Norwegian Royal Regalia


The crown jewels, or royal regalia, of Norway include nine items: the king's crown, the sword of the realm, the king's sceptre, the king's orb, the queen's crown, the queen's sceptre, the queen's orb, the crown of the crown prince and the anointing horn. Also in this collection are several coronation robes, two banners of the realm and coronation thrones.

History

The regalia of the king and the anointing horn were made for Carl Johan, king of Norway and Sweden, in 1818 to his coronation in Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim. The regalia of the queen were made later. All these crown jewels were made in Sweden. The crown of the prince is the only crown jewel made in Norway, in 1848. The sword of state was a gift from Carl Johan to the Norwegian state. It was a gift from Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, to Carl Johan , then known as Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, when he was appointed Marshal of France. King Carl Johan bore the sword during the Battle of Leipzig. When Carl Johan acquired the Norwegian regalia in 1818, he had the blade of the sword refashioned, in order that its symbolic language might correspond to its new function.

Following Carl Johan, Carl XV and his wife Louise of the Netherlands were next in line to be crowned in Norway, in 1860. Then Oscar II and Sophie were crowned in 1873. The last ones who used the regalia were Haakon VII and Queen Maud, who has been the only ones to go through a coronation after the independence from Sweden. The crown of the prince has in fact never been used. Crown prince Olav was too little to participate in the ceremony in 1906. The coronation paragraph in the Norwegian constitution was revoked in 1908. The regalia, together with some other old treasures, are today on display in Trondheim's Nidaros Cathedral.

Individual items in the regalia

External links