Norrland

Norrland is a historical land of Sweden. To the west it represents the northern half of Sweden bounded to the south by Svealand and to the east it represents the northern half of Finland bounded to the south by sterland.

Provinces

Norrland was made up of the following nine provinces:

In the 20th century the northern part of Westrobothnia occasionally came to be regarded as a separate traditional province:

History

As the Swedish kingdom expanded north both on the western (Swedish) side and the eastern (Finnish) side of the Gulf of Bothnia the territories uncovered were organised into provinces. The peace treaty of 1645, Denmark and Norway ceded Jemtia and Herdalia to Sweden and which were incorporated as provinces. The later peace treaty of 1658 would see Sweden recieve Skne, Bohusln, Trondheim, Halland and Blekinge. Upon the separation of Sweden and Finland in 1809 Norrland was split in two parts, leaving all of Ostrobothnia, and the eastern parts of Laponia and Westrobothnia to the Grand Duchy of Finland, as a part of the Russian Empire.

See also

 

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