Aarhus is Denmark's second city and the capital of Jutland, famous notably for its Old Town. |
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At Jutland Bank the British Admiralty wished to intercept the German fleet as it left its home port. |
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Admiral Jellicoe found fame in Word War One as the admiral who led the British Navy at the Battle of Jutland. |
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With your own set of wheels it is easy to explore the West Jutland region, an area that has been truly blessed by Mother Nature. |
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My wife's grandfather went through the battle of Jutland as a sixteen-year-old midshipman. |
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While in the Senior Service Mr Allingham serviced aircraft and acted as a spotter for submarines and mines during the Battle of Jutland. |
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His father had been an embittered hired hand to a poor tenant farmer in the forsaken moorlands of Jutland. |
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The cannonade from the fleets was so violent that people along the west coast of Jutland were prevented from sleeping during the whole night, and foregathered on the beach. |
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It's the capital of the Jutland peninsula, on the north-east coast, and is known throughout the country for its old-world charm and picturesque streets. |
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In 1987 66,000 fry were released in the river and in a few other south Jutland rivers from which the houting has disappeared since the beginning of the century. |
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The country consists of a peninsula, Jutland, and an archipelago of 443 named islands, with the largest being Zealand and Funen. |
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Historians believe that before their arrival, most of Jutland and the nearest islands were settled by tribal Jutes. |
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The remaining Jutish population in Jutland assimilated in with the settling Danes. |
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A sizeable portion of Denmark's terrain consists of rolling plains whilst the coastline is sandy, with large dunes in northern Jutland. |
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It is now possible to drive from Frederikshavn in northern Jutland to Copenhagen on eastern Zealand without leaving the motorway. |
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Bismarck successfully concluded war on Denmark in 1864, which promoted German over Danish interests in the Jutland peninsula. |
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Although the Germans claimed victory at Jutland, the British Grand Fleet remained in control at sea. |
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A storm on 3 February 1825 penetrated the narrow land mass, Agger Tange, and thus separated Northern Jutland from the rest of Jutland. |
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The Danish Wadden Sea Islands and the German North Frisian Islands stretch along the southwest coast of Jutland in the German Bight. |
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Nydam Bog has played a role in the Danish national claim for Southern Jutland. |
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The Eudoses are the Jutes, these names probably refer to localities in Jutland or on the Baltic coast. |
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The Kentish region, settled by the Jutes from Jutland, has the scantiest literary remains. |
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Also, the spread of metallurgy in Denmark is intimately related to the Beaker representation in northern Jutland. |
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The interaction between the Beaker groups on the Veluwe Plain and in Jutland must, at least initially, have been quite intensive. |
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Tacitus portrays a people called the Eudoses living in the north of Jutland and these may have been the later Iutae. |
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Up until around the 6th century, Jutland is described as being the homeland of the Jutes, another Scandinavian tribe. |
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Around 890, Wulfstan of Hedeby undertook a journey from Hedeby on Jutland along the Baltic Sea to the Prussian trading town of Truso. |
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In August 2004 Arriva purchased Wulff, which operated buses in Jutland and Copenhagen. |
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Soapstone was traded with the Norse on Iceland and in Jutland, who used it for pottery. |
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The Battle of Jutland was annually celebrated as a great victory by the right wing in Weimar Germany. |
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In May 2016, the 100th Anniversary commemoration of the Battle of Jutland was held. |
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World War I pitted the old Royal Navy against the new Kaiserliche Marine of Imperial Germany, culminating in the 1916 Battle of Jutland. |
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Otto's army was unable to break the fortification, so he changed tactics and sailed around it, landing in Jutland with a large fleet. |
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Major battles included the Battle of Heligoland Bight, the Battle of the Dogger Bank, and the Battle of Jutland. |
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Archaeologists have not found any clear indications of a mass migration from Jutland in the early Iron Age. |
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Advocates for a northern homeland point to Greek and Roman sources that associate the Cimbri with the peninsula of Jutland. |
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According to this hypothesis the Geats would have not only resided in southern Sweden but also in Jutland, where Beowulf would have lived. |
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Between them was Engria and north of these three, at the base of the Jutland peninsula, was Nordalbingia. |
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German is spoken by a minority in Southern Jutland and their cultural and language rights are protected by the government. |
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After a very brief period of mourning, Fengi marries Geruth, and declares himself sole leader of Jutland. |
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In Denmark notably in Jutland, where the northern half use it extensively in traditional dialect, and multiple places in Sweden. |
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The Weichsel glaciation covered all of Denmark most of the time, except the western coasts of Jutland. |
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The campaign ended in defeat, and Jutland was occupied by the imperial army of Albrecht von Wallenstein. |
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The islands and Jutland together constituted the kingdom, whereas the monarch held the duchies in personal union with the kingdom. |
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Some yields were so high that it allowed farmers to trade furs and skins for luxury items, especially with Jutland. |
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The extensive Late Neolithic shaft mines in north Jutland and Scania testify to the demand for top-quality Senonian flint. |
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Operation Jutland, a joint initiative across the North-east, also uncovered a cosh in a car stopped on Teesside. |
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Foraminiferal stratigraphy in a marine Eemian-Weichselian sequence at Apholm, North Jutland. |
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The medieval Code of Jutland applied for Schleswig until 1900 when it was replaced by the Prussian Civil Code. |
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Jutland has historically been one of the three lands of Denmark, the other two being Scania and Zealand. |
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Before that, according to Ptolemy, Jutland or the Cimbric Chersonese was the home of Teutons, Cimbri and Charudes. |
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During the First World War, the Battle of Jutland in the North Sea west of Jutland was one of the largest naval battles in history. |
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These did not enter service until after the Battle of Jutland, so failed to take part in any major naval action of the war. |
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Following the Battle of Jutland, the capital ships of the Imperial Navy had been confined to inactive service in harbor. |
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Jutland later showed that the British battlecruisers were still vulnerable to ammunition fires and magazine explosions, if hit by plunging fire. |
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Signalling on board Lion was again poor in the first hours of Jutland, with serious consequences for the British. |
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The battlecruisers failed to improve fire distribution and similar targeting errors were made at Jutland. |
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Jutland was the last major battle in world history fought primarily by battleships. |
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In July, bad news from the Somme campaign swept concern over Jutland from the British consciousness. |
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Subsequently, there has been considerable support for the view of Jutland as a strategic victory for the British. |
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One month after the battle, the Grand Fleet was stronger than it had been before sailing to Jutland. |
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In this view, the most important consequence of Jutland was the decision of the Germans to engage in unrestricted submarine warfare. |
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Aarhus, Silkeborg, Billund, Randers, Kolding, Horsens, Vejle, Fredericia and Haderslev, along with a number of smaller towns, make up the East Jutland metropolitan area. |
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The Danish king's realm still consisted of the islands, the northern half of the Jutland peninsula, and the Duchy of Schleswig in real union with the Duchy of Holstein. |
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During the 10th century the royal seat of the Danes was moved from Lejre to Jelling in central Jutland, marking the foundation and consolidation of the Kingdom of Denmark. |
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These sites are concentrated in northern Jutland around the Limfjord and on the Djursland peninsula, largely contemporary to the local Upper Grave Period. |
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Roman sources such as Strabo and Tacitus identify these Cimbri with a group living in Jutland, but strong evidence for this connection is lacking. |
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By 801, a strong central authority appears to have been established in Jutland, and the Danes were beginning to look beyond their own territory for land, trade and plunder. |
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This civic code covered the Jutland Peninsula from the area north of the River Eider to Funen as well as the North Jutlandic Island and other smaller islands. |
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Jutland is a peninsula bounded by the North Sea to the west, the Skagerrak to the north, the Kattegat and Baltic Sea to the east and Germany to the south. |
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The Germans also generally had better propellant handling procedures, a point that was to have disastrous consequences for the British battlecruisers at Jutland. |
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In Southern Jutland in southwestern Denmark, German is also spoken by the North Schleswig Germans, and German is a recognized minority language in this region. |
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A small remnant population of Cimbri and Teutones remained in northern Jutland, southern Scandinavia and the Baltic coast at least until the 1st century. |
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Bede places the homeland of the Jutes on the other side of the Angles relative to the Saxons, which would mean the northern part of the Jutland Peninsula. |
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Geological surveys have suggested that it stretched from Britain's east coast to the Netherlands and the western coasts of Germany and the peninsula of Jutland. |
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Five Royal Marines earned the Victoria Cross in the First World War, two at Zeebrugge, one at Gallipoli, one at Jutland and one on the Western Front. |
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The Bobbio Orosius from the early 7th century, distinguishes between South Danes inhabiting Jutland and North Danes inhabiting the isles and the province of Scania. |
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Typical to northern Jutland, however, cremations have been reported, also outside the Beaker core area, once within the context of an almost full Bell Beaker equipment. |
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Under the reign of Gudfred in 804 the Danish kingdom may have included all the lands of Jutland, Scania and the Danish islands, excluding Bornholm. |
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The gateway to West Jutland is the lively North Sea port of Esbjerg with its central square full of cafes and restaurants and a long pedestrianised shopping street. |
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The Jutes invaded the British Isles three centuries earlier, pouring out from Jutland during the Age of Migrations, before the Danes settled there. |
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