Governor-general of Norway
Governor-general of Norway | |
---|---|
Danish: Rigsstatholder Swedish: Riksståthållare | |
Appointer | The King |
Term length | At His Majesty's pleasure |
Formation | 1556 |
First holder | Christen Munk |
Final holder | Severin Løvenskiold |
Abolished | 1873 |
The governor-general of Norway (
Etymology
(
Governors-general appointed by the kings of Norway and Denmark
The office of Governor-general of Norway was established in 1556 and was occupied with occasional interruptions until 1814. The Governor-general was normally at the same time Lensherre (Governor) of Akershus len (after 1662; Akershus amt), and was the highest authority in the country.[1]
List of governors-general (Stattholdere) during the Union between Denmark and Norway
No. | Portrait | Governors-general | Took office | Left office | Time in office | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | Christen Munk (c. 1520–1579) under King Christian III and Frederick II | 1556 | 1572 | 15–16 years | ||
1 | Pouel Ottesen Huitfeldt (c. 1529–1592) under King Frederick II | 1572 | 1577 | 4–5 years | ||
2 | Ludvig Munk (c. 1532–1602) under King Frederick II | 9 July 1577 | 1583 | 5–6 years | ||
3 | 1588 | 1601 | 12–13 years | |||
4 | Jørgen Friis (c. 1543–1616) under King Christian IV | 1601 | 1608 | 6–7 years | ||
5 | Enevold Kruse (c. 1554–1621) under King Christian IV | 1608 | 1618 | 9–10 years | ||
6 | Jens Hermansson Juel (1580–1634) under King Christian IV | 1618 | 1629 | 10–11 years | ||
7 | Christoffer Urne (1593–1663) under King Christian IV | 1629 | 1642 | 12–13 years | ||
8 | Hannibal Sehested (1609–1666) under King Christian IV and Frederick III | 1642 | 24 June 1651 | 8–9 years | ||
9 | Gregers Krabbe (1594–1655) under King Frederick III | 1651 | 20 December 1655 | 3–4 years | ||
10 | Niels Trolle (1599–1667) under King Frederick III | 1656 | 28 March 1661 | 4–5 years | ||
11 | Iver Krabbe (1602–1666) under King Frederick III | 8 Oct 1661 | 1664 | 2–3 years | ||
12 | Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve (1638–1704) under King Frederick III and Christian V | January 1664 | 1699 | 34–35 years | ||
13 | Frederik Gabel (c. 1640–1708) Vice Governor-general under King Frederick IV | 30 September 1699 | 1708 | 8–9 years | ||
14 | Johan Vibe (1634–1710) Vice Governor-general under King Frederick IV | 10 April 1708 | 22 February 1710 | 1 year | ||
15 | Woldemar Løvendal (1660–1740) under King Frederick IV | 1 August 1710 | 30 April 1712 | 1 year | ||
16 | Claus Henrik Vieregg (1655–1713) Vice Governor-general under King Frederick IV | 4 August 1712 | 14 July 1713 | 0 years | ||
17 | Frederik Krag (1655–1728) Vice Governor-general under King Frederick IV | 19 September 1713 | 1722 | 8–9 years | ||
18 | Ditlev Vibe (1670–1731) under King Frederick IV and Christian VI | 17 April 1722 | 5 October 1731 | 9 years | ||
19 | Christian Rantzau (1684–1771) under King Christian VI | 1733 | 1739 | 7–8 years | ||
Office vacant (1739–1750) | ||||||
20 | Jacob Benzon (1688–1775) Vice Governor-general (1750-1770) Governor-general (1770-1771) under King Frederick V and Christian VII | 11 September 1750 | 8 February 1771 | 20 years | ||
- | Prince Charles of Hesse-Kassel (1744–1836) Acting under King Christian VII | 4 July 1766 | January 1768 | 1 year | ||
Office vacant (8 February 1771 – 25 July 1809) | ||||||
21 | Charles August, Crown Prince of Sweden (1768–1810) under King Frederick VI | 25 July 1809 | 11 January 1810 | 0 years | ||
22 | Prince Frederik of Hesse (1771–1845) under King Frederick VI | 11 January 1810 | 11 May 1813 | 3 years | ||
23 | Christian Frederik af Danmark (1786–1848) under King Frederick VI | 11 May 1813 | 16 February 1814 | 0 years |
Governors-general appointed by the kings of Norway and Sweden
The following describes the office of governor as it was from 1814 during the union with Sweden:
The office came into existence by the
The post was held by Swedish appointees from 1814 until 1829, when it was vacated by natural causes. Protests left the position empty until 1836, when it was filled by a Norwegian appointee. He was succeeded in 1841 but the successor Severin Løvenskiold laid down his office in 1856, after which it would not be reinstated. The demand to abandon the office completely was ultimately granted in 1873 by King Oscar II.
List of governors-general (Stattholdere) during the Union between Sweden and Norway
No. | Portrait | Governors-general | Took office | Left office | Time in office | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1814 | 1816 | 1–2 years | |||
2 | 1816 | 1818 | 1–2 years | |||
3 | 1818 | 1827 | 8–9 years | |||
4 | 1827 | 1829 | 1–2 years | |||
Office vacant (1829 – 1836) | ||||||
5 | 1836 | 1840 | 3–4 years | |||
Office vacant (1840 – 1841) | ||||||
6 | 1841 | 1856 | 14–15 years | |||
Office vacant (1856 – 1873) Then it was abolished |
See also
- List of Norwegian monarchs
- List of Norwegian Prime Ministers
- Union between Sweden and Norway
Sources and references
References
- ^ Two sentences are quotes from the National Archives ra/sentralinst/statholderembetet.html Statholderembetet 1572-1771 from the National Archives/archived edition