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The 25 provinces have no administrative function today but remain historical legacies and the means of cultural identification, and their traditions are maintained by present day authorities. In some cases, the administrative counties correspond almost exactly to the provinces, as is Dalarna to Dalarna County and Gotland , which is a Province , County and a Municipality . In other cases, they do not, which then enhances the cultural importance of the provinces. In addition, the administrative units are subject to continuous changes – several new counties were for instance created in the 1990s – while the provinces have had their historical borders outlined for centuries. The provinces of Sweden are still used in colloquial speech and cultural references, while for example the provincial ''Småländskt glasblåseri'', referring to Småland glass-blowing manufactures, is an accepted formulation, the county counterpart ''Kalmarskt glasblåseri'' would be regarded as a misnomer. The provinces of Sweden can therefore not be regarded as an Anachronistic concept. PROVINCES Sweden is divided into the three lands: Götaland , Svealand , Norrland . = Götaland
= Svealand
= Norrland
HISTORY The origins of the provincial divisioning lays in the Petty Kingdom s that were gradually more and more submitted to the rule of the King Of Sweden during the Consolidation Of Sweden . Until the country law of Magnus Ericson in the 1360 s, each of these lands still had its own laws with its own assembly (the Thing ), and in effect governed themselves. The historical provinces were held as Duchies , but newly conquered provinces added to the kingdom either received the status of a duchy or a county, depending on its importance. Of the conquests made after the separation from the Kalmar Union in 1523 only some were incorporated as provinces. The most permanent acquisitions were from the Treaty Of Roskilde in 1658 , in which the former Danish Scanian Lands – the provinces of Skåne , Blekinge and Halland – along with the Norwegian Bohuslän , Jämtland and Härjedalen , became Swedish and gradually integrated. Other foreign territories were ruled as Swedish Dominions under the Swedish monarch, in some cases lasting for two or three centuries. Norway was in Personal Union with Sweden from 1814 to 1905 but never became an integral part of Sweden. The division of Västerbotten that took place with the cession of Finland caused the ''new'' province of Norrbotten to emerge, eventually being recognised as a province in its own right. It was granted a coat of arms in 1995. History provinces according to lands Sweden was historically divided into the four lands: Götaland and Svealand consisted before (cirka) 1000 AD by ; the main tribe of Svealand was the Suiones (or the "historical Swedes"). Norrland was the denomination for all the unexplored northern parts. Österland in Finland, was an integral part of Sweden, but was in 1809 annexed by Russia as the Grand Duchy Of Finland , and since 1917 the independent country Finland . HERALDRY At the funeral of King Gustav Vasa (Gustav I) in 1560 the coats of arms for the provinces were displayed together for the first time, many having been granted for that particular occasion. After the separation of Sweden and Finland the traditions for respective provincial arms diverged, most noticeably following an order by the Privy Council on January 18 , 1884 . This established that that all ''Swedish'' provinces carry ducal crowns, while the ''Finnish'' provincial arms still distinguished between ducal and county dignity. A complication was that the representation of Finnish ducal and county coronets resemble Swedish coronets of a lower order, namely county and baronial. The division of Lapland necessitated a distinction between the Swedish and the Finnish arms. For more information, see Lands Of Sweden and Lands Of Finland or articles on respective land. Götaland Götaland consists of the following ten provinces, within present-day Sweden. Until 1658, Bohuslän was a part of Norway, while Halland, Skåne and Blekinge were part of Denmark. Also, until 1645, Gotland was a part of Denmark. Obviously neither of those provinces were part of Götaland before that.
Svealand Svealand consists of the following six provinces all within present-day Sweden:
Norrland Norrland consists today of nine provinces. The development of the Västerbotten and Norrbotten provinces were a gradual shift during the 19th century, and Swedish Lapland was united with Finnish Lapland as Lapland until 1809. Counted into the historical Norrland, but located in present day Finland, is the province Österbotten .
Österlanden In present-day Finland , the Österlanden consists of the following seven provinces:
SEE ALSO
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