Danish Realm

Kingdom of Denmark
Motto: Forbundne, forpligtet, for kongeriget Danmark
(United, committed, for the Kingdom of Denmark)
Anthems:
Der er et yndigt land
(English: "There is a lovely country")

Kong Christian stod ved højen mast
(English: "King Christian stood by the lofty mast")
Clockwise from top left (sizes not to scale): maps of Greenland, the Faroe Islands, Denmark
Capital
and largest city
Copenhagen
Official languagesDanish; locally:
Recognised regional languagesGerman
Demonym(s)Danish; locally:
Constituent territories (non‑sovereign parts)Denmark (main) and separate parts:
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
 Monarch
Frederik X
Mette Frederiksen
Aksel V. Johannesen
Jens Frederik Nielsen
LegislatureFolketing, with some authority devolved to Løgting (Faroe Islands) and Inatsisartut (Greenland)
History
 Unification
c. 965
 Faroese home rule
24 March 1948
 Greenlandic home rule
1 May 1979
 Faroese takeover act
29 July 2005
 Greenlandic self rule
21 June 2009
Area
 Denmark
42,926 km2 (16,574 sq mi) (12th)
 Faroe Islands
1,396 km2 (538.999 sq mi)
 Greenland
2,166,086 km2 (836,330 sq mi)
Population
 Q2 2023 estimate
6,049,579 (112th)
 Denmark
5,941,388
 Greenland and Faroe Islands
108,191
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
 Total
€380 billion
 Per capita
€62,814
GDP (nominal)2019-2024 estimate
 Total
$418.659 billion
 Per capita
$69,205
HDI (2021)0.948
very high
CurrencyDanish krone (DKK)
Faroese króna
Time zone
List
 Summer (DST)
List
  • UTC+2 (CEST) (Denmark)
  • UTC+1 (WEST) (Faroe Islands)
  • UTC-3 to 0 (ADT, WGST, EGST, GMT) (Greenland)
Calling code
3 codes
ISO 3166 codeDK
Internet TLD
3 TLDs
  • .dk  (Denmark)
  • .fo  (Faroe Islands)
  • .gl  (Greenland)

The Danish Realm, officially the Kingdom of Denmark, or simply Denmark, is a sovereign state consisting of a collection of constituent territories united by the Constitutional Act, which applies to the entire territory. It consists of metropolitan Denmark—the kingdom's territory in continental Europe and sometimes called "Denmark proper"—and the realm's two autonomous (but not sovereign) regions: the Faroe Islands in the North Atlantic and Greenland in North America. The relationship between the three parts of the kingdom is known as rigsfællesskabet (the unity of the realm).

The Kingdom of Denmark is not a federation, but a concept encompassing the three autonomous legal systems of Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland, united under its monarch. The Kingdom of Denmark is a unitary sovereign state. It has Arctic territorial claims in the Arctic Ocean: various sites near the North Pole (Lomonosov Ridge, Gakkel Ridge, and the Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge complex). The Kingdom of Denmark constitutionally encompasses the realm or the country, but the Faroe Islands and Greenland have an extended degree of autonomy to govern their relations.

The Faroe Islands and Greenland have been under the Crown of Denmark since 1397 (de facto) when the Kalmar Union was ratified, and part of the Danish Realm since 1814 (de jure). Due to their separate historical and cultural identities, these parts of the realm now have an extensive degree of self-government and have assumed legislative and administrative responsibility in a substantial number of fields.

Legal matters in the country or realm are subject to the Constitution of the Realm of Denmark. It stipulates that it applies for all parts of the Kingdom of Denmark and that legislative, executive and judicial powers are the responsibility of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Denmark (Danish: Folketing), the Government of Denmark and the Supreme Court of Denmark. The Faroe Islands were granted home rule via an independence referendum in 1946, and Greenland obtained this in a 1979 referendum. In 2005, the Faroes received a self-government arrangement, and in 2009 Greenland received "self rule", which left the government of Denmark with little influence over the matters of internal affairs that are devolved to the local governments of Greenland and the Faroe Islands.

The country or realm has land borders with Germany (the Danish-German border) and Canada (Hans Island), and a road and rail bridge-tunnel that connects to Malmö, Sweden (the Danish-Swedish border).