What is the oldest current coutry?

If it wasn't for Cromwell and his pesky interruption, we would beat Denmark into third place. :D
 
The Danish monarchy is over 1000 years old, making it the second oldest continual monarchy in the world still existing today, the oldest being the Imperial House of Japan. The first monarch the monarchy can be traced back to is Gorm the Old (d. 958).
However, Denmark was occupied by Germany during WW2, which may or may not disqualify it. We never really did decide what does or does not qualify as a suitably grand break in continuity to disqualify a competitor.

If it wasn't for Cromwell and his pesky interruption, we would beat Denmark into third place. :D
Fourth, actually- Sweden is only a few years behind Denmark. (And, if we count Scotland and England separately, you'd only be fifth. :p)
 
I'm certain that there's some obscure village in Siberia that was forgotten about due to an error in the imperial bureaucracy's paperwork, and hasn't had contact with the rest of Russia in two centuries. They still think the Romanovs are in charge.
 
Fourth, actually- Sweden is only a few years behind Denmark. (And, if we count Scotland and England separately, you'd only be fifth. :p)
Even setting aside Alfred the Great, doesn't Aethelstan in the mid 10th Century count for England? :D
 
I doubt with the Romanovs. But I do recall news of a village in saharean Algeria where there still used to pray mentioning the name of Abd al-Hamid, and it was in the 00's.
 
Even setting aside Alfred the Great, doesn't Aethelstan in the mid 10th Century count for England? :D
Sure it does. But you're still behind Scotland, which goes back to at least 889, when Donald II was the first monarch crowned as Rí Alban or "King of Scotland", or to the reign of Kenneth I (843-858), supposedly the first monarch to rule over both the Pitcish Kingdom of Alba and the Gaelic Kingdom of Dalriada.
 
Feh, king-lists. :rolleyes:
 
Not long ago I was traveling through rural Australia and I stopped at a cattle station where I had dinner with the owner. He owned neither a television set nor a radio, so we just sat around the campfire talking for hours.

After a while I said to him: "Oh, yes, and we won the war too."

He replied; "Good. I never liked those damn Boers."

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I wouldn't be surprised by the Romanov thing. As tk mentioned, the Red Guard famously found a village where people were still convinced the Qing ruled.
 
Not long ago I was traveling through rural Australia and I stopped at a cattle station where I had dinner with the owner. He owned neither a television set nor a radio, so we just sat around the campfire talking for hours.

After a while I said to him: "Oh, yes, and we won the war too."

He replied; "Good. I never liked those damn Boers."

That's extremely fascinating if the person was genuinely serious.
 
Oh. I'm not Australian. I suppose the American equivalent would be the recurring legend of the woodsman hunter that thinks the American Civil War hasn't ended yet.
 
You don't have to look as far as the backwoods for those people - they've infested CFCOT.
 
I though Ethiopia might have qualified, although its current constitution dates back to dusty old 1995; it was (according to tradition) founded in 980 BC.
 
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