Continental Europe

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Continental Europe, also referred to as mainland Europe or simply the Continent, is the continent of Europe, explicitly excluding European islands and, at times, peninsulas.[1] Notably, in British English usage, the term means Europe excluding the United Kingdom, Isle of Man, Ireland and Iceland. One general definition of "Continental Europe" is the European landmass excluding the UK, Ireland and Iceland. Other island nations excluded from Continental Europe are Cyprus and Malta. However, in other areas of Europe different ideas on what the term actually means prevail.

Continental Europe

Some definitions of continental Europe extend the boundaries of the continent to its geographical boundaries, thus including nations that are within the elevated boundaries of the Ural Mountains and the Caucasus Mountains.

What might seem to be a simple matter of geographical definition, though, has profound social and political ramifications. Some definitions of continental Europe include the Transcaucasian nations of Georgia and Armenia - which are predominantly Christian - while excluding such predominantly Muslim nations as Azerbaijan and Turkey.[2]

In the United Kingdom, the Continent is used to refer to the mainland of Europe. A famous, perhaps apocryphal, British newspaper headline once read "Fog in Channel; Continent Cut Off". [3] INVESCO does not include the United Kingdom or Ireland in its definition of continental Europe[4].

Derivatively, the adjective "continental" refers to the social practices or fashion of continental Europe, as opposed to those in Britain. Examples include breakfast and, historically, long-range driving before Britain had motorways.

Map of the Scandiae islands by Nicolaus Germanus for a 1467 publication of Cosmographia Claudii Ptolomaei Alexandrini.

The Scandinavian peninsula (Finland, Norway and Sweden) is sometimes excluded from Continental Europe.[citation needed] Especially, in Germanic studies, "Continental" refers to the European continent excluding both Scandinavia and the British Isles. The reason for this is that although the Scandinavian peninsula is technically attached to Continental Europe by Karelia, it is in practice reached by sea, not by land (which would imply travelling north as far as Tornio at the 66th parallel north), and has in the past been mis-identified as an island (Scandia).

In the Mediterranean context, "the continent" may refer to the continental part of Italy (as opposed to Sardinia and Sicily), Spain whit Balearic islands,alboran or the continental part of France (as opposed to Corsica).

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