Perrin3088
|> I find that Native Americans, are living in the past... we don't have Native Carthaginians, do we...? Native Byzantinians..? Native Czechoslovakians..?
Subtle difference: "American" refers to a piece of land, it's a geographical reference; Carthagia, Byzantium and Czechoslovakia all refer to countries, they're national references. (And, I'm quite sure there's a lot of Native Czechoslovakians left, after all, they only split up into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993.)
On a semi-related note, I have a lot of international friends; comparing passports is always funny. If felt a little weird to see a Slovenian passport for the first time: "Country of birth: Yugoslavia". Of course it makes sense when you think about it. I was caught off-guard (should've known better) the first time looking at a Russian passport: "Country of birth: Soviet Union". None of my Turkish friends are old enough for their passport to say "Country of birth: Byzantine Empire" though. :p
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Moros
|> Does anyone know any country that was never colonized/conquered?
Depends on how you define things. For instance, during the time of the Kalmar Union, the current countries of Denmark, Norway (including Iceland and Greenland) and Sweden (including Finland) where not actually "colonised", yet they were not independant either:
[Wikipedia](
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalmar_union):
|> The countries had not technically given up their sovereignty or even their independence, but in practice, they were not autonomous, the common monarch holding sovereignty and, in practice, leading foreign policy (..)
Also, where do you begin to count? Do the Roman Empire and Alexander the Great's empire count for instance? If you only look at the last few centuries, you could go with the USA (probably, they did have some issues with Mexico, I'm not sure if Mexican soldiers were ever on the USA side of the current border), Canada, Australia (I think they lost some small parts of territory during WWII) and probably Great Britain (maybe some issues with (North) Ireland and some islands close to France were lost during WWII) and the countries who's WWII-neutrality was respected (Switzerland and the Vatican).
It's probably cheating, but if you only look at "not being conquered since the birth of the country", there's a lot of "new" countries which would qualify. In Europe that would be Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia, even Kosovo if you're "flexible" enough with your definitions. In Asia most countries that were (officially) formed after the end of WWII (such as Indonesia). Of course, most of those were independent territories before, but (I think) not really in the modern sense of a "country".
In short, mankind has waged far too many wars already; with the utterly screwed up and shameful history our species has, it's highly unlikely you'll find any territory at all which has been peaceful and left alone by its neighbours since the dawn of time... :(
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|> Ok, I tried zooming in on North Korea it wasn't surprising, but funny anyway:)
You weren't surprised? I was astonished at the zoom level available. Sure, there's only one city labelled, but if you zoom in far enough, labels for rivers start appearing; it's not nearly as blank as you'd expect. Look at this [stadium](
http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=39.049738,125.775505&z=19) for instance; I doubt imagery as detailed as this was available (outside of the USA and Russian intelligence agencies) even just a few years ago.