The Shortest History of Scandinavia
By (Author) Mart Kuldkepp
Black Inc.
Black Inc.
29th April 2025
Australia
Paperback
272
Width 130mm, Height 196mm, Spine 20mm
242g
From the Stone Age to 'Scandimania' - a brisk, illuminating journey through 14,000 years of Nordic history Outsiders have long viewed Scandinavia as special, starting with the ancient Greeks and their myths of ultima Thule, a place 'where the Sun goes to rest'. Today, we admire Scandinavia for its universal welfare, equality, peacefulness and untouched nature - not to mention its interior design, crime literature and love of all things hygge. Yet Nordic history has had its hardships and dark periods too- pandemics, war, the expansionism of the Viking Age and the eighteenth century, alliances with Nazi Germany in World War II and a eugenics movement in the twentieth century. In The Shortest History of Scandinavia, historian Mart Kuldkepp masterfully sketches the outlines of Scandinavia's rich history - from the first known peoples of the region, who followed the ice sheet north as it retreated at the end of the last Ice Age, to the Scandinavians living in nations that are among the happiest in the world today. In this short but deeply insightful volume, Kuldkepp illuminates the concept of 'Nordicness' - a hard-to-define quality that has nonetheless steered the region to respond to major challenges, actively shaping their history and exerting a considerable influence on European and global history in the process.
Mart Kuldkdepp is a professor and researcher of Estonian and Nordic history at University College London, where he specialises in the political history of the Baltic and Nordic regions in the twentieth century.