List of islands of Sweden
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Swedish. (March 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Swedish Wikipedia article at [[:sv:Lista över öar i Sverige]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|sv|Lista över öar i Sverige}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
This is a list of islands of Sweden. According to 2013 statistics report there are in total 267,571 islands in Sweden, fewer than 1000 of which are inhabited.[1] Their total area is 1.2 million hectares, which corresponds to 3 percent of the total land area of Sweden. Most of the islands are in the Baltic Sea regions of the Bay of Bothnia and the Bothnian Sea.[1]
Rough population statistics are from 2015.
Ordered by size
Island | Area | Population |
---|---|---|
Gotland | 2994 km² | 57,000 |
Öland | 1342 km² | 25,000 |
Södertörn | 1207 km² | 800,000 |
Orust | 346 km² | 15,000 |
Hisingen | 199 km² | 125,000 |
Värmdö | 181 km² | 48,000 |
Tjörn | 148 km² | 15,000 |
Väddö and Björkö | 128 km² | 1,700 |
Fårö | 113 km² | 500 |
Selaön | 95 km² | 1,800 |
Gräsö | 93 km² | 800 |
Svartsjölandet | 82 km² | 8,700 |
Hertsön | 73 km² | 22,000 |
Alnön | 68 km² | 8,298 |
Ekerö and Munsö | 68 km² | 11,524 |
Tosterön-Aspön | 66 km² | 3,600 |
Ingarö | 63 km² | 6,900 |
Ljusterö | 62 km² | 1,500 |
Torsö | 62 km² | 520 |
Ammerön | 60 km² | 100 |
Other well-known islands
- Adelsö
- Björkö (Birka)
- Bondaholmen
- Frösön
- Gåsö
- Gotska Sandön
- Helgö
- Holmöarna
- Koster Islands
- Lidingö
- Märket
- Mjältön
- Stora Karlsö
- Ven
- Visingsö
- Furusund
See also
- List of islands of Bothnian Bay
- List of islands of Stockholm
- List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Sweden
- List of islands in the Baltic Sea
- List of islands
References
- ^ a b "3 percent of Sweden's land area consists of islands". Statistiska Centralbyrån. Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- v
- t
- e
Sweden articles
- Prehistory
- 800–1521
- Kalmar Union
- 1523–1611
- Rise to become Great Power
- Swedish Empire
- Great Northern War
- Age of Liberty
- Coup of 1756
- December Crisis (1768)
- Revolution of 1772
- Gustavian era
- Coup of 1809
- Sweden–Norway union
- Famine of 1867–1869
- Modernization
- Industrialization
- World War I
- World War II
- timeline
- 1945–1967
- 1967–1991
- Since 1991
Culture |
---|
- Category
- Portal