Norske Løve Fortress Explained

Norske Løve
Location:Horten, Norway
Built:1852-1859
Materials:Stone
Used:1852-today
Controlledby:Norway

Norske Løve is the name of a 19th-century fortress built from 1852 to 1859 to protect Karljohansvern naval station at Horten in Norway.

Overview

Norske Løve (literally, 'Norwegian Lion') is a reference to the lion on the Coat of Arms of Norway. The fort is still a military area, but is today only used as an administration building for the Norwegian naval officers training school.[1] [2]

The fort was constructed by Baltazar Nicolai Garben. The primary construction material was limestone, reinforced with granite. The fortress structure was fitted with heavy artillery on several floors protected by casemates. It has a moat which can be filled with water and was originally fitted with a circular envelope with 22 open casemates each holding a 3-ton cannon. The fort originally had a complement of 500 men. The open casemates were walled up by the Germans during World War II, but otherwise the fort is largely in its original form.[3] [4]

See also

External links

59.4432°N 10.4899°W

Notes and References

  1. http://www.festningsverk.no/Loven.htm Norske Løve - Horten (festningsverk)
  2. http://www.forsvarsbygg.no/festningene/Festningene/Karljohansvern/Opplevelser/Fortet-Norske-Love/ Fortet Norske Løve (forsvarsbygg.no)
  3. Web site: Den norske løve (arkivverket.no) . 2015-06-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150610202606/http://www.arkivverket.no/arkivverket/Arkivverket/Riksarkivet/Nettutstillinger/Skatter-fra-arkivet/Den-norske-loeve . 2015-06-10 . dead .
  4. http://www.snl.no/Balthazar_Nicolai_Garben Balthazar Nicolai Garben (Store Norske Leksikon)