Modern DenmarkVery bluntly speaking, it can be claimed that the present configuration of Denmark is the result of 400 years of forced relinquishments of land, surrenders and lost battles.
Crucial events took place in the mid-1800s. In 1848, absolutism had been abolished, whereby Denmark got a constitution and a parliament, but in 1864 Denmark suffered a crushing defeat to Prussia in the second Schleswig war and had to relinquish 40% of its land. The Danish population dropped from 2.6 million to 1.6 million.Homogenous societyAs a consequence of the defeat, Denmark became an almost completely ethnically homogenous society, in which the inhabitants – except the ones in Iceland (totally independent in 1944), the Faroe Islands and Greenland – shared language and culture.
Thus, the national boundaries of modern Denmark were more or less established by 1864, and the border between southern Jutland and Germany became fixed in 1920.
After 1945The neutral politics of Denmark ensured the country a smooth journey through World War I, but not through WW II, when Denmark was occupied by German forces 1940-45.
In 1949 Denmark was one of the founding members of NATO. In 1972 Denmark voted for joining the European Communities, EC (changed in 1993 to the European Union, EU).
Today Denmark – especially considering its relatively small size – is an active player on the international political scene.