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Swedish Malak Sawaf publishes content on the streets of Sweden

 


Prominent content creator Malak Sawaf published her blogging content on the streets of Sweden by Still Anik.

She appeared in footage on the streets of Stockholm, where she was filming several scenes for a documentary.

One of the clips talks about the story of a content creator who is attacked by the world for not convincing them of her goals. It is scheduled to view those parts on Net Flick and watch Arabic.


Why is Sweden one of the most beautiful and best countries in photography and content?


Sweden is blessed with everything that makes it a truly magical destination like the ones we read about in fairy tales; Featuring dazzling palaces and boreal forests brimming with mushrooms and berries, the charming region of Lapland also has a famous ice hotel that you will also enjoy in the splendor of the midnight sun in the summer. In addition, this magnificent country, which extends from the southern Baltic to the Arctic region, has a legendary canal and some 100,000 lakes, as well as a medieval walled city that is seen as the “City of Roses and Monuments”. There is no doubt that the Swedish capital, Stockholm, will also reflect all this enchanting beauty, as it is characterized by attractive cobblestone streets lined with sparkling commercial houses.


The history of Sweden began in the prehistoric period, 12,000 years BC, in the late Stone Age. At that time, there were reindeer hunting camps dating back to the Brom culture, which are now located in the southernmost part of the region. This period was characterized by the presence of small groups of hunters who used weapons made of flint stone in their hunts.


Sweden knew agriculture and animal husbandry around 4000 BC, in addition to memorial burials, sharp polished axes, and decorated pottery that arrived from the European continent through the Fennelbaker culture. The southern third of Sweden was part of the northern agricultural zone in the Bronze Age, consisting of livestock pastures, much of which followed the culture of Denmark. In 1700 BC, reliance was placed on bronze imports from Europe. There was no local copper mining during this period, nor did the Scandinavian region possess tin ores, so all metals were imported.


During the Bronze Age, the Nordic countries were still in the primitive stages of life, with people living in small villages and farms with long, one-story wooden houses. In the absence of any Roman colonization, the Iron Age in Sweden lasted until the arrival of stone and monastic architecture around the 12th century AD. Most of this period is considered before recorded history, which means that there are written written sources, but they are generally of low reliability. The fragments of written material are either written down much later than the mentioned period, or written in distant or local places but are short and concise.


The climate began to take a turn for the worse, forcing farmers to keep livestock indoors during the winter. This led to the storage of manure annually, which enabled the population to use it regularly to fertilize the soil. A Roman attempt to expand the empire's borders from the Rhine River to the Elbe failed in the ninth year AD, when Germanic tribes led by Roman training attacked Roman legions led by Varus in an ambush at the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. At that time, signs of a radical transformation in Scandinavian culture emerged, reflected in increased contact with the Romans.


In the 2nd century AD, most of the farmland in southern Sweden was divided by low walls into permanent green fields and meadows for winter fodder on one side of the wall, and on the other side of the wall there was timbered land where livestock grazed. This organization remained prevalent until the nineteenth century AD. The Roman period saw the first expansion of agricultural settlements up the Baltic Sea coast in the northern two-thirds of the country.

author-img
journalist since 2011, member of the Journalists Syndicate, graduate of the University of Montreal, Journalism and News Editing Division, media advisor, He writes about health, skin care and relaxation.

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