The only one I can think of is England.
England ceased to exist as a state in 1707, along with Scotland. Ireland disappeared in 1801 and most of it reappeared in 1927. If you mean the United Kingdom, please say so.
The only one I can think of is England.
For a start, I don't think they've always had electricity.
Depends on how much continuity you want to attribute to Thaksin. 1782 isn't an unreasonable answer.How old is Siam?
How old is Siam?
ya, but the thing that determines a country is culture. not fashion.
Nor is 1945.Depends on how much continuity you want to attribute to Thaksin. 1782 isn't an unreasonable answer.
France, despite its political fragmentation during the middle ages, should have a strong claim on being Europe's oldest "stable" (roughly stable geographical area, continued existence) country.
Because a unified England only dates back to 927, while an independent France dates back to 843, so it wouldn't really matter either way?If you're counting Elsass and Lothringen as "minor" acquisitions, I see no reason why not to say the same thing about England. England hasn't changed geographically a great deal since the Wessex unification.
Because a unified England only dates back to 927, while an independent France dates back to 843, so it wouldn't really matter either way?
Ah, I did not realise that. Clearly, I need to brush on my Early Medieval French history.It wasn't France until the Captenians; before then, it was West Francia, which had a completely different geographical, social and political structure. It's sort of a coincidence that Capetian France eventually started to take the same geographical shape as West Francia did; the former is by no means a "continuation" of the latter.
Ah, I did not realise that. Clearly, I need to brush on my Early Medieval French history.![]()
Also, would that logic imply that Scotland can legitimately trace itself to the Pictish kingdom of Alba in the 9th century? It held direct or indirect control over most of modern Scotland, only the Lowland regions of Strathclyde and Lothian remaining apart. (Granted, they're where everybody actually lives now...)