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Background Stats: compare key data on Germany & Ireland

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Definitions

  • Daylight Savings Time end date: Rules that determine the date on which daylight savings time ends. Clocks are moved backwards on this date.
  • Daylight Savings Time start date: Rules that determine the date on which daylight savings time begins. Clocks are moved forward on this date.
  • First human settlement > Date: Date or period of the first known or suspected human settlement within each geographic location listed. For further descriptions, please refer to notes.
  • First human settlement > Notes: Description of the first known or suspected human settlement within each geographic location listed. For the date or period of the described settlement, please refer to the according date stat.
  • First human settlement > Place: Location of the first known or suspected human settlement in each country.
  • Land border length: The length of each country's land border. Islands are listed as having a 0.0 km.
  • National anthems: National anthem.
  • National tree: Name of tree.

    No date was available from the Wikipedia article, so we used the date of retrieval.

  • Neighboring countries and territories: The countries and territories neighboring each country. "L" means they share only a land border and "M" means they have only maritime boundaries. A blank means they share both.
  • Number of maritime boundary neighbours: Number of states and territories with which each country shares a maritime border. Two countries separated from each other by a body of water have a maritime border with each other.
  • Overview: A geopolitical overview of every sovereign country in the world, briefly examining their recent history and place on the global stage. The texts are taken from the BBC News website.
STAT Germany Ireland
Daylight Savings Time end date 01:00 UTC on last Sunday October 01:00 UTC on last Sunday October
Daylight Savings Time start date 01:00 UTC on last Sunday March 01:00 UTC on last Sunday March
First human settlement > Date 42,000-43,000 BP 7,700 BC
First human settlement > Notes Three Paleolithic flutes belonging to the early Aurignacian , which is associated with the assumed earliest presence of Homo sapiens in Europe ( Cro-Magnon ). It is the oldest example of prehistoric music . Carbon dating of hazel nut shells reveals this place to have been inhabited for 9,700 years.
First human settlement > Place Geißenklösterle , Baden-Württemberg Mount Sandel
Land border length 3,621 km
Ranked 54th. 10 times more than Ireland
360 km
Ranked 146th.
National anthems Deutschlandlied ( Song of Germany ) \u2013 the Third stanza Amhr\u00e1n na bhFiann ( The Soldier's Song )
National tree Oak Sessile Oak
Neighboring countries and territories Austria (L) Belgium (L) Czech Republic (L) Denmark France (L) Luxembourg (L) Netherlands Poland Sweden (M) Switzerland (L) United Kingdom (M) United Kingdom
Number of maritime boundary neighbours 5
Ranked 16th. 5 times more than Ireland
1
Ranked 122nd.
Overview <p>Germany is Europe&#039;s most industrialized and populous country. Famed for its technological achievements, it has also produced some of Europe&#039;s most celebrated composers, philosophers and poets.</p> <p>Achieving national unity later than other European nations, Germany quickly caught up economically and militarily, before defeats in World War I and II left the country shattered, facing the difficult legacy of Nazism, and divided between Europe&#039;s Cold War blocs.</p> <p>Germany rebounded to become the continent&#039;s economic giant, and a prime mover of European cooperation. With the end of the Cold War, the two parts of the country were once again united, although the economy of the former east continues to lag behind that of the former west.</p><br> <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17299607">Full Article</a> <p>Ireland emerged from the conflict that marked its birth as an independent state to become one of Europe&#039;s economic success stories in the final decade of the twentieth century.</p> <p>Long under English or British rule, Ireland lost half its population in the decades following the Great Famine of the 1840s to death and emigration.</p> <p>After World War I, independence from the United Kingdom was only achieved at the price of civil war and partition. Northern Ireland remains part of Britain.</p><br> <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17473476">Full Article</a>

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