Thecoat of arms of Norway is thearms of dominion of KingHarald V of Norway, and as such represents both the monarch and thekingdom (nation and the state). It depicts a standinggoldenlion on ared background, bearing a golden crown and axe with silver blade (blazonedGules, a lion rampant Or, crowned Or, holding an axe Or with a blade argent).
The coat of arms is used by theKing (including theKing's Council), theParliament, and theSupreme Court, which are the three powers according to theConstitution. It is also used by several national, regional, and local authorities that are subordinate to the aforementioned, for example the County Governors and both thedistrict courts and the courts of appeal. Since 1905, two parallel versions exist: the more elaborate version used by the King and the simpler one used by the State. The arms inbanner form serve as basis for the monarch's flag, known as theRoyal Standard.
The arms has its origin in the 13th century, at first just as a golden lion on a red shield, with the silver axe added late in the century, symbolisingOlav II as theEternal King of Norway. In origin the arms of theSverre dynasty, the coat of arms becamequartered with that of theBjälbo dynasty when the Sverre lineage was extinct in 1319, and the Sverre coat of arms figured as part of the furtherdivisions of the coats of arms of Norwegian kings during theearly modern period.
The Sverre coat of arms was regarded as representing theNorwegian monarchy in the late 15th century, and it came to be used to represent Norway on coins and in seals during theunion with Denmark (1523−1814) and the 19th-centurypersonal union with Sweden, its 13th-century origins placing it among the oldest state coats of arms which remain in contemporary use. The axe tended to be depicted as a curvedpollaxe orhalberd from 1500 until 1844. The 1844 design approved by kingOscar I reverted to the depiction of abattle-axe as shown in medieval designs.
After the dissolution of the union with Sweden in 1905 a medieval-type escutcheon and charge was designed byEilif Peterssen. Peterssen's design would be used until 1937 when it was re-designed by state archivistHallvard Trætteberg, resulting in a markedly different, more simplified design style. Peterssen's design has, however, been retained in the Royal Standard and coat of arms.[1]
Royal decree of 20 May 1927 states:[2] The coat of arms of the Realm may be used only by the state's authorities in the exercise of their official activity. The coat of arms may be used by the Royal Court, by the government and its ministries, by the parliament, by the law courts, and by some others. Matters of the coat of arms are treated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The state coat of arms has no achievement save the surmounting crown.
The royal coat of arms is defined in the resolution of 30 December 1905.[3] In the coat of arms of the realm, a heraldic royal crown is placed directly on top of the shield. In the royal coat of arms, the shield of the arms of the realm is on a mantlepurple linedermine with a royal crown on top. Three sides of the shield are surrounded by the collar of theRoyal Order of St. Olav.
The following coats of arms are displayed with the collar of theOrder of St. Olav. However, not all Princes and Princesses are Grand Cross holders or, for that sake, members of this order at all, wherefore their respective coats of arms do not include thisachievement.
The design of the coat of arms is derived from that of theSverre dynasty.Hallvard Trætteberg suggested thatSverre, who was king between 1184 and 1202, had a lion in his coat of arms, although there is no direct attestation. Snorre Sturlason claims that a golden lion on a red background was used already in 1103 by King Magnus III, the son of King Olav III.Gustav Storm in 1894 concluded that this is ahistorical. Storm explained that the claimed lion in King Magnus's coat of arms is unknown both in the olderSaga literature and in other contemporary sources. It is possible that Snorre, who wrote under the instruction of the King, attributed King Sverre's coat of arms to earlier Kings of Norway.
A lion is shown on the coat of arms in the seal of Earl Skule Bårdsson, dated 1225,[4] who had relations to the royal family.
Seal of 1298. Whilst the lion in the shield does not appear to bear an axe, the one on thecaparison does.
Approximately in 1280, either King Magnus VI (dead in 1280) or the guardianship of his son Eric Magnuson let the lion be equipped with a crown of gold and in the foremost paws an axe of silver. The axe was a symbol of Saint Olav, i.e. King Olav II, and by inserting it into the coat of arms it symbolised that the King was the rightful heir and descendant of the "Eternal King of Norway" (Latin:Rex Perpetuus Norvegiae).
Seal
Bearer
Description
King Eric II
Seal of 1285.
King Eric II
Seal of 1283 and 1285. This is a variant in which the shield has flowers.
With the death of KingHaakon V in 1319, the reign of theSverre dynasty came to an end. The Throne and thus the Royal Coat of Arms was inherited by Magnus VII, who was a maternal grandson of Haakon V and who himself belonged patrilineally to the family known as the Bjälbo dynasty.
Subsequently, Norway remained inpersonal union with neighbouring countries. When acting as the ruler of one particular country, the sovereign would normally use the arms of that kingdom. When acting as sovereign of the united kingdoms, he wouldmarshal the escutcheon byquartering. This was a tendency in Europe in general.
The first union kings placed the Royal Coat of Arms in the first quarter of the quartered coat of arms. At the beginning of theKalmar Union, Norway as a hereditary kingdom was considered more important than Sweden and Denmark, which were still electoral kingdoms. Consequently, King Eric III ofPomerania placed his Norwegian Coat of Arms in aninescutcheon, superimposed on the coats of arms of his other realms. However, the Norwegian Coat of Arms would later be degraded, so that thecoat of arms of Denmark would occupy the first field, whilst Norway's was placed in the second.
Coat of arms as presented in theGelre Armorial. The royal coat of arms is combined with that of the Bjälbo dynasty, to which Magnus belonged patrilineally. It displays the original crest of the Norwegian coat of arms.
The Arms of Margaret I of Denmark present in the painting The StockholmNationalmuseum. it depicts the heraldry of Denmark (left field), Sweden (right field {House of Bjälbo}) and Norway (escutcheon) with 3 crowns in the center.
The union arms introduced by King Charles XIII and Crown Prince Carl Johan were never used officially in Norway. Only the lion coat of arms of Norway appeared on coins and on seals of official documents signed by the King in his capacity as Norwegian king.
The union arms introduced by King Oscar I in 1844 was used by members of the royal family, by the common diplomatic service of both kingdoms, and on official documents concerning both countries. In Norway, the union arms was never used on coins or official documents.
In Sweden, Crown Princes and Princes bore the coat of arms belonging to his duchy. SeeDuchies in Sweden (but these titles and arms were never used in Norway).
The halberd was officially discarded and the shorter axe reintroduced by Royal Order in Council 10 July 1844, when an authorised design was instituted for the first time. On 14 December 1905 the official design for royal and government arms was again changed, this time reverting to the medieval pattern, with a triangular escutcheon and a more upright heraldic lion. The painterEilif Peterssen was responsible for the design.
Quisling's version was used on a postage stamp 1n 1944.
Through centuries and following changing fashions in heraldry and arts, the coat of arms has appeared in several ways in the matter of design, shape, and so on. In the lateMiddle Ages, the axe handle gradually grew longer and came to resemble ahalberd. The handle was usually curved in order to fit the shape of the escutcheon (or the changing unionquarterings) preferred at the time, and also to match the shape of coins.
The coat of arms has also been used by subordinate state authorities and in semi-official contexts, such as on bank-notes.
^"The style of the lion in the Royal standard has, however, not been changed. The 1905 version is still in use. The style and design of the lion on the Norwegian coat of arms were changed from the 1905 version in 1937, and the result is two very diverging drawings. The whole drawing is strictly flat or 'stylized'. This redrawing was the work of state archivist Hallvard Trætteberg - his point of view on heraldry strongly influenced public heraldry since the early 1930s (see for instance the county flags). There have been minor changes to the lion in the coat of arms - most recently in 1994. The Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs produced some very attractive brochures on the flag and arms last year - also mainly in Norwegian but with nice pictures" (Jan Oskar Engene, 24 November 1995)crwflags.com