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Schleswig-Flensburg is a district in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is bounded by (from the
south and clockwise) the districts of Rendsburg-Eckernförde, Dithmarschen and
Nordfriesland, the Danish
county of South Jutland, the city of Flensburg and the Baltic Sea.
History
Written history in the area began about 800 AD, when the Viking settlement of Haithabu was founded. Later the neighbouring city of
Schleswig took the place of Haithabu and became a powerful town in the 11th
century. It later lost its power to Lübeck.
The district was established in 1974 by merging the former districts of Flensburg-Land
and Schleswig. Due to the neighbourhood of Denmark and the regional history there is a large percentage of Danish
inhabitants.
Geography
The countryside is generally plain. The Schlei, a firth of the Baltic Sea, is the
southern border of this district. All the land north of the Schlei and south of Flensburg is called the peninsula of Angeln. Angeln was the ancient home of the Germanic people known as the Angles, which migrated to
Britain in the early Middle Ages.
Coat of arms
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The coat of arms displays two lions, symbolising the old duchy of Schleswig,
which contained three lion in its arms. At the bottom of the arms there is a wavy line symbolising the Baltic Sea and its
firths. |
Towns and municipalities
External links
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