The UK's FTSE 100 index rose 1.5%, while the main share indexes in France and Germany saw even bigger increases.
The
dollar also rallied against other currencies after the US Federal
Reserve increased the range for its benchmark rate to between 0.25% and
0.5%.
The Fed said the rise was part of a "gradual" process to get rates back to normal after years of being near zero.
London's FTSE 100 rose 1.5% to 6,152.86, while Frankfurt's Dax jumped more than 3% and the Cac 40 in Paris was 2.4% higher.
'Christmas has come early'
The European stock markets were following the lead given by markets in the US and Asia.
On Wall Street, the Dow Jones closed up 224.18 points, or 1.3%, at 17,749.09, while in Japan, the benchmark Nikkei 225 closed up 1.6% at 19,353.56.
"With
the Dow rising steadily from the moment [Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen]
first opened her mouth, the rosy picture she painted of the US economy
and the absence of major overseas threats has sent markets surging with
relief," said Robert Craig, private client investment manager at MB
Capital.
"In
a press conference that was short on precision and long on pragmatism,
the Fed left the door wide open to future changes in direction."
"But what is clear is that there will be no sudden spiral of further rate rises - and for stocks, Christmas has come early."
This could help pave the way for a so-called Santa rally, where stocks rise in the run-up to the end of the year.
"With
the Fed out of the way and only a couple of trading sessions left
before Christmas, we could now see a traditional end-year rally," said
Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets
in Brussels.
Carmakers, banks and insurers - stocks which do well when an economy is growing - rose.
In London, Standard Chartered jumped 7.8%. In Frankfurt, Mercedes Benz-owner Daimler rose 4.3%. In Paris, Axa and Renault grew 4.5% and 4% apiece.
'No nasty surprises'
On the currency markets, the dollar rose against larger major currencies following the Fed's decision.
Higher rates make the US a more attractive market for deposits, meaning demand for the dollar is likely to rise.
The pound fell by nearly a cent against the dollar to $1.4927.
British government-issued bonds, or gilts, rose in price following the Fed decision, meaning lower yields, or income.
Benchmark
ten-year gilt yields fell 0.056 percentage points to 1.89%. While the
spectre of higher rates is often bad for existing debt prices, analysts
said investors were pleased future Fed rate rises would be "gradual" in nature.
"Overall,
there were no nasty surprises in there - the Fed sounded quite dovish,
data-dependent, so I think fixed income markets were quite happy with
it," Jason Simpson, fixed income strategist at Societe Generale.
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