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13 May 2008 12:35
Destinations:   Mikael Andersson/Nordicphotos

A voyage through centuries

Swedes have always liked to travel. Our history is full of adventurous journeys and travelers, with widely differing aims. From trade and research to conquest and the search for a better life.
 
 

The world's most well-preserved 17th century ship, Vasa, can be found at the Vasa-museum in Stockholm.
Photo: Richard Ryan
 
A thousand years ago, the Vikings defied the high seas and rivers to sail to far away lands; they were the first to reach the North American coast. Six hundred years later, Sweden was a European superpower and the Baltic was a Swedish inland sea. Ships crossed the Atlantic to the New Sweden colony (modern Delaware). In the 1700s, our famous botanist Carl von Linné sent his pupils out and around the world to document plant and animal life.
 

"Sweden has a long and intriguing history. And thanks to 200 years of uninterrupted peace, many historic buildings and monuments are still standing and can be seen by those visiting Sweden today," says Herman Lindqvist, Author.

During the 1800s and in the beginning of the 1900s, over a million Swedes emigrated to the USA. At the turn of the last century one fifth of Swedes lives in America and there were more Swedes in Chicago than in any other city, with the exception of Stockholm. During the 1900s, Swedish industry’s exports were hugely successful and ‘Made in Sweden’ became a tag that changed the image of Sweden abroad and at home.
 
As a developed democracy with two hundred years of uninterrupted peace, the Sweden of today is a country with significantly more immigrants than emigrants. But our curiosity about the world around us is the same now as it was before. In relation to our population, there are disproportionately a lot of Swedes traveling for business or pleasure worldwide.

 
 

Heritage

Emigration took more than 1.2 million Swedes to North America - the movement of people stands out as one of the greatest emigrations from a European country. Sweden's intensity of emigration was exceeded only by that of Ireland and Norway, and one out of five Swedish-born people lived in the US in 1900.
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Discover Sweden - Welcome to My Home Country!

Discover Sweden - Welcome to my home country!
Washington, DC April 2-June 8
 
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