| Reign | 18 November, 1905-September 21 1957 |
| Predecessor | Oscar II |
| Successor | Olav V |
| Spouse | Princess Maud of Wales |
| Issue | Olav V |
| Royal House | House of Oldenburg |
| Father | Frederick VIII of Denmark |
| Mother | Lovisa of Sweden |
| Born | August 3, 1872 |
| Died | 21 September, 1957 |
Haakon is regarded as one of the greatest Norwegians of the twentieth century and is particularly revered for his courage during the German invasion and his leadership and preservation of Norwegian unity during the Nazi occupation. At the time of his death at age 85 in 1957, Haakon had led Norway for 52 years.
Prince Carl was born in Charlottenlund. He belonged to the Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg branch of the House of Oldenburg. The House of Oldenburg had been the Danish royal family since 1448, and between 1536-1814, also ruled Norway when it was part of the Kingdom of Denmark-Norway. The house was originally from northern Germany, where also the Glucksburg (Lyksborg) branch held their small fief. The family had permanent links with Norway already beginning from late Middle Ages, and also several of his paternal ancestors had been kings of independent Norway (Haakon V of Norway, Christian I of Norway, Frederick I, Christian III, Frederick II, Christian IV, as well as Frederick III of Norway who united Norway into the Danish kingdom, after which it was not independent at least until 1814). Christian Frederick, who was King of Norway briefly in 1814, the first king of Norwegian 1814 constitution and struggle for independence, was his great-granduncle.
In 1896, Prince Carl married his first cousin Princess Maud of Wales, youngest daughter of the future King Edward VII of the United Kingdom and his wife, Princess Alexandra of Denmark, daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and Princess Louise of Hesse-Cassel. Their son, Prince Alexander, the future Crown Prince Olav and finally king Olav V of Norway, was born on July 2, 1903.
After the Union between Sweden and Norway was dissolved in 1905, a committee of the Norwegian government identified several members of European royalty as candidates for Norway's first king of its own in several centuries. Gradually, Prince Carl became the leading candidate. He had a son (and hence an heir to the throne) and Princess Maud's ties to the British royal family were viewed as advantageous to the newly-independent Norwegian nation.
The democratically-minded Carl, aware that Norway was still debating whether to retain its monarchy or to switch to a republican system of government, was flattered by the Norwegian government's overtures, but declined to accept the offer without a referendum to show whether monarchy was truly the choice of the Norwegian people.
After the referendum overwhelmingly confirmed by 79 percent majority that Norwegians desired to retain a monarchy, Prince Carl was formally offered the throne of Norway by the Storting (parliament) on November 18, 1905. When Carl accepted the offer the same evening, after his grandfather Christian IX of Denmark approved, Carl became Haakon VII. In so doing, he succeeded his great-uncle, Oscar II of Norway, who had abdicated the Norwegian throne in October following the agreement between Sweden and Norway on the terms of the separation of the union.
Haakon's coronation took place in Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim on June 22, 1906.
He arranged for his heir, Crown Prince Olav, to marry a first cousin, Haakon's sister's daughter, Märtha of Sweden.
In 1914 Haakon County in South Dakota was named in his honor.
The next day, German minister Curt Bräuer demanded a meeting with Haakon. The German diplomat called on the Norwegians to cease their resistance and stated Hitler's demand that the king appoint Nazi sympathizer Vidkun Quisling as prime minister of what would be a German puppet government. Bräuer suggested that Haakon follow the example of the Danish government, which had surrendered almost immediately after the previous day's invasion, and threatened Norway with harsh conditions if it didn't surrender.
In an emotional meeting with the Cabinet in Nybergsund, the king reported the German ultimatum to his cabinet and stated that
Haakon went on to say that he knew the Norwegian people and Storting had no confidence in Quisling and, in the event the Cabinet felt otherwise, the king said he would abdicate so as not to stand in the way of the government's decision.
The government unanimously agreed with their king and announced its refusal to accept the German terms to the German emissary by telephone. In a radio broadcast that evening, the government and king's refusal to the German ultimatum were announced to the Norwegian people. The government indicated that they would resist the German attack as long as possible, and expressed their confidence that Norwegians would lend their support to the cause.
The following morning, April 11, 1940, bomber aircraft of the Luftwaffe attacked Nybergsund, destroying the small town where the Norwegian government was staying in an attempt to wipe out Norway's unyielding king and government. The king and his ministers took refuge in the snow-covered woods and escaped harm, continuing farther north through the rugged Norwegian mountains toward Åndalsnes on Norway's northwestern coast. As the British forces in the area lost ground under Luftwaffe bombardment, the king and his party were taken aboard the British cruiser HMS Glasgow and conveyed by sea to Tromsø where a provisional capital was established on May 1. Haakon and Crown Prince Olav took up residence in a forest cabin in Målselvdalen valley in the interior of Troms county where they would stay until the evacuation to the United Kingdom. While residing in Troms the two were protected by local rifle association members armed with the ubiquitous Krag-Jørgensen rifle.
The Allies had a fairly secure hold over northern Norway until late May, but as the Allies' position in the Battle of France rapidly deteriorated, the British forces in northern Norway were badly needed elsewhere and were withdrawn. The beleaguered and demoralized Norwegian government were evacuated from Tromsø on June 7 aboard the HMS Devonshire and upon arrival in London, Haakon and his cabinet set up a Norwegian government in exile in the British capital. Taking up residence at Rotherhithe in London, Haakon was an important national symbol in the Norwegian resistance.
Meanwhile, Hitler had appointed Josef Terboven as Reich commissar for Norway. On Hitler's orders, Terboven attempted to coerce the Storting to depose the king; parliament declined, citing constitutional principles. A subsequent ultimatum was made by the Germans under threat of interning all Norwegians of military age in German concentration camps. With this threat looming, the Norwegian parliament's representatives in Oslo wrote their monarch on June 27, asking him to abdicate. The king, politely replying that the Storting had acted under duress, declined the request. After one further German attempt in September to force the Storting to depose Haakon failed, Terboven finally decreed that the royal family had "forfeited their right to return" and dissolved the democratic political parties.
During Norway's five years under German control, many Norwegians surreptitiously wore clothing or jewelry made from coins bearing Haakon's "H7" monogram as symbols of resistance to the German occupation and of solidarity with their exiled king and government.
For his struggles against the Nazi regime and his effort to revive the Holmenkollen ski festival following World War 2, King Haakon VII earned the Holmenkollen Medal in 1955 (Shared with Hallgeir Brenden, Veikko Hakulinen, and Sverre Stenersen), one of only nine non-Nordic skiiers to earn this honor (Norway's Stein Eriksen, Norway's Boghild Niskin, Norway's Inger Bjørnbakken, Norway's Astrid Sandvik, Norway's King Olav V, Norway's Erik Håker, Sweden's Ingemar Stenmark, and Norway's Jacob Vaage are the others.).
King Haakon VII fell in his bathroom at the estate at Bygdøy in July 1955. This fall, which occurred just a month before his eighty-third birthday, broke the king's thighbone and, although there were few other complications resulting from the fall, the king was left confined to a wheelchair. The once-active king was said to be depressed by his resulting helplessness and began to lose his customary involvement and interest in current events. With Haakon's loss of mobility and, as the king's health deteriorated further in the summer of 1957, Crown Prince Olav was appearing on behalf of his father in ceremonial occasions and taking a more active role in state affairs. At Haakon's death in 1957 the crown prince succeeded as Olav V.
Today, King Haakon is by many regarded as one of the greatest Norwegian leaders of the pre-war period, managing to hold his young and fragile country together in unstable political conditions. In 1927 he said "I am also the Communists' King." His loyalty to democracy proved to be crucial for Norway's political situation during and after World War II.
Here is a list of the styles King Haakon bore from birth to death, in chronological order:
Norwegian monarchs | Knights of the Garter | House of Glücksburg | Norwegian World War II people | Order of St. Olav | 1872 births | 1957 deaths | World War II political leaders | Knights Grand Cross of the Bath | Knights Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order | Recipients of the Royal Victorian Chain | Bailiffs Grand Cross of St John
Haakon VII de Noruega | Haakon 7. af Norge | Haakon VII. (Norwegen) | Haakon VII | Haakon la 7-a (Norvegio) | Haakon VII de Norvège | Haakon VII di Norvegia | Haakon VII van Noorwegen | ホーコン7世 | Haakon VII av Norge | Haakon VII av Noreg | Haakon VII Glücksburg | Håkon VII av Norge | 哈康七世
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Haakon VII of Norway".
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