Tickets for the Roskilde festival are available from the festival's official website. Tickets are priced according to ...
President-elect Donald Trump threatened Tuesday to place new tariffs on imports from Denmark unless the country gives up control of Greenland, news that dented the stocks of some of Denmark’s ...
Denmark plans to replace the F-16MLUs with F-35s to meet its needs for national QRA and NATO’s Air Policing missions, but is also looking to support F-35 operations from Kangerlussuaq airport in ...
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen told President-elect Donald Trump “Greenland is not for sale” during a phone call this week, according to a press release from her office, as Trump ...
The Danish prime minister told President-elect Trump that Greenland will decide its future in a call Wednesday, according to a press release. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen stated that in ...
Welcome to Escape Academy. Train to become the ultimate Escapist. Solve Puzzles. Hack Servers. Meet the Faculty. Brew the perfect cup of tea. Escape Rooms in single player or co-op with a friend ...
Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has told Donald Trump that it is up to Greenland to decide its own future. The US president-elect sparked turmoil in Copenhagen and Nuuk, Greenland's ...
Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and President-elect Donald Trump held a 45-minute-long phone call Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen has told Donald Trump that it is up to ...
Around 4,900 years ago, Neolithic people on Bornholm, Denmark, sacrificed stones with sun motifs, coinciding with a volcanic eruption that obscured the sun in Northern Europe.
Denmark's prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, told President-elect Donald Trump that Greenland's independence would be up to the Danish self-governing territory. Frederiksen and Trump spoke over ...
Denmark's prime minister held a 45-minute phone conversation with Donald Trump where she says she delivered the same message about Greenland as the territory's leader: it's not for sale.
In the 1950s, around 20 Inuit children, aged between five and nine, from various villages in Greenland were taken from their families and sent to Copenhagen to learn Danish. The goal was not only to ...