Blekinge

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Blekinge  is a traditional province (landskap) in the south of Sweden, which corresponds with today's administrative Blekinge County. It borders Småland, Skåne and the Baltic Sea.

The name "Blekinge" comes from the adjective bleke, which corresponds to the sea term for "dead calm".

Blekinge
Map
The provinces of Sweden with Blekinge highlighted
Coat of Arms
Land Götaland
Main corresponding county Blekinge County
Indigenous dialect(s) {{{dialects}}}
Area 2,900 km²
Flower Mullein
Animal Stag beetleBeetle

Contents

Provinces serve no administrative function in Sweden. Instead, that is done by the counties of Sweden. However, Blekinge has virtually the same boundaries as the corresponding Blekinge County.

Blekinge has a scenic archipelago and is sometimes called the "Garden of Sweden".

Historically Blekinge belonged to the Danish crown together with the provinces Skåne and Halland, making up the eastern part of the Danish kingdom. Blekinge has been a Swedish province since 1658, following the Treaty of Roskilde.

Towns in Blekinge with Swedish city privileges were: Karlshamn (chartered in 1664), Karlskrona (1680), Ronneby (1387), Sölvesborg (1445)

Of these towns, Karlskrona is for more than 300 years the principal naval base in Sweden, and in 1998 it became a site of the UNESCO World heritage program.

Former coat of arms
Former coat of arms

During the sixteenth century, the province used a coat of arms depicting a crowned hill rising from the sea, and the symbol is known from several official Danish documents. The colours are uncertain, but expert Anders Thiset suggested a green hill on a red shield. This symbol was only used during the Danish administration and replaced by the current coat of arms by the Swedish administration.

Blekinge was granted its current arms at the funeral of Charles X Gustav of Sweden in 1660, based on a seal from the 15th century. Symobolically the three crowns from the Coat of arms of Sweden had been placed on the trunk of the tree to mark the change in status of the former Danish province, that now belonged to Sweden. The arms is represented with a ducal coronet. Blazon: "Azure, an Oak Tree eradicated Or ensigned with three Crowns palewise of the same."

Hundreds of Sweden were the historical sub-divisioning of a province. Blekinges hundreds were: Bräkne Hundred, Eastern Hundred, Lister Hundred, Medelstad Hundred.

In Blekinge two main dialects appear. The divider of this has historically been the Mörrumsån, near the historical sight of Elleholm. West of this divider, the dialect was historically closely related to Danish and eastern Scanian. East of this divider, the dialect has more in common with Småland. Today, this divider is not as significant as before, with the exception of Listerlandet with its special language. The eastern dialect of Danish can also be found on the Danish island of Bornholm.

The variety is called Blekingska but should rather be divided into Western Blekingska (or Västblekingska) and Eastern Blekingska (or Östblekingska).

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