Europe is one of the traditional
seven political continents, and a peninsular sub-continent of the geographic
continent Eurasia. Europe is bounded to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the
west by the Atlantic Ocean, to the south by the Mediterranean Sea, and to the
southeast by the Caucasus Mountains, the Black Sea and the waterways connecting
the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. To the east, Europe is generally divided
from Asia by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural River, and by the
Caspian Sea.[1]
Europe is covering about 10,180,000 square
kilometres (3,930,000 sq mi) or 2% of the Earth's surface and about 6.8% of the
planet's total land area. It hosts a large number of sovereign states (ca. 50),
whose precise number depends on the underlying definition of Europe's border,
as well as on the inclusion or exclusion of semi-recognized states. Europe
contains both Russia, the world's largest by area and Europe's largest by
population, as well as the Vatican, the smallest on both counts (not counting
the non-sovereign Pitcairn Islands in the Pacific). Europe is the third most
populous continent after Asia and Africa with a population of 731,000,000 or
about 11% of the world's population. According to UN population projection
(medium variant), Europe's share will fall to 7% in 2050, numbering 653
million.[2] However, Europe's borders and population are in dispute, as the
term continent can refer to a cultural and political distinction or a
physiographic one.
Europe is the birthplace of Western
culture. European nations played a predominant role in global affairs from the
16th century onwards, especially after the beginning of colonization. By the
17th and 18th centuries European nations controlled most of Africa, the
Americas, and large portions of Asia. World War I and World War II led to a
decline in European dominance in world affairs as the United States and Soviet
Union took prominence. The Cold War between those two superpowers divided
Europe along the Iron Curtain. European integration led to the formation of the
Council of Europe and the European Union in Western Europe, both of which have
been expanding eastward since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991.
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