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Vidkun Quisling


Vidkun Abraham Lauritz Jonssøn Quisling (July 18, 1887October 24, 1945) was a Norwegian fascist politician and officer. He held the office of Minister President in occupied Norway from February 1942 to the end of World War II, while the elected social democratic cabinet of Johan Nygaardsvold was exiled in London. After the war he was tried for high treason and subsequently executed by firing squad. His name has become an eponym for traitor, especially a collaborationist.

Biography


Quisling was a son of the Lutheran priest and well-known genealogist Jon Lauritz Qvisling from Fyresdal, and both of his parents belonged to some of the oldest and most distinguished families of Telemark.

His early life was mixed and relatively successful; he had become the country's best ever war academy cadet upon graduation in 1911, and achieved the rank of major in the Norwegian army some years later. He worked with Fridtjof Nansen in the Soviet Union during the famine in the 1920s, and served as defense minister in the agrarian governments 1931-1933.

On May 17, 1933, Norwegian Constitution Day, Quisling and lawyer Johan Bernhard Hjort formed Nasjonal Samling ("National Unity"), the Norwegian fascist party.
Nasjonal Samling had an anti-democratic, Führerprinzip-based political structure, and Quisling was to be the party's Fører (Norwegian: 'Leader', equivalent of the German 'Führer') - He was sometimes referred to as "the Hitler of Norway". The party went on to have modest successes; in the election of 1933, four months after the party was formed, it garnered 27,850 votes (approximately 2%), following support from the Norwegian Farmer's Aid Association, with which Quisling had connections from his time as a member of the Agrarian government. However, as the party line changed from a religiously rooted one to a more pro-German and anti-Semitic hardline policy from 1935 onwards, the support from the Church waned, and in the 1936 elections, the party got fewer votes than in 1933. The party became increasingly extremist, and party membership dwindled to an estimated 2,000 members after the German invasion, but under the German occupation by 1945 some 45,000 Norwegian collaborators had joined the party.

When Germany invaded Norway on April 9, 1940, Quisling became the first person in history to announce a coup d'etat during a news broadcast, declaring an ad-hoc government during the confusion of the invasion, hoping that the Germans would support it. The background for this action was the flight northwards of the King and the government, and Quisling feared that all political power could end up in German hands, to the disadvantage of the Norwegian population. Quisling had visited Adolf Hitler in Germany the year before, but was not well liked by Hitler who thought Quisling was of "no use" to him. Quisling had low popular support, and the Quisling government lasted only five days, after which Josef Terboven was installed as Reichskommissar, the highest official in Norway, reporting directly to Hitler. The relationship between Quisling and Terboven was tense, although Terboven, presumably seeing an advantage in having a Norwegian in an apparent position of power to reduce resentment in the population, named Quisling to the post of Minister President in 1942, a position the self-appointed Fører assumed in 1943, on February 1.

Vidkun Quisling stayed in power until he was arrested May 9, 1945, in a mansion on Bygdøy in Oslo that he called Gimle after the place in Norse mythology where the survivors of Ragnarok were to live. The house, now called Villa Grande, is today a museum dedicated to the holocaust victims.

Quisling, along with two other Nasjonal Samling leaders, Albert Viljam Hagelin and Ragnar Skancke, was convicted for high treason and executed by firing squad at Akershus Fortress. The charge was mainly based on his actions during the war: his coup d'etat in april 1940, his revocal of the mobilization order, his many encouragements to serve as volunteers in the German army, his collaboration in the deportation of the Jews, his responsibility for the execution of Norwegian patriots and a number of other charges.

Subsequently these sentences have been controversial, since capital punishment was reintroduced to the Norwegian legal system by the exile government at the end of the war, in anticipation of the post war trials. The Supreme Court found the death sentences not in breach of the Norwegian Constitions §97 ("No law must be given retroactive effect").

Maria Vasilijevna, Quisling's Russian wife, lived in Oslo until her death in 1980. They had no children.

The term "quisling" has become a synonym in some European languages, including English, Norwegian, Greek, Croatian and Serbian, for traitor, particularly one who collaborates with invaders. The term was coined by the British newspaper The Times in its leader of April 15, 1940 which was entitled "Quislings everywhere": it asserted "There are Quislings in every country in Europe".

Literature


In Norwegian:
Dahl, Hans Fredrik (1991). "Quisling - En fører blir til." Oslo: Aschehoug. (BIBSYS)
Dahl, Hans Fredrik (1992). "Quisling - En fører for fall." Oslo: Aschehoug. (BIBSYS)
Borgen, Per Otto (1999). "Norges statsministre." Oslo: Aschehoug. (BIBSYS)

In English:
QUISLING - A Study in Treason, 1989, Norwegian University Press (Universitetsforlaget) by Oddvar K. Høidal, ISBN 8200184005

See also


Operation Weserübung
British campaign in Norway
Norwegian resistance movement

   
   
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