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Due to the islands' high latitude the Northern Lights (''aurora borealis'') can sometimes be seen in the sky" on clear winter nights, while in summer there is almost perpetual daylight, known locally as the "simmer dim".
Due to the islands' high latitude the Northern Lights (''aurora borealis'') can sometimes be seen in the sky" on clear winter nights, while in summer there is almost perpetual daylight, known locally as the "simmer dim".


The islands' remote, northern location has laid them open to different cultural influences.  Early in the [[Viking Period]] Shetland was settled by Norsemen, and <span class="plainlinks">[http://www.netlook.com.br/ <span style="color:black;font-weight:normal; text-decoration:none!important; background:none!important; text-decoration:none;">vestidos da moda</span>] whether they drove its previous population out or absorbed them, Shetland became a Norse land and almost all of Shetland's place-names are derived from the Norse language.  In the days of King Harold Fairhair of Norway, Shetland became part of the new Earldom of Orkney, and it remained under the Norwegian crown until 1468, when it was given to King James III King of Scots as a pledge for a dowry, which pledge was not redeemed.
The islands' remote, northern location has laid them open to different cultural influences.  Early in the [[Viking Period]] Shetland was settled by Norsemen, and whether they drove its previous population out or absorbed them, Shetland became a Norse land and almost all of Shetland's place-names are derived from the Norse language.  In the days of King Harold Fairhair of Norway, Shetland became part of the new Earldom of Orkney, and it remained under the Norwegian crown until 1468, when it was given to King James III King of Scots as a pledge for a dowry, which pledge was not redeemed.


The Norn language had died out by the nineteenth century, replaced by Scots and English, though its influence remains strong in dialect words.
The Norn language had died out by the nineteenth century, replaced by Scots and English, though its influence remains strong in dialect words.

Revision as of 09:15, 14 November 2011

Shetland
United Kingdom
Flag of Shetland
Flag
Með Lögum Skal Land Byggja
(With laws shall this land be built)
Shetland
[Interactive map]
Area: 551 square miles
Population: 21,988
County town: Lerwick
County flower: Shetland mouse-ear [1]

The County of Shetland or Zetland is the northernmost shire of the United Kingdom. It consists of a group of many mountainous islands in the seas to the north of Great Britain.

Shetland contains the United Kingdom's northernmost point, the rock of Out Stack, north of Muckle Flugga, Britain's northernmost island.

Due to the islands' high latitude the Northern Lights (aurora borealis) can sometimes be seen in the sky" on clear winter nights, while in summer there is almost perpetual daylight, known locally as the "simmer dim".

The islands' remote, northern location has laid them open to different cultural influences. Early in the Viking Period Shetland was settled by Norsemen, and whether they drove its previous population out or absorbed them, Shetland became a Norse land and almost all of Shetland's place-names are derived from the Norse language. In the days of King Harold Fairhair of Norway, Shetland became part of the new Earldom of Orkney, and it remained under the Norwegian crown until 1468, when it was given to King James III King of Scots as a pledge for a dowry, which pledge was not redeemed.

The Norn language had died out by the nineteenth century, replaced by Scots and English, though its influence remains strong in dialect words.

The islands

Shetland has some 100 islands, of which only 15 are inhabited.

The main island of the group is Mainland, which contains the county's capital, Lerwick, its former capital, Scalloway, and most of the substantial settlements. Mainland has an area of 373 square miles, making it the fifth-largest island of the British Isles.

Muckle Flugga, Britain's northernmost island

The inhabited islands in the main group are:

Further out lie:

Parishes

Shetland is divided into twelve civil parishes.

The oil industry

In the early 1970s, oil and gas were found off Shetland. The East Shetland Basin is one of the largest petroleum sedimentary basins in Europe and the oil extracted there is sent to the terminal at Sullom Voe (Norse: Solheimavagr). Sullom Voe terminal opened in 1978 and is the largest oil export harbour in the United Kingdom, with a volume of 25 million tons per year.

Income from oil and related economies has reduced emigration and vastly improved infrastructure throughout Shetland. Sheep farming also plays a big part in Shetland today as does fishing.

Timeline

Year Event
3400 BC First sign of settlement
43 & 77 AD Roman authors Pomponius Mela and Pliny the Elder refer to the seven islands they call Haemodae and Acmodae respectively, assumed to be Shetland.[1]
297 AD Roman sources mention the Picts
875 Harald Hårfagre took control of the islands
1195 Harald Maddadsson lost the earldom of Shetland and the islands are put directly under the Norwegian king Sverre Sigurdsson
1379 The Scottish earl Henry Sinclair took control of Orkney on behalf of the Norwegian king Håkon VI Magnusson
1469 Christian I gave Shetland to the Scottish king James III as a pledge for a dowry
1700–1760 Smallpox hit the islands
18th century Norn language gradually dies out
1707 Shetland became part of the Kingdom of Great Britain. The German merchants lost their trading rights in Shetland
1708 Capital moved from Scalloway to Lerwick
1861 32,000 inhabitants
1940 Shetland bus established by the Special Operations Executive
1961 17,814 inhabitants
1969 Shetland marks 500 years under both Norwegian and Scottish rule
1978 Oil terminal in Sullom Voe opened
2001 21,990 inhabitants
2005 Lord Lyon King of Arms, the heraldic authority of Scotland, approved the blue and white flag of Shetland as an official flag
2009 22,210 inhabitants

County flag

Flag of Shetland

Roy Grönneberg designed a flag for Shetland in 1969 in cooperation with Bill Adams, to mark the 500 year anniversary of the transfer of Shetland from Norway to Scotland.[2]

The rationale of the design was to illustrate the Shetland had been a part of Norway for 500 years and a part of Scotland for 500 years. The colours are identical to those of the St Andrew flag of Scotland, but shaped in the Nordic cross. (It is the same design Icelandic republicans used in the early 20th century, known in Iceland as Hvítbláinn, the white-blue.)

In 1975 when the new Shetland Islands Council came into being, Grönneberg wanted his proposed flag to become the official flag of Shetland, but was unsuccessful. Finally in 2005 the Lord Lyon King of Arms approved the flag as the official flag of Shetland.

Notable places and buildings

Outside links

References

  1. Breeze, David J. "The ancient geography of Scotland" in Ballin Smith and Banks (2002) pp. 12–13.
  2. Flags of the Worlds page on the flag of Shetland
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