Provinces of Denmark

{{Short description|Statistical divisions}}

The provinces of Denmark ({{langx|da|Landsdele}}) are statistical divisions of Denmark, positioned between the administrative regions and municipalities. They are not administrative divisions, nor subject for any kind of political elections, but are mainly for statistical use.{{Cite web|title=Background - NUTS - Nomenclature of territorial units for statistics - Eurostat|url=https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/nuts/background|access-date=2022-01-22|website=ec.europa.eu}}

This is a list of the eleven Danish provinces and the regions they belong to. There are five regions (EU standard NUTS 2) and eleven provinces (EU standard NUTS 3). The provinces Copenhagen City and Copenhagen surroundings are largely build up areas, the same applies also for large parts of East Zealand and North Zealand.

Although East Zealand (NUTS-3 level) belongs to healthcare Region Zealand (NUTS-2 level), in other respects (like public transport, road maintenance, metropolitan future planning, known as the Finger Plan in all versions since 1949, regional radio and television etc.) it belongs to the Metropolitan Area of Greater Copenhagen. This has been the case since 1970, but at that time the East Zealand province was an administrational and political unit, called Roskilde Amt.

class="wikitable" style="margin-left:1em; text-align:center;"
style="background:#e0e0e0;"

| colspan="2" style="text-align:left; padding-left:7px;"|NUTS-2

| colspan="3" style="text-align:left; padding-left:7px;"|NUTS-3

style="width:50px;"|Code

! style="width:130px;"|Region

! style="width:50px;"|Code

! style="width:130px;"|Province

! Municipalities within the provinces

rowspan="4"|DK01

| rowspan="4" style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Region Hovedstaden (Capital Region of Denmark)

| DK011

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Byen København (Copenhagen City)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Copenhagen, Frederiksberg, Dragør and Tårnby

DK012

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Københavns omegn (Copenhagen surroundings)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Albertslund, Ballerup, Brøndby, Gentofte, Gladsaxe, Glostrup, Herlev, Hvidovre, Høje-Taastrup, Ishøj, Lyngby-Taarbæk, Rødovre and Vallensbæk

DK013

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Nordsjælland (North Zealand)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Allerød, Egedal, Fredensborg, Frederikssund, Furesø, Gribskov, Halsnæs, Helsingør, Hillerød, Hørsholm and Rudersdal

DK014

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Bornholm

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Bornholm with Ertholmene

rowspan="2"|DK02

| rowspan="2" style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Region Sjælland (Region Zealand)

| DK021

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Østsjælland (East Zealand)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Greve, Køge, Lejre, Roskilde and Solrød

DK022

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Vest- og Sydsjælland (West & South Zealand)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Faxe, Guldborgsund, Holbæk, Kalundborg, Lolland, Næstved, Odsherred, Ringsted, Slagelse, Sorø, Stevns and Vordingborg

rowspan="2"|DK03

| rowspan="2" style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Region Syddanmark (Region of Southern Denmark)

| DK031

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Fyn (Funen)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Assens, Faaborg, Kerteminde, Langeland, Middelfart, Nordfyn, Nyborg, Odense, Svendborg and Ærø

DK032

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Sydjylland (South Jutland)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Billund, Esbjerg, Fanø, Fredericia, Haderslev, Kolding, Sønderborg, Tønder, Varde, Vejen, Vejle and Aabenraa

rowspan="2"|DK04

| rowspan="2" style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Region Midtjylland (Central Denmark Region)

| DK041

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;" |Vestjylland (West Jutland)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Herning, Holstebro, Ikast, Lemvig, Ringkøbing-Skjern, Skive, Struer and Viborg

DK042

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;" |Østjylland (East Jutland)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Favrskov, Hedensted, Horsens, Norddjurs, Odder, Randers, Samsø, Silkeborg, Skanderborg, Syddjurs and Aarhus

DK05

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Region Nordjylland (North Denmark Region)

| DK050

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Nordjylland (North Jutland)

| style="text-align:left; padding-left:5px;"|Brønderslev, Frederikshavn, Hjørring, Jammerbugt, Læsø, Mariagerfjord, Morsø, Rebild, Thisted, Vesthimmerland and Aalborg

File:DK Regions and Provinces.JPG

Areas and population within the provinces

class="wikitable sortable"
ProvincePopulation (2013)Area
km2
Population density
Hab./km2
Copenhagen City {{efn|Provinces forming Copenhagen metropolitan area, although the four NUTS 3 provinces belong to two different NUTS 2 regions, and the Baltic island, Bornholm is excluded.|name=*}}align="right"|728,243align="right"|169.6align="right"|4,394
Copenhagen Surroundings {{efn|name=*}}align="right"|530,612align="right"|342.3align="right"|1,550
North Zealand {{efn|name=*}}align="right"|450,245align="right"|1,449.0align="right"|311
East Zealand {{efn|name=*}}align="right"|239,016align="right"|807.7align="right"|296
West & South Zealandalign="right"|577,710align="right"|6,414.9align="right"|90
Bornholmalign="right"|40,305align="right"|592.3align="right"|68
Funenalign="right"|486,709align="right"|3,478.7align="right"|140
South Jutlandalign="right"|715,800align="right"|8,777.3align="right"|82
East Jutlandalign="right"|851,769align="right"|5,841.4align="right"|146
West Jutlandalign="right"|425,769align="right"|7,164.3align="right"|59
North Jutlandalign="right"|581,057align="right"|7,878.6align="right"|74

{{Notelist}}

The provinces Copenhagen City, Copenhagen Surroundings, North Zealand and East Zealand together comprise the Copenhagen metropolitan area. They are together both the planning area for the Copenhagen area, also known as the Finger Planmap of 2007 version at {{cite web |url=http://www2.sns.dk/udgivelser/2007/978-87-7279-780-9/html/bred07.htm |title=Fingerplan 2007 - Figur |accessdate=2012-01-23 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20121215110433/http://www2.sns.dk/udgivelser/2007/978-87-7279-780-9/html/bred07.htm |archivedate=2012-12-15 }} and the Copenhagen Public transport area.{{Cite web|url=http://www.visitcopenhagen.com/copenhagen/transportation/zones|title = Zones}} Close to 2 million people live in their joint area of about 2,770 square kilometres. This is also the best area to use for comparisons with other cities of similar size.

Occasionally the East Jutland province, with around 850,000 inhabitants in 5,841 square kilometres, is labeled as Greater Aarhus, however less than 40% of its population lives in Aarhus municipality.

Area [http://www.dst.dk/da/Statistik/emner/areal/areal-for-kommuner-og-regioner.aspx Areal for kommuner og regioner: Hovedtal - Danmarks Statistik]

Population [http://www.dst.dk/da/Statistik/emner/befolkning-og-befolkningsfremskrivning/folketal.aspx (below the population pyramide)]

References

{{reflist}}

{{Articles on first-level administrative divisions of European countries}}

{{Denmark topics}}

Category:Administrative divisions of Denmark

Denmark

Category:Denmark geography-related lists