
According to classification by size, mainland Australia (7.6 million km2) is the smallest continent and Greenland (2.1 million km2) is the largest island.
So Greenland is 21 times larger than Iceland, with a population of 65,000. Iceland is number 18, with its 100,000 km2 (population 320,000). Number two, New Guinea, is 7.8 times bigger than the Republic of Iceland. Population: 8 million.
Borneo is ranked third, a smidge smaller than New Guinea, population 20 million in three states: Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei. Fourth is Madagascar, 5.9 times larger than Iceland, population 22 million.
Number five, and five times larger than Iceland, is Baffin Island, population 10,000, while sixth is Sumatra, 4.4 times the size of Iceland with a population of 52 million.
Number seven is Honshu, the largest of the Japanese islands, 2.2 times larger than Iceland, with a population of 103 million. Victoria Island on the north coast of Canada is number eight, 2.1 times the size of Iceland, population, 2,000.
Great Britain is ninth on the list, twice the size of Iceland, with a population of 63 million, followed by Ellesmere Island, number 10, and Sulawesi in Indonesia, number 11.
New Zealand’s South Island, 1.4 times the size of Iceland and with 1 million inhabitants is twelfth. Number 13 is Java, 1.3 times larger than Iceland, with 140 million people—the world’s most populated island.
New Zealand’s North Island is next on the list. The island measures 1.1 times the size of Iceland and has a population of 3.4 million, followed by Luzon, the largest of the Philippine islands, nine percent larger than Iceland, population close to 50 million.
Newfoundland is sixteenth. Eight percent larger than Iceland, it has a population of 480,000. Newfoundland is followed by Cuba, only slightly larger than Iceland, with 11.1 million people.
Number 18 is the Republic of Iceland, an island consisting of one of the youngest land masses on the planet.
Finally, the oldest, and the world’s biggest island Greenland, our next-door neighbor 400 kilometers to the west, is next.
The southernmost point of Greenland goes as far south as southern Norway, and the northernmost tip is closer to the North Pole than any other country.
Yes, Greenland lies to the west of Iceland, but also the South, North and East; the easternmost point of Greenland is more easterly than Gerpir, the eastern most point of Iceland.
The world is not flat.
Páll Stefánsson - ps@icelandreview.com
Whitsun, or hvítasunna in Icelandic, is a religious holiday, celebrated on the seventh Sunday after Easter. Usually known as Pentecost in English, the holiday commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the disciples of Christ.
more
Icelandic post-rock band Sigur Rós are set to appear on Jay Leno’s The Tonight Show on NBC on Friday next week.
more
Chairman of the Progressive Party Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson will become Iceland’s next prime minister and leader of the Independence Party, Bjarni Benediktsson, will take up the position of Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs, as reported in the Icelandic media yesterday.
more
The festival Reykjavík Music Mess kicks off at KEX Hostel in the center of the capital with an opening party on May 23 at 8 pm. An art exhibition themed around the participating bands will open at the occasion and Boogie Trouble will play a few songs. Entry is free.
more
The 2013 April-May issue of Iceland Review & Atlantica has been released. Packed with informative and entertaining stories, highlights include an interview with outgoing Prime Minister Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir and the people who know her best, a photo essay of ice caves in Europe’s largest glacier and a colorful feature on life in the West Fjords.
more
The 11th Reykjavík Shorts & Docs. Catch it while it lasts!
more

Fida Abu Libdeh moved to Iceland from East Jerusalem at 16, made her way through the Icelandic education system and now runs a promising startup company.
more
The 27th Reykjavík Arts Festival starts this week.
more