Counties of Sweden

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Updates: Image

Georg Ebner discovered an error in the Population history table. The error was in my source. I've corrected it in a plausible way.

Update 12 to Geopolitical Entities and Codes (formerly FIPS 10-4) is dated 2013-06-30. It changes all of the county names to informal ones. For example, it changes Hallands L�n to plain Halland. The new names are the same as in the table below.

The NUTS code scheme for Sweden has been revised several times. In ~2001, the level-2 codes for two regions were changed for no apparent reason. In 2003, the level-3 code for Stockholms l�n was changed. There was another revision in ~2008, affecting all counties. The latest version is shown in the tables below.

ISO 3166-2 Newsletter II-3 is dated 2011-12-15. For Sweden, the sort order of county names is corrected, and the status of the divisions is changed from provinces to counties (or d�partements in French).

International standard ISO 3166-2 was published on December 15, 1998. It superseded ISO/DIS 3166-2 (draft international standard). For Sweden, the draft standard showed 24 counties. The final standard shows 21 counties. The difference is due to actual changes in Sweden's administrative geography.

Sweden has two sets of county codes. L�nskoder are two-digit codes; l�nsbokst�ver are one- or two-letter codes. The alphabetic codes are more familiar to the typical Swede. The numeric codes are used in governmental work. In government reports, for example, the counties may be sorted by numeric code. Both versions of ISO 3166-2 show both sets of codes, but the draft standard represents the numeric codes as official. The alphabetic codes are given as background information. The final standard reverses the positions of the two sets of codes. It states, however, that the numeric codes may eventually supplant the alphabetic ones.

Country overview: Image

Short nameSWEDEN
ISO codeSE
FIPS codeSW
LanguageSwedish (sv)
Time zone+1~
CapitalStockholm

 

Sweden was sovereign over Norway during most of the 19th century. The united kingdom was called Sweden and Norway. Norway became separate on 1905-06-07.

Other names of country: Image

  1. Danish: Sverige
  2. Dutch: Zweden, Koninkrijk Zweden (formal)
  3. English: Kingdom of Sweden (formal)
  4. Finnish: Ruotsi
  5. French: Su�de f
  6. German: Schweden n
  7. Icelandic: Sv��j��
  8. Italian: Svezia f
  9. Norwegian: Sverige, Kongeriket Sverige (formal)
  10. Portuguese: Su�cia, Reino m da Su�cia f (formal)
  11. Russian: Королевство Швеция (formal)
  12. Spanish: Suecia, Reino m de Suecia f (formal)
  13. Swedish: Sverige, Konungariket Sverige (formal)
  14. Turkish: İsve� Krallığı (formal)

Origin of name: Image

from ethnic name variously transcribed Suethi, Svear, etc.

Primary subdivisions: Image

Sweden is divided into 21 l�n (counties).

CountyHASCISOFIPSLkNUTSPopulationArea(km.�)Area(mi.�)CapitalSwedish
Blekinge SE.BLK SW0210SE221151,436 3,0551,180KarlskronaBlekinge l�n
Dalarna SE.KOW SW1020SE312275,711 30,40411,739FalunDalarnes l�n
G�vleborg SE.GVX SW0321SE313275,653 19,7567,628G�vleG�vleborgs l�n
Gotland SE.GTI SW0509SE21457,297 3,1841,229VisbyGotlands l�n
Halland SE.HAN SW0613SE231288,859 5,7202,208HalmstadHallands l�n
J�mtland SE.JAZ SW0723SE322127,020 54,10020,888�stersundJ�mtlands l�n
J�nk�ping SE.JOF SW0806SE211331,539 11,2534,345J�nk�pingJ�nk�pings l�n
Kalmar SE.KAH SW0908SE213233,776 11,6944,515KalmarKalmar l�n
Kronoberg SE.KRG SW1207SE212179,635 9,4293,641V�xj�Kronobergs l�n
Norrbotten SE.NBBDSW1425SE332251,886 106,01240,931Lule�Norrbottens l�n
�rebro SE.ORT SW1518SE124275,030 9,3433,607�rebro�rebro l�n
�sterg�tland SE.OGE SW1605SE123417,966 11,6464,497Link�ping�sterg�tlands l�n
Sk�ne SE.SNM SW2712SE2241,184,50011,3694,389Malm�Sk�ne l�n
S�dermanland SE.SDD SW1804SE122263,099 6,6072,551Nyk�pingS�dermanlands l�n
Stockholm SE.STABSW2601SE1101,918,1046,7892,621StockholmStockholms l�n
Uppsala SE.UPC SW2103SE121319,925 7,2062,782UppsalaUppsala l�n
V�rmland SE.VRS SW2217SE311273,489 19,3887,486KarlstadV�rmlands l�n
V�sterbotten SE.VBACSW2324SE331257,581 59,28422,890Ume�V�sterbottens l�n
V�sternorrland SE.VNY SW2422SE321243,978 23,1078,922H�rn�sandV�sternorrlands l�n
V�stmanland SE.VMU SW2519SE125248,489 6,6142,554V�ster�sV�stmanlands l�n
V�stra G�talandSE.VGO SW2814SE2321,538,28425,3899,803G�teborgV�stra G�talands l�n
21 counties9,113,257441,370170,414
  • HASC: Hierarchical administrative subdivision codes.
  • ISO: Codes from ISO 3166-2; identical to l�nsbokst�ver.
  • FIPS: Codes from FIPS PUB 10-4.
  • Lk: L�nskoder (county codes). The counties are often sorted by l�nskod.
  • NUTS: Level-3 NUTS code (Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics).
  • Population: 2006-12-31, based on population registers
  • Area: Source [5].
  • Swedish: Names of counties in Swedish

 

The NUTS code system also defines groupings of counties. All the counties whose NUTS codes begin with the same four characters (for example, SE31-) can be designated as a group using those four characters. These areas have no administrative significance, but are used for statistical summaries. Here are the descriptions of the eight level-two NUTS regions of Sweden.

NUTSEnglish descriptionSwedish
SE11Stockholm city and countyStockholm
SE12East Central Sweden�stra Mellansverige
SE21Sm�land with IslandsSm�land med �arna
SE22South SwedenSydsverige
SE23West SwedenV�stsverige
SE31North Central SwedenNorra Mellansverige
SE32Central NorrlandMellersta Norrland
SE33Upper Norrland�vre Norrland

 

Remove the last digit of these codes to get a NUTS-1 region code, where SE1 represents Eastern Sweden, SE2 is Southern Sweden, and SE3 is Northern Sweden.

Postal codes: Image

Sweden uses five-digit postal codes, sometimes written with a space between the third and fourth digits. Swedish addresses can be identified by prefixing the postal codes with "SE-".

Further subdivisions:

See the Municipalities of Sweden page.

The counties are divided into kommuner (municipalities; 288 in 1998), which are further subdivided into f�rsamlingar (parishes). Sweden has a hierarchical system of numerical codes for these entities. The first two digits are a l�nskod, the first four are a kommunkod, and all six digits are a f�rsamlingskod.

There are also 25 traditional divisions called landskap (provinces). The counties and the provinces overlap, but rarely coincide. There are also three traditional regions: G�taland, Norrland, and Svealand, each consisting of several provinces.

Territorial extent: Image

All of the counties except Gotland are predominantly on the Scandinavian mainland.

  1. Gotland consists of the island of Gotland and its smaller neighbors, such as F�r� and Gotska Sand�n. Gotland is the only county that consists of a single municipality.
  2. J�nk�ping includes Visings� in Lake V�ttern.
  3. Kalmar includes �land.
  4. Scania includes Ven island in �resund sound.
  5. Stockholm includes many islands, in both the Baltic Sea and Lake M�laren. The Baltic islands extend from Tor� and M�rk� in the south to Gr�s� in the north. The lake islands include Svartsj�landet, Muns�, and Adels�.
  6. V�sterbotten includes �nges�n and Holm�n.
  7. V�stra G�taland includes Tors�, K�llands�, and Djur� in Lake V�nern.

The UN LOCODE page Image for Sweden lists locations in the country, some of them with their latitudes and longitudes, some with their ISO 3166-2 codes for their subdivisions. This information can be put together to approximate the territorial extent of subdivisions.

Origins of names: Image

  1. �lvsborg: Old Swedish Eluesborg, from �lv: river, : mouth, borg: fort
  2. Botten (Bothnia): Swedish botten: bottom
  3. Gotland: Land of the Goths
  4. J�mtland: Land of J�mte (ethnic name)

Change history: Image

  1. 1637: V�sterbotten county split from V�sternorrland.
  2. 1645: Sweden acquired Gotland, Halland, and J�mtland from Denmark by the Peace of Br�msebro.
  3. 1658: Sweden acquired Bohus county, and a guvernement which corresponds to present-day Blekinge and Sc�ne, from Denmark by the Peace of Roskilde.
  4. 1680: G�teborg and Bohus county formed by merging Bohus county and G�teborg city; Kronoberg county split from Sm�land.
  5. 1683: Kalmar county split from a guvernement.
  6. 1687: J�nk�ping county split from Kronoberg.
  7. 1714: Blekinge county split from Kalmar; Stockholm county formed from parts of Nyk�ping and Uppsala; the remainder of Nyk�ping renamed S�dermanland.
  8. 1719: Halland county split from a guvernement.
  9. 1762: G�vleborg county split from V�sternorrland.
  10. 1779: N�rkes och V�rmlands l�n (N�rke and V�rmland county) split into �rebro and V�rmland.
  11. 1809: Kristianstad and Malm�hus counties split from a guvernement.
  12. 1810: J�mtland county formed from parts of G�vleborg and V�sternorrland; Norrbotten county split from V�sterbotten.
  13. 1819: �land county split from Kalmar.
  14. 1825: �land county merged with Kalmar again.
  15. 1968-01: Stockholm City merged with Stockholm county. Before the change, Stockholm City had l�nskod 01, l�nsbokstav A, FIPS code SW20; Stockholm county had 02, B, and SW19, respectively. Stockholm was the capital of both. This was the first change in the number or identity of primary administrative divisions of Sweden since 1825.
  16. 1995-01-01: Sweden joined the European Union.
  17. 1997-01-01: Kristianstad (ISO=11, lb=L, FIPS=SW11, capital=Kristianstad) and Malm�hus (ISO=12, lb=M, FIPS=SW13, capital=Malm�) counties merged to form Scania. Name of Kopparberg county changed to Dalarna.
  18. 1998-01-01: �lvsborg (ISO=15, lb=P, FIPS=SW01, capital=V�nersborg), G�teborg och Bohus (ISO=14, lb=O, FIPS=SW04, capital=G�teborg), and Skaraborg (ISO=16, lb=R, FIPS=SW17, capital=Mariestad) counties merged to form V�stra G�taland. Two municipalities (Habo and Mullsj�) transferred from V�stra G�taland county to J�nk�ping.

Other names of subdivisions: Image

In the early years of the 20th century, it was common to see e instead of �, f instead of medial v, and w instead of initial v (Elfsborg, Gefleborg, Wermland, etc.).

  1. Dalarna: Dalecarlia (Anglicized); Kopparberg (obsolete)
  2. G�teborg: Gautaborg (Icelandic); Gothembourg (French); Gothenburg (English-variant, German)
  3. Gotland: Gothland, Gottland (obsolete)
  4. Sk�ne: Scania (Anglicized); Scanie (French)
  5. S�dermanland: S�rmland (informal)
  6. Stockholm: Estocolmo (Portuguese, Spanish); Stoccolmo (Italian); Tukholma (Finnish); Стокгольм (Russian)

Population history:

County1895191019451955196519751989
�lvsborg274,698287,692338,996366,827390,000418,150437,516
Blekinge143,387149,359146,908146,034149,000155,391149,960
G�vleborg218,864253,792275,436290,676293,000294,595288,223
G�teborg and Bohus313,340381,270510,896579,551666,000714,660735,672
Gotland51,85555,21759,50557,52654,00054,44756,840
Halland139,356147,224155,257165,865180,000219,767250,959
J�mtland104,259118,115143,213144,880131,000133,559134,789
J�nk�ping195,856214,454253,794277,949296,000301,905306,590
Kalmar229,176228,129231,336237,462236,000240,768239,564
Kopparberg206,774233,873253,507276,172282,000281,082286,667
Kristianstad219,858228,307253,277259,398262,000272,090286,654
Kronoberg158,838157,965153,572159,112164,000169,454176,589
Malm�hus383,202457,214551,610596,809667,000740,137771,361
Norrbotten115,500161,132229,568250,521260,000264,215262,838
�rebro188,771207,021235,989254,136268,000273,994271,523
�sterg�tland270,973294,179332,946354,126366,000387,104399,506
Skaraborg244,514241,284244,737249,389255,000263,382274,546
S�dermanland161,722178,568201,051219,501241,000252,030253,363
Stockholm City271,638342,323671,284776,947  
Stockholm157,457229,181321,989386,4891,382,0001,493,0521,629,631
Uppsala123,015128,171146,415159,752185,000229,879264,738
V�rmland252,915260,135272,275286,786287,000284,442282,375
V�sterbotten133,336161,366228,135236,434234,000236,367250,134
V�sternorrland217,220250,512278,707288,599277,000268,202260,488
V�stmanland142,735155,920183,346213,723250,000259,872256,510
Totals4,919,2595,522,4036,673,7497,234,6647,775,0008,208,5448,527,036

 

Data for 1895 and 1955 are estimates. For 1975, data represent the 1975-11-01 census (source [6]).

Sources: Image

  1. [1] Gustafsson, Agne, Local Government in Sweden. Roger Tanner tr. The Swedish Institute, Uddevalla, 1983.
  2. [2] N�r Var Hur 1956. Bokf�rlaget Forum AB, Stockholm, 1955. The table in this book gives 776,462 for the population of Kalmar l�n, which differs egregiously from earlier and later figures. What's more, using that figure would produce a column total of 7,773,664, which differs from the total given in the book by 539,000. The simplest fix is to assume that the entire 539,000 discrepancy is due to a mistake in Kalmar's figure. Under that assumption, the correct population of Kalmar was 237,462, which is a very plausible figure.
  3. [3] Chisholm, George G., ed., Longman's Gazetteer of the World. Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1920 (apparently not revised since the 1895 first edition).
  4. [4] Statistiska centralbyr�n Image (SCB). Retrieved 2007-09-22.
  5. [5] SCB Image, using the column headed "Land area and inland water excluding the four large lakes" (retrieved 2007-09-22).
  6. [6] 1979 Demographic Yearbook Image, 31st Ed. Statistical Office, United Nations, New York, 1980 (retrieved 2011-12-28).
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