Bergen Bank Explained

Bergen Bank AS
Fate:Merged
Successor:Den norske Bank
Foundation:1975
Defunct:1990
Location:Bergen, Norway
Industry:Banking

Bergen Bank was a Norwegian commercial bank in existence between 1975 and 1990. It was created as a merger between Bergens Privatbank (founded in 1855) and Bergens Kreditbank (founded in 1928) while the bank Kvam Privatbank was acquired in 1979. In 1988 it bought Nevi.[1] Bergen Bank, which was based in Bergen, Norway, merged with Den norske Creditbank in 1990 to form Den norske Bank. It is now part of DnB NOR.[2]

Criticism

The bank was the target of massive demonstrations in 1976 after three female employees at Per Hestvik & Co in Mo i Rana were fired with the reason that they were members of Kvinnefronten, a women's rights movement. The reason for the firing was that Bergen Bank denied the bank credit if they did not fire the employees.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Imset, Gunnar . Bankerott: det norske bankvesens vekst og fall . Stavrum . Gunnar . 82-05-21889-7 . Gyldendal . Oslo . Norwegian . 123.
  2. http://www.dnbnor.com dnbnor.com
  3. http://www.kampdager.no/arkiv/organisering/kvinnefronten/kvinnefronten_bilder.html Kampdager – Kvinnefronten