The ancestral danish tribe lived in Skåneland, Sjælland, Fyn and the smaller islands in the vicinity. To the north was the geats, swedes and norwegians. To the west the jutes. The term "scandinavian" that encompasses all these tribes and their modern day descendants is derived from the name for Skåne / Scania.
Actually, the name of Scandinavia comes from the Scandes mountains, which permiates the 3 countries in Scandinavia. Or at least used to, when Skåneland was Danish, but it's been Swedish for almost 400 years now.
@@BlazeLycan Actually, it is belived to be the other way around. Scandinavia derrives from old germanic words Skaðan and Awjo. Skaðan mening dangerous and Awjo menaing land. This due to all the dangerous sand reefs that surrounds the southern coast. Skaðan Is also very close to the scandinavian words for "damage" (Skada, Skade , Skader)
@@_CorruptedBlade Yes, Denmark lost Scania along with other provinces during the Second Northern War. We were forced to give up a third of our territory by signing the Roskilde Treaty (1658). The Swedish march across the belts was devastating to us. We did get Bornholm back though, and the Norwegians Trøndelag, when we signed the Treaty of Copenhagen (1660).
this is beautiful :) edit: this song has come to represent a certain bittersweet time in my life, and i listen to it when i want that odd mix of nostalgia and relief to kick me in the stomach again. love this song :))
Skåneland är historiskt främst Skåne, Halland och Blekinge, =Skåneland (danska: Skånelandene) (i viss betydelse i litteraturen oftare Skånelandskapen eller de skånska landskapen är en kulturhistorisk region i södra Skandinavien, vars storlek och avgränsning varierar en del i olika användningar. Skåneland kan avse: Ett i vissa historiesammanhang använt sammanfattande namn för de områden i dagens södra och sydvästra Götaland, som vid freden i Roskilde 1658 permanent tillföll Sverige, nämligen landskapen Blekinge, Halland (hade redan temporärt tillfallit Sverige vid freden i Brömsebro 1645) och Skåne. Den danska ön Bornholm kan även inkluderas i begreppet. Däremot brukar inte Bohuslän, som fram till Roskildefreden tillhörde den norska delen av det gemensamma kungariket Danmark-Norge, räknas till Skåneland. Ett poetiskt namn för landskapet Skåne. Så används det i olika dikter till exempel "Skåneland" av Nils Norling (1880-1956) eller "Hembygden" av Nils Hildestrand (1849-1916).
Would you maybe consider doing "Ack Värmeland du sköna"? Heard it the first time one of the times I spent valborgsmässoafton in Värmland and a small choir came to the fire we had (this was at a scout center). It gave me shivers, and together with the sound of the rapids in the background it was magical.
that accent was cleansed and people speaking like that ridiculed. My father grew up with Scanians that spoke very old and very different from the current accent. I feel that Skåne was taken from us, it's sad.
"Så länge som vi LEVA här på jorden" - detta är en pluralform, jättefint! Det borde dock vara "Vi ÄLSKA vårt land", om det skall vara plural hela vägen. Vackert hur som helst!
“De bästa land”, jah tykker nock de låter fel, “de vackraste land” låter mer tidsenligt och seriöst som nationalsong. Fuck va andra säger, detta är den officiella Skåneländska nationalsongen! Scanian National Anthem! Skåne, Halland, Blekinge och (Bornholm)😁
@Kavniar no at the peace in Copenhagen 1660 Sweden gifted Bornholm to the danish when setting the lines of Sweden, before then Sweden was the owner and ruler of Bornholm, Sure Peasant uprisings was backed by Denmark but they were put down and the last uprise wasn’t put down because Karl x saw the island as meaningless. Also it wasn’t really a gift since Denmark gave estate farms and royal castles
@@monnaak Not quite. It was actually where the Danes came from. Skåne and Sjælland. They spread west and conquered the Jutes. So a historically Danish, now mostly Swedish region would be more accurate.
@@grumpiesttitan7930 Tja, som malmöit själv skulle jag vilje påstå att det inte hade varit så dumt, speciellt med extra autonomi. Bäst hade dock varit ett enat skandinaviskt kejsardöme eller union, det hade vi kommit långt på
@@nagonnagonting1433 jag tror dock inte vi hade kunnat även om vi ville vi har liksom inte riktigt något att exportera förutom en jävla massa växter och trä och så är ju malmö i en ganska dålig sitation just nu
Kinda, but not a very active one. They used to be a core part of Denmark. Skåne and the island to the west, Sjælland were actually where Denmark got it's start as a country. This has resulted in them having quite a unique dialect of Swedish today, as they were forced to speak Swedish, but still retain some of their old Danish expressions, words and ways of pronouncing things.
Both yes and no... there are some really small movements but nothing mayor. It’s a historical region that belonged to denmark until the mid 1600s when the area was concured by sweden. Two years later one of the parts of this region got back to denmark and this was the island of bornholm. The other parts of skåneland is/was skåne, blekinge and halland. And i would say it is probably nothing at all in bornholm. But in skåne i think it is the largest amount of ”separatists” and those are not so many... and in blekinge and halland there are probably a few people but not more than that... and these ”separatists” that exists doesn’t all want the same... som say independent skåneland and some say they want to be part of denmark again... however there are a strong regional patriotism in the area. Especially in skåne where they are really proud. Halland and blekinge are less regional-patriotic but still we have feelings for our home and feel commections to the other parts of skåneland. We speak dialects that to some extent is very similar... basically vocabulary is the most simular... halland and blekinge however have got a more swedish-influenced pronunciation, basiclly influenced from the bordering swedish peovinces småland and västergötland. Halland and blekinge young people are not generally so dialectal in their speak anymore, just speaking with accent and a few regional words... so those are easily confused to be from småland.. skåne uses more dialect vocabulary even young people but also there mostly accent, but the accents of that part of skåneland are more significant. If i would spell in my dialect (eastern blekinge) it would basically be a mix between danish and swedish standard language with a lot of extra vowels and lack of R:s, and then some regional skåneland vocabulary and local eastern blekinge vocabulary. Young people in all of skåneland tends do understand most of the dialectal vocabulary but not use it so much. And a fun fact, me and friends from halland and skåne together with a friend from småland and one from stockholm did a fun thing. We three guys from the skåneland regions tried to have a conversation in so much dialect we could and see if we understood eachother and if our friends from småland and stockholm understood anything... the guys from småland and stockholm didn’t get much (i mean people in stockholm have problems understanding me when i use no dialectal vocabulary...) but we three skåneland guys had a good conversation with no problems. But back to your question... not a strong separatist movement no. We generally love denmark and we rather go to copenhagen than to stockholm. Copenhagen tries to gather the skåneland regions to make some kind of business region.
@@johanfagerstromjarlenfors Actually, the Scanian dialect has many sounds and words that they’ve developed on their own. To Swedes, Danisha and Scanian sound similar. But if you would speak Swedish with a Danish accent it would not at all sound like Scanian
@@malteaweberg7532 I have studied the nordic language history. Scanian, blekingska and halländska are danish dialects in the same family as bornholmsk and they differs from the rest of the danish. Try listen to a bornholmer and you’ll understand. In halland and blekinge the accent have been more affected by the swedish language cause of the ban on danish when we got occupied. You are right about the swedish with a danish accent though... that sounds nothing like scanian, it sounds almost the same as swedish with german accent
420danklord chungusreddit asså ni hatar oss och hotar att sälja oss.. men när vi vill någonting så tror ni att ni äger oss och kan bestämma vad vi ska vara. Ew
@@Eddies_Bra-att-ha-grejer Efter en googling tycks du ha rätt. Husknut är synonym till hushörn. Och ser man bilder på korsvirkeshus respektive "röd stuga" stämmer det du säger. Dvs det är vanligt att färga timret i en röd eller rödbrun nyans. Tack.
@@hadesmapping8654 You should all leave Nato and we should make Nordic military alliance. Seems that actually might become reality, as the Nordic combat uniform project continues.
SATAN MUPPET you are the only one thinking that, Your king was a retard and took Skåne as Denmark had no king. You are supposed to be Denmark and Skåne wants to be Danish. So speak for your self
Om vi blir danskar hoppar jag av Öresundsbron, samma om vi stannar me Sverige länge till, landet går fan åt helvete. Frihet till Skåne ska det va! Och det är bara pluspoäng om vi får resten av Skåneland med oss.
@@ericboom1712 yes but scandinavian languages just aren't beautiful that's why all of us joke about eachother, there are many beautiful languages but in my opinion, these 3 just aren't
@@AlxzAlec That explains why we English-speakers joke about eachother, but i'm aware of it and it doesn't really bother me since i'm semi billingual (French).
This is such a typicly Swedish song in the sense it sounds like it almost wants to rise from minor to major in some places but then just goes...naah, let's not. Let's keep it melancholic.
@@johanfagerstromjarlenfors no not really, it’s also connected to Sweden, And Sweden bought it then Denmark decided to take it. Some hundred years later Russia and Denmark declared war on Sweden and Denmark lost, Sweden took back there claim.
It is part of Skåneland. It was actually conquered by Sweden along with the rest, but the population managed to throw out the ruler there and join Denmark again.
Was Denmark. Still have some danish heritage, both culturally and linguistically, and in many ways a closer connection to Copenhagen than Stockholm, but Skåne is swedish none the less.
@@edvaure7553 but they're apart of skåneland which is what the song and the video shows. Skåneland is a more historical cultural region compared to actual skåne.
@Pruttkudde Jeg græder ikke. Det ville blive noget af en udgift og et kæmpe oprydningsarbejde at få Skåne tilbage. Men I har jo fået rigeligt med krigsduelige beboere de sidste mange år. Måske de tager Skåne :)