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  • In the scope of human history, most countries are fairly young.

  • For thousands of years the world was divided into empires and kingdoms, ruled by monarchs

  • or theocracies.

  • In fact, a vast majority of modern nation-states only became independent after the year 1800.

  • But there are a few that mark their independence centuries or even millenniums before then.

  • So what are the world’s oldest countries?

  • Well, one country that is considered among the oldest is San Marino, a tiny republic

  • in the mountains of central Italy.

  • According to legend, San Marino was founded in the year 301 by a stonesman who was escaping

  • religious persecution in a nearby city.

  • He hid on the top of a mountain, built a chapel and formed a community of people who shared

  • his Christian beliefs.

  • As Europe’s first city-state, San Marino hung on to its independence even as Italy

  • unified around it and other small republics dissolved.

  • In 1600, its leaders drafted what is now believed to be the world’s oldest constitution.

  • Even older than San Marino is China, which celebrates its founding year as 221 BC.

  • Civilization in China can be traced back roughly five thousand years.

  • The region began as a collection of tribes, which then divided into seven walled stateseach

  • governed by a different dynasty.

  • After a nearly 200 year war between these states, one dynasty, led by King Qin Shi Huang,

  • emerged victorious.

  • Qin[CHIN] knocked down the dividing walls and built one Great Wall along the northern

  • border of his newly unified kingdom, and became China’s first emperor.

  • His dynasty strongly advocated for law and order, centralized wealth and collectivization,

  • a philosophy that paved the way for modern, communist China.

  • Even the nameChinais derived from the name Qin.

  • But China’s neighbor, Japan, might be even older.

  • The country marks its founding at 660 BC, when according to legend, Emperor Jimmu conquered

  • the region’s most powerful province and established a central government.

  • Jimmu is believed to be a descendent of the Sun Goddess, and the first ancestor of the

  • country’s royal family.

  • However, many historians consider Jimmu’s reign to be a myth, and instead place the

  • country’s origin roughly 1,200 years later.

  • Either way, Japan is still considered one of the oldest countries in the world.

  • Very few countries consider their independence to have taken place more than 500 years ago.

  • One exception is France, which has been a country since the year 843.

  • Denmark and Austria’s independence came roughly a century later.

  • In fact, even though Europe is not the cradle of civilization, it is home to many of the

  • world’s oldest countries.

  • This is in part because for centuries, much of the world was owned by European powers.

  • The British Empire alone laid claim to India, Australia, much of Africa and North America

  • as well as countless small islands.

  • Many of these nations didn’t become independent countries until decolonization after World

  • War Two.

  • Many of the countries we think of as ancient may not be as old as we think.

  • China, Japan and San Marino have thousands of years on most countries.

  • In fact, some of the youngest nations have been around for less than a decade.

  • So what are the newest countries?

  • Find out in this video.

  • Sudan and South Sudan had been at odds since Sudan originally formed in 1956.

  • The conflict was due to a largely Christian and non-Muslim south feeling unrepresented

  • and oppressed by the Arab and Muslim north.

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In the scope of human history, most countries are fairly young.

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