Europe (In Frederick's Fields)

The European continent is a continent composed of the westernmost peninsula of the Eurasian continent (not to be confused with ), bordered by Asia to the east beyond the Ural mountains as well as the Caucasus and the Bosphorus, by the Atlantic Ocean to the west, and by Africa to the south, separated by the Mediterranean Sea. To the north is the Arctic Sea, with Europe being one of the most northern continents in the world.

The second smallest continent through area (measuring only 10 million square kilometres), Europe is extremely densely populated, with a population of over 900 million inhabitants, roughly equally divided throughout the continent, albeit Central Europe is the most densely populated of all the subregions. Of Europe's approximately 30 continents, the largest one by size and population within Europe is, albeit when considering "Commonwealths" the size is heavily disputed depending on the population by different nations.

Europe is the birthplace of what is known as Western culture. Historically, the colonial supremacy of the European continent in between the sixteenth and twentieth century has led to Europe overdoing in prosperity. Europe, with 11% of the population, has roughly a quarter to a third of the world's gross domestic product. Of the world's highest ten nations by human development index, six are located in Europe.

Political Division
The Council of Europe, an advisory body to which all European nations and some non-European observers belong to, recognises thirty independent and sovereign states within the European continent. These are,

Besides these nations, there is also the territory of, sometimes considered an independent republic, as well as the , which is technically in North America but tied culturally to Denmark. The is rarely also considered a thirty-third state in Europe.