No, Iceland has a population of about 318, 452 people and an area of 103, 001 km2. Vatican City is the smallest country in the world with a population of about 829 people and an area of 0.44 km2.
No. At 2,175,590 km2 in area (840,000 square miles), Greenland is the world's largest island.
In the world? No.
No.
Youngest Country in the world.
Youngest, you've escaped Reykjavik!
India
197 or 204
spain
countary style
Russia thought it doesn't have the biggest population.
Spain have won the world cup in 2010.
Using the most likely definitions of those words, Iceland is none of those things, as China, for example, is older, Kiribati, for example, is lower, and Montenegro, for example, is younger. Using other interpretations of the meanings of oldest, youngest, and lowest, it is possible that Iceland is the youngest country in the world in the sense that the landmass that the country occupies is geologically younger that any other, having formed volcanically more recently than any other landmass constituting an entire country. Using age of population, it is not the youngest or oldest, as the youngest populations are in Africa, and a number of European countries have older populations. Ultimately, perhaps what you are thinking of is the fact that Iceland has the oldest parliament in the world, the "Althing", founded in 930AD, and may be (loosely or arguably) called the oldest democracy in the world (still extant).
The geologically youngest country in the world is Iceland, which is located on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates are spreading apart. Iceland is constantly being shaped and transformed by volcanic eruptions and other geologic processes, making it one of the most geologically active places on Earth.
Iceland