Revision as of 02:45, 22 May 2009 view sourceErik9 (talk | contribs)30,314 edits Add contemporary Norwegian politician← Previous edit | Revision as of 15:15, 22 May 2009 view source Lylefor (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled6,625 edits No need to add more less notable Norwegians. There's more than enough in the infobox already. For more, please rather see List of NorwegiansNext edit → | ||
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{{Ethnic group| | {{Ethnic group| | ||
|group=Norwegian people<br>''Nordmenn'' | |group=Norwegian people<br>''Nordmenn'' | ||
|image=<div style="margin-top:1px; margin-bottom:1px;">] ] ] ]</div> | |image=<div style="margin-top:1px; margin-bottom:1px;">]</div> | ||
|caption=<small>] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br> ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br> ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br> ] ] ]</small> | |caption=<small>] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br> ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] <br> ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ] {{•}} ]</small> | ||
|poptime='''12 million''' including ancestry | |poptime='''12 million''' including ancestry | ||
|popplace={{flagcountry|Norway}}:4,135,400<ref>"Without immigrant background" : Population 1.1.2007 (4 016 385 )</ref> | |popplace={{flagcountry|Norway}}:4,135,400<ref>"Without immigrant background" : Population 1.1.2007 (4 016 385 )</ref> |
Revision as of 15:15, 22 May 2009
Ethnic groupSt. Olaf • P. Tordenskjold • N. H. Abel • F. Stang H. Ibsen • E. Grieg • F. Nansen • E. Munch R. Amundsen • E. Groven • L. Ullmann • O. G. Solskjær | |
Regions with significant populations | |
---|---|
Norway:4,135,400 | |
United States | 4.5 million |
Canada | 432,515 |
Brazil | 150,000 - 250,000 est. |
Argentina | 50,000 - 100,000 est. |
Sweden | 44,773 |
Chile | 42,000 - 60,000 est. |
Spain | 20,000 |
Denmark | 15,782 |
Uruguay | 15,000 - 20,000 est. |
Australia | 15,000 |
United Kingdom | 10,000 |
Germany | 6,251 |
Japan | 452 |
Languages | |
Norwegian Related languages include Danish, Faroese, Icelandic, Swedish, and to a lesser extent, all Germanic languages. | |
Religion | |
83% of the population of Norway are members of the Christian Evangelical Lutheran Church of Norway. Norway is highly secularized, and only about 10% of the population attend religious services more than once a month. | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Germanic ethnic groups: Danish, Icelanders, Swedish, Dutch, Germans, Austrian, English, Faroese, Flemings, Normans;. |
Norwegians (Norwegian: nordmenn) are a Northern European ethnic group found mostly in Norway and other Scandinavian countries, as well as many other countries in diaspora. Norwegians mostly speak Norwegian as well as other languages in diaspora and mostly follow Christianity (particularly Lutheranism). The Norwegians are part of the Scandinavian ethnic group.
Viking Age
Main article: Viking AgeThe Norwegians travelled to the north-west and west, founding vibrant communities in the Faroe Islands, Shetland, Orkney, Iceland, Ireland, Scotland and northern England. Norwegian Vikings conducted extensive raids in Ireland and founded the cities of Cork, Dublin and Limerick. A new wave of Norwegian Vikings appeared in England in 947 when Erik Bloodaxe captured York. Apart from Britain and Ireland, Norwegians mostly found largely uninhabited land, and established settlements in those places. The first known permanent Norwegian settler in Iceland was Ingólfur Arnarson, who built his homestead in Reykjavík, traditionally in the year 874. According to the saga of Erik the Red, when Erik the Red was exiled from Iceland he went west. There he found a land that he named "Greenland" to attract people from Iceland to settle it with him. The Viking Age settlements in Greenland were established in the sheltered fjords of the southern and western coast.
Norwegians in Norway
See also History of Norway and Demography of Norway.
According to recent genetic analysis, both mtDNA and Y chromosome polymorphisms showed a noticeable genetic affinity between Norwegians and central Europeans, especially Germans. (these conclusions are also valid for Swedes) For the global genetic make-up of the Norwegian people and other peoples, see also: and
Norwegian diaspora
Norwegian citizens abroad
As with many of the people from smaller European countries, Norwegians are spread throughout the world. There are more than 100,000 Norwegian citizens living abroad permanently, mostly in the USA and in the other Scandinavian countries.
The Netherlands
During the 17th and 18th Century, many Norwegians emigrated to the Netherlands and in particular Amsterdam. This emigration is regarded as the second of the waves of emigration from Norway (the first being the trek to the Atlantic islands, Ireland, Normandy etc. during the Viking age, and the third was to North America, not counting the Gothic emigrations to Continental Europe in the 2nd and 3rd Century AD.) Loosely estimated some 10% of the population may have emigrated, in a period when the entire Norwegian population consisted of some 800,000 people. Whole valleys in the south of Norway were decimated. The Norwegians left with the Dutch trade ships that in Norway traded for timber, hides, herring and stockfish (dried codfish). Young women took employment as maidens in Amsterdam. Young men took employment as sailors. Large parts of the Dutch merchant fleet and navy came to consist of Norwegians and Danes. They took Dutch names, so no trace of Norwegian names can be found in the Dutch population of today. One well known illustration is that of Admiral Kruys. He was hired in Amsterdam by Peter I to develop the Russian navy, but was originally from Stavanger in Norway (Kruys means 'cross', and the Russian maritime flag is today also a blue cross on white background). The emigration to the Netherlands was so devastating to the homelands that the Danish-Norwegian king issued penalties of death for emigration, but repeatedly had to issue amnesties for those willing to return, announced by posters in the streets of Amsterdam. Increasingly, Dutchmen who search their genealogical roots turn to Norway. Many Norwegians who emigrated to the Netherlands, and often were employed in the Dutch merchant fleet, emigrated further to the many Dutch colonies such as New Amsterdam (New York).
United States of America
See article: Norwegian American
Many Norwegians emigrated to the USA between the 1850s and the 1920s. Today, the descendants of these people are known as Norwegian-Americans. According to the 2000 US Census, 3 million Americans consider Norwegian to be their sole or primary ancestry. It is estimated that as many as a further 1.5 million more are of partial Norwegian ancestry.
Travelling to and through Canada and Canadian ports were of choice for Norwegian settlers immigrating to the United States. In 1850, the year after Great Britain repealed its restrictive Navigation Acts in Canada, more and more emigrating Norwegians sailed the shorter route to the Ville de Québec (Quebec City) in Canada, to make their way on to USA cities like Chicago, Milwaukee, and Green Bay by steamer. For example, in the 1850s, 28,640 arrived at Quebec, Canada en route to the USA, and 8,351 at New York directly.
Norwegian-Americans represent between 2 and 3% of the White non-Hispanic population in the US. They mostly live in the Upper Midwest.
Canada
As early as 1814, a party of Norwegians was brought to Canada to build a winter road from York Factory on Hudson Bay in northern Canada to the infant Red River settlement at the site of present-day Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. Norway House is one of the oldest trading posts and Native-Canadian missions in the Canadian West. Willard Ferdinand Wentzel served the North West Company of Canada in the Athabasca and Mackenzie regions and accompanied Sir John Franklin on his overland expedition in 1819–20 to the Canadian Arctic.
Norwegians immigrated to Canada in search of the Canadian Dream. This immigration lasted from the mid-1880s until 1930. It can be divided into three periods of roughly fifteen years each. In the first, to about 1900, thousands of Norwegians homesteaded on the Canadian prairies. In the second, from 1900 to 1914, there was a further heavy influx of Norwegians immigrating to Canada from the United States because of poor economic conditions in the USA, and 18,790 from Norway. In the third, from 1919 to 1930, 21,874 people came directly from Norway, with the peak year in 1927, when 5,103 Norwegians arrived, spurred by severe depression at home. They came with limited means, many leaving dole queues.
From 1825 to 1900 some 500,000 Norwegians landed at Quebec City, Quebec, (and other Canadian ports) for traveling through Canada was the shortest corridor to the Central American states. In spite of efforts by the Government of Canada to retain these immigrants for Canada, very few remained because of Canada's somewhat restrictive land policies at that time and negative stories being told about Canada from U.S. land agents deterring Norwegians from going to Canada. Not until the 1880s did Norwegians accept Canada as a land of opportunity. This was also true of the many Americans of Norwegian heritage who immigrated to Canada from the USA with "Canada Fever" seeking homesteads and new economic opportunities. By 1921 one-third of all Norwegians in Canada had been born in the USA.
These new Canadians became British subjects in Canada, and part of the British Empire. Canadian citizenship, as a status distinct from that of a British subject, was created on 1 January 1947, with Canada being the first Commonwealth country to create their own citizenship. Prior to that date, Canadians were British subjects and Canada's nationality law closely mirrored that of the United Kingdom. On 1 January 1947, Canadian citizenship was conferred on most British subjects connected with Canada. Unlike in the USA, Canada was part of the British Empire and most Norwegians would have become Canadians and British subjects at the same time.
According to the 2006 Canadian census, 432,515 Canadians reported Norwegian ancestry (Norwegian-Canadians). Norwegians make up 2% of the White Canadian population. However, the actual figure may be higher. It is important to note that because so many Norwegian women married men of other nationalities, and thus by census rules are not counted as having children of this ethnic origin, this tends to reduce the number in the statistics.
Russia
Some Norwegians who once lived in the Russian city of Murmansk have left. There are very few of them left there today. The Norwegians in Murmansk are Kola Norwegians.
Other terms used
The Norwegians are and have been referred to by other terms as well. Some of them include:
- Nordmenn: A term used by Scandinavians to denote ethnic Norwegians and Norwegian citizens. It translates as "Northmen". (Singular: Nordmann)
- Northmen: Old term used by other European peoples to denote the peoples originating in the northern regions of Europe
- Norsemen or Norse: Viking age peoples of Nordic origin.
- Vikings: Used in Norway to denote people who went raiding during the Viking age. Used in a similar way by other peoples but can also mean Scandinavians in general.
- Minnewegian: What a Norwegian-Minnesotan is called.
- Norrbagge: A Swedish derogatory term for Norwegians (first attested use: 1257), based on the root "bagge" meaning sheep's testicles
- Norski: Common name for Northern American Norwegians
See also
References
- "Without immigrant background" : Population 1.1.2007 (4 016 385 )
- The 2000 American census reports that the United States, in the 2000 census, has 4,477,725 inhabitants of Norwegian ancestry.
- Shows a list over Canadas different ethnic groups, reports that there is 363,760 Norwegians in Canada.
- Swedish Statistics from 2005. Shows the official number of Norwegians in Sweden at page 20.
- Spanish National Statistics Institute from 2005. Now at over 20,000
- Danish Statistics from October 2005.
- The ABS estimates in a 2003 study that there are between 10,000 and 20,000 people claiming Norwegian ancestry living in Australia. The middle number has been used, and no change since 03 has been assumed
- Number of Norwegians registered at the Embassy for living in each of these countries.
- Foreign population of Germany counted 31 December 2003 till 1 January 2004.
- Japan-Norway relations
- Template:No icon Welcome to the Church of Norway
- Religion in Norway (Norway - the official site in the United States)
- http://hpgl.stanford.edu/publications/EJHG_2002_v10_521-529.pdf
External links
Norway articles | |||||||
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