List of possessions of Norway

This is a list of territorial possessions of Norway.

Location of Norway in Europe.

Current possessions

Norwegian kingdom and its current possessions

Integral overseas areas of Norway, although unincorporated:

Svalbard with Bear Island are subject to the provisions of the Svalbard Treaty. Svalbard and Jan Mayen are grouped together for some categorization purposes.

Current dependencies of Norway are all in the southern polar region:

Former dependencies and homelands

Norwegian kingdom at its greatest extent, ab 1265.
Norwegian Empire with homeland, dependencies and possessions.
Norwegian kingdom at its homeland, pre 1645.

The so-called Greater Norway includes these entities:

Dependencies ceded to Scotland (1st phase)

Uncertain transfere

National homelands ceded to Sweden (2nd phase)

Early entity

Briefly-ruled Danish-Swedish homelands

Briefly-ruled Swedish homelands

Dependencies ceded to Denmark (3rd phase)

Ceding era explained

The actual time for the ceding of the islands is somewhat disputed. Denmark claims it took place with the Union of Denmark and Norway in 1536, as the possessions of the Norwegian crown were claimed by the Danish king. Nevertheless, they were still referred to as "dependencies of Norway" in later official documents. Also the Treaty of Kiel states: "...and provinces, constituting the kingdom of Norway, [..], together with their dependencies (Greenland, the Faroe Isles, and Iceland, excepted); [...] shall belong in full and sovereign property to the King of Sweden,...", clearly indicating that they were until 1814 regarded as a part of Norway.

Briefly-ruled Danish kingdom

Former Norse kingdoms outside Scandinavia

Kingdom entities

Norwegian legacy kingdoms subsequently integrated into Norway and Ireland:

Joint kingdom entities with the Danes

Dano-Norwegian legacy kingdoms subsequently integrated into England and France:

Former contested possessions and claims

England

Africa

Baron Fritz Wedel Jarlsberg, Norwegian ambassador to Paris, enjoyed a high level of popularity and influence in the French capital. Through diplomacy, he had originally intended for The Treaty of Versailles to have Germany cede German East Africa to Norway in 1919 in compensation for the loss of men and ships in WWI during which Norway had declared itself neutral. The liberal political party Venstre which was elected to government in Norway, opposed the conservative view on colonization and denied the offer which Jarlsberg had successfully secured in France.

Arctic

Finland and Russia

See also

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