Nation state

   

This article refers to a state in which a single nation is dominant. There is also an article on the Internet game NationStates. See also State (disambiguation).

The term nation state (or nation-state), while often used interchangeably with the terms unitary state and independent state, refers properly to states in which a single nation is dominant, such as Portugal or Ireland. A nation state may at the same time be a federal state, as for instance the Federal Republic of Germany and the United States of America.

Over the last few centuries (and particular over the last half-century, except in Africa), this form of state has become more common, so that now most states claim to be nation states. However, this has not always been so; and even today there are some states where it is questionable whether they contain a single dominant nation. This is made more difficult by the question of what is a nation.

There are many states, such as Belgium and Switzerland, with multiple linguistic, religious or ethnic groups within them, without any one being clearly dominant. However, often (and especially in the case of Switzerland and the United States) a bridging national identity has been constructed despite these differences. A better example of a non-nation state would be the United Kingdom, which consists of three nations England, Scotland, and Wales together with Northern Ireland, the northern part of a fourth nation.

A somewhat similar example might be contemporary Spain, where Basques, Catalans, and Galicians claim to be nations distinct from the historically dominant Castile (the Spanish Constitution of 1978 hints at this by mentioning "regions and nationalities" within Spain, and recognizing implicitly their pre-existence).

Historically France was more successful at subsuming within a Gallic nation-state such culturally disparate elements as Brittany, Aquitaine, Languedoc and Burgundy, though less so in Corsica.

In many cases, such as Canada, Switzerland, United States of America, Indonesia, the Soviet Union, India, and China, efforts have been made to create a national identity that encompasses different groups within that country. In the case of China this effort has manifested itself in the concept of Zhonghua minzu (or a Chinese people).

Examples of non-nation states are empires and multinational states which embrace more than one nation, city-states which may be part of a larger nation, thalassocracies, American Indian nations or tribes none of which possess states, and sovereign corporations (as in the Hudson's Bay Company or the British East India Company). The Kurds and the Palestinians are sometimes referred to as Nations without states, much as European Jews before the official creation of Israel in 1948.

The Rise of the nation-state

The rise of a nation-state, as opposed to the dynastic assemblage of territories held in the personal union of a single sovereign, which might be redistributed among his heirs, is a feature of the High Middle Ages. The first nation-states to emerge in Western Europe are generally agreed to be England and France, and their senses of national identity took shape in the atmosphere of mutual antagonism of the Hundred Years War, 1337–1453, a period of economic and social crisis and disorder, which did not lead to the formation of nation-states elsewhere in Europe.

At the same time, opposition against the Kalmar Union, chifly due to diverging economic interests between Central Scandinavia and Southern Jutland, was expressed in nationalist language and first manifested in the Engelbrecht rebellion (14341436). The ultimate demise of the union in 15211523 led to the establishment of Sweden as a nation-state (that however had a neglected Finnish speaking peasant minority).

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