Gustav Borgen, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons
King Haakon VII made a dramatic speech to his people
from the inn in a small village near Elverum where he and Crown Prince Olav
were staying in April 1940. He said that he could not tell them where he, the
Crown Prince and the Government hid, for fear of attack by the German forces. He
told them that: ‘High explosive and incendiary bombs and machine-gun fire were
used against the civilian population and ourselves in the most unscrupulous and
brutal fashion’. The attack could only have one object, the King informed them –
to ‘annihilate all of us who were assembled to resolve questions in the best
interests of Norway’. He thanked all
those fighting for Norway’s ‘independence and liberty’, and to remember those
who had given their lives for the country. Finally, he parted with the moving
words: ‘God save Norway.’
Norway, a neutral country, watched hopelessly as much
of Europe fell to the Nazis like ten-pins, knowing that the Germans needed its
iron-ore for their munitions, so it was strategically important. Sweden was
also neutral, but Denmark soon fell to the Nazis, and the Danish King, King
Haakon’s brother, ceded to their demands. The dark days of Nazi occupation were
on the horizon. Luckily, the sinking of the heavy cruiser Blücher by the naval forces at Oscarbserg Fortress delayed
the German advance into Oslo, enabling the royal family and government to flee
capture.
The King, Crown Prince Olav and his family, and the
government had already made a dramatic escape from the Royal Palace in Oslo in
the early hours of April 8, after being told that the Germans were on their
way. They headed to Hamar on the train but hearing the explosions of bombs
falling nearby, they closed the curtains, lying on the floor in fear. Forced to
get off the train because of the German attack, they resumed their journey,
eventually reaching a tiny village near Elverum, where the King made his
broadcast.
A few days after they fled the royal family made the
sad decision to split up, considering the paramount importance of the young Prince
Harald (now King Harald V of Norway), the heir to the throne. Crown Princess Märtha and the children travelled to her
home country of neutral Sweden, and eventually went to America for the duration
of the war.
The King met with the
German envoy Curt Bräuer in Elverum, who pressured him to accept a new
government headed by Quisling, who had staged a coup d’état, and was friendly
with the Nazis. The King told him that he would ask his government to decide,
disgusted that he’d left the entire responsibility on his shoulders. Supported
by Prince Olav, the King threatened to abdicate if the government agreed to
having Quisling as their leader, but they sided with King Haakon. According to King
Haakon VII: The Man and the Monarch by Tim Greve, they were all deeply
moved.
Finally, escaping heavy bombing and the German
advance they arrived at Tromso where Sir Cecil Dormer sadly informed the King
about the withdrawal of Allied help, and the King and Crown Prince were
requested to go to Britain where they could help the Norwegian cause. The Crown
Prince offered to stay but he was strongly advised against it for fear of the
royal house falling into German hands. The King’s last words to his Cabinet
were: ‘God save our dear Fatherland’.
The
King and Prince Olav left for London on June 2, 1940 on the Devonshire.
Interestingly, the occupation government even requested his abdication in a
letter to England, which he adamantly refused.
2 comments:
The royal family made the sad decision to split up, for what they thought were compelling reasons. But compare this to King George and Queen Elizabeth in Britain.
I think that the Nazis might have been able to spread propaganda about them if they'd stayed? The British King and Queen were very strong and admirable, though.
'Atlantic Crossing', the new series about Princess Martha, is enjoyable.
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