Order of the Norwegian Lion Den norske løve | |
Type: | Single grade Order of knighthood |
Status: | repealed by Court resolution 11 March 1952 |
Date: | 21 January 1904 |
Last Induction: | 10 September 1904 |
Total: | 11 |
Higher: | none |
Related: | Order of the Seraphim |
Lower: | Order of St. Olav |
The Order of the Norwegian Lion was a Norwegian order of knighthood established by King Oscar II on 21 January 1904, "in memory of the glorious events associated with Norway’s venerable Coat of Arms".[1]
The order was established as an equivalent in rank to the Swedish Order of the Seraphim as knights of the Norwegian Order of St. Olav ranked below the knights of the Seraphim in the shared Swedish-Norwegian royal court. However the expansion of the Norwegian honours system received mixed reactions amongst Norwegian politicians.
The Union between Sweden and Norway was dissolved in 1905 before any Norwegian knights had been appointed and King Haakon VII chose not to appoint any new knights. He formally repealed the order in a Court resolution on 11 March 1952. The last living knight was King Gustaf VI Adolf of Sweden, who died in 1973.
No | Name | Known for | Year Appointed |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Royal Family | 21 January 1904 | |
2 | Crown Prince Gustaf | ||
3 | Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Skåne | ||
4 | Prince Wilhelm, Duke of Södermanland | ||
5 | Prince Erik, Duke of Västmanland | ||
6 | Prince Carl, Duke of Västergötland | ||
7 | Prince Eugen, Duke of Närke | ||
No | Name | Known for | Year Appointed |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 27 January 1904 | ||
2 | 5 April 1904 | ||
3 | 10 September 1904 | ||
4 | 1 December 1904 | ||
King Haakon VII formally became Grand Master on 18 November 1905, but never wore any of the order's insignias.