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  1. 6 de jul. de 2020 · 7 June. The date of the homecoming, 7 June, was not chosen at random. It marked five years to the day since the King and the Crown Prince had been forced to leave Norway for England on the British cruiser Devonshire. “The day we decided we had to leave the country was a grim and sombre day,” King Haakon told the crowd in Oslo’s City Hall ...

  2. 28 de may. de 2021 · 11319. During World War II, Norway’s Crown Princess Märtha and her three children fled the Nazis and lived in exile in Bethesda, Maryland. The location was convenient to Washington and to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The crown princess, 39 years old at that time, travelled to USA at the invitation of the American president.

  3. Prince Harald (King Harald V) Today, Martha and Olav’s son Harald, born in 1937, sits on the Norwegian throne as King Harald V of Norway. He’s the youngest child of Martha and Olav, but the ...

  4. 13 de feb. de 2012 · King Olav V was born at Appleton House in Norfolk, England, on 2 July 1903. He was the son and only child of King Haakon VII (1872-1957) and Queen Maud (1869-1938), then Prince Carl of Denmark and Princess Maud of Wales. Christened Alexander Edward Christian Frederik, he was given the name Olav when his father was elected King of Norway in 1905.

  5. Norwegian campaign; Part of Operation Weserübung: The Battle of Narvik saw Norway's toughest fight in World War II; nearly 7,500 Norwegian soldiers participated in the battle, along with British, French and Polish troops.

  6. The Royal House of Norway belongs to the House of Glücksburg. The members of the Norwegian Royal House are Their Majesties King Harald and Queen Sonja and Their Royal Highnesses Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit and Princess Ingrid Alexandra. The members of the Royal Family are in addition the Crown Prince and Crown Princess’s ...

  7. 17 de may. de 2024 · Did Prince Olav of Norway remarry? No, Prince Olav of Norway did not remarry. After the death of his beloved wife, Crown Princess Märtha, he ruled the country without a queen for 33 years until his own death on January 17, 1991. Why are Norwegians so happy? Norwegians are known to be happy because they have a concept called “koselig”.