Subregion 1
Scandinavians were one race of people in Northern Europe. These were known as Germanic tribes of people who were Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish.
Germanic languages (Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish) are the most common language group in Northern Europe, one of only two. The other is Uralic (Finnish and Sami).
The subregion of Southern Europe extends the farthest in Western Europe, more specifically, the country of Greece.
Many European groups migrated to the Northern Colonies. Larger groups included the British, the Germans, the Irish, the Italians, and the Swedish.
Europe is in the northern hemisphere.
The most common language group in Northern Europe is the Germanic language group, which includes languages such as Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese. These languages are spoken by millions of people in countries like Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and parts of Finland.
Southern Europe can be divided into two separate regions: Southwestern Europe and Southeastern Europe. The Balkans is also a subregion of Southern or Eastern Europe (with the exception of Greece).
It is in Europe and Europe is in the Northern hemisphere.
Northern Europe
Copenhagen, the premier capital of Northern Europe, is Scandinavia's most fantastic city and the centre of the most dynamic region in Europe, the oresund Region. The city is one of Europe's oldest capitals with a royal touch - the monarchy in Denmark is the oldest in the world!
Is found in northern Europe