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10/03/2016

Norway Facts

Norway Facts and Introduction:

Norway is mostly known for it's natural beauty, fjords and mountains, the unpredictable Northern lights and the midnight sun. The kingdom of Norway is a ramble monarchy situate in Northern Europe, the Western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula.

Norway Facts 1 to 20:

1.The country of Norway is officially known as the kingdom of Norway.

2.Norway share a border mutually Russia, Finland, Sweden.

3.The capital and largest city in Norway is Oslo.

4.Norway is often described as the "Land of the Midnight Sun" because over the summer months of late May through to late July the sun never completely drops below the horizon in northerly Arctic circle areas of the country and others areas have around 20 hours of sunlight a day. However, it is before the opposite in winter.

5.Norwegian, the spoken language of Norway has two official written form, Bokmal Norwegian and Nynorsk Norwegian.

6.Norway has a population of 5,214,900 people as of 2016.

7.The Sami are an indigenous ancestry of northern Scandinavia who have been living in the arctic territories for around 10,000 years. They are known for their superb clothes and herding of reindeer.

8.Norway is the practically successful nation in the world at the winter Olympics. The country has collected the most medals of any country overall the games history and it is the well known of seldom three countries(along with Austria and Liechtenstein) who have won in a superior way medals at the games than at the summer games.

9.Norway's flag is red by the whole of a blue  cross outlined in white that extends to the ends of the flag. The straightforward part of the flag is shifted to the stretch side in the rule of the Dannebrog(Danish flag). The colors remind Norway's past political unions mutually Denmark(red and white) and Sweden(blue).

norway-flag-facts

10.Norway's formal made up a well known mind is Kongeriket Norge(kingdom of Norway).

11.Norway's national symbol is the lion.

12.The Laerdal tunnel is the world's longest road tunnel at 15 miles(24.5 km).

the-laerdal-tunnel
Image.wikipedia.org

13.If you own a television in Norway, you have to pay licensing fee.

14.Minnesota is the unofficial Norwegian capital of the United States, and greater Norwegian reside in Minnesota than entire other state.

15.The Norwegians founded Dublin, Ireland in 836 A.D.

16.The cheese slicer was invented in Norway in 1925 by Thor BjΓΈrklund.

cheese-slicer-invented-by
Image.pixabay

17.Norway was one of the founding nation of the United Nations in 1945, and the first U.N secretary General was Norwegian foreign minister, Trygve Lie.

18.Food stores are not allowed to stay open on Sundays, but petrol stations and kiosks trading groceries are. This means that you are free do your grocery shopping in ordinary food stores from Monday to Saturday, yet you have to visit a petrol station or a kiosk if you want to economical groceries on a Sunday.

19.Because food prices in Norway are amongst the highest in the world, many Norwegians, and particularly those living close to the Swedish borderline, travel to Sweden on a regular basis to low-priced groceries.

20.Norway is world's largest exporter of Salmon.

salmon-norway
Image.pixabay

Norway Facts 21 to 48.

21.Trondheim, Norway was one of  Europe's first wireless cities.

22.During world war two, the Norwegian mining town of Kirkenes suffered greater bomb attacks than any other place in Europe except for Malta.

23.The Norwegian pop music group A-ha wrote the title song for the 1988 James Bond film The Living Daylights.


24.The Norwegian postal service was established in 1667. The first Norwegian stamp was released in 1855.


25.Oslo-born Grete Waitz was the first women to run a marathon in minor than two and a half hours.


26.Norwegians read books more than entire other nation in the world, purchasing an average of 500 kroner(us$76) a year per capita on books. More than 2000 books titles are published annually in Norway.



book-reading-in-norway

27.Norwegian feel heart go out to frozen pizza. The Grandiosa frozen pizza is the unofficial Norwegian national dish. Each year Norwegian consume more than 20 million Grandiosa pizzas, in opening to all the other frozen pizza brands on the market.

28.Norway's Hardangervidda Plateaue is the biggest all kinds of plateaue and homeland to the continent's largest herd of wild reindeer.


29.Norway is the country of origin of modern skiing. The word "Ski" is Norwegian for "piece of wood".


30.There are closely 450,000 lakes in Norway, 200 or so that 4 square miles or more in size.


31.Norway is famous for it's fjords two of which the Geiranger fjord and the Naeroy fjord achievement on the UNESCO world heritage list.


32.Sognefjorden or Songefjord is the largest fjord in Norway and second largest in the world. It is the longest ice-free fjord in the world and stretches 127 miles (205 km) inland from the ocean.



sognefjord-norway

33.The Holmenkollen ski festival is the world's oldest, established
as early as 1872, and is one of the Norway's most visited tourist sities, attracting approximately 1 million people per year.

34.King Harald of Norway vowed to remain unmarried for life unless he could marry his true love, who was the girl of a cloth merchant. They both later married with help from the Government of Norway and she became the Queen of Norway.


35.Norway is one of the wealthiest countries in the world.


36.Norway is the 6th largest country in Europe, but only ranks 28th as far as population.


37.Norway gets 98-99% of its electricity from hydroelectric power, more than any other country.



norway-electricity-dam
Image.wikipedia.org

38.Norway also has the world's deepest underwater tunnel at 287 meters deep.

39.If caught driving under the influence, there is an automatic 30 days in incarcerate, get the worst of it your authorize for a year and come to an agreement fines up to 10% of your yearly income.


40.Coffee came to Noway approximately 280 years ago, but it wasn't commonly accepted simultaneously the 1870s. Today Norwegian's are among the world's biggest consumers of coffee per inhabitant.



coffee-in-norway-facts
Image.pixabay

41.In 1895, Alfred Nobel, the Swedish founder of the Nobel prizes stipulated that the peace prize was to be awarded by a cabinet appointed by the storting the Norwegians governing body. The Norwegian peace prize selection committee selects a peace prize winner every year. The award ceremony taken place each year on December 10, the anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death and celebrations are stay that day both in Stockholm and Oslo.

42.Grimstad, Norway was the birthplace of playwright Henrik Ibsen and is besides the sunniest resort in Norway.



grimstad-norway-facts

43.Norway's national drink is akevitt or aquavit. It is a potato-based spirit seasoned by anmasse of caraway seeds regularly dill, fennel, cumin, star anise, or orange peel. Akevitt was derived in 1831 from a whisky created by Eske Bille and sent to Archbishop Olav Engelbrektsson as liquor (water of life) a cure for all ills. There is a well known brand of Akevitt called Linje akevitt which is shipped to Australia to mature and then back to Norway. The word linje is added now the akevitt crosses the Equator.

44.The official Christmas tree in Trafalgar square in London has come from Norway every year since 1946.



Christmas-tree-in-london

45.The Sami comprise approximately 1% of Norwegian population. They are an ancient ethnic people with their own language and culture. Only 7% are employed in herding reindeer. Half's of the world Sami population of 70,000 reside in Norway.

46.Norwegian Erik Rotheim preceived the favorite of the can-and-aerosol system we experienced as the aerosol spray can. He was taken as known a intellectual property for his invention in Norway on October 8,1926.



aerosol-can-norway

47.Dying is illegal in Longyearbyen, Norway because the town's small graveyard stopped accepting bodies afterwards discovering the permafrost prevented the bodies from decomposing.


48.Norway Trolls Fact:

trolls are an significant part of Norwegian folklore. They vary in size and appearance, anyhow are invariably ugly and messy creatures, and permanently mischievous (if not downright nasty). They constantly live  in caves or deep in the forest and only emerge from their hiding places after sunset legend has it that they start to stone upon contact with the sun. Several places in western and northern Norway have been named after them, a well known as trollheimen, trollstigen, trollhatten and trollveggen.


troll-norway-fact


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