EUROPE

yoorˈəp, 6th largest continent, c.4,000,000 sq mi (10,360,000 sq km) including adjacent islands (1992 est. pop. 512,000,000). It is actually a vast peninsula of the great Eurasian land mass. By convention, it is separated from Asia by the Urals and the Ural River in the east; by the Caspian Sea and the Caucasus in the southeast; and by the Black Sea, the Bosporus, the Sea of Marmara, and the Dardanelles in the south. The Mediterranean Sea and the Strait of Gibraltar separate it from Africa. Europe is washed in the north by the Arctic Ocean, and in the west by the Atlantic Ocean, with which the North Sea and the Baltic Sea are connected.

Physical Geography

The huge Alpine mountain chain, of which the Pyrenees, the Alps, the Carpathians, the Balkans, and the Caucasus are the principal links, traverses the continent from west to east. The highest points are Mt. Elbrus (18,481 ft/5,633 m) in the Caucasus and Mont Blanc (15,771 ft/4,807 m) in the Alps. Europe's lowest point (92 ft/28 m below sea level) is the surface of the Caspian Sea. Between the mountainous Scandinavian peninsula in the north and the Alpine chain in the south lie the Central European Uplands surrounded by the great European plain, stretching from the Atlantic coast of France to the Urals.

A large part of this plain (which is interrupted by minor mountain groups and hills) has fertile agricultural soil; in the east and north there are vast steppe, forest, lake, and tundra regions. South of the Alpine chain extend the Iberian, Italian, and Balkan peninsulas, which are largely mountainous. The Po plain, between the Alps and the Apennines, and the Alföld plain, between the Carpathians and the Alps, are fertile and much-developed regions. Among the chief river systems of Europe are, from east to west, those of the Volga, the Don, the Dnieper, the Danube, the Vistula, the Oder, the Elbe, the Rhine, the Rhône, the Loire, the Garonne, and the Tagus.

Climate

The climate of Europe varies from subtropical to polar. The Mediterranean climate of the south is dry and warm. The western and northwestern parts have a mild, generally humid climate, influenced by the North Atlantic Drift. In central and eastern Europe the climate is of the humid continental-type with cool summers. In the northeast subarctic and tundra climates are found. All of Europe is subject to the moderating influence of prevailing westerly winds from the Atlantic Ocean and, consequently, its climates are found at higher latitudes than similar climates on other continents.

Regions

Europe can be divided into five geographic regions: Scandinavia (Iceland, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Denmark); the British Isles (United Kingdom and Ireland); W Europe (France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, and Monaco); S Europe (Portugal, Spain, Andorra, Italy, Malta, San Marino, and Vatican City); Central Europe (Germany, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Austria, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary); SE Europe (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Hercegovina, Serbia and Montenegro, Albania, Macedonia, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, and the European part of Turkey); E Europe (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, and the European portion of Russia); and by convention the Transcaucasian countries of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.

People

Indo-European languages (see The Indo-European Family of Languages, table) predominate in Europe; others spoken include Basque, Maltese, and the languages classified as Finno-Ugric, Samoyedic, Bulgaric, and Turkic. Roman Catholicism is the chief religion of S and W Europe and the southern part of central Europe; Protestantism is dominant in the United Kingdom, Scandinavia, and the northern part of Europe; the Orthodox Eastern Church predominates in E and SE Europe; and there are pockets of of Muslim predominance in the Balkan Peninsula and Transcaucasia. With the exception of the northern third of the continent, Europe is densely populated. Eleven cities have populations exceeding two million inhabitants; London, Moscow, and Paris are the largest cities.

Economy and Transportation

Europe is highly industrialized; the largest industrial areas are found in W central Europe, England, N Italy, Ukraine, and European Russia. Agriculture, forestry (in N Europe), and fishing (along the Atlantic coast) are also important. Europe has a large variety of minerals; coal, iron ore, and salt are abundant. Oil and gas are found in E Europe and beneath the North Sea. Coal is used to produce a significant, but declining amount of Europe's electricity; in Norway and Sweden and in the Alps hydroelectric plants supply a large percentage of the power. More than 25% of Europe's electricity is generated from nuclear power.

The transportation system in Europe is highly developed; interconnecting rivers and canals provide excellent inland water transportation in central and W Europe. The Channel Tunnel connects Great Britain to France. The countries of Europe engage heavily in foreign trade, and some of the world's greatest ports are found there. Rotterdam with the huge new Europort complex, London, Le Havre, Hamburg, Genoa, and Marseilles are the chief ports.

Outline of History

Historical Currents

The beginnings of civilization in Europe can be traced to very ancient times, but they are not as old as the civilizations of Mesopotamia and Egypt. The Roman and Greek cultures flourished in Europe, and European civilization—language, technology, political concepts, and the Christian religion—have been spread throughout the world by European colonists and immigrants. Throughout history, Europe has been the scene of many great and destructive wars that have ravaged both rural and urban areas. Once embraced by vast and powerful empires and kingdoms, successful nationalistic uprisings (especially in the 19th cent.) divided the continent into many sovereign states. The political fragmentation led to economic competition and political strife among the states.

Modern History

After World War II, Europe became divided into two ideological blocs (Eastern Europe, dominated by the USSR, and Western Europe, dominated by the United States) and became engaged in the cold war. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was formed as a military deterrent to the spread of Communism and sought to maintain a military balance with its eastern equivalent, the Warsaw Treaty Organization. Cold war tensions eased in the 1960s, and signs of normalization of East-West relations appeared in the 1970s.

In Western Europe, the European Economic Community (Common Market), the European Coal and Steel Community, and the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom) merged in 1967 to form the European Community. Known since 1993 as the European Union, the organization aims to develop economic and monetary union among its members, ultimately leading to political union. The Eastern European counterpart was the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON), which, like the Warsaw Treaty Organization, dissolved with the breakup of the Soviet bloc in the early 1990s.

The loosening of political control sparked a revival of the long pent-up ethnic nationalism and a wave of democratization that led to an overthrow of the Communist governments in Eastern Europe. In the former Yugoslavia, ethnic tensions between Muslims, Croats, and Serbs were unleashed, leading to civil war and massacres of members of ethnic groups, or "ethnic cleansing," in areas where other groups won military control. During the early and mid-1990s most of the former Soviet bloc countries embarked on economic restructuring programs to transform their centralized economies into market-based ones. The pace of reform varied, especially as the hardships involved became increasingly evident. Meanwhile, in Western Europe the European Union, amid some tensions, continued working toward greater political and economic unity, including the creation of a common European currency.

Bibliography

See S. B. Clough et al., ed., The European Past (2 vol., 1964); Denis de Rougemont, The Idea of Europe (tr. 1966); John Bowle, The Unity of European History: A Political and Cultural Survey (rev. and enl. ed. 1970); Richard Mayne, The Europeans: Who Are We? (1972); René Albrecht-Carrié, A Diplomatic History of Europe since the Congress of Vienna (rev. ed. 1973); European Security and the Atlantic System, ed. by W. T. Fox and W. R. Schilling (1973); Stephen Usherwood, Europe, Century by Century (1973); Dennis Swann, Competition and Industrial Policy in the European Community (1983); George Schöpflin, The Soviet Union and Eastern Europe (1986); Richard Mayne, ed., Western Europe (1987); T. G. Jordan, The European Culture Area (2d ed. 1988); James Dudley, 1992, Understanding the New European Market (1990); B. Gwertzman and M. Kaufman, The Collapse of Communism (1990).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Europe  - 63521 results

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...radically modify the political landscape in Europe: in different but simultaneous moves...create, together, a democratic united Europe. It was also the beginning of a long...principles promoted by the Council of Europe and considered as the fundamental European...
Constitutions of Europe Texts Collected by the Council of Europe Venice Commission Volume II COUNCIL CONSEIL OF EUROPE DE LEUROPE MARTINUS NIJHOFF PUBLISHERS LEIDEN BOSTON 2004
...Relations with Some Countries of South-Eastern Europe 447-8 Stability Pact for South-Eastern Europe 447 , 448 , 452 Stabilization and Association...independence of 439 opposition to SECI 451 Southern Europe, comparison of transformation with that of...
5 Where does Europe end? Dilemmas of inclusion and exclusion William Wallace The Cold War gave Western Europe a secure and stable eastern frontier, guarded by the Russians. Western Europe became Europe, and Europe was firmly part...
...and was redesignated Strategic Command Europe. The SACEURs operational headquarters...Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers in Europe (SHAPE), located at Casteau. Supreme Allied Commanders Europe General Dwight D. Eisenhower Dec. 1950...
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"Deads Lands" or "New Europe"? Reconstructing Europe, Reconfiguring Eastern Europe: "Westerners" and the Aftermath of the World War. by W. Brian Newsome A "NEW EUROPE" OR "DEAD LANDS"? In Britain during 1916, a periodical called...
Europe and Its Fertility: From Low to Lowest Low...changes in family formation that took place in Europe during the last two decades of the twentieth...spreading quickly to Central and Eastern Europe. Policies and economic trends, long...
Geographical Imaginaries of the New Europe and the East in a Business Context: The Case of Italian...constantly shifting, and mutually defining constructions of Europe, Eastern Europe, and more recently the New Europe, focusing mostly on...
Europe from Down Under: A Case-Study in the...Development of European Studies Programmes outside Europe. by Peter Morgan Introduction: the paradigm...altogether, with aspects of contemporary Europe being covered in generalist courses - if...
East Central Europe and the European Social Policy Model...of that process, and even "The End of Europe" has been hastily declared, (1) it...political and academic debates across Europe. On the one hand, the concept has appeared...
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What do we mean by Europe by J.G.A. Pocock Europe today is a contested notion. Historians and critics debate...Statesmen, administrators, and corporate executives view Europe as, for better or worse, a very real entity, with a clear...
BRITAIN AND EUROPE OFF-SHORE OR ON-BOARD by Stuart Woolf...man in the street continues to call `Europe (as if Britain did not form a part of...historical relationship between Britain and Europe merits more serious attention. In reality...
Rethinking Europe by Charles A. Kupchan The Atlantic security...Americas heavy-handed strategic role in Europe. This rethinking entails addressing two...indefinitely, or is the time approaching for Europe to begin putting into place its own security...
Europe and Its Discontents. by XVI Benedict What is the true definition of Europe? Where does it begin, and where does it end? Why, for example, is Siberia not considered part of Europe, even though many Europeans live there, and it...
Europe on the brink: democratic values and the...speed, cheered on by the United States. Europe, the argument goes, has been the place...Department with a single number to call in Europe. Those assumptions need to be questioned...
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NASDAQ to Launch SuperMontage Europe. Byline: William Wright Nasdaq Europe is planning to go live in October with SuperMontage Europe, a trading platform based on SuperMontage in the US, to boost trading volumes and activity. The launch of...
...Briton urges NAFTA expansion to Eastern Europe by Marc Selinger An influential member...former communist countries of Eastern Europe so they can prosper and stabilize their...Soviet satellites in Central and Eastern Europe have the skilled workers and drive needed...
Ford Expects to Make Profit in Europe despite Tough Times. Fords European...conditions. The pledge came from Ford of Europe chairman Lewis Booth. "We have declared that we will be profitable in Europe this year and we expect to stay there...
...Now Secretary General of the Council of Europe, Terry Davis. This Is His Speech Yesterday...all, a few words about the Council of Europe. What it is or rather what it is not...which has the words "Council" and "Europe" in its name. First of all, the Council...
Big Brothers reaches out to Europe by Didi Tang Big Brothers and Sisters...teenagers, is expanding into Eastern Europe to help youngsters from families devastated...big brothers and sisters in Eastern Europe in the mid-1990s, there were worries...
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encyclopedia articles on: Europe  - 2106 results

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EUROPE yoor p, 6th largest continent, c.4...Strait of Gibraltar separate it from Africa. Europe is washed in the north by the Arctic Ocean...regions. Among the chief river systems of Europe are, from east to west, those of the Volga...
RADIO FREE EUROPE (RFE), broadcasting organization established...others. They are now sent to E and SE Europe, Russia, the Caucasus, Central Asia...the Internet. See R. Holt, Radio Free Europe (1958); A. A. Michie, Voices through...
COUNCIL OF EUROPE international organization founded in 1949 to promote greater unity within Europe and to safeguard its political and cultural...signed under the auspices of the Council of Europe deal with humanitarian, cultural, economic...
...ORGANIZATION FOR SECURITY AND COOPERATION IN EUROPE (OSCE), international organization...Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) in 1973, during the cold war...foster peace, prosperity, and justice in Europe. There are now 56 OSCE members, including...
TURKEY , country, Asia and Europe Turk. Turkiye tur keye , officially...780,574 sq km), SW Asia and SE Europe. It borders on Iraq (SE), Syria...numbers of Turks are employed in Western Europe, especially in Germany. Government...
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