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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Scandinavian Political Geography > Norway
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Norway, Scandinavian Political Geography

Related Category: Scandinavian Political Geography

Medieval Norway

The history of Norway before the age of the Vikings is indistinct from that of the rest of Scandinavia. In the 9th cent. the country was still divided among the numerous petty kings of the fylker. Harold I, of the Yngling or Scilfing dynasty (which claimed descent from one of the old Norse gods), defeated the petty kings (c.900) and conquered the Shetlands and the Orkneys, but failed to establish permanent unity. Harold's campaigns drove many nobles and their followers to settle in Iceland and France. In the next two centuries Norsemen raided widely in W Europe and established the Norse duchy of Normandy. Harold himself concentrated on developing a dynasty; before he died (c.935) the country was divided among his sons, but one of them, Haakon I, defeated (c.935) his brothers and temporarily reunited the kingdom.

Christianity, brought by English missionaries, gained a foothold under Olaf I and was established by Olaf II (reigned 1015–28). Olaf II was driven out of Norway by King Canute of England and Denmark, in league with discontented Norwegian nobles; however, his son, Magnus I, was restored (1035) to the Norwegian throne. Both Magnus and his successor, Harold III, played a vital part in the complex events then taking place in England and Denmark. After Harold died while invading England (1066), Norway entered a period of decline and civil war, precipitated by conflicting claims to the throne.

Among the major events of 12th-century Norwegian history were the mission of Nicholas Breakspear (later Pope Adrian IV), who organized the Norwegian hierarchy, and the rule of Sverre, who created a new nobility grounded in commerce and, with the help of the popular party, the Birkebeiner, consolidated the royal power. His grandson, Haakon IV, was put on the throne by the Birkebeiner in 1217; under him and under Magnus VI (reigned 1263–80) reached its greatest flowering and enjoyed peace and prosperity. During this time Iceland and Greenland recognized Norwegian rule.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Adrian IV, pope
Roald Amundsen
Bergen, city, Norway
Gro Harlem Brundtland
Denmark
Drammen
Finnmark
European Free Trade Association
Edvard Hagerup Grieg
Haakon I
Haakon IV
Haakon VII
Hammerfest
Hanseatic League
Harold I
Harold III
Harold V
Henrik Ibsen
Kalmar Union
Kristiansand
Trygve Halvdan Lie
Magnus I
Magnus VI
Magnus VII
Margaret I
Edvard Munch
Fridtjof Nansen
Narvik
Norwegian language
Norwegian literature
Olaf I
Olaf II
Olaf V
Oslo
Vidkun Quisling
Stavanger
Johan Sverdrup
Sverre
Sweden
TromsO
Trondheim
Vikings
whaling

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Places > Germany, Scandinavia, and Central Europe
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