Thoughts on this map. Do Scandinavians use different words as opposed to the word "Saint"...

Thoughts on this map. Do Scandinavians use different words as opposed to the word "Saint"? How strong is Christianity in those countries anyway?

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We use holy instead

They probably use another word.

Christianity is irrelevant in Scandinavia, just like in France, it's probably some vocal far right retards who role-play as Christian.

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Not surprised about France, we have 500 places named Saint-Martin (with usually something after it, like the name of the region it's in or the name of a river near that place)
Also why are there so many places with "saint" in galicia ?

we use saint/ holy
and we only got like 7 saints connected to norway, and 2 of them are somewhere on orkney
christianity is mostly irrelevant here

The map is absolute bogus for Poland. It's less than 40% and falling.

Well hello there lads.

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We also have the astronomically number of 37,000 towns compared to 10,000 towns in UK.

Mikkeli is S:t Michel in Swedish but that's about it.

All parishes start with Saint (add your virgin, apostle, saint, etc. of choice)

why are meds so shallow

we say "sankt"

Well, in Slavic languages we also rarely create names of towns combined with "Saint", I'm sure most of these red dots in Slavic lands are old German villages or names borrowed from the German language (or exact translation)

Slovenia has like 100 places that start with Sveti (Saint) Jakob, Martin na Muri, Jurij...

German influence

most of your towns didnt even have proper slavic names and they were made up by yugoslavs

Just had a look. You're right. pic related. Some are Slav in origin and were adapted by the german majority

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In Poland almost all such names are in places where Germans lived so I guess it works for all Slavic countries, at least catholic ones.

>Sveti
>

more like Šent- as in Šentlenart, tho that's in part due to the commie renaming of places beginning with Sveti into their dialectal forms in order to erase the old saints' cults.

>most of your towns didnt even have proper slavic names and they were made up by yugoslavs

that's just not true

but you have to understand that Slovenes are not like other Slavs. Slavic names did not exist among Slovenes in 1800, we were completely westernized.

this doesn't mean anything as every Slovenian village had a German name once. Unlike other Slavs, Slovenes travelled on pilgrimages to Koln and Aachen and Santiago. What our elite did in the 1800s when they renamed themselves to Serbian and Russian names and reshaped the language was a betrayal of our unique western-Slavic cultural fusion.

>Christianity is irrelevant in Scandinavia
this

>we
>scandinavians

hoo boy

We use Sankt, often abbreviated as S:t

It's mostly used to name streets or squares though, I can't think of any cities containing 'Sankt'