There isn't one. There hasn't been one for 65 years. There's a president, and a prime minister, though. Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, is el president.
Iceland's mostly ceremonial head of state is a President, but its actual head of government is a Prime Minister.
No. They have a Prime Minister and a President so it is a bit like a democracy, but still considered a socialist government.
No. Iceland is republic, so it has a president not a monarch.
No
Iceland is a unitary parliamentary republic, while Australia is a constitutional monarchy.
Iceland has a government of democracy.
The Danish monarchy began in 1536-1864. At that time were Norwegian, parts of Holstein/Holsten in Germany, parts of Sweden, Iceland and Faroe Islands a part of Denmark but because of something (it's a long story) we lost those parts, and in 1864 there was no more Danish monarchy. We still have our Royal Family, and today it's called 'Kongeriget Danmark/Kingdom of Denmark'
Iceland is a northern independent country. Iceland is an island.
The capital of Iceland is Reykjavik.Reykjavík has officially been the capital of Iceland since 1845.
Iceland is a republic. It has not had any form of monarchy since possibly Viking times. up until the middle of World War II, they were a colony of Denmark, then went independent. as such , they do not have royal customs. Denmark, Norway, Sweden, yes, Iceland and Finland No. Estonia and Latvia were Grand Duchies under the Russian Empire so may have had grand ducal oversight. Some people consider Latvia and Estonia borderline Scandinavian.
Absolute monarchy
Iceland is IS.
Two continents have Iceland.
Iceland has no official motto.
Iceland. On mainland Europe, the westernmost country is Portugal.
The similarities between a monarchy and constitutional monarchy are that their are both monarchies.