Norway

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Norway is a small country, with a small population and is less known outside its borders than the inhabitants may wish. Surveys by Norwegian press have shown that out in the world Norway is known as:

  • Home of Ole Gunnar Solskjaer*
  • Home of Henrik Ibsen, Fridtjof Nansen, Roald Amundsen, Sonja Henie, Thor Heyerdahl and/or Gro Harlem Brundtland*
  • That cold place with the fjords
  • Capital of Sweden

Hopefully this entry will leave a lasting impression of a few more facts about Norway in the minds of those who read it and establish once and for all that Norway is a country of its own and that the capital of Sweden is irrelevant.

Executive Summary

Norway lies in the north-west of Europe, sharing the Scandinavian peninsula with Sweden. Its shape is somewhat like a guitar, with a long narrow neck to the north and a wider southern part. The long axis stretches some 1600km, the width reaches its max at about 400 km, and the neck is at one point just a few kilometers.

Norway has just over 4.5 million citizens and is a constitutional monarchy. The monarch, currently Harald V, has mostly seremonial powers and no practical influence over the government.

Norway has a hefty budget surplus due to extensive oil and natural gas resources in the North Sea. Chief exports are petroleum and petroleum products, machinery and equipment, metals, chemicals, ships, fish. The petrochemical and metal industries benefit from the abundance of hydropower.

Stereotypical descriptions of Norwegians range from restrained but friendly to arrogant and pushy. Real life experience with genuine Norwegians shows that this all depends on mood, stage of drunkenness and topic of conversation.

If you stop reading at this point you should know that Norwegians consider Norway to be both the best and the worst country in the world. Disagreeing with any Norwegian in this, by either putting down one of the features the Norwegian approves of or exalting one he dislikes, is very unwise. The actual response will vary with mood, drunkenness and topic, but will not be positive.

Geography and Nature

Geography

As mentioned in the summary Norway is a long and narrow country in nort-west Europe. With extremes at 4° and 32°E and 58° and 71°N it pokes into two time zones and stretches far above and below the arctic circle. In comparison Alaska mostly lies between the same north south boundariesand the UK is almost entirely south of Norway. Pivoting Norway around it's southern tip brings the far north down to Rome. Norway has a land area of 320,000 km², about a third larger than the UK*, but while the UK is 80% fields, pastures and woodland, Norway has 3% arable land, 27% forrest, and 70% other, mostly mountain plateau.

Being a coastal nation and having spent the last ice age covered in glaciers it is unsurprising that Norway is indeed a land of fjords. These glacier-carved wonders are the reason Norway has a 22,000km coast line. If you look at a detailed map you will see that Norway is almost all glacial valleys, glacial fjords and lots and lots of tiny islands, apart from the bits that are mountain plateau, obviously.

Climate

Due to the Gulf Stream all of Norway is considerably warmer than areas at the same latitude like Alaska, Northern Canada and Siberia. Any overall description of the climate would however be 90% wrong, since the climate differs widely between north and south; coast and inland; west and east; and high and low. If you're going to Norway you should equip yourself for all weather, or check what local climate is like. As we (We being someone who didn't forget to bring a sweater when everyone else is freezing) say in Norway: "There's no such thing as bad weather, just bad clothing."

Flora and fauna

The dominant flora in Norway is heather, mountain birch, dwarf birch and shrub willow*. Most Norwegians are however are unaware of this. Since they spend most of the time in the lowland they see either farmland, forest or houses. Ask a representative selection of Norwegians and you might get the impression that the dominant flora is fir, spruce and pine. Norwegians do spend quite some time in the areas where heather etc is dominant but the majority only do so in the winter, when the flora is invisible.

The average Norwegian would be surprised to learn that only 27% of Norway is covered by forest. This is because, apart from the mountain plateaus, practially all open areas in Norway are man made and the majority of Norwegians live in the lowlands in south and middle Norway and are used to see trees everywhere they look. Fields and pastures have all been claimed from the forest by hard-working Norwegian forefathers and foremothers and is reclaimed by the forest if left unattended.

Norwegian fauna is dominated by the King of the Forest, the majestic 'Elg' (Alces Alces, Elk or Moose). Hunting elk is very common in rural Norway and keeps the elk population in check in the abscense of large predators. Beside moose, there are roe deer, red deer, fox, hare, reindeer, badger, wolverine, lynx, wolf, fox, owls, hawks, mice, squirrels, gulls, ducks... You get the picture. Lots and lots of animals.

History

Expansion

In Norwegian Norway is called Norge or Noreg so you have to look at forreign languages or Old Norse (Norvegr) to learn that the name of the country literally means 'Road North'.

All Norwegians know that Harald Fair-hair (Harald Hårfagre) was the first ruler of all of Norway and finalised this feat at the battle of Hafrsfjord in 872. In the next few hundred years Norwegian Vikings traded, raided and conquered alongside their Danish brothers all over Western Europe and Norway reached its largest size in the mid 1200s when the Norwegian king ruled over present-day Norway; Hjämtland, Härjedalen and Bohuslän; Isle of Man and the Hebridies; Shetland and the Orkney Islands; and Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland.

Hjämtland, Härjedalen and Bohuslän was conquered by Sweden in the 1600s; the Isle of Man and the Hebridies were ceded to the king of Scotland in 1266 against assurances that Shetland and the Orkney Islands would remain Norwegian; Shetland and the Orkney Islands were put up as collateral for dowry to the Scots king in a couple of royal marriages in the 15th century; and Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland came under Danish rule during union time and remained under Denmark after 1814.

Under Denmark

In 1349-50 the Black Death killed one half to two thirds of Norway's population during an economic recession, and for some reason Norway was slower to recover than its Nordic neighbours. Norway, Denmark and Sweden had shared kings several times in the viking age, but in 1450 Norway came under Danish rule, and remained so until 1814.

Union with Sweden

In 1814 Norwegian politicians took advantage of Denmarks defeat along with Napoleon and declared independence, even though the peace treaty said Norway had been ceeded to Sweden. The new consitution was signed on May 17th, today Norway's constitution day and main national holiday. Eventually the Swedish king got around to claiming Norway and sent in the army. After a fairly easy campaign Norway was forced to accept the Swedish king as ruler, but the new Norwegian constitution remained in force with a few revisions and Norway now had its own parliament.

Independence, occupation and the oil

The union between Sweden and Norway ended late in 1905 on a date few Norwegians remember and Danish prince Carl became king of Norway and took the name Haakon VII.

Norway was occupied by Germany during WWII, after the war Norway was active in the formation of the UN with Trygve Lie becoming the first Secretary-General. In 1949 Norway gave up its former policy of neutrality and joined NATO. In 1970 oil started flowing for real from platforms in the North Sea and Norway became an oil producing nation.

It's the arts

Few Norwegian writers, painters, composers etc are known outside of Norway. Notable exceptions are:

Edvard Grieg

Edvard Grieg (1843-1907) is Norway's foremost classical composer. His most famous works, part of the music to Henrik Ibsen's Peer Gynt, are In the Hall of the Mountain King and Morning Mood. Even if you don't know them you are likely to have heard these somewhere, eg Morning Mood when the sun rises over Pepperland in Yellow Submarine.

Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906) is Norway's most important playwright, and according to some the most frequently performed dramatist in the world after Shakespeare. No matter the truth of that statement it is a fact that Ibsen's plays are still performed all over the world. A Doll's House was recently performed in China, and An Enemy of the People, Ghosts, Hedda Gabler, Peer Gynt and other of his plays are in any given year performed in several countries all over the world.

Edvard Munch

Edvard Munch (1863-1944) had no idea what he spawned when he painted the now ubiquitous painting The Scream in 1863. Although today he inspires cartoonists and horror film-makers Edvard Munch was considered a main influence on the development of German Impressionism. Some of his works are today prized in the millions, but you can pick up a print of The Scream in any art poster shop.

Norway for tourists

Money

Norwegian currency is the krone, plural kroner, abbreviated kr or indicated by ,-. International currency code is NOK. A krone is divided into 100 øre and on June 19th 2002 the exchance rate was 7.7NOK for 1USD and 11.5NOK for 1GBP.

Prices in Norway are higher than in the rest of Europe with salaries being proportionally larger in general. Alcohol is exceptionally expensive due to heavy taxes and a state monopoly on selling wine and spirits, and Norwegians generally smuggle home a bottle or two above the quota of 2 liters of wine or 1 liter of stronger stuff.

Visitors should look for the "Tax free for tourists" signs. Shopping in one of these stores allow you to reclaim the 'm.v.a.*' when leaving the country.

Things to see

Norway is full of sights worth seeing, all of which deserve an entry of their own. None mentioned, none forgotten, but worth mentioning in a hurry are:

  • Bryggen in Bergen
  • The Vigeland Sculpture Park in Oslo
  • The midnight sun
  • North Cape
  • The Lofot Wall
  • The fjords
  • The glaciers
  • The mountains
  • The elk (Or just an elk warning sign by the road)

What to buy

As mentioned above, prizes are high in Norway, but if you have lots of money you should bring home some knitwear, preferably a black and white "lusekofte" jacket. If you want something smaller there's a plethora of troll dolls to choose from, or you can go with the pewter viking ships. A troll is really a must though and you should invest in a book on the topic so as to remove some of the misconceptions you have.

The Norwegian Inferiority Compex

Having played little brother to Sweden for almost 200 years Norway suffers from a slight inferiority complex. Sweden has twice as many people, a third as large land area (with less mountain plateaus), more successful artists (ABBA springs to mind), a more impressive history, Volvo, Saab and, let's face it, Norwegians have always payed much more attention to Sweden and Swedes than the other way around.

A result of this is the strong focus on everything Norwegian and a patriotism that borders on the ridiculous. Very important to Norwegians and disappointingly (to Norwegians) unimportant to foreigners are the following facts:

  • The Paperclip is a Norwegian invention
  • The aerosol can and the cheese slicer are Norwegian inventions
  • Cross-country skiing as a sport originated in Norway and slalom is a Norwegian word
  • A-ha is a Norwegian band
  • The first man to the South Pole was a Norwegian (Amundsen)
  • The first Europeans in North America were Norwegian Vikings*
  • The Nobel peace prize is awarded in Norway
  • Ford Motor Company's electric car Think is produced in Norway

Every time Norway is mentioned in international press it is big news in Norway and Norwegians are very disappointed when they discover that foreigners they meet don't all memorise every mention of Norway in the papers. And they will take it as a grave insult if a foreigner confuses Norway and Sweden in any way. If you have to guess whether something is Norwegian or Swedish, go for Norwegian, if you're wrong the Norwegian will still be annoyed, but not so much as if you had erred in the other direction.

National anthem

At the end of this entry I'd like to share with you the words of Norway's national anthem 'Ja, vi elsker'.

Yes, we love with fond devotion
This our land that looms
Rugged, storm-scared o'er the ocean
With her thousand homes.
Love her, in our love recalling
Those who gave us birth.
And old tales which night, in falling
Bring as dreams to earth.
And old tales which night, in falling
Bring as dreams, as dreams to earth.

Pages about other bits of Norway


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