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  • Where Is Europe?

    January 9, 2012, *10:03 pm* Where Is Europe? By FRANK
    JACOBS

    Where is Europe? You might as well ask: What is Europe? For it is a
    concept as well as a continent, and the borders of both oscillate wildly.
    For the ancient Persians, it was that small stepping stone separating them
    from Greece. In the Middle Ages, it became virtually synonymous with
    Christendom. A relatively recent and generally unaccepted theory sees
    Europe spanning half the globe, from Iceland to the Bering Strait, nearly
    touching Alaska.

    Take the most common present-day usage of the term `Europe,' shorthand
    for (and synonymous with) the European Union. The external borders of this
    supranational project are well-defined, and in some cases well-defended.
    But they remain movable, having consistently shifted outward over the last
    half century. From a core of six founding members in the continent's west
    [1] ,
    this `Europe' has expanded to comprise 27 states, as far east as Cyprus.

    That still leaves quite some wriggle room between concept and continent,
    which by some estimates
    [2]includes
    as many as 51 countries. For those in between, the difference is
    clear and uncontested. Even non-European Union members like Switzerland
    and Croatia, close to the continent's geographic core, will readily admit
    that they're outside `Europe' (but only if you include the quotation
    marks). The interesting difference is that the Swiss overall are happy to
    remain outside, while the Croats generally can't wait for July 2013, when
    they're slated to join the Union.

    This gap in Euro-euphoria is a symptom of a curious kaleidoscopic quality
    of this supranational `Europe': Everybody is looking at the same thing, but
    everybody sees something different. For the Swiss, who have a long history
    of non-alignment (and a shorter one of being confidently rich), joining
    `Europe' would entail few benefits. By contrast, for the non-`European'
    remainder on the Balkans
    [3],
    similarly encircled by member states, joining would be almost more of a
    moral vindication than an economic relief. Like the countries of the former
    Eastern Bloc before them, membership would confirm their Europeanness.

    As a frequent visitor to the Balkans recently put it to me: `In the Croats'
    own eyes, they are the last bastion of Europe against the barbarians, the
    first of which are the Serbs. The Serbs too view themselves as Europe's
    ultimate bulwark, against the Albanians.' And so on.

    What's interesting is that such kaleidoscopic assessments of what is and
    isn't Europe exist within the Union, too. But instead of positive images,
    the E.U. kaleidoscope refracts nothing but horrors. Here, `Europe' has
    become the convenient scapegoat for anything too unpopular, expensive or
    painful to be defended by the individual member states. `We don't like
    it
    either,' they can tell their electorates, `but Europe is making us do it.'
    Europe, long the defining inclusive quality uniting people from Spain to
    Finland, is now, ironically, the oppressive other.

    This `Europe' is a misassembled, headless monster, owing less to
    Charlemagne than to Frankenstein. It stalks the bureaucratic labyrinth of
    Brussels, beying for tribute from the peoples of Europe. But this modern
    minotaur is also a petty, powerless bureaucrat, issuing directives on the
    correct curvature of cucumbers
    [4],
    but unable to save the euro from collapsing.

    To the British, `Europe' and `the Continent' are increasingly one and the
    same, and they find increasing consolation in their splendid isolation from
    it. Strictly geographically speaking, they're not wrong. A continent may
    be
    defined as a large, contiguous land mass, sans the islands off its coast.
    Of course, the choice of terminology is suggested more by the rise of
    anti-E.U. sentiment in Britain rather than by concerns for geographic
    rectitude. An equally acceptable definition of a continent does include
    so-called continental islands
    [5]-
    situated on the continental shelf, as Britain and Ireland are. An even
    broader definition includes islands off the shelf (so to speak), if they
    are geographically and culturally proximate. Cyprus, Malta and Iceland are
    all considered European because of historical, political and cultural
    links, even though none of them is entirely located on Europe's continental
    shelf.

    Yet if we leave the islands out of the equation for a moment, most of
    Europe's borders are self-evident. They are the waters that border it on
    three sides: the Arctic Sea to the north, the Atlantic Ocean to the west
    and the Mediterranean and Black Seas to the south. Ah, but then the
    ultimate problem becomes painfully clear: Where to draw Europe's eastern
    border? And does it even have one?

    Let's return to our earlier definition: A continent is a large, contiguous
    land mass. And not half of one. Many geographers see what we call the
    European continent as a mere peninsula of a gigantic continent of Eurasia,
    spanning halfway across the world, from the Strait of Gibraltar to the
    Bering Strait. There is no good reason to divide that continent in two. No
    good geographic reason.

    For, etymologically, `Eurasia' might well be a union of opposites. Some
    linguists suggest that Europe and Asia derive from words in Phoenician and
    Assyrian for `sunset' and `sunrise' respectively, similar to the Latin
    concepts of `occidens' and `oriens,' or simply our `west' and
    `east.'

    In fact, in its earliest incarnation, Europe was merely that bit of land on
    the continent that the Persians had to cross to get from the
    Hellespont [6]to
    Greece proper. Ironically, 25 centuries later, the perception of that
    region has totally reversed. Greece is now firmly part of Europe (both the
    concept and the continent), while that former Persian stepping stone is now
    known as Turkish Thrace
    [7].
    Its existence embarrasses those who would deny Turkey E.U. membership on
    the basis that it is `not a European state.' It is. And what's more:
    based
    on ancient history, Turkey (or at least this part of it) can claim to be
    the original Europe.
    Joe Burgess/The New York Times

    Turkey's detractors have another Europe in mind. This one took shape in the
    early Middle Ages, as `Europe' became a constituent third of the world
    in
    simplified ecclesiastical geography, together with Africa and Asia
    converging on Jerusalem - the center of the world. From the 13th century
    onward, encroachment by the Tartars (in Russia) and the Turks (in Anatolia)
    shifted the definition to a more spiritual one: Europe came to be
    identified with Christendom - specifically, western Christendom.

    In this definition, Europe ended where Turkey began, even when Turkey
    extended deep into the continent proper. When the Turks controlled large
    parts of the Balkans, those areas were considered to be beyond Europe
    [8],
    the eastern edge of which was the border between the Austrian and Ottoman
    Empires.

    To be fair, this viewpoint wasn't absolute. As their power declined, the
    Ottomans were pushed out of almost all of Europe. This allowed the
    classical definition to prevail, placing the border at the narrow waterway
    that connects the Mediterranean and Black Seas
    [9].
    It remains there to this day - with only Turkish Thrace remaining as a
    reminder that `Europe' may stop where continents divide, but also where
    empires collide.

    The northern border with Asia posed a different problem for geographers
    because, as knowledge of and self-consciousness in that part of the world
    increased, it turned out that `Europe' was not connected to Asia via a
    narrow isthmus, but rather via the widening expanse of Russia. The problem
    being that any definition of Europe will divide Russia in two. The question
    is thus: How much of Russia is European? Or, even: How European is Russia?

    As seen from the west, the earliest answer always seemed to be, not much,
    or not at all. The French minister Sully (1560-1641), when dreaming up his
    `Grand Design' [10]for
    a `Very Christian Council of Europe,' objected to Russia's inclusion
    in
    his scheme: `[T]here scarce remains any conformity among us with them;
    besides they belong to Asia as much as to Europe. We may indeed almost
    consider them as a barbarous country, and place them in the same class with
    Turkey.' [11]

    Sully's opinion sounds awfully modern. For centuries, the urge was to
    include Moscow and its lands within the European continent, even though
    doing so made for some rather arbitrary-seeming distinctions. In the
    Renaissance, geographers solved the problem of Europe's eastern border by
    being creative: Ortelius, in his `Theatrum Orbis Terrarum' (1570), started
    from the ancient border, the river Don (even though it was less impressive
    than its semi-mythical pendant, the Tanais), then drawing a straight line
    north towards the White Sea, near the city of Archangel.

    By the end of the 17th century, the eastern border of Europe had shifted,
    following the courses of the rivers Don, Volga and Kama, and then leaping
    in a straight line across the northern Ural Mountains to join the river Ob
    north into the Arctic Ocean.

    This border, championed by the geographer Philipp Clüver, made the Gulf of
    Ob, at 600 miles the world's longest estuary, the border between Europe and
    Asia. Had this extension of Europe east of the Urals persisted, the
    northernmost part of Europe would now be the tip of the Yamal
    Peninsula [12],
    poking 400 miles into the Arctic and home to Russia's largest remaining
    reindeer herds (and largest remaining natural gas reserves).
    Joe Burgess/The New York Times

    Those reindeer might have benefited from the media attention that being
    threatened in `Europe's northernmost wilderness' might have brought.
    But
    alas for them: The Ob as Europe's northeastern border became obsolete by
    the late 18th century.

    The reason for this was the expansive growth of the Russian state east- and
    southward, so that geographers felt annoyed by the fact that Russia in its
    entirety could no longer be treated under the header `Europe.' One solution
    was to discard `Muscovy' entirely from Europe, another to extend the
    borders of Europe to keep up, somewhat, with Russian expansion. To be fair,
    the Russians themselves considered Europe to be elsewhere, hence the
    mission of of St. Petersburg, founded in 1703, to be a `window on Europe.'

    The ultimate compromise between `Russia in' and `Russia out' was found when
    western geographers became aware of the mountain range the Russians
    themselves called Kameny Poyas (`Stony Girdle'). The Swedish military
    geographer Philip Johan von Strahlenberg, after years of captivity gave him
    the benefit of close observation of the Russian geography, proposed these
    Ural Mountains as the new European border in 1730. The Strahlenberg border
    soon found acceptance throughout Europe - and Russia itself.

    Strahlenberg's southern bend back via the Volga to the Don (always the Don)
    was more controversial. Many geographers chose, where the Ural Mountains
    ended, to follow the Ural River south to the Caspian Sea.

    By the early 19th century, Conrad Malte-Brun and other French geographers
    had successfully promoted the Caucasus Mountains, connecting the Caspian to
    the Black Sea, as the southern border of Europe.

    This is still considered the most conventional border for the continent of
    Europe. But the Urals-Ural-Caspian-Caucasus border was (and is) by no means
    a generally accepted convention. Several geographers have, over the
    centuries, tried to place Europe's eastern boundary well beyond the Urals -
    one notable example being the 18th-century German botanist Johann Georg
    Gmelin, who proposed the Yenisey River, running from the Mongolian border
    to the Arctic Ocean near the 70th meridian east, or about 2,000 miles east
    of Moscow.

    The most expansive vision of Europe was one of many expounded by the
    founder of the Pan-European Union, the Austrian count Richard von
    Coudenhove-Kalergi, in 1935. It solved the problem of finding an adequate
    geographical boundary to Europe by substituting a political one - all of
    the Soviet Union would be considered part of Europe. Asia would be to its
    south. That would have made European cities out of Vladivostok and Irkutsk,
    but also Samarkand and Dushanbe.

    During the cold war, however, the opposite tendency triumphed more often:
    All of the Soviet Union, including Vilnius, Riga and other cities that
    today lie within the European Union, were excluded from Europe entirely. At
    times even the Soviet satellite states in the Warsaw Pact were left out as
    well, so much had `Europe' come to be synonymous with `the West' and its
    associated political values.

    Today, of course, the border of Europe is rebounding, thanks to the
    expansive semi-state run out of Brussels. Indeed, if Turkey ever does join
    the E.U. - and while its prospects look dim today, who knows what a decade
    or two will bring - it will push the border of Europe further east than
    anyone but a few daydreaming geographers had ever imagined: from the
    volcanic shores of Iceland to the mountainous frontier that divides Turkey
    from Iran.

    *Frank Jacobs is a London-based author and blogger. He writes about
    cartography, but only the interesting bits.*
    ------------------------------

    [1] By signing the Treaty of Rome (1957), the three Benelux countries,
    Italy and - most crucially - the former archenemies France and (West)
    Germany constituted the European Economic Community, which would later
    become the European Union.

    [2] That's a maximalist figure, including countries partly or wholly
    outside the accepted geographic borders of Europe, and thus often excluded:
    Russia, Turkey, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and one country
    well within most geographic definitions of Europe, but still not recognized
    by many as a sovereign state: Kosovo.

    [3] Of the former Yugoslav countries, only tiny Slovenia has joined (in
    2004). Albania, never a part of Yugoslavia, is also still in the E.U.
    antechamber.

    [4] Only 10 mm per 10 cm. Otherwise an equal number of cucumbers wouldn't
    fit into standard packaging, which would require them to be counted
    individually. More background
    here
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