and compel capitulation. Danish forces under Christian IV suffered defeats, including of key positions in by mid-1644, while Swedish naval superiority under Carl Mårten Fleming disrupted Danish . The conflict concluded with the of Brömsebro on , 1645, imposing harsh terms: Denmark ceded Jämtland and Härjedalen permanently to , surrendered and Ösel () temporarily until 1679, and pledged for years as against further . These concessions weakened Denmark's eastern and from Baltic tolls, which aimed to neutralize as a barrier to its imperial goals. Tensions reignited in the Second Northern War (1655–1660), where Denmark–Norway under Frederick III declared war on in 1657, hoping to reclaim concessions amid Charles X Gustav's campaigns in . Swedish forces, numbering around , executed a daring winter march across the frozen Little and Great Belts in 1658, enabling rapid occupation of and , and a of beginning February 11. The ensuing Treaty of Roskilde, signed February 26, 1658, represented Denmark's nadir: it relinquished Scania (Skåne), Blekinge, Bornholm, and Bohuslän—fertile eastern provinces comprising about one-third of Denmark's land area—as well as Trøndelag in Norway, severely curtailing Danish Baltic influence. Sweden's subsequent violation of the truce by advancing on Copenhagen prompted Dutch intervention and a prolonged , ending with the Treaty of Copenhagen on May 29, , which restored Bornholm and Trøndelag but ratified permanent Swedish control over Scania, Blekinge, Bohuslän, and Halland (previously temporary). These territorial amputations, confirmed despite Denmark's later Scanian War bid (1675–1679) to reverse them, stemmed causally from Sweden's tactical innovations—like rapid maneuvers and dominance—outpacing Denmark's static defenses and fiscal strains from prior conflicts. The losses halved Denmark's and base, shifting its strategic focus westward toward and precipitating absolutist reforms under Frederick III to centralize power and avert . Empirical of troop mobilizations (Denmark fielded ~25,000 against Sweden's ~ peak in 1658) and economic tolls underscore how Sweden's opportunistic , unhindered by equivalent Danish counter-mobilization, entrenched these borders enduring into the .

Absolutist Monarchy and Administrative Reforms (1660–18th Century)

Following the devastating losses in the Second Northern War (1658–1660), King Frederick III orchestrated a coup d'état in October 1660, leveraging military support to dissolve the Council of the Realm and declare absolute hereditary monarchy, thereby centralizing executive power in the crown and eliminating aristocratic veto over royal decisions. This shift was formalized in 1665 through the Kongeloven (King's Law or Lex Regia), a document drafted by legal scholars that enshrined divine right monarchy, prohibited future elective elements, and mandated obedience to the sovereign as God's appointed ruler, serving as Denmark-Norway's foundational absolutist constitution until 1849. The immediate effect was the confiscation of noble estates to fund war debts, weakening the traditional aristocracy and enabling recruitment of loyal bureaucrats from non-noble backgrounds to staff the expanding central administration in Copenhagen. Under Christian V (r. ), the first hereditary absolute , administrative reforms professionalized by replacing medieval councils with collegial boards (kollegier) modeled on French and Swedish s, each overseeing specific domains like , admiralty, chancery, and , thus rationalizing and enhancing royal oversight through collegiate consensus rather than noble dominance. To bolster loyalty and , Christian V introduced a of Danish noble titles in 1671, elevating commoners and German officials to based on service, which diluted the old Danish aristocracy's influence and integrated foreign expertise into the . Concurrently, the Danish Code (Danske Lov) of 1683 unified disparate regional laws into a national civil code, standardizing justice, property rights, and administrative procedures across Denmark-Norway, while curtailing local manorial courts in favor of royal-appointed officials. In the 18th century, absolutism evolved toward enlightened efficiency under Frederick IV (r. 1699–1730) and successors, with central bureaucracy expanding to include specialized agencies for finance, customs, and infrastructure, supported by a growing corps of civil servants trained in Copenhagen's new administrative academies. Reforms emphasized fiscal centralization, such as the 1719 establishment of a unified treasury board to combat corruption and streamline tax collection, reflecting causal pressures from recurrent wars that necessitated more extractive and accountable state mechanisms. By mid-century under Frederick V (r. 1746–1766), administrative rationalization extended to local governance, where county governors (amtmænd) were stripped of residual military powers, subordinated to civil oversight, and tasked with implementing royal edicts on agriculture and public works, fostering a hierarchical chain of command from Copenhagen to provinces. These changes, while preserving monarchical supremacy, laid groundwork for later reformist impulses, as evidenced by the 1784 privatkansejllet cabinet's bloodless overhaul, which sidelined conservative councilors for progressive administrators advocating merit-based appointments and economic liberalization within absolutist bounds.

Great Northern War and Economic Reorientation (1700–1721)

Denmark–Norway, under King Frederick IV, entered the Great Northern War in February 1700 as part of an anti-Swedish coalition with Russia and Saxony–Poland, aiming to reclaim lost territories and curb Swedish dominance in the Baltic. Danish forces initially invaded the Duchy of Holstein-Gottorp, a Swedish protectorate, but Charles XII of Sweden rapidly counterattacked, landing troops in Zealand and coordinating with Anglo-Dutch fleets to threaten Copenhagen. This forced Denmark to sue for peace, signing the Treaty of Travendal on August 18, 1700, which restored the pre-war status quo, guaranteed Holstein-Gottorp privileges in Schleswig, and obligated Denmark to withdraw from the alliance. Denmark observed neutrality for nearly a decade, monitoring Swedish campaigns against Russia. The decisive Russian victory at the Battle of Poltava on July 8, 1709, shattered Swedish military power and prompted Denmark's re-entry into the war in October 1709, alongside renewed Saxon involvement. Danish armies occupied Swedish Pomerania, Stralsund, Wismar, and the island of Rügen, but faced reversals: Swedish forces under Magnus Stenbock defeated them at the Battle of Gadebusch on December 20, 1712, while earlier, in March 1710, Swedes repelled a Danish incursion into Scania at the Battle of Helsingborg, expelling occupiers. Prolonged fighting strained Danish resources, including naval engagements and support for anti-Swedish operations in northern Germany. The death of Charles XII during the siege of Fredriksten Fortress on November 30, 1718, weakened Sweden further, enabling negotiations. The Treaty of Frederiksborg, concluded on July 3, 1720, at Frederiksborg Palace, ended hostilities between Denmark–Norway and Sweden. Sweden acknowledged Danish control over the entirety of Schleswig, curtailing Holstein-Gottorp claims and influence there, but Denmark relinquished occupied territories in Pomerania, Rügen, and Bremen-Verden without regaining southern Swedish provinces like Scania or Blekinge. Sweden also agreed to a payment of 600,000 Danish rigsdaler as compensation for Danish war costs. The conflict exacted heavy tolls, with military expenditures exceeding 100 million rigsdaler and contributing to fiscal exhaustion under absolutist rule. Combined with the ravages of the 1711–1713 plague epidemic, which claimed up to 250,000 lives—roughly one-fourth of Denmark's population—the war necessitated a pivot toward economic recovery over further expansionism. Post-1720 policies under Frederick IV emphasized debt reduction through tax reforms, naval rebuilding to protect Baltic trade routes, and state encouragement of manufacturing and agricultural improvements, fostering a mercantilist framework reliant on Sound Toll revenues and colonial ventures in the West Indies and India for revenue stabilization.

18th–19th Century Reforms and Nationalism

Enlightenment Influences and Agricultural Revolution

During the , Denmark-Norway experienced the of Enlightenment principles emphasizing reason, rational administration, and empirical , particularly under the absolutist monarchies of Frederick V (r. 1746–1766) and Christian VII (r. 1766–1808), though tempered by the regime's centralized control. These ideas, drawn from European thinkers like and the physiocrats, influenced through cameralist reforms aimed at state and economic , with mandatory schooling from 1739 introducing basic and rational thought to broader populations. Agricultural and administrative innovations became primary for these influences, as elites and officials sought to scientific methods to boost output amid post-war recovery, contrasting with more upheavals elsewhere in . The agricultural revolution, accelerating from the 1780s, dismantled feudal constraints and reoriented production toward efficiency, directly embodying Enlightenment priorities of rational land use and individual initiative. Prior to reforms, the stavnsbånd (adscription) system, enacted in 1733, bound peasants to their birth estates until age 36 (later 40), restricting labor mobility and incentivizing subsistence farming on open-field commons with low yields—often yielding only 4–5 times the seed sown in cereals. Influenced by physiocratic advocacy for agrarian primacy and estate management treatises, a royal commission under Crown Prince Frederick (future Frederick VI) promoted enclosures, crop rotation, and new techniques like clover integration and potato cultivation, transforming communal lands into consolidated private holdings by the 1790s. A pivotal on , 1788, abolished the stavnsbånd effective immediately for those over 14, with a phase-out by , freeing approximately ,000 peasants from hereditary bondage and enabling labor, purchases, and in improvements. This catalyzed a shift from grain monoculture to animal husbandry, with dairy and pork production rising sharply—bacon exports to Britain, for instance, increased from negligible levels to over 50,000 tons annually by the early 19th century—supported by selective breeding and manure-based fertilization that boosted soil fertility. While yields initially varied, overall productivity grew 20–30% by , laying foundations for export-led growth, though reforms exacerbated rural inequality as wealthier peasants consolidated land at the expense of smaller holders in fertile areas. These changes reflected causal linkages between Enlightenment and : freed labor and incentives spurred , while state-directed commissions ensured systematic , averting the subsistence crises plaguing unreformed European agrarian systems. By the century's end, Denmark's agricultural output supported from 800,000 in 1750 to over 900,000 by 1800, with surpluses nascent industry and underscoring the reforms' empirical despite uneven distribution.

Napoleonic Era, Loss of Norway, and Continental Blockade (1807–1814)

Denmark-Norway endeavored to preserve neutrality in the escalating , but British intelligence anticipated French coercion to seize the Danish fleet, prompting a preemptive naval and . British forces, under James Gambier and General Cathcart, arrived off in early 1807, landing 27,000 troops and initiating a bombardment of the city from September 2 to 5. The intense shelling, involving over 100,000 projectiles, destroyed around 1,000 buildings and caused nearly 200 civilian deaths, compelling Danish surrender on September 7. Britain seized the bulk of the Danish Navy, including about 20 ships of the line and 17 frigates, incorporating many into the Royal Navy. The unprovoked assault alienated Denmark, leading King Frederick VI to sign a defensive alliance with Napoleon at Fontainebleau on October 31, 1807, which obligated Denmark to join the Continental System—a French economic blockade barring British goods from Europe. Denmark's navy remnants and privateers targeted British shipping, but Britain's retaliatory blockade severed vital Baltic trade routes, isolating Denmark-Norway economically. Danish forces, numbering around 30,000, clashed with Sweden—which had aligned with the anti-Napoleonic coalition in 1812—in border skirmishes from 1813, defending Norwegian territories amid Napoleon's waning fortunes. Compliance with the Continental System devastated Denmark's agrarian , centered on , timber, and shipments previously destined for Britain; of this , coupled with British naval , fostered rampant yet triggered , bankruptcies, and the Danish state's in early 1813. expenditures and lost revenues compounded , eroding fiscal stability and welfare, as coastal to Denmark's —ground to a halt. Napoleon's defeat at in 1813 and subsequent enabled Sweden, under John, to enforce territorial demands backed by British and Russian subsidies. The , signed , 1814, forced to cede mainland to , dissolving the 434-year originating in 1380, while retained , the , and . This amputation halved Denmark's land area and , inflicting lasting geopolitical diminishment and economic contraction, as had supplied timber, iron, and . Norway's subsequent resistance, culminating in its and brief with , yielded a Swedish-Norwegian union but underscored the treaty's coercive origins, absent Norwegian representation.

Constitutional Monarchy and Liberal Reforms (1849)

The adoption of Denmark's first constitution on June 5, 1849, marked the end of absolute monarchy, which had prevailed since 1660, and established a constitutional framework limiting royal authority while introducing representative institutions. Triggered by the European revolutions of 1848, including widespread demonstrations in Copenhagen during March of that year, King Frederik VII responded by dismissing his conservative cabinet and appointing a liberal ministry led by Adam Wilhelm Moltke. A constituent assembly, convened in October 1848 and comprising 152 members elected indirectly by provincial assemblies, drafted the document, approving it on May 25, 1849, before Frederik VII's signing transformed Denmark into a hereditary constitutional monarchy. This peaceful transition contrasted with more violent upheavals elsewhere in Europe, reflecting the Danish liberals' emphasis on negotiated reform amid economic pressures from post-Napoleonic losses and agrarian modernization. The constitution, known as the or Grundloven, outlined a bicameral legislature called the , consisting of the () with 76 members elected by direct and the Landsting () with members selected indirectly by electoral colleges favoring wealthier voters. extended to approximately 15% of the —specifically men over who paid at least 3 rigsdaler in direct taxes—excluding women, servants, and the poor, thereby aligning with liberal priorities of property-based representation over universal equality. The king retained prerogatives such as appointing ministers, dissolving , and commanding the armed forces, but legislative power shifted to the Rigsdag, requiring royal assent for laws while embedding ministerial responsibility to . Judicial independence was affirmed, with the Supreme Court empowered to review administrative acts, drawing from Enlightenment principles of separated powers. Liberal reforms embedded in the constitution emphasized individual liberties, including freedoms of speech, assembly, and religion, alongside protections against arbitrary arrest and guarantees of property rights, which facilitated subsequent economic liberalization. These provisions dismantled absolutist controls over censorship and guilds, promoting a market-oriented society that built on prior agrarian changes like the 1788 abolition of serfdom and enclosure movements. The National Liberal Party, dominant in early Rigsdag sessions, advanced policies such as tax equalization and infrastructure investment, fostering industrialization and urban growth, though tensions with conservative landowners in the Landsting often delayed implementation. By embedding parliamentary sovereignty, the 1849 framework laid the groundwork for Denmark's evolution toward broader democracy, enduring with amendments until its unicameral revision in 1953.

Schleswig-Holstein Conflicts and National Defeat (1848–1864)

The Schleswig-Holstein conflicts stemmed from longstanding disputes over the duchies' status under the Danish crown, where Schleswig maintained ties to Danish law and Holstein belonged to the German Confederation with a predominantly German-speaking population. Following the death of King Christian VIII on January 20, 1848, and influenced by European revolutionary fervor, Denmark's liberal government pursued an "Eider Danish" policy to integrate Schleswig into the Danish realm while excluding Holstein, prompting uprisings by German nationalists in the duchies who sought separation or union with Germany. This ignited the First Schleswig War (1848–1851), pitting Danish forces against provisional Schleswig-Holstein assemblies backed by Prussian and other German troops, with initial clashes at Flensborg on March 24, 1848, and a major Danish defensive stand at the Dannevirke fortifications. The featured sporadic but fierce engagements, including the Battle of Idstedt on , , where approximately ,000 combatants clashed and Danish forces under Gerhard von Rumohr achieved a but failed to decisively dismantle rebel armies. , supported by Swedish-Norwegian contingents, ultimately prevailed through naval superiority and international , culminating in an on , , formalized by the of Berlin, and the London Protocol of , , which reaffirmed Danish control, designated Prince Christian of as to the childless Frederick VII, and preserved Schleswig's administrative separation from to balance Danish and German interests. Tensions reignited after Frederick VII's death on November 15, 1863, when Christian IX ascended the throne but faced pressure from Danish nationalists to consolidate power. On November 18, 1863, he signed the November Constitution, establishing shared legislative institutions between and Schleswig while detaching Holstein and Lauenburg, a move that contravened the 1852 protocol by eroding Schleswig's autonomy and fueling German claims, including those of Frederick of Augustenburg. The German Confederation's diet demanded revocation on October 1, 1863, and under , allied with , issued an ultimatum on January 16, 1864, which rejected, leading to invasion on February 1, 1864, and the Second Schleswig War. Denmark's 38,000 troops confronted a Prussian-Austrian force exceeding 60,000, equipped with modern rifled artillery and needle guns, exposing Danish fortifications' vulnerabilities. The pivotal Battle of Dybbøl on April 18, 1864, saw Prussian forces under Prince Frederick Charles bombard and storm the entrenched Danish position after two months of siege, resulting in over 5,000 Danish casualties and the fortress's fall, shattering morale and enabling advances into Jutland. Danish retreats to Als Island in June and naval constraints isolated forces, prompting an armistice on August 1, 1864, and the Treaty of Vienna on October 30, 1864, by which Denmark ceded Schleswig, Holstein, and Lauenburg to joint Prussian-Austrian administration, retaining only the island of Ærø. This defeat cost Denmark approximately 40% of its territory and half its population, inflicting profound economic and demographic setbacks, including the exodus of up to 50,000 ethnic Danes from Schleswig and a national reckoning over irredentist policies that disregarded German majorities and great-power dynamics. Christian IX narrowly avoided abdication amid internal recriminations, while the outcome bolstered Prussian hegemony, paving Bismarck's path to German unification, as Denmark's isolation—lacking effective allied intervention despite British sympathies—highlighted the perils of defying continental balances without military parity.

Industrialization, Urbanization, and Economic Growth

Denmark's economic recovery after the 1864 defeat in the Schleswig-Holstein War prompted a shift toward internal reforms, with agriculture remaining dominant but undergoing modernization through land enclosures completed by the 1860s and the rise of cooperative organizations. The cooperative movement, initiated in the 1870s and expanding rapidly in the 1880s, allowed smallholder farmers to pool resources for mechanized processing, particularly in dairy and meat production; by 1890, cooperatives handled about half of Denmark's butter output, enabling efficient exports of high-value products like butter and bacon to Britain. This agricultural industrialization, driven by technological adoption such as steam-powered cream separators introduced in the 1880s, contributed to per capita income growth exceeding 2% annually from 1870 to 1913, outpacing many European peers. Industrial development started modestly in the 1870s with factories in textiles, machinery, and brewing concentrated in and provincial centers like and , fueled by engines and imported . occurred in the late 1890s amid structural shifts toward , with manufacturing's share of increasing from 13% in 1890 to 21% by 1914, though industry never overtook agriculture's output share, which hovered around 30-40% of GDP into the early 20th century. Key sectors included , where output tripled between 1890 and 1910, and tied to cooperatives, reflecting Denmark's resource-based path rather than heavy industry dominance seen in or Britain. Urbanization intensified alongside these changes, as rural displaced labor; the urban share from about 20% in 1870 to 35% by 1911, with Copenhagen growing from 135,000 inhabitants in 1870 to 462,000 by 1916 to migration and increase. Provincial towns like Aarhus expanded similarly, from 8,000 in 1870 to over 50,000 by 1911, supporting industrial clusters, though Denmark retained a decentralized urban compared to more centralized European nations. This migration strained housing and sanitation but facilitated labor pools for factories and services, underpinning sustained economic expansion with GDP per capita reaching levels rivaling Western Europe's leaders by 1914.

20th Century: World Wars and Modern State

World War I Neutrality and Economic Strain

Denmark declared neutrality , immediately following the outbreak of , with the decision endorsed by King Christian X and all major to avoid entanglement in the conflict between its neighboring powers, and Britain. To enforce this , the mobilized approximately 58,000 troops , with over 80 percent stationed on near to deter potential invasions, though troop numbers were later reduced to 34,000 by late 1915 and 24,500 by autumn 1917 as the stabilized. Diplomatic efforts prioritized accommodation with , including laying defensive minefields in the Great Belt, Little Belt, and Øresund straits at Berlin's insistence, despite conflicting with Denmark's 1912 neutrality proclamation, which helped preserve territorial integrity amid submarine warfare and naval pressures from both belligerents. The severely strained Denmark's export-dependent , particularly , which relied on shipping , , eggs, and other to Britain pre-war while importing one-third of its consumption and primarily from . British naval measures indirectly disrupted these flows by halting most Allied exports to Denmark after October 1917—except —aiming to Danish re-exports to , where shipments had surged to compensate for lost markets, leading to initial import halts and a pivot to bilateral deals like the September 1918 trade agreement with the United States. Shortages emerged acutely by summer 1917, prompting of and , alongside spikes and prices tripling, as global disruptions limited inflows despite Denmark achieving an overall surplus through neutrality. retail reached 16-18 percent, fueled by a trebled money supply and idle capital chasing scarce , devaluing the krone to about 60 percent of its pre-war value by 1920. Government responses included 1914 laws enabling state intervention via supply commissions to regulate prices and distribution, averting total but exacerbating social tensions, with syndicalist strikes and protests over , shortages, and inequality intensifying from 1916 and peaking in 1917-1918 amid influences from the Russian Revolutions. These measures, while preserving neutrality, highlighted the causal vulnerabilities of Denmark's to belligerent blockades and wartime , fostering domestic debates on versus continued controls that persisted postwar.

Interwar Democracy, Economic Depression, and Social Policies

Denmark's parliamentary democracy, established through the 1849 constitution and reinforced by proportional representation introduced in the 1920 elections, faced challenges from political fragmentation during the interwar years, with governments frequently changing due to the multi-party system's demands for coalitions among the Social Democrats, Venstre (agrarian liberals), Conservatives, and Radikale Venstre (social liberals). The Social Democratic Party, led by Thorvald Stauning, formed minority governments in 1924–1926 and again from 1929 onward, often relying on support from the Radikale Venstre to pass legislation amid rising labor unrest and demands for economic intervention. This system preserved democratic stability, averting the extremist takeovers seen in other European nations through cross-party compromises rather than suppression of opposition. The economy, heavily reliant on agricultural exports like bacon and butter to Britain and Germany, experienced initial post-World War I growth but entered a severe downturn with the onset of the Great Depression in 1929, as global protectionism and falling commodity prices eroded Denmark's trade surplus. Gross domestic product contracted by approximately 15% between 1929 and 1932, with agricultural output declining due to overproduction and tariffs such as Britain's 1932 Import Duties Act. Unemployment surged, with registered rates reaching 12% by 1933, though estimates including non-registered workers suggest totals near 25–30% of the labor force, straining municipal relief systems and prompting mass emigration reversals. In response, the Stauning government abandoned the gold standard in 1931, devaluing the krone by about 20% to restore export competitiveness, a move that facilitated recovery but initially fueled inflation concerns. The pivotal Kanslergade Agreement of January 30, 1933, negotiated between the Social Democrats and Radikale Venstre at Prime Minister Stauning's residence, committed to wage and price freezes, deficit-financed public works, and agricultural subsidies, while securing opposition tolerance for these measures in exchange for no further radical reforms. This pact stabilized the economy, with industrial production rebounding by 1935 and unemployment falling to under 15% by 1939, laying groundwork for expanded state involvement without undermining market mechanisms. Social policies advanced through crisis-driven legislation, building on pre-existing voluntary unemployment funds from 1907 and mandatory insurance for certain workers since 1919, with the 1933 agreement enabling broader state subsidies for relief and job programs targeting urban and rural unemployed. Measures included subsidized housing initiatives and family allowances piloted in the mid-1930s, reflecting Social Democratic priorities for universalist support over means-tested aid, though fiscal constraints limited scope until wartime occupation. These policies mitigated social unrest—such as the 1931 "hunger marches"—by prioritizing labor market activation over pure redistribution, preserving incentives for work amid high taxes funding the interventions. Overall, interwar adaptations emphasized pragmatic consensus, enabling Denmark to navigate depression-era pressures while maintaining democratic institutions and averting authoritarian drifts.

Nazi Occupation, Resistance, and Liberation (1940–1945)

invaded Denmark on , , as part of , launching a coordinated assault with airborne and naval forces to secure airfields and ports ahead of the parallel invasion of . Danish forces, outnumbered and outgunned, engaged in sporadic fighting but offered limited resistance, with the government surrendering after approximately six hours to avoid heavy casualties and destruction. King Christian X, assessing the military imbalance, authorized the capitulation, allowing the Danish monarchy and civilian government to remain nominally in place under German oversight. This swift conquest minimized immediate bloodshed, with Danish losses totaling around 16 soldiers killed and 20-30 wounded. Under the occupation, Denmark adopted a of pragmatic with German authorities, led by , to retain administrative , protect the , and safeguard relative to harsher occupations elsewhere in . This approach permitted the of parliamentary , food systems, and even cultural activities, while German forces—numbering about 50,000 by 1941—focused on transit routes to rather than direct control. King Christian X symbolized national defiance by refusing personal allegiance to Hitler and conducting daily horseback rides through Copenhagen without escort, fostering public morale amid growing resentments over economic strains and cultural impositions like bans on Freemasonry. However, this cooperation eroded as Allied victories mounted and German demands intensified, culminating in the August 1943 crisis when widespread strikes and protests—known as the August Uprising—prompted the Germans to dissolve the Danish government, impose martial law, and assume direct rule. The , initially fragmented and comprising communist, socialist, and conservative groups, expanded significantly after 1943, coordinating against German to disrupt supply lines and munitions production. Key actions included rail derailments, factory explosions, and ship sinkings, with groups like BOPA ( Against Occupation ) and Holger Danske executing over 1,000 operations by war's end, causing delays in German logistics equivalent to thousands of tons of materiel. Resistance fighters, numbering up to 20,000 by 1944, also assassinated approximately 400 Danish collaborators and informants, while enduring reprisals such as the execution of 102 civilians in retaliation for sabotage. A pivotal effort was the October 1943 rescue of Denmark's Jewish population: upon learning of impending deportations, resistance networks, aided by ordinary citizens and fishermen, evacuated about 7,200 of 7,800 Jews to neutral Sweden via sea routes, with only 464 captured and sent to Theresienstadt concentration camp, where fewer than 50 died. Denmark's liberation began on May 4, 1945, when German forces in northwest Europe surrendered to British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, with the announcement broadcast via BBC radio at 20:35 Danish time. British troops, including the 11th Armoured Division, crossed the border from Germany on May 5, advancing to Copenhagen with minimal resistance, as most Wehrmacht units capitulated without combat. King Christian X and the provisional government reasserted authority, declaring a state of emergency to curb post-liberation unrest, including the summary execution of over 40 collaborators by resistance groups before formal trials. The island of Bornholm, however, remained under German control until Soviet forces bombarded and occupied it in late April, holding it until April 1946 due to negotiated withdrawal terms. Overall, the occupation resulted in about 3,300 Danish deaths, including 800 from resistance-related violence and 750 from concentration camps, reflecting a relatively low toll compared to other occupied nations due to early cooperation and late-stage defiance.

Post-War Welfare State Expansion and Marshall Plan Aid

Following the liberation of Denmark on May 5, 1945, the economy faced challenges from wartime disruptions, including inflation and shortages, though physical destruction was minimal compared to other occupied nations. The United States provided Denmark with $385 million in Marshall Plan aid between 1948 and 1952, equivalent to approximately 2.5% of the total $13 billion distributed to 16 European countries, primarily to address balance-of-payments deficits and facilitate imports of essential goods like food, fuel, machinery, and raw materials. This aid, channeled through Denmark's participation in the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC), supported agricultural modernization, industrial upgrades, and export recovery, contributing to a post-war GDP growth boom averaging 4-5% annually in the late 1940s and 1950s, which outpaced many peers despite the occupation's economic strains. The influx of funds enabled fiscal stability, allowing the to invest in and without immediate , while dynamism—rooted in pre-war agricultural and —amplified recovery. By , Danish industrial production had surpassed pre-war levels by %, and agricultural exports, a core economic , rebounded strongly, providing the base for social spending. This growth underpinned the welfare state's expansion under Social Democratic-led , which held power intermittently from onward, building on interwar like the 1933 Kanslergade Agreement's crisis-response measures. Welfare reforms accelerated in the 1950s, with the 1956 Old Age Pension Act establishing a universal, tax-financed pension system for all citizens over 67, replacing means-tested benefits with a flat-rate base supplemented by income-related additions, funded by rising progressive taxes on a booming economy. Complementary policies included expanded child allowances in 1946 and enhancements to unemployment insurance, reflecting Social Democratic priorities for decommodification amid full employment, though these were calibrated to avoid disincentives to labor participation. By the late 1950s, public expenditure on social services had risen to 10-12% of GDP, laying groundwork for later universal healthcare and education expansions, sustained by export-led growth rather than aid dependency post-1952. This model emphasized universalism to foster social cohesion, but empirical outcomes showed sustained private investment and productivity gains as causal drivers of affordability, not state expansion alone.

Cold War Alignment, NATO Entry, and EEC Rejection (1949–1973)

Denmark abandoned its longstanding policy of neutrality after World War II amid escalating Cold War tensions, particularly following the Soviet-backed coup in Czechoslovakia in February 1948 and the Berlin Blockade later that year, which heightened fears of communist expansion into Scandinavia. Initial efforts focused on a regional Scandinavian Defense Union with Norway and Sweden, but negotiations collapsed in January 1949 when Sweden demanded provisions preserving its neutrality, prompting Denmark and Norway to accept a U.S. invitation to join NATO in March 1949. The Danish Folketing ratified the North Atlantic Treaty on April 4, 1949, making Denmark one of NATO's 12 founding members, a decision driven by its strategic vulnerability—guarding the Baltic Sea entrance and controlling Greenland's vast territory for potential Allied air bases—despite domestic pacifist sentiments and a narrow parliamentary majority. Throughout the Cold War, Denmark maintained firm alignment with the Western bloc, contributing modestly to NATO forces while adhering to a "footnote policy" under Social Democratic governments (1953–1968), which emphasized collective defense but prohibited nuclear weapons, permanent foreign bases, or large-scale peacetime troop deployments on Danish soil proper, reflecting public aversion to militarization. This approach balanced alliance commitments with domestic politics, as evidenced by Denmark's allowance of U.S. bases in Greenland (e.g., Thule Air Base established 1951 under a bilateral defense agreement) for strategic early-warning radar against Soviet threats, while avoiding similar facilities in metropolitan Denmark to mitigate leftist and neutralist opposition. Denmark participated actively in NATO exercises and integrated its forces into alliance commands, with defense spending averaging around 2-3% of GDP, though internal debates—often framed by Soviet propaganda as Denmark being a "weak link"—tested resolve during crises like the 1956 Hungarian uprising and 1968 Prague Spring. Regarding European economic integration, Denmark initially rejected joining the European Coal and Steel Community (1951) and the founding European Economic Community (EEC) in 1957, prioritizing free trade with the UK-led European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which it co-founded in 1960 to safeguard agricultural exports and fisheries—a sector comprising over 10% of exports—without supranational political commitments. Applications for EEC membership were submitted in 1961 and 1967 alongside the UK, but French President Charles de Gaulle's vetoes of British entry (1963 and 1967) stalled progress, as Denmark conditioned its accession on the UK's to avoid isolation from its primary trading partner, which accounted for 30-40% of Danish exports. Negotiations resumed after de Gaulle's 1969 resignation, culminating in treaty signature in 1972; a national referendum on October 2, 1972, approved entry with 63.3% voting yes on a 90.1% turnout, overcoming opposition from leftist parties concerned about sovereignty loss and agricultural protections under the Common Agricultural Policy. Denmark formally acceded to the EEC on January 1, 1973, alongside the UK and Ireland, marking a pragmatic shift toward deeper Western economic ties amid global trade shifts, though with ongoing reservations about federalism.

Contemporary Denmark (Late 20th–21st Centuries)

EU Integration, Opt-Outs, and Maastricht Treaty Ratification

Denmark's integration into the European deepened following the of the in , which committed the to the internal market's completion by 1992. The , signed at on 7 , proposed establishing the with pillars for (), (CFSP), and cooperation in and affairs (JHA). While the Danish () approved the on 12 May , constitutional requirements mandated a due to its implications for sovereignty transfer. On 2 1992, Danish voters in a , with 50.7% voting against and 49.3% in favor, on a of 85.5%. The narrow defeat reflected widespread concerns over loss of national control, particularly regarding the euro's potential , defense commitments, and supranational in JHA areas like and judicial . In response, the Danish , led by Poul Schlüter's Conservative-liberal , negotiated exemptions at the European Council in Edinburgh on 11-12 December 1992. These yielded four opt-outs: exemption from the third stage of EMU (preventing obligatory euro ); non-participation in EU defense under the Western European Union framework; reservations on applying Title V (CFSP) and Title VI (JHA) protocols, limiting binding obligations in visa, asylum, and policing matters; and clarification that EU citizenship supplemented, rather than replaced, Danish nationality. A domestic "" brokered in 1992 across parties ensured parliamentary support for the adjusted terms. This paved the way for a second referendum on 18 May 1993, where 56.7% approved against 43.1% opposed, with again at approximately 86%. The outcome, under the subsequent Social Democratic government of , enabled Denmark's formal of the on 29 1993, allowing the EU's on 1 1993. The opt-outs preserved Danish exceptions from eurozone membership—later reaffirmed by a 2000 referendum rejecting the currency—and from obligatory participation in EU defense initiatives, while permitting case-by-case engagement in JHA via protocols. These arrangements reflected Denmark's "flexible integration" model, balancing market access with safeguards against federal overreach, though they isolated the country from full EMU convergence criteria and common security structures.

Economic Flexicurity Model and Globalization Challenges

Denmark's flexicurity model emerged in the 1990s as a response to structural shifts in the labor market, formalized through reforms that balanced employer flexibility with worker . The term "flexicurity" was coined in 1995 by Dutch sociologist Hans Adriaansens to describe the Danish approach, which built on decades of tripartite negotiations between , employers, and unions back to the post-World II . Key reforms under the 1993-2001 Social Democratic reduced , allowing easier hiring and firing—Denmark ranks among the OECD's least regulated for dismissal procedures—while expanding active labor market policies (ALMPs) such as job , subsidized , and mandatory activation requirements after unemployment benefits begin. This model spends more on ALMPs per unemployed person than any other OECD country, approximately 2-3% of GDP annually in the early 2000s, fostering high labor turnover (around 25-30% annually) alongside re-employment rates exceeding 70% within six months for many job losers. The model's security pillar includes generous unemployment insurance, covering up to 90% of prior wages for two years, conditional on active job search and participation in programs to mitigate moral hazard and adverse selection. Empirical studies confirm "threat effects" from these activation mandates, where the prospect of mandatory training or job placement encourages quicker returns to work, contributing to Denmark's structural unemployment rate stabilizing below 5% through the 2000s despite global shocks. During the 2008-2009 financial crisis, flexicurity proved resilient: unemployment peaked at 6.5% in 2010, rising 4 percentage points from pre-crisis levels, but re-employment inflows remained robust due to flexible adjustments and ALMPs, outperforming rigid labor markets in southern Europe where long-term unemployment surged over 20%. Globalization intensified pressures on Denmark's export-dependent economy, which derives over 50% of GDP from trade, exposing manufacturing sectors to offshoring and competition from low-wage economies like China post-2001 WTO accession. From the mid-1980s, Danish firms accelerated outsourcing, with small and medium enterprises (SMEs) leading aggressive offshoring strategies—more so than European peers—shifting production abroad while retaining high-value activities domestically, resulting in a 10-15% decline in manufacturing employment share from 1990 to 2010. Flexicurity facilitated adaptation by enabling rapid labor reallocation to service and knowledge-intensive sectors, such as pharmaceuticals and renewables, where Denmark maintains competitive edges; for instance, wind energy exports grew 300% from 2000 to 2020 amid global demand. However, challenges persisted, including wage compression to sustain competitiveness—collective agreements cap differentials—and vulnerabilities to supply chain fragmentation, as evidenced by 2022-2024 disruptions raising import costs for critical inputs. Despite successes, globalization exposed limitations in flexicurity, such as elevated public spending (tax-to-GDP ratio near 46% in 2023) funding benefits that some analyses link to slower productivity growth in low-skill sectors compared to more liberal economies. Reforms in the 2010s tightened activation rules and shortened benefit durations for certain groups to counter disincentives, yet empirical evidence shows persistent integration hurdles for non-Western immigrants, with their employment rates lagging natives by 20-30 percentage points, straining the model's universality amid demographic shifts. OECD assessments highlight the need for further digitalization adaptations to sustain flexibility against automation and trade barriers, as fragmented global trade could reduce Danish GDP by 1-2% under pessimistic scenarios.

Immigration Inflows, Integration Failures, and Policy Tightening (1980s–2010s)

During the , Denmark experienced a shift from primarily labor migration—largely Turkish guest workers from the and —to increased and asylum inflows, with non-Western immigrants rising from about 1% of the in to over 4% by , predominantly from , , , and emerging streams from the and . By the , asylum seekers surged due to conflicts like the Bosnian War, adding tens of thousands annually, followed by ; non-Western immigration accounted for the majority of inflows, with net migration turning positive from 1998 onward and foreign-born residents reaching approximately 8% of the by . These groups included significant numbers from Somalia, Iraq, and Iran, straining public resources as initial labor migrants transitioned to welfare dependency amid economic recessions. Integration challenges became evident in economic disparities, with non-Western immigrants facing employment rates as low as 20% in the mid-1990s—compared to over 70% for natives—and unemployment rates two to three times higher through the 2000s, persisting even among second-generation descendants who exhibited lower earnings and higher joblessness than native peers. Welfare reliance was pronounced, with non-Western households overrepresented in social benefits due to skill mismatches, language barriers, and cultural factors discouraging labor market participation, as evidenced by administrative data showing sustained gaps despite mandatory integration programs introduced in the 1990s. Socially, overrepresentation in crime statistics emerged, with individuals of foreign background showing higher arrest and conviction rates—particularly for violent offenses—than Danes, linked in studies to socioeconomic factors and imported norms from origin countries rather than solely discrimination. Segregation intensified, fostering "parallel societies" in urban enclaves like parts of Copenhagen and Aarhus, where by the late 1990s non-Western residents exceeded 50% in certain neighborhoods, correlating with elevated unemployment, low education levels, and crime; these areas, later formalized as "vulnerable zones" in policy, exhibited self-reinforcing isolation with limited interaction with mainstream Danish society. Causal analyses from register-based studies attribute persistent failures to high initial welfare incentives attracting low-skilled migrants, combined with cultural incompatibilities—such as resistance to gender equality or secular norms—exacerbating multigenerational dependency, though official narratives often emphasized discrimination over these structural realities. Policy responses pivoted toward restriction starting in the late 1990s, with a 1999 mandating structured integration courses including and job , though compliance remained low; the 2001 center-right government's "paradigm shift" introduced stricter asylum criteria, ending automatic for refugees and imposing the "24-year rule" in 2002 requiring spouses to be at least 24 years old with ties to to curb migration. Further tightening included asset tests for asylum (), dispersal policies to prevent ghetto formation, and citizenship requirements like proficiency exams by the mid-2000s, reducing annual asylum grants from peaks of over 10,000 in the 1990s to under 2,000 by the 2010s. The 2010 "Ghetto Plan" targeted parallel societies by designating high-immigrant areas for interventions like mandatory kindergarten for children and employment quotas, reflecting cross-party consensus on prioritizing cultural assimilation and self-sufficiency amid evidence of fiscal costs exceeding contributions from non-Western cohorts. These measures halved net non-Western inflows by the late 2010s, though integration gaps endured.

21st-Century Crises: Financial Crash, Refugee Surge, and COVID Response

Denmark experienced significant economic contraction during the 2008 global financial crisis, with real GDP growth falling by approximately 6 percentage points below pre-crisis projections following the acute phase in autumn 2008. The crisis triggered a domestic banking sector collapse, exemplified by the failure of Roskilde Bank A/S, Denmark's eighth-largest bank with assets of 43 billion Danish kroner (about USD 8 billion at the time), which required government intervention and restructuring in early 2008. In response, the government introduced deposit guarantee schemes and provided fiscal support, including liquidity assistance and capital injections totaling around 100 billion DKK across affected institutions, to stabilize the system and prevent broader contagion. These measures, while averting a total meltdown, contributed to a sharp rise in public debt from 26% of GDP in 2007 to over 40% by 2011, alongside declines in private consumption, investment, and employment. The 2015 European migrant crisis led to a surge in asylum applications in Denmark, rising from 14,765 in 2014 to 31,716 in 2015, predominantly from Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq. Residence permits granted to refugees nearly doubled from 6,104 in 2014 to 10,849 in 2015, straining public resources and prompting cross-party consensus on restrictive measures. The government, initially under the center-left coalition, enacted policies including mandatory confiscation of valuables exceeding 10,000 DKK from asylum seekers to fund integration, suspension of family reunifications for two years, and advertising campaigns in Lebanese and other media warning of Denmark's stringent welfare and deportation rules to deter inflows. These actions, later intensified under subsequent administrations, reflected concerns over integration failures from prior inflows, high welfare costs, and cultural incompatibilities evidenced by rising parallel societies and crime rates in immigrant-dense areas; by 2016, Denmark had revoked over 150 Syrian residencies based on improved conditions in parts of Syria. Applications plummeted to under 3,000 annually post-2016, validating the deterrence strategy amid broader EU border controls. Denmark's COVID-19 response, coordinated by Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen's Social Democratic government from March 2020, emphasized early border closures, nationwide lockdowns, and high vaccination uptake to minimize mortality and healthcare overload. The first lockdown on March 11, 2020, shuttered schools, businesses, and gatherings, followed by phased reopenings tied to declining cases; subsequent waves prompted renewed restrictions in late 2020 and 2021, including vaccine passports. Vaccination rollout began December 27, 2020, achieving over 80% full coverage by mid-2021, correlating with low excess mortality: Denmark recorded among Europe's lowest rates, with an estimated 1-2% excess deaths in 2020-2021 and 52 excess deaths per 100,000 in 2022, attributed to compliance, testing, and targeted protections for the elderly. Cause-specific analyses showed minimal non-COVID excess deaths, contrasting with higher burdens in less restrictive Nordic peers like Sweden, though critics noted economic costs exceeding 300 billion DKK and debates over long-term health impacts from deferred care. By 2023, policies shifted to endemic management, with mandates lifted as immunity waned concerns.

Recent Political Dynamics and Reforms (2015–2025)

In the 2015 general election, the center-right Venstre party under secured , forming a supported by the anti-immigration , amid rising concerns over following the European . This administration implemented stricter asylum rules, including reduced benefits for refugees and controls, contributing to a decline in asylum applications from over 31,000 in 2015 to fewer than 10,000 by 2016. Between 2015 and 2018, Denmark enacted approximately 70 amendments to legislation, emphasizing temporary residence permits, mandatory integration programs, and incentives for repatriation, policies initially driven by right-wing pressures but later adopted across the spectrum to address empirical evidence of parallel societies and welfare strain from non-Western . The 2019 election marked a shift as the Social Democrats, led by , won the most seats, forming a that pledged a 70% reduction in by 2030 while maintaining rigorous immigration controls. Frederiksen's approach integrated left-leaning economic expansion—such as increased public spending on welfare—with deterrence measures like external processing of asylum claims and jewelry confiscation from migrants, reflecting a strategic co-optation of voter priorities on integration failures documented in official reports. By 2021, asylum inflows had dropped sharply, with policies framed as protecting social cohesion and the welfare state from unsustainable fiscal burdens, evidenced by net migration data showing non-Western immigrants' higher reliance on transfers. Following the 2022 election, Frederiksen formed a centrist with Venstre and the Moderates, cross-party reforms amid geopolitical tensions. Defense spending surged to meet NATO's 2% GDP target by 2025, including plans to extend conscription from 4 to 11 months and establish a new in response to Russia's invasion of . Social policies advanced with early expansions for manual laborers and strengthened vocational training to counter labor shortages, while a 2025 healthcare reform aimed to redistribute doctors to underserved regions. Education saw a February 2025 agreement overhauling secondary schooling to include new apprenticeships, prioritizing skills alignment with economic needs. During Denmark's 2025 EU Council Presidency, the government advocated for harmonized migration restrictions, emphasizing returns and border enforcement, while committing artillery donations to Ukraine and reinforcing NATO-EU ties. Economic stability persisted through flexicurity adjustments, with GDP growth projected at 3.0% for 2025 driven by industrial output, though fiscal expansion targeted green transitions via tripartite pacts. These dynamics underscored a consensus on pragmatism: tightening inflows to sustain high trust in institutions, as low asylum numbers by mid-2025—contrasting European trends—correlated with preserved welfare generosity and public support.

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