It doesn't count having had, in prehistory, an evolved civilization like the Nuragic one. Nor that an enlightened woman, before 1400, endowed the island with the memorable Carta de Logu , when the word law perhaps still had to be introduced into the common lexicon of peoples, especially the Nordic ones.

It is too much to ask that they know Eleonora d'Arborea in Stockholm.

The fact is that in the pavilion housing the top management of the Swedish presidency of the European Union there is a giant map of Europe, but one detail is missing: Sardinia .

The second largest Italian island has been "forgotten", while Corsica, despite being smaller, appears disproportionate on the map.

The stylized map, made of living moss, is on display in the entrance to the meeting room where ministers and delegations from all over Europe met for the Swedish presidency semester in Arlanda near Stockholm.

In addition to Sardinia, there are also the islands of Menorca, Ibiza and Oland, a small island off the coast of the city of Kalmar, in south-eastern Sweden, and other smaller islands in the Mediterranean.

It's cheap to fix. After all, Sardinia on the map also fits well.

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