Union between Sweden and Norway

United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway
Förenade Konungarikena
Sverige och Norge
 (Swedish)

De forenede Kongeriger
Norge og Sverige
(Dano-Norwegian)[A]

Sambandet millom
Norig og Sverike
(Landsmål)[B]
1814–1905
Flag of Sweden and Norway
National flags
Top: Flag of Sweden
(1844–1905)
Bottom: Flag of Norway
(1844–1899)
Royal coat of arms (1844–1905) of Sweden and Norway
Royal coat of arms
(1844–1905)
Anthem: 
Norway:
Norges Skaal (1814–1820)
Sønner af Norge (1820–1864)
Sweden:
Du gamla, du fria (de facto)
Royal anthem: 
Norway:
None
Sweden:
Bevare Gud vår kung (1805–1893)
Kungssången (1844–1905)
Sweden–Norway in 1904
Sweden–Norway in 1904
StatusPersonal union
CapitalStockholm and Christiania[a]
Common languagesSwedish, Norwegian,[b] Danish, Sámi, Finnish
Religion
Norway:
Church of Norway (state religion)
Sweden:
Church of Sweden (state religion)
GovernmentConstitutional monarchies
King of Sweden and Norway 
• 1814–1818
Charles XIII/II
• 1818–1844
Charles XIV/III John
• 1844–1859
Oscar I
• 1859–1872
Charles XV/IV
• 1872–1905
Oscar II
LegislatureLegislatures:[d]
• Swedish legislature
Riksdag
• Norwegian legislature
Storting
Historical eraBetween Napoleonic Wars and World War I
14 January 1814
• Charles XIII of Sweden elected as King of Norway and Constitution of Norway amended
4 November 1814
16 October 1875
26 October 1905
Population
• 1820
3,550,000[c]
• 1905
7,560,000[c]
CurrencySweden:
Norway:
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Sweden
Denmark–Norway
Norway
Sweden
Norway
Today part ofSweden
Norway
a. ^ The king resided alternately in Stockholm (mostly) and Christiania (usually some months each year). He received ministers from both countries in Union council, or separately in purely Swedish or Norwegian councils. The majority of the Norwegian cabinet ministers convened in Christiania when the king was absent.

b. ^ The written Norwegian language ceased to exist in the first half of the 16th century and was replaced by Danish. Written Danish was still used during the union with Sweden, but was slightly norwegianized through the creation of Nynorsk in the latter half of the 19th century. In 1885, the Storting accepted Landsmål as an official written language on par with Danish.
c. ^ 1820: 2,585,000 in Sweden, and 970,000 in Norway.[1]
1905: 5,260,000 in Sweden, and 2,300,000 in Norway.[2]

d. ^ The Swedish Riksdag was a diet composed of four estates until 1866, when it was transformed into a bicameral legislature, whereas the Norwegian Storting was a unicameral legislature, where the cabinet needed support from the majority.

Sweden and Norway or Sweden–Norway (Swedish: Svensk-norska unionen; Norwegian: Den svensk-norske union(en)), officially the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway, and known as the United Kingdoms, was a personal union of the separate kingdoms of Sweden and Norway under a common monarch and common foreign policy that lasted from 1814 until its peaceful dissolution in 1905.[3][4]

The two states kept separate constitutions, laws, legislatures, administrations, state churches, armed forces, and currencies; the kings mostly resided in Stockholm, where foreign diplomatic representations were located. The Norwegian government was presided over by viceroys: Swedes until 1829, Norwegians until 1856. That office was later vacant and then abolished in 1873. Foreign policy was conducted through the Swedish foreign ministry until the dissolution of the union in 1905.

Norway had been in a closer union with Denmark, but Denmark–Norway's alliance with Napoleonic France caused the United Kingdom and Russia to consent to Sweden's annexation of the realm as compensation for the loss of Finland in 1809 and as a reward for joining the alliance against Napoleon. By the 1814 Treaty of Kiel, the King of Denmark-Norway was forced to cede Norway to the King of Sweden, but Norway refused to submit to the treaty provisions, declared independence, and convoked a constituent assembly at Eidsvoll in early 1814.

After the adoption of the new Constitution of Norway on 17 May 1814, Prince Christian Frederick was elected king. The ensuing Swedish–Norwegian War (1814) and the Convention of Moss compelled Christian Frederick to abdicate after calling an extraordinary session of the Norwegian Parliament, the Storting, to revise the Constitution in order to allow for a personal union with Sweden. On 4 November the Storting elected Sweden's king, Charles XIII, as the King of Norway, thereby confirming the union. Continuing differences between the two realms led to a failed attempt to create a separate Norwegian consular service and then, on 7 June 1905, to a unilateral declaration of independence by the Storting. Sweden accepted the union's dissolution on 26 October. After a plebiscite confirming the election of Prince Carl of Denmark as the new king of Norway, he accepted the Storting's offer of the throne on 18 November and took the regnal name of Haakon VII.


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  1. ^ "Skandinaviens befolkning". Archived from the original on 3 October 2008. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  2. ^ "SSB – 100 års ensomhet? Norge og Sverige 1905–2005 (in Norwegian)". Archived from the original on 19 November 2014.
  3. ^ "Sweden". World Statesmen. Archived from the original on 5 November 2016. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
  4. ^ "Norway". World Statesmen. Archived from the original on 26 December 2018. Retrieved 17 January 2015.