1914 was the first year of the First World War in Sweden, which mostly consisted of Sweden deciding their stance on the war, eventually deciding on a neutrality. Sweden's neutrality lasted the entirety of the war.
Demographics
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Life expectancy - ~58 years [1] Fertility rate - 3.2 births per woman [2]
Population - 5.7 million [3]
Important Figures
editEvents
edit- 6 February - Courtyard Speech
- 6 February - Peasant armament support march
- 27 March - March 1914 Swedish general election
- 28 May – Selma Lagerlöf inducted to the Swedish Academy.
- 5 September - September 1914 Swedish general election
- 31 July - Declaration of neutrality in the Austro-Serbian conflict
- 2 August - Knut Wallenberg speaks to Esmé Howard and tells him that if Sweden were to enter this conflict, then they would never fight on the side of Russia[4]
- 3 August - Declaration of neutrality in the conflict between Germany, and France and Russia
- 8 August - Sweden enters a join declaration of neutrality between all belligerents in World War I with Norway
- 18-19 December - King Gustaf V meets with Christian X of Denmark and Haakon VII of Norway in Malmö[5]
Births
editThis is an incomplete list, if any editors wish to add more please do so by manually going through this list
- 30 January - Inga-Bodil Vetterlund, actor (died 14 September 1980 at 66)
- 14 February - Britt G. Hallqvist, poet (died 20 March 1997 at 83)
- 26 March - Åke Grönberg, actor (died 15 September 1969 at 55)
- 18 April - Tord Bernheim, actor (died 23 July 1992 at 78)
- 10 July - Henrik Schildt, actor (15 March 2001 at 87)
- 11 July - Sven Fahlman, fencer (died 23 June 2003 at 88)
- 25 July - Olle Nordemar, actor (died 18 February 1999 at 84)
- 9 October - Bengt Logardt, actor (died 25 September 1994 at 79)
Deaths
edit- 1 March - Tor Aulin, violinist (born 1866 in Sweden)
- 20 April – Ivar Wickman, physician who discovered the epidemic and contagious character of poliomyelitis in 1907 (born 1872)
- 10 November - Nils Christoffer Dunér, astronomer (born 1839)
References
edit- ^ "Life expectancy". Our World in Data. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Fertility rate: children per woman". Our World in Data. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Population by age and sex. Year 1860 - 2022". Statistikdatabasen. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "CONTENTdm". dmr.bsu.edu. Retrieved 2024-01-31.
- ^ "Mitt Hjärtas Malmö". 2016-03-04. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2024-02-01.