Statesman's Year-Book 1899/Sweden and Norway
SWEDEN AND NORWAY.
(SVERIGE OCH NORGE.)
Reigning King.
Oscar II., born January 21, 1829; the third son of King Oscar I., and of Queen Josephine, daughter of Prince Eugene of Leuchtenberg. Succeeded to the throne at the death of his brother. King Carl XV., Sept. 18, 1872. Married June 6, 1857, to Queen Sophia, born July 9, 1836, daughter of the late Duke Wilhelm of Nassau.
Children of the King.
I. Prince Gustaf, Crown Prince, Duke of Wermland, born June 16, 1858. Married Sept. 20, 1881, to Princess Victoria, born Aug. 7, 1862, daughter of the Grand Duke of Baden. Issue, Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Scania, born Nov. 11, 1882; Prince Carl Wilhelm, Duke of Södermanland, born June 17, 1884; and Prince Erik Ludvig Albert, Duke of Vestmanland, born April 20, 1889.
II. Prince Oscar Bernadotte, Count of Wisborg, born Nov. 15, 1859. Renounced his succession to the throne and married March 15, 1888, Ebba Munck of Fulkila, born Oct. 24, 1858.
III. Prince Carl, Duke of Westergötland, born Feb. 27, 1861. Married August 27, 1897, to Princess Ingeborg, born Aug. 2, 1878, daughter of the Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark.
IV. Prince Eugen, Duke of Nerike, born Aug. 1, 1865.
King Oscar II. is the fourth sovereign of the House of Ponte Corvo, and grandson of Marshal Bernadotte, Prince de Ponte Corvo, who was elected heir-apparent of the crown of Sweden by the Parliament of the Kingdom, Aug. 21, 1810, and ascended the throne Feb. 5, 1818, under the name of Carl XIV. Johan. He was succeeded at his death, March 8, 1844, by his only son Oscar. The latter died July 8, 1859, and was succeeded by his eldest son Carl XV., at whose premature death, without male children, the crown fell to his next surviving brother, the present King.
The royal family of Sweden and Norway have a civil list of 1,320,000 kronor, or 73,340 £., from Sweden, and 482,838 kroner, or 26,882 £., from Norway. The sovereign, besides, has an annuity of 300,000 kronor, or 16,666 £., voted to King Carl XIV. and his successors on the throne of Sweden. The following is a list of the kings and queens of Sweden, with the dates of their accession, from the accession of the House of Vasa:—
House of Vasa. | |
Gustaf I. | 1521 |
Eric XIV. | 1560 |
Johan III. | 1568 |
Sigismund | 1592 |
Carl IX. | 1599 |
Gustaf II Adolf | 1611 |
Christina | 1632 |
House of Pfaltz. | |
Carl X. | 1654 |
Carl XI. | 1660 |
Carl XII. | 1697 |
Ulrika Eleonora | 1718 |
House of Hesse. | |
Fredrik I. | 1720 |
House of Holstein-Gottorp. | |
Adolf Fredrik | 1751 |
Gustaf III. | 1771 |
Gustaf IV. Adolf | 1792 |
Carl XIII. | 1809 |
House of Ponte Corvo. | |
Carl XIV. | 1818 |
Oscar I. | 1844 |
Carl XV. | 1859 |
Oscar II. | 1872 |
By the treaty of Kiel, Jan. 14, 1814, Norway was ceded to the King of Sweden by the King of Denmark, but the Norwegian people did not recognise this cession, and declared themselves independent. A Constituent Assembly met at Eidsvold, and having adopted, on May 17, a Constitution, elected the Danish Prince Christian Fredrik King of Norway. The Swedish troops, however, entered Norway without serious resistance, and, the foreign Powers refusing to recognise the newly elected King, the Norwegians were obliged to conclude, August 14, the Convention of Moss, by which the independency of Norway in union with Sweden was solemnly proclaimed. An extraordinary Storthing was then convoked, which adopted the modifications in the Constitution made necessary by the union with Sweden, and then elected King Carl XIII. King of Norway, November 4, 1814. The following year was promulgated a charter, the Riksakt, establishing new fundamental laws on the terms that the union of the two Kingdoms be indissoluble and irrevocable, without prejudice, however, to the separate government, constitution, and code of laws of either Sweden or Norway.
The law of succession is the same in Sweden and Norway. In case of absolute vacancy of the throne, the two Diets assemble for the election of the future sovereign, and should they not be able to agree upon one person, an equal number of Swedish and Norwegian deputies have to meet at the city of Karlstad, in Sweden, for the appointment of the king, this nomination to be absolute. The common affairs are decided upon in a Council of State composed of Swedes and Norwegians. In case of minority of the king, the Council of State exercises the sovereign power until a regent or council of regency is appointed by the united action of the Diets of Sweden and Norway.
1. SWEDEN.
Constitution and Government.
I. Central Government.
The fundamental laws of the Kingdom of Sweden are:—1. The Constitution or Regerings-formen of June 6, 1809; 2. The amended regulations for the formation of the Diet of June 22, 1866; 3. The law of royal succession of September 26, 1810; and 4. The law on the liberty of the press of July 16, 1812. According to these statutes, the king must be a member of the Lutheran Church, and have sworn fealty to the laws of the land. His person is inviolable. He has the right to declare war and make peace, after consulting the Council of State. He nominates to all higher appointments, both military and civil; concludes foreign treaties, and has a right to preside in the supreme Court of Justice. The princes of the blood royal, however, are excluded from all civil employments. The king possesses legislative power in matters of political administration, but in all other respects that power is exercised by the Diet in concert with the sovereign, and every new law must have the assent of the crown. The right of imposing taxes is, however, vested in the Diet. This Diet, or Parliament of the realm, consists of two Chambers, both elected by the people. The First Chamber consists of 150 members. The election of the members takes place by the 'Landstings,' or provincial representations, 25 in number, and the municipal corporations of the towns, not already represented in the 'Landstings,' Stockholm, Göteborg, Malmö, Norrköping and Gefle. All members of the First Chamber must be above 35 years of age, and must have possessed for at least three years previous to the election either real property to the taxed value of 80,000 kronor, or 4,444 £., or an annual income of 4,000 kroner, or 223 £. They are elected for the term of nine years, and obtain no payment for their services. The Second Chamber consists of 230 members, of whom 80 are elected by the towns and 150 by the rural districts. All natives of Sweden, aged 21, possessing real property to the taxed value of 1,000 kroner, or 56 £., or farming, for a period of not less than five years, landed property to the taxed value of 6,000 kroner, or 333 £., or paying income tax on an annual income of 800 kronor, or 45 £., are electors; and all natives, aged 25, possessing the same qualifications, may be elected members of the Second Chamber. The number of qualified electors to the Second Chamber in 1896 was 309,899, or 6.3 of the population; only 140,488, or 45.3 of the electors, actually voted. In the smaller towns and country districts the election may either be direct or indirect, according to the wish of the majority. The election is for the term of three years, and the members obtain salaries for their services, at the rate of 1,200 kroner, or 67 £., for each session of four months, or, in the case of an extra session 10 kronor (11 s.) a day, besides travelling expenses. The salaries and travelling expenses of the deputies are paid out of the public purse. The members of both Chambers are elected by ballot, both in town and country. The executive power is in the hands of the King, who acts under the advice of a Council of State, the head of which is the Minister of State. It consists of ten members, seven of whom are ministerial heads of departments and three without department, and is composed as follows:—
1. Erik Gustaf Boström, Minister of State; appointed July 10, 1891.
2. Count Ludvig Vilhelm August Douglas, Minister of Foreign Affairs; appointed June 1, 1895.
3. Per Samuel Ludvig Annerstedt, Minister of Justice; appointed Febniary 5, 1896.
4. Baron Axel Emil Rappe, Minister of War; appointed June 22, 1892.
5. Jarl Casimir Eugène Christerson, Minister of Marine; appointed December 16, 1892.
6. Julius Edvard von Krusenstjerna, Minister of the Interior; appointed October 6, 1896.
7. Count Hans Hansson Wachtmeister, Minister of Finance; appointed July 16, 1897.
8. Nils Ludwig Alfred Claëson, Minister of Education and Ecclesiastical Affairs; appointed June 22, 1898.
9. Baron Albert Lars Evert Åkerhielm; appointed September 28, 1888.
10. Sven Herman Wikblad; appointed October 12, 1889.
All the members of the Council of State are responsible for the acts of the Government.
II. Local Government.
The provincial administration is entrusted in Stockholm to a Governor-General, and in each of the 24 governments to a prefect, who is nominated by the King. As executive officers of the prefects there are 117 baillies (Kronofogdar) and 518 sub-officers (Länsmän). The right of the people to regulate their own local affairs is based on the communal law of March 21, 1862. Each rural parish, and each town, forms a commune or municipality in which all who pay the local taxes are voters. Each commune has a communal or municipal council. The communal assembly or municipal council decides on all questions of administration, police and communal economy. Ecclesiastical affairs and questions relating to primary schools are dealt with by the parish assemblies, presided over by the pastor of the parish. Each government has a general council which regulates the internal aiiairs of the government. The council meets annually for a few days in September under a president appointed by the King from among its members. The members are elected by the towns and provincial districts. Towns having a population of at least 1-150th (if the total population of the country and towns already separated from the 'Landstings,' and where the number of inhabitants is not fallen below that which caused their separation, are administered separately by their municipal councils: these towns are Stockholm, Göteborg, Malmö, Norrköping, and Gefle.
Area and Population.
I. Progress and Present Condition.
The first census took place in 1749, and it was repeated at first every third year, and subsequently, after 1775, every fifth year. At present, a general census is taken every ten years, beside which there are annual numerations of the people.
The area and population of Sweden, according to the census taken on December 31, 1890, and as estimated on December 31, 1897, are as follows:—
Governments (Län) | Area: English square miles |
Population Dec. 31, 1890 |
Population Dec. 31,1897 |
Pop. per square mile |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stockholm (city) | 13 | 246,454 | 288,602 | 22,200.1 |
Stockholm (rural district) | 3,015 | 152,715 | 160,999 | 53.4 |
Upsala | 2,051 | 121,091 | 124,061 | 61.9 |
Södermanland | 2,631 | 154,991 | 164,557 | 62.5 |
Östergötland | 4,267 | 266,619 | 274,818 | 64.4 |
Jönköping | 4,447 | 193,704 | 198,623 | 44.6 |
Kronoberg | 3,825 | 160,835 | 159,175 | 41.6 |
Kalmar | 4,443 | 232,847 | 227,998 | 51.3 |
Gotland | 1,219 | 51,337 | 52,187 | 42.8 |
Blekinge | 1,164 | 142,602 | 144,666 | 124.3 |
Kristianstad | 2,486 | 221,691 | 219,588 | 88.3 |
Malmöhus | 1,866 | 368,817 | 393,231 | 210.7 |
Halland | 1,900 | 136,106 | 140,504 | 73.9 |
Göteborg and Bohus | 1,948 | 297,824 | 322,529 | 165.6 |
Elfsborg | 4,938 | 275,780 | 276,969 | 56.1 |
Skaraborg | 3,280 | 247,074 | 243,835 | 74.3 |
Vermland | 7,435 | 253,326 | 253,363 | 34.1 |
Örebro | 3,498 | 182,557 | 191,684 | 54.8 |
Vestmanland | 2,625 | 137,453 | 144,396 | 55.0 |
Kopparberg | 11,522 | 197,449 | 210,790 | 18.3 |
Gefleborg | 7,614 | 206,924 | 226,423 | 29.7 |
Vesternorrland | 9,837 | 208,763 | 223,606 | 22.8 |
Jemtland | 19,712 | 100,455 | 107,656 | 5.4 |
Vesterbotten | 22,754 | 122,784 | 138,061 | 6.1 |
Norrbotten | 40,870 | 104,783 | 121,311 | 3.0 |
Lakes Venern, Vettern, Mälaren, Hjelmaren | 3,516 | — | — | — |
Total | 172,876 | 4,784,981 | 5,009,632 | 28.7 |
In 1897 there were 2,437,926 males and 2,571,706 females.
The growth of the population has been as follows:—
Year | Population | Increase per ct. per annum |
---|---|---|
1800 | 2,347,303 | — |
1820 | 2,584,690 | 0.5 |
1840 | 3,138,887 | 1.07 |
1850 | 3,482,541 | 1.09 |
1860 | 3,859,728 | 1.08 |
1870 | 4,168,525 | 0.80 |
1880 | 4,565,668 | 0.95 |
1890 | 4,784,981 | 0.50 |
With the exception of (1890) 19,505 Finns, 6,846 Lapps, and some thousands others, the Swedish population is entirely of the Scandinavian branch of the Aryan family.
In 1890 the foreign-born population numbered 24,548, of whom 4,066 were born in Germany, 5,401 in Denmark, 6,287 in Norway, 4,609 in Finland, 1,195 in Russia, 598 in the United Kingdom, and 1,482 in the United States.
According to civil condition the population was divided as follow in 1890:—
— | Male | Female |
---|---|---|
Unmarried | 1,431,843 | 1,460,664 |
Married | 795,463 | 804,613 |
Widowed | 88,580 | 199,930 |
Divorced | 1,301 | 2,587 |
The following table shows the leading occupations of the people in 1890, including the families and dependents of those directly employed:—
Agriculture, &c.: | |
Landed and farm proprietors | 1,229,601 |
Farmers, overseers, &c. | 250,784 |
Planters, &c. | 400,623 |
Crofters, cottagers, &c. | 494,421 |
Dairy-keepers | 11,882 |
Gardeners | 15,793 |
Fisheries | 34,246 |
Mining and metal works | 219,578 |
Timber works | 96,323 |
Various manufactures | 533,119 |
Trade and locomotion | 309,957 |
Officials and military | 207,276 |
Learning and literature | 43,383 |
Medicine, &c. | 18,817 |
Owners, pensioners, &c. | 307,550 |
Mechanics, servants, &c | 555,297 |
Various | 56,271 |
II. Movement of the Population.
1. Births, Deaths, and Marriages.
Year | Total living Births |
Of which Illegitimate |
Stillborn | Marriages | Deaths exclusive of Stillborn |
Surplus of Births over Deaths |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1891 | 135,516 | 13,718 | 3,556 | 27,940 | 80,603 | 54,913 |
1892 | 129,622 | 13,595 | 3,363 | 27,338 | 85,894 | 43,728 |
1893 | 131,729 | 13,616 | 3,436 | 27,219 | 81,027 | 50,702 |
1894 | 131,409 | 13,958 | 3,457 | 27,851 | 79,444 | 51,965 |
1895 | 134,599 | 14,438 | 3,535 | 28,728 | 74,368 | 60,231 |
2. Emigration.
Year | Immigrants | Total Emigrants |
To America |
---|---|---|---|
1890 | 6,030 | 34,212 | 29,487 |
1891 | 6,114 | 42,776 | 36,134 |
1892 | 6,511 | 45,504 | 40,990 |
1893 | 7,377 | 40,869 | 37,321 |
1894 | 10,425 | 13,358 | 9,529 |
1895 | 8,528 | 18,955 | 14,982 |
III. Principal Towns.
The population of Sweden is mainly rural. In 1871 the town population numbered only 551,106, and in 1896, 1,030,367, showing an increase of 87 per cent., or nearly five times the rate of the general average of the Kingdom.
The following towns had more than 10,000 inhabitants at the end of 1897:—
Stockholm | 288,602 |
Göteborg | 120,552 |
Malmö | 55,500 |
Norrköping | 38,354 |
Gefle | 26,400 |
Karlskrona | 23,196 |
Helsingborg | 22,818 |
Upsala | 22,706 |
Jönköping | 21,439 |
Örebro | 18,687 |
Lund | 15,791 |
Sundsvall | 17,158 |
Halmstad | 17,100 |
Landskrona | 13,481 |
Linköping | 13,586 |
Eskilstuna | 12,971 |
Kalmar | 12,459 |
Borås | 12,371 |
Söderhamn | 10,775 |
Karlstad | 10,511 |
Kristianstad | 10,079 |
Religion.
The mass of the population adhere to the Lutheran Protestant Church, recognised as the State religion. There are 12 bishoprics, and 2,551 parishes in 1898. At the census of 1890, the number of 'Evangelical Lutherans' was returned at 4,735,218, the Protestant Dissenters, Baptists, Methodists, and others numbering 44,378, including 23,307 unbaptized children. Of other creeds, there were 1,390 Roman Catholics, 46 Greek-Catholics, 313 Irvingites, 3,402 Jews, and 234 Mormons. No civil disabilities attach to those not of the national religion. The clergy are chiefly supported from the parishes and the proceeds of the Church lands.
Instruction.
The Kingdom has two universities, at Upsala and Lund, the former frequented by 1,405 and the latter by 585 students in the spring of 1898. There are also a state faculty of medicine in Stockholm (268 students) and private philosophical faculties in Stockholm and Göteborg. Education is well advanced in Sweden. In 1897 there were 79 public high schools, with 16,180 pupils; 28 people's high schools, 1,205 pupils; 12 normal schools for elementary schoolteachers, 1,203 pupils; 2 high and 6 elementary technical schools; 10 navigation schools, 592 pupils; 21 institutions and schools for deaf mutes and blinds; besides medical schools, military schools, veterinary and other special schools. Public elementary instruction is gratuitous and compulsory, and children not attending schools under the supervision of the Government must furnish proofs of having been privately educated. In 1896 there were 11,342 elementary schools, with 15,155 teachers and 730,259 pupils. In 1896 the expenditure on elementary education was 16,132,149 kronor, of which more than one-fourth came from the national funds. Among the recruits (Beväring) of 1895 only 0.20 per cent, were unlettered, only 0.65 per cent, unable to write.
Justice and Crime.
The administration of justice is entirely independent of the Government. Two functionaries, the Justitie-Kansler, or Chancellor of Justice, and the Justitie-Ombudsman, or Attorney-General, exercise a control over the administration. The former, appointed by the King, acts also as a counsel for the Crown; while the latter, who is appointed by the Diet, has to extend a general supervision over all the courts of law. The Kingdom, which possesses one Supreme Court of Judicature, is divided into 3 high court districts and 207 district courts divisions, of which 90 are urban districts and 117 country districts.
In town these district courts (or courts of first instance) are held by the burgomaster and his assessors; in the country by a judge and 12 jurors—peasant proprietors—the judge alone deciding, unless the jurors unanimously differ from him, when their decision prevails. In Sweden trial by jury only exists for affairs of the press.
In 1896, 1,936 men and 262 women were sentenced for serious crimes; at the end of 1896, 1,640 hard-labour prisoners.
Pauperism.
Each commune is bound to assist children under 15 years of age, if their circumstances require it, and all who from age or disease are unable to support themselves. In other cases the communal poor board decides what course to take. Each commune and each town (which may be divided) constitutes a poor district, and in each is a board of public assistance. In 1896 these districts possessed workhouses and similar establishments to the number of 1,854, capable of lodging 47,377 people. The number of paupers assisted in 1860 was 132,982; in 1870, 204,378; in 1880, 219,532; in 1896, 252,480. Of the last 84,168 were in the towns.
Finance.
The budgets of revenue and expenditure for the years 1897 and 1898 were as follows:—
Revenue | 1898 | 1899 |
---|---|---|
Kronor | Kronor | |
Domains, railway, land taxes, &c. | 21,082,000 | 22,603,000 |
Customs | 39,000,000 | 41,000,000 |
Post | 9,025,000 | 9,925,000 |
Stamps | 5,000,000 | 4,400,000 |
Impost on spirits, &c. | 23,500,000 | 24,500,000 |
Tax on incomes, &c. | 6,450,000 | 6,350,000 |
Net profit of the State Bank | 1,800,000 | 2,000.000 |
Surplus from the previous years | 14,229,000 | 12,615,000 |
Total revenue | 120,086,000 | 123,393,000 |
Expenditure | 1898 | 1899 |
Kronor | Kronor | |
(a) Ordinary: | ||
Royal Household | 1,820,000 | 1,320,000 |
Justice | 3,842,350 | 3,842,450 |
Foreign Affairs | 606,750 | 606,750 |
Army | 26,342,985 | 26,528,460 |
Navy | 7,046,340 | 7,164,965 |
Interior | 5,738,800 | 5,756,200 |
Education and Ecclesiastical Affairs | 13,800,698 | 14,222,099 |
Finance | 18,376,400 | 19,219,350 |
Pensions | 3,284,450 | 3,429,450 |
Total of (a) | 80,358,773 | 82,089,724 |
(b) Extraordinary | 27,047,127 | 28,024,076 |
(c) Expenditure thro' the Riksgäldskontor: | ||
Payment of loans and Miscellaneous (Diet, &c.) | 11,243,800 | 11,588,507 |
Carried to floating capital | 36,300 | 40,693 |
Fund for insurance against invalidity of workmen | 1,400,000 | 1,400,000 |
Fund for insurance against accidents of workmen | 250,000 | |
Total expenditure | 120,086,000 | 123,393,000 |
Of the extraordinary expenditure in 1899 the army claims 5,431,390 kronor, the navy 3,569,335 kronor, the interior 4,354,350 kronor, education and ecclesiastical affairs, 1,945,101 kronor, pensions 1,540,000 kronor. The value of the land and house property of Sweden is thus returned for 1897:—
Kronor | |||||
Taxed: | Agricultural | land | in the country | 2,239,891,950 | |
,, | ,, | in the towns | 42,741,260 | ||
Other | real | estate | in the country | 426,076,150 | |
,, | ,, | ,, | in the towns | 1,323,968,450 | |
Total (1897) | 4,032,677,810 | ||||
Untaxed: | National | In the country | 165,949,346 | ||
In the towns | 65,174,700 | ||||
Belonging to commonalties, academies, &c. |
In the country | 115,915,550 | |||
In the towns | 132,025, 588 | ||||
Total (1897) | 479,065,184 | ||||
Grand total (1897) | 4,511,742,994 |
The expenditure for the Church is chiefly defrayed by the parishes and out of the revenue of landed estates belonging to the Church, and the amounts do not appear in the budget estimates. A part of the cost for maintaining the army Indelta also does not appear in the budget. The expenses for public instruction are in great part defrayed by the parishes.
On January 1, 1898, the public liabilities of the Kingdom, contracted entirely for railways, were as follows:—
Kronor | |||||||
Funded | railway | loan of | 1860 | without | interest | 121,111 | |
,, | ,, | ,, | 1880 | with | 31⁄2 | ,, | 101,821,500 |
,, | ,, | ,, | 1886 | ,, | 31⁄2 | ,, | 58,670,666 |
,, | ,, | ,, | 1887 | ,, | 36⁄10 | ,, | 48,759,500 |
,, | ,, | ,, | 1888 | ,, | 3 | ,, | 26,666,667 |
,, | ,, | ,, | 1890 | ,, | 31⁄2 | ,, | 33,444,000 |
Funded | railway | loan of | 1894 | with | 3 | interest | 18,000,000 |
Total | 287,483,444 |
All the loans are paid off gradually by means of sinking funds. The debt amounts to about 3 £. 8 s. per head of the population, and the interest to about 2 s. 3 d.; but as the railway receipts amount to about the whole interest, the charge per head is nominal.
The income of the communes in 1896 was 74,184,779 kronor, and the expenditure 74,268,772 kronor. Their assets amounted to 312,691,802 kronor, and their debts to 188,543,622 kronor. The revenue of the provincial representative bodies was 4,585,691 kronor, and expenditure 4,322,742 kronor; their assets 14,346,759 kronor, and debts 4,760,238 kronor.
Defence.
The chief fortifications of Sweden are, on the coast, Karlskrona with Kungsholmen and Westra Hästholmen, Stockholm with Vaxholm-Oscar-Fredriksborg; in the interior, Karlsborg, near Lake Wetter.
The Swedish army is composed of three distinct classes of troops. They are:—
1. The Värfvade, or enlisted troops, to which belong the royal lifeguards (two infantry and one cavalry regiments), five regiments of infantry (of these, however, three regiments contain Indelta troops), one battalion of chasseurs, two battalions of infantry, four regiments of cavalry, the artillery, the engineers, and the train. The Värfvade are in service two or three years.
2. The Indelta, consisting of 19 regiments and one corps of infantry, and 3 regiments of cavalry. The privates of cavalry (Indelta) are paid and kept by the Landowners. Every soldier of the Indelta has, as a rule, besides a small annual pay, his torp, or cottage, with a piece of ground attached, which remains his own during the whole period of service, sometimes extending to thirty years, but he may instead take money payment. There is about 200 days' training in two years for recruits in the infantry and 400 days' in two years in the cavalry, after which they are annually called out for 22 or 23 days' practice.
3. The Värnpligtige, or conscription troops, drawn by annual levy from the male population between the ages of 21 and 40 years, of which the first 12 classes are called Beväring, the 8 others Landstorm. The right of purchasing substitutes, which formerly existed, was abolished by the Diet in 1872. The Värnpligtige are divided among the Värfvade and the Indelta troops, and are mobilised with these. The Beväring undergoes 90 days' training, which in the navy and also in the cavalry is completed in the first year; in the other forces 68 days in the first year and 22 in the second. The Landstorm is in time of war formed in separate troops. Beväring of first year, about 29,000 men; of the 12 years, about 250,000. Landstorm of the 8 years, about 200,000.
The total peace strength of the armed forces of Sweden (exclusive of the Värnpligtige), according to the re-organization carried out in 1892, consists of:—
Permanent Army | Officers | Non-com- missioned Officers |
Musicians | Men (exclusive of Musicians) |
Civil and Civil Military persons |
Total | Field-guns | Horses |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Generals | 9 | — | — | — | — | 9 | — | 18 |
General Staff, Staff-College, &c. | 39 | 2 | — | — | 229 | 270 | — | 78 |
Infantry | 1,220 | 1,133 | 1,285 | 23,792 | 201 | 27,631 | — | 241 |
Cavalry | 232 | 210 | 152 | 4,615 | 60 | 5,269 | — | 5,318 |
Artillery | 303 | 255 | 171 | 3,307 | 143 | 4,179 | 240 | 1,022 |
Engineers | 77 | 58 | 21 | 821 | 14 | 991 | — | 87 |
Train | 66 | 124 | 24 | 522 | 36 | 772 | — | 112 |
Total | 1,946 | 1,782 | 1,653 | 33,057 | 683 | 39,121 | 240 | 6,876 |
Reserves 1898 | 685 | 760 | 75 | — | 80 | 1,300 | — | 56 |
The Swedish navy is maintained wholly for coast defence. In September 1892, a committee appointed to consider the subject recommended a considerable increase in the floating strength. The navy consists of the following vessels: Armoured coast defence turret ships—First class, 5; second class, 4; armoured gunboats, 9; steam corvettes, 3; gunboats and despatch vessels, 16; torpedo boats of 65 to 90 tons, 4; of 34 to 40 tons, 9; vedettes 8, and school and other ships of various types, 12.
The following is a list of the principal armonr-clad ships:—
Description | Name | Launched | Displacement tons |
Extreme armouring inches |
Armament | Torpedo ejectors |
Indicated horse power |
Nominal speed knots |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
t | John Ericsson | 1865 | 1,500 | 10.8 | 2.5.9 in. | — | 380 | 7.5 |
t | Thordön | 1866 | 1,500 | 10.4 | 2.9.4 in. | — | 380 | 6.7 |
t | Tirfing | 1867 | 1,500 | 10.4 | ,, | — | 380 | 6.8 |
t | Loke | 1871 | 1,600 | 17.8 | ,, | — | 430 | 8.5 |
t | Svea | 1886 | 2,900 | 11.8 | 2 10 in. 44.7 in. 14 Q.F. guns of smaller calibre |
1 | 3,640 | 14.7 |
t | Göta | 1891 | 3,100 | 11.7 | 2 10 in. 45.7 in. 13 Q.F. guns of smaller calibre |
3 | 4,750 | 16.0 |
t | Thule | 1893 | 3,150 | 11.7 | 2 10 in. 45.9 in. 13 Q.F. guns of smaller calibre |
2 | 4,740 | 16.2 |
t | Oden | 1896 | 3,300 | 10.0 | 2 10 in. 44.7 in. 14 Q.F. guns of smaller calibre |
1 | 5,330 | 16.8 |
t | Niord | 1898 | 3,300 | 10.0 | Do. do. | 1 | 5,330 | 16.8 |
t | Thor | 1898 | 3,300 | 10.0 | Do. do. | 1 | 5,330 | 16.8 |
It is proposed to lay down three first-class coast defence armourclads in 1900. Some of the Armoured gunboats are receiving quick-firing guns, and several torpedo cruisers are nearly ready. A committee has reported upon the question of fixed defences, and a plan has been laid down to complete, within ten years, the defences of Karlskrona, Karlsburg, and the Island of Gothland, to erect new works at Waxholm and Oscar-Frederiksberg for the defence of Stockholm, and to fortify Boden and Gothenborg.
The personnel of the Royal Navy is divided into three classes, viz.: 1, The Active List; 2. The Reserve; 3. The Beväring. On the active list are 5 flag-officers, 6 captains, 24 commanders, and about 140 lieutenants and sub-lieutenants, while about 140 commissioned officers belong to the Reserve.
Production and Industry.
I. Agriculture.
The number of farms in cultivation in 1896 was 333,073; of these there were of 2 hectares and under, 72,020; 2 to 20 hectares, 216,650; 20 to 100 hectares, 32,463; 100 and above, 3,211. Of the total land area of Sweden 8.4 per cent. is under cultivation, 3.6 per cent. under natural meadows, and 47.5 per cent. under forests, the products of which form a staple export.
The following table shows, in thousands of hectares, the area under the chief crops in 1896, and, in thousands of hectolitres, the yield in 1897:—
Wheat | Rye | Barley | Oats | Mixed Grain | Pulse | Potatoes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
71.3 1,611.2 |
407.7 8,316.4 |
218.0 5,040.5 |
818.7 20,605.9 |
121.8 3,356.2 |
50.7 848.3 |
157.7 19,772.5 |
The value of all cereal crops in 1897 was estimated at 265.2 million kronor. At the end of 1896 Sweden had 512,406 horses, 2,554,577 head of cattle. 1,298,732 sheep and lambs, 788,736 pigs. In 1880 34,000 head of cattle and
29,000 sheep were exported, in 1896 respectively, 25,146 and 12,793. II. Mines and Minerals.
Mining is one of the most important departments of Swedish industry, and the working of the iron mines in particular is making constant progress by the introduction of new machinery. There were raised in the year 1896, throughout the Kingdom, 2,038,094 tons of iron ore. The pig-iron produced amounted to 487,147 tons; the bar iron to 321,615 tons. Of iron ore in 1895 800,452 tons, and in 1896 1,150,695 tons were exported; of pig-iron, 86,368 tons in 1895, and 71,343 in 1896; of bar iron, 177,086 in 1895, and 180,372 in 1896. There were also raised in 1896 15,381 tons of silver and lead ore, 27,351 tons of copper ore, 44,041 tons of zinc ore, and 2,056 tons of manganese ore. The gold produced amounted to 114.53 kilogrammes, the silver to 2,082, the lead to 1,518,419, the copper to 248,586. There are not inconsiderable veins of coal in the southern parts of Sweden, giving 225,878 tons of coal in 1896. In 1896 there were 27,994 persons engaged in mining.
Commerce.
The total customs duties levied were in 1895 39,466,186 kronor, in 1896 42,339,086 kronor, and in 1897 43,755,018 kronor. The value of the imports subject to duty in 1896 was 217,351,729 kronor; and of duty-free imports, 140,962,989 kronor.
The imports and exports of Sweden have been as follows:—
— | 1890 | 1892 | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | |
Imports | 377,187,739 | 360,315,855 | 332,689,289 | 351,173,005 | 344,290,247 | 358,314,718 |
Exports | 304,591,863 | 329,300,154 | 328,271,667 | 298,625,234 | 311,434,290 | 340,283,042 |
The following were the values of the leading imports and exports for two years:—
— | Imports 1895 |
Imports 1896 |
Exports 1895 |
Exports 1896 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | |
Textile manufactures | 43,394,575 | 41,671,033 | 7,265,867 | 8,004,445 |
Corn and flour | 26,284,212 | 38,248,993 | 6,502,983 | 5,624,517 |
Colonial wares | 42,849,293 | 41,851,757 | 713,556 | 652,338 |
Raw textile material and yarn | 35,835,101 | 35,466,710 | 1,224,047 | 1,287,892 |
Minerals, of imports mostly coal | 43,787,064 | 45,114,786 | 10,387,749 | 13,178,748 |
Metal goods, machinery, &c. | 37,462,115 | 43,941,208 | 13,674,947 | 16,830,248 |
Live animals and animal food | 15,953,946 | 18,668,472 | 65,755,099 | 64,332,767 |
Hair, hides, and other animal products | 20,688,201 | 19,897,595 | 4,615,320 | 5,037,046 |
Metals, raw and partly wrought | 8,396,101 | 9,527,708 | 33,045,476 | 35,332,642 |
Timber, wrought and unwrought | 4,424,663 | 4,512,386 | 139,909,132 | 152,090,709 |
Paper and paper manufactures | 3,832,457 | 3,909,256 | 7,796,817 | 8,319,939 |
Other articles | 61,382,519 | 65,468,814 | 20,543,297 | 22,591,751 |
Total | 344,290,247 | 358,314,718 | 311,434,290 | 340,283,042 |
The values of imports and exports are calculated according to average prices in Swedish port, exclusive of Customs duties. For most of these average prices merchants are consulted by the Board of Trade (Kommers-Kollegium), and the values thus obtained are published in the Board's annual report on commerce. The quantities in the Customs' returns are most exactly given for imports. For the quantities of exports the statements of exporters are relied on. Imports are recorded as from the country of the last port of shipment, and exports as to the country which is their immediate destination. The figures record the special trade. The returns of the trade between Sweden and Norway may be considered as not corresponding with the real commerce.
The following shows the value of the trade with the principal countries with which Sweden deals:—
Country | Imports from (1895) |
Imports from (1896) |
Exports to (1893) |
Exports to (1896) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | Kronor | |
Great Britain | 97,774,831 | 98,834,090 | 130,819,647 | 144,052,618 |
Germany | 116,223,385 | 117,516,148 | 42,759,526 | 43,833,965 |
Denmark | 37,975,650 | 45,897,752 | 41,464,029 | 42,293,111 |
Norway | 28,741,784 | 29,027,882 | 18,053,791 | 19,548,410 |
Russia (including Finland) | 19,755,142 | 23,267,447 | 11,292,119 | 13,336,656 |
France | 7,931,912 | 7,170,442 | 25,207,694 | 29,365,472 |
Spain | 864,330 | 1,214,017 | 3,623,999 | 2,489,179 |
Netherlands | 8,331,267 | 8,777,465 | 18,302,375 | 20,140,466 |
Belgium | 9,628,509 | 11,689,109 | 8,898,432 | 12,075,365 |
United States | 10,642,732 | 9,091,760 | 81,809 | 720,582 |
Other countries | 6,420,705 | 5,828,606 | 10,930,869 | 12,427,218 |
Total | 344,290,247 | 358,314,718 | 311,434,290 | 340,283,042 |
The following table shows the trade between Sweden and the United Kingdom according to the Board of Trade Returns:—
— | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
£ | £ | £ | £ | £ | |
Imports into U. K. from Sweden | 8,416,252 | 8,330,188 | 8,784,256 | 9,524,137 | 9,839,146 |
Exports of British produce to Sweden | 2,699,527 | 2,971,256 | 3,021,811 | 3,206,033 | 3,565,422 |
The following table shows the chief articles of import into the United Kingdom from Sweden:—
— | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
£ | £ | £ | £ | £ | |
Wood & timber | 3,564,586 | 3,977,631 | 3,704,197 | 4,488,381 | 5,224,978 |
Oats | 927,936 | 250,660 | 312,777 | 222,823 | 51,406 |
Bar iron | 518,209 | 470,910 | 490,180 | 510,511 | 464,195 |
Iron and steel manufactures | 268,259 | 223,619 | 277,211 | 253,500 | 239,721 |
Pig iron | 159,381 | 267,627 | 380,149 | 323,473 | 288,324 |
Butter | 1,452,099 | 1,413,779 | 1,644,111 | 1,664,685 | 1,515,705 |
Matches | 204,060 | 230,509 | 203,196 | 204,999 | 223,834 |
The leading exports of British home produce to Sweden in 1897 were iron, wrought and unwrought, of the value of 491,058 £.; coals, 1,014,056 £.; cotton
manufactures and yarn, 388,286 £.; woollen manufactures and yarn, 355,093 £. Shipping and Navigation.
The Swedish mercantile marine engaged both in the home and foreign trade on January 1, 1897, was as follows:—
— | Sailing | Steam. | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | |
20-100 tons | 1,200 | 60,443 | 269 | 13,498 | 1,469 | 73,941 |
100-500 ,, | 733 | 171,667 | 349 | 74,007 | 1,082 | 245,674 |
500-1,000 ,, | 70 | 46,947 | 105 | 74,335 | 175 | 121,282 |
Above 1,000 tons | 10 | 11,798 | 33 | 44,124 | 43 | 55,922 |
Total | 2,013 | 290,855 | 756 | 205,964 | 2,769 | 496,819 |
The port of Göteborg had the largest shipping in 1896—namely, 206
vessels of 82,702 tons; and next to it came Stockholm, possessing 194
vessels of a total burthen of 60,411 tons.
Vessels entered and cleared with cargoes and in ballast in 1896, as follows:—
— | With Cargoes | In Ballast | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | |
Entered: | ||||||
Swedish | 7,971 | 1,415,929 | 7,876 | 874,009 | 15,847 | 2,289,938 |
Foreign | 4,302 | 1,290,228 | 12,592 | 3,471,258 | 16,894 | 4,761,486 |
Total entered | 12,273 | 2,706,157 | 20,468 | 4,345,267 | 32,741 | 7,051,424 |
Cleared: | ||||||
Swedish | 11,613 | 2,041,693 | 4,271 | 288,051 | 15,884 | 2,329,744 |
Foreign | 9,698 | 3,149,453 | 7,263 | 1,589,183 | 16,961 | 4,738,636 |
Total cleared | 21,311 | 5,191,146 | 11,534 | 1,877,234 | 32,845 | 7,068,380 |
Total entered & cleared 1896 | 33,584 | 7,897,303 | 32,002 | 6,222,501 | 65,586 | 14,119,804 |
,, ,, ,, 1895 | 31,125 | 7,897,303 | 28,271 | 5,070,350 | 59,396 | 12,383,747 |
,, ,, ,, 1894 | 31,957 | 7,313,397 | 28,154 | 4,945,345 | 60,111 | 12,689,093 |
Internal Communications.
In 1896 88,734 ships and boats passed through the canals of Sweden.
At the end of 1897 the total length of railways in Sweden was 6,350 miles, which 2,283 miles belonged to the State. The receipts in 1896 were 65,097,537 kronor, and expenses 36,471,958 kronor. The total cost of construction for the State railways to the end of 1896 was 324,060,946 kronor, and for private railways 310,374,351 kronor. The total number of passengers on the State railways in 1896 was 7,728,919; weight of goods carried on State railways, 4,968,360 tons; private railways 11,364,837 tons of goods, and 12,630,720 passengers.
The length of all the telegraph lines at the end of 1896 was 8,281 miles, and of wires 25,578 miles. Of the lines, 5,398 miles, and of the wire, 15,416 miles belonged to the State telegraph, and the remainder to the railways. There were 1,425 telegraph offices. The number of despatches sent in the year 1896 was 2,213,444, including 258,508 in transit. In 1896 there were 64,895 miles of wire and 49,411 instruments employed in the telephone service.
The Swedish Post Office carried 182,923,354 letters, post-cards, journals, &c., in the year 1896. The number of post-offices at the end of the year was 2,595. The total receipts of the Post Office in 1896 amounted to 9,035 371 kronor, and the total expenditure to 8,016,794 kronor, leaving a surplus of 1,018,577 kronor.
Money and Credit.
The Riksbank, or National Bank of Sweden, belongs entirely to the State and is managed by directors elected for three years by the Diet, except one, the president, who is designated by the king. It is a bank of exchange to regulate financial relations with foreign countries, it accepts and pays interest on deposits of money, and on sufficient security it lends money for purposes in which there is no speculative element. The Bank is under the guarantee of the Diet, its capital and reserve capital are fixed by its constitution, and its note circulation is limited by the value of its metallic stock and its assets in current accounts at home and abroad; but its actual circulation is kept far within this limit.
The following table gives statistics of the National Bank, private banks, and joint-stock banks in Sweden for January 1, 1898:—
Assets | National Bank | Private Banks | Joint-stock Banks |
---|---|---|---|
Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | |
Mortgages | — | 57,963,876 | — |
Real estate | — | 5,450,010 | 3,568,629 |
Coin and bullion | 32,257,248 | 22,345,981 | 12,060,231 |
Accounts with other banks | 19,673,635 | 49,820,620 | 34,299,040 |
State notes and bills | 21,942,664 | 35,599,603 | 22,222,755 |
Stocks, shares, mortgages, &c. | — | — | 64,364,526 |
Bills | 53,716,569 | 178,300,580 | 73,718,235 |
Loans, public obligations, shares, &c | 42,257,196 | 190,062,481 | 117,935,409 |
Cash credits, &c. | 8,455,379 | 95,985,951 | 49,363,355 |
Totals | 178,302,691 | 635,529,102 | 377,532,180 |
Liabilities | |||
Bank notes and bills | 70,941,074 | 89,546,531 | 7,674,108 |
Liabilities with other banks | 9,464,303 | 52,664,164 | 40,839,196 |
Deposits | 3,936,366 | 264,986,177 | 90,767,714 |
Capital | 50,000,000 | 73,252,600 | 56,582,258 |
Reserve | 5,000,000 | 24,339,612 | 17,073,109 |
To be paid out to the public treasury | 1,800,000 | — | — |
Various liabilities | 30,285,280 | 123,174,141 | 163,263,922 |
To further disposition | 6,875,668 | 7,565,877 | 1,331,873 |
Totals | 178,302,691 | 635,529,102 | 377,532,180 |
The savings-banks statistics (exclusive of Post Oflfice) are as follows:—
— | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Number of depositors at end of year | 1,111,187 | 1,119,887 | 1,124,298 | 1,141,469 |
Deposits at end of year, kronor | 314,653,546 | 333,078,309 | 348,441,088 | 369,707,290 |
Capital and reserve fund, ditto. | 28,557,033 | 29,998,600 | 31,383,447 | 32,634,284 |
At the end of 1896 the Post Office Savings Bank had 451,872 depositors
and 49,733,810 kronor of deposits. 2. NORWAY.
Constitution and Government.
I. Central Government.
The Constitution of Norway, called the Grundlov, bears date May 17, 1814, with several modifications passed at various times up to 1898. It vests the legislative power of the realm in the Storthing, or Great Court, the representative of the sovereign people. The King, however, possesses the right of veto over laws passed by the Storthing, but only for a limited period. The royal veto may be exercised twice; but if the same bill pass three Storthings formed by separate and subsequent elections, it becomes the law of the land without the assent of the sovereign. The King has the command of the land and sea forces, and makes all appointments, but, except in a few cases, is not allowed to nominate any but Norwegians to public offices under the crown.
The Storthing assembles every year. New elections take place every three years. The meetings take place suo jure, and not by any writ from the King or the executive. They begin on the first weekday after October 10 each year, and must receive the sanction of the King to sit longer than two months. Every Norwegian citizen of twenty-five years of age (provided that he resides and has resided for five years in the country) is entitled to elect. Under the same conditions citizens thirty years of age, and having resided in Norway for ten years, are qualified to be elected. The mode of election is indirect. Towards the end of every third year the people choose their deputies, at the rate of one to fifty voters in towns, where the election is administered by the magistrate, and one to a hundred in rural sub-districts, where they meet in the parish church under the presidency of the parish minister. The deputies afterwards assemble and elect among themselves, or from among the other qualified voters of the district, the Storthing representatives. Former members of the Council of State can be elected representatives of any district of the Kingdom without regard to their residence. No new election takes place for vacancies, which are filled by the persons already elected for that purpose, or, if not, who received the second largest number of votes. At the election in 1897 on the old franchise, the number of electors was 195,956, or 9.79 per cent. of total population, while 167,207 votes, or 85.33 per cent. of the whole number, were recorded. Of the total male population, 45 per cent. are 25 years of age and above. The Storthing has 114 members—38 from towns, 76 from rural districts.
The Storthing, when assembled, divides itself into two houses, the 'Lagthing' and the 'Odelsthing.' The former is composed of one-fourth of the members of the Storthing, and the other of the remaining three-fourths. The Thing nominates its own presidents. The principal ordinary business of the Storthing is to enact or repeal laws, to impose taxes, to supervise the financial affairs of the kingdom, to vote the amounts required for the public expenditure, and to examine treaties concluded with foreign Powers. Questions relating to laws must be considered by each house separately. The inspection of public accounts and the revision of the Government, and impeachment before the Rigsret, belong exclusively to the Odelsthing. All other matters are settled by both houses in common sitting. The Storthing elects five delegates, whose duty it is to revise the public accounts. All new laws must first be laid before the Odelsthing, from which they pass into the Lagthing to be either accepted or rejected. If the Odelsthing and Lagthing do not agree, the two houses assemble in common sitting to deliberate, and the final decision is given by a majority of two-thirds of the voters. The same majority is required for alterations of the Constitution. The Lagthing and the ordinary members of the supreme court of justice (Höiesteret) form a high court of justice (the Rigsret) for the impeachment and trial of Ministers, members of the Höiesteret, and members of the Storthing. While in session, every member of the Storthing has an allowance of twelve kroner (13 s. 4 d.) a day, besides travelling expenses.
The executive is represented by the King, who exercises his authority through a Council of State, composed of two Ministers of State and at least seven Councillors. Two of the Councillors, who change every year, together with one of the Ministers, form a delegation of the Council of State, residing at Stockholm, near the King. Ministers and Councillors of State are entitled to be present in the Siorthing and to take part in the discussions, when public, but without a vote. The following are the members of the Council of State, February 16, 1898:—
(1.) Council of State at Kristiania.
Minister of State.—Johannes Wilhelm Christian Steen.
Department of Education and Ecclesiastical Affairs.—Vilhelm Andreas Wexelsen.
Department of Justice.—Ole Anton Qvam.
Department of the Interior.—Georg August Thilesen.
Department of Public Works.—Jörgen Gunderson Lövland.
Department of Finance and Customs.—Elias Sunde.
Department of Defence.—Colonel Peter Theodor Holst.
Revision of Public Accounts Department.—J. W. C. Steen, Minister of State.
(2.) Delegation of the Council at Stockholm.
Otto Albert Blehr, Minister of State.
Einar Löchen. II. Local Government.
The admiuistrative division of the country is into twenty districts, each governed by a chief executive functionary (Amtmand), viz., the towns of Kristiania and Bergen, and 18 'Amts' (counties). They are subdivided into 39 towns and 56 'Fogderier,' the latter comprising 22 'Ladesteder' (ports). There are 525 rural communes (Herreder), mostly parishes or subparishes (wards). The government of the Herred is vested in a council and a body of representatives. The members (from three to nine) of the former (the 'Formænd') are elected from the different wards within the Herred. The representatives, who vote the expenditure of the Herred, are three times the number of the Formænd, These bodies elect conjointly every year from among the 'Formænd' a chairman and a deputy chairman. All the chairmen of an Amt form with the Amtmand and the Fogder (sheriffs) the 'Amtsformandskab' or 'Amtsthing' (county diet), which meets yearly to settle the budget of the Amt. The Amtmand is the chairman of the diet. The towns and the ports form 59 communes, also governed by a council (4 to 12, Kristiania 15), and representatives (three times the size of the council). The members of both local governing bodies are elected, in towns and rural communes, by voters for the Storthing.
Area and Population.
I. Progress and Present Condition.
Norway has an area of 124,445 English square miles; at the census of January 1, 1891, the population amounted to 1,988,674 present, and 2,000,917 domiciled inhabitants.
The area and population of the twenty districts (Amter) are as follows:—
Amter. | Area : English square miles |
Population Jan. 1, 1891 |
Density per square mile |
---|---|---|---|
Kristiania (town) | 6 | 15,239 | 25,206.5 |
Akershus | 2,055 | 99,111 | 48.2 |
Smaalenene | 1,600 | 120,360 | 75.2 |
Hedemarken | 10,621 | 119,129 | 11.2 |
Kristians | 9,793 | 108,076 | 11.0 |
Buskerud | 5,790 | 104,769 | 18.1 |
Jarlsberg og Larvik | 896 | 100,957 | 112.7 |
Bratsberg | 5,865 | 92,034 | 15.7 |
Nedenes | 3,609 | 81,043 | 22.4 |
Lister og Mandal | 2,805 | 78,738 | 28.1 |
Stavanger | 3,532 | 117,008 | 33.1 |
Söndre Bergenhus | 6,026 | 128,213 | 21.3 |
Bergen (town) | 5 | 53,684 | 10,736.8 |
Nordre Bergenhus | 7,132 | 87,552 | 12.3 |
Romsdal | 5,788 | 127,806 | 22.1 |
Söndre Trondhjem | 7,184 | 123,817 | 17.2 |
Nordre Trondhjem | 8,791 | 81,236 | 9.2 |
Nordland | 14,517 | 131,850 | 9.1 |
Tromsö | 10,134 | 65,125 | 6.4 |
Finmarken | 18,296 | 29,170 | 1.6 |
Total | 124,445 | 2,000,917 | 16.1 |
There were 965,911 males, and 1,035,006 females.
Conjugal condition of the domiciled population, 1891:—
— | Unmarried | Married | Widowed | Divorced | Not stated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Males | 602,962 | 323,935 | 37,660 | 308 | 1,046 |
Females | 627,498 | 325,952 | 80,263 | 426 | 867 |
Of the total population in 1891, 1,526,788 (76.3 per cent.) were domiciled in rural districts, and 474,129 (23.7 per cent.) in towns.
Of the total population in 1891, 1,940,726 were born in Norway, 38,017 in Sweden, 2,475 in Denmark, 2,661 in Finland, 1,738 in Germany, 655 in Great Britain or Ireland. In 1891 the number of Laps was 20,786, and of Fins, 9,378.
In 1891 the population was divided according to occupation as follows:—
Occupation | Employers, &c. |
Clerks, overseers. &c. |
Workmen and women |
Dependents of families, &c. |
Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Administrative and professional |
Male | 4,368 | 12,148 | 2,949 | 16,162 | 35,627 |
Female | 1,684 | 3,972 | 1,830 | 15,769 | 23,255 | |
Agriculture, &c. | Male | 122,143 | 3,231 | 126,217 | 166,774 | 408,365 |
Female | 11,216 | 512 | 74,346 | 166,477 | 247,551 | |
Fisheries | Male | 41,072 | 188 | 14,455 | 33,687 | 89,402 |
Female | 297 | 1 | 748 | 32,053 | 33,099 | |
Mines, metal works, and other industries |
Male | 34,998 | 5,269 | 87,089 | 85,204 | 212,560 |
Female | 29,731 | 304 | 20,120 | 84,844 | 134,999 | |
Commerce | Male | 13,991 | 10,648 | 9,923 | 55,284 | 131,360 |
Female | 6,199 | 4,798 | 2,942 | 56,745 | 71,926 | |
Transport | Male | 3,575 | 11,667 | 26,272 | (included in commerce, above) | |
Female | 302 | 475 | 465 | |||
Domestic work | Male | — | 42 | 10,843 | 2,593 | 13,478 |
Female | 305,267[1] | 13,077 | 137,113[2] | 2,585 | 458,042 | |
Occupation not stated | Male | 170[3] | 79 | 4,782 | 4,204 | 9,235 |
Female | 259[3] | 38 | 3,654 | 3,910 | 7,861 | |
Living on private fortune, annuitants, &c. |
Male | 26,612 | — | — | 3,951 | 30,563 |
Female | 31,109 | — | — | 4,555 | 35,664 | |
Charity, public or private |
Male | — | — | — | 20,700 | 20,700 |
Female | — | — | — | 24,987 | 24,987 | |
Total | Male | 236,929 | 43,272 | 282,530 | 388,559 | 951,290 |
Female | 386,064 | 23,177 | 241,218 | 386,925 | 1,037,384 | |
Male and female | 622,993 | 66,449 | 523,748 | 775,484 | 1,988,674 |
- ↑ Married women in their own households.
- ↑ Comprising servants, children, &c., living in the house.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Social condition unknown.
II. Movement of the Population.
1. Births, Deaths, and Marriages.
Year | Marrages | Births (exc. stillborn) |
Stillborn | Illegitimate, living |
Deaths (exc. stillborn) |
Excess of Births |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1892 | 12,742 | 59,430 | 1,707 | 4,266 | 35,769 | 23,661 |
1893 | 12,974 | 61,918 | 1,844 | 4,428 | 32,915 | 29,003 |
1894 | 12,966 | 60,450 | 1,719 | 4,332 | 34,355 | 26,095 |
1895 | 13,339 | 62,932 | 1,634 | 4,464 | 32,189 | 30,743 |
1896 | 13,962 | 63,308 | 1,632 | 4,598 | 31,574 | 31,734 |
2. Emigration.
Place of Destination | 1891 | 1892 | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | 13,249 | 16,841 | 18,690 | 5,591 | 6,153 | 6,584 | 4,580 |
British North America | 79 | 223 | 75 | 22 | 6 | 22 | 3 |
Other countries | 13 | 12 | 13 | 29 | 48 | 73 | 86 |
Total | 13,814 | 17,049 | 18,778 | 5,642 | 6,207 | 6,679 | 4,669 |
III. Principal Towns.
At the census taken January 1, 1891, the number of towns with a population of above 100,000 was one, above 20,000 four, above 10,000 five, above 5,000 nine. The population of the principal towns, January 1, 1891, was:—
Kristiania | 151,239 |
(January 1, 1898) | 203,337 |
Bergen | 53,684 |
Trondhjem | 29,162 |
Stavanger | 23,899 |
Drammen | 20,687 |
Kristiansand | 12,813 |
Fredrikstad | 12,451 |
Larvik | 11,261 |
Fredrikshald | 11,217 |
Kristiansund | 10,381 |
Skien | 8,979 |
Aalesand | 8,406 |
Moss | 8,051 |
Religion and Instruction.
The evangelical Lutheran religion is the national Church and the only one endowed by the State. Its clergy are nominated by the King. All other Christian sects (except Jesuits) as well as the Jews are tolerated, and free to exercise their religion within the limits prescribed by the law and public order. Ecclesiastically Norway is divided into 6 bishoprics, 83 Provstier (provostships, or archdeaconries), 478 Præstegjeld (clerical districts). In 1891 there were 30,685 dissenters, including 1,004 Roman Catholics, 8,187 Methodists, 4,228 Baptists, 348 Mormons, 231 Quakers.
Education is compulsory, the school age being from six and a half in towns and seven in the country to fourteen. In 1894 (the latest date for which there are statistics) there were in the country 5,983 public elementary schools with 248,906 pupils, and in towns 2,001 classes with 62,440 pupils; the amount expended on both being 8,319,282 kroner, of which 1,949,822 kroner was granted by the State, the rest being provided in towns by the towns themselves, in rural districts partly by the separate parish communes, partly by the county communes (Amtskommuner). There are 83 secondary schools: 14 public, 42 communal, 27 private. Of the secondary schools 19 have a higher department for classics, or mathematics, or both, viz. 14 public, 1 communal, 4 private. Most of the secondary schools are mixed, 15 are for girls alone: 1 communal, 14 private. The number of pupils in the secondary schools in 1894 was 11,325. Besides these, 75 communal and private schools have 3,629 pupils more or less advanced. There were in 1894, 6 public normal schools and 3 private, with 478 students. Kristiania has a University, attended in 1897 by 1,220 students. In the financial year 1897-8 it has, besides its own incomes amounting to 295,400 kroner, a subsidy of 497,493 kroner from the State.
Justice and Crime.
For civil justice Norway is divided into 119 districts, each with an inferior court. Of these 82 are rural courts, divided into 447 circuits. The other courts are in towns. There are 3 superior courts, having each one chief justice and two other justices, and one supreme court for the whole kingdom (Höiesteret), consisting of 1 president and at least 6 other justices. There is a court of mediation (Forligelseskommission) in each town and Herred (district), consisting of two men chosen by the electors, before which, as a rule, civil cases must first be brought.
According to the law of criminal procedure of July 1, 1887, all criminal cases (not military, or coming under the Rigsret—the court for impeachments) shall be tried either by jury (Lagmandsret), or Meddomsret.
The Lagmandsret consists of three judges (1 Lagmand, or president), and 10 jurors (Lagrettemand). The Kingdom is divided into 5 jury districts (Lagdömmer), each having its chief judge (Lagmand). Each district is divided into circuits, corresponding, as a rule, to the counties (Amter), in which courts are held at fixed times. The Meddomsret consists of the judge and is held in the district of the inferior court, and 2 assistant judges (not professional) summoned for each case. The Lagmandsret takes cognisance of the higher classes of offences. The Meddomsret is for the trial of other offences, and is also a court of first instance.
The prosecutions are directed by the State advocates (Statsadvokater), 13 in number, subordinate to one Rigsadvokat.
The number of persons convicted of crimes was: in 1894, 2,948; in 1893, 2,949; in 1892, 3,026; in 1891, 2,548; in 1890, 2,603. For offences against public order and police, penalties were, in 1894, inflicted upon 28,825 persons.
There are four convict prisons (1 a penitentiary); inmates, June 30, 1896, 657 (565 were males and 92 females).
There are, besides, 55 district prisons, in which, in 1895, 10,915 persons were detained. There are 3 reformatories for young offenders between 10 and 15 years.
The police force of Kristiania numbers 439 men, including 15 superior functionaries.
Pauperism.
In Norway the relief of the poor is mostly provided for by local taxation, but certain expenditure is also borne by the Amter (counties) and by the State. The number of persons receiving relief amounted to 78,439 in 1895, 80,749 in 1894, 80,924 in 1893, 78,681 in 1892, 76,613 in 1891. In 1895 12,335, 1894 10,275, 1893 9,572, 1892 9,471, 1891 9,938, persons are included who have only been medically relieved.
Finance.
The following table shows the revenue and expenditure for each of the last five years in thousands of kroner:—
Revenue Expenditure Years ending June 30 Direct Taxes Indirect Taxes Other Sources Total Defence Debt Public "Works General Total
1894 1895 1896
,000 kr. 3,310 3,198 3,343 4,529 4,634 ,000 kr, 28,518 28,861 30,170 31,249 35,792 ,000 kr. 20,716 21,566 21,290 22,764 25,150 ,000 kr. 52,544 53,625 57,3851 71,9322 69,0473 ,000 kr. 10,913 10,495 12,006 17,635 22,651 ,000 kr. 4,557 4,890 4,937 5,500 6,882 ,000 kr. 10,481 11,515 11,490 16,465 16,553 ,000 kr. 26,824 28,045 28,223 29,563 30,644 ,000 kr. 52,775 54,945 56,656 69,163 56,730 Including 2,582,000 kroner raised by loans. ,, 13,390,000 ,, ,, ,, 3,471,200
The following table shows the principal heads of the budget for two years ending June 30:—
Sources of Revenue Branches of Expenditure 1898 1899
Kroner Kroner Kroner Kroner Income Tax 4,000,000 4,000,000 Civil list 361,466 482,838 Customs 29,200,000 31,900,000 Storthing 665,500 646,550 Excise on spirit 3,000,000 3,500,000 The Ministries 1,331,983 1,319,872 ,, ,, malt 3,700,000 3,500,000 Church & education 7,552,663 8,582,878 Succession tax 550,000 550,000 Justice 6,109,571 6,390,790 Stamps 715,000 865,000 Interior 2,820,218 3,190,256 Judicial fees 1,000,000 850,000 Post, telegraphs, &c. 6,758,959 8,697,200 Mines 463,300 459,800 State railways 13,399,331 14,444,717 Post Office 4,000,000 4,350,000 Roads, canals, ports, &c. 4,316,248 4,549,763 Telegraphs 1,530,000 1,770,000 State property 2,886,354 3,055,704 Finance and customs 3,423,682 3,711,288 Railways 9,701,300 10,139,400 Mines 572,000 585,450 Miscellaneous 6,179,874 6,463,789 Amortisation of debt 1,222,679 1,521,960 Balance 3,937,503 — Interest ,, ,, 5,965,722 5,796,378 Loans for Defence and Railways. — 15,188,054 Army 9,975,220 15,824,000 Navy 3,704,500 3,018,300 Foreign affairs 769,651 773,590 Miscellaneous 1,913,938 2,056,007 Balance — —
70,863,331 86,591,837
70,868,331 86,591,837
The following table shows the amortisation, growth, and interest of the public debt for the years named, ending June 30:—
Years ending June 30 |
Amortisation | Growth | Interest | Amount at the end of the year |
Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | |
1893 | 591,160 | — | 3,959,330 | 124,950,005 |
1894 | 681,948 | 39,675,733[1] | 4,201,574 | 163,943,791 |
1895 | 19,630,351 | — | 4,430,230 | 144,313,440 |
1896 | 532,407 | 13,572,000 | 4,957,772 | 157,353,033 |
1897 | 1,458,582 | 25,444,233 | 5,894,671 | 181,338,684 |
- ↑ Of this amount 19,131,560 kroner were applied to the redemption of a former loan.
The unredeemable debt, 10,837,410 in 1885, is now 245,472 kroner.
The taxation for communal purposes amounted for the rural communes to 11,967,620 kroner, and for the towns to 11,813,513 kroner in 1896.
Defence.
The most important fortresses of Norway are Oscarsborg and the new fortresses by Agdenes, Bergen, Tönsberg, and Christianssand S.; the other fortresses, Fredriksstad, Fredriksten, Carljohansvaern, Akershus in Kristiania, Trondhjem, and Vardö, are of little importance.
The troops of the Kingdom are raised mainly by conscription, and to a small extent by enlistment. By the terms of three laws voted by the Storthing in 1866, 1876, and 1885, the land forces are divided into the troops of the Line, the Landvaern, the Landstorm or final levy. All young men past the twenty-second year of age are liable to the conscription. The young men in the line raised by conscription have to go through a first training in the school of recruits, extending over 48 days in the infantry, in the fortress and mountain artillery, 50 days in the engineers, and 70 days in the field artillery and cavalry. They are then put into the battalions, which in the second, third, and fourth year in the artillery, cavalry, and engineers, and the second and third year in the infantry and train, under ordinary circumstances, have an annual practice of 24 days, after which the men are sent on furlough, with obligation to meet when ordered. The Landvaern of the sixth year has a 18 days' practice, in which also the recruits take part. The train has a school of recruits, extending over 50 days for the engineers, and 18 days in the other arms. The nominal term of service is 13 years, divided between 5 years in the Line, 4 years in the Landvaern, and 4 years in the Landstorm. The Landvaern and Landstorm is only liable to service within the frontiers of the Kingdom. Every man capable of bearing arms, and not placed in one of the said categories, is in time of war liable to do service in the reserve of the Landstorm, from the eighteenth to the fiftieth year of age.
On January 1, 1894, the troops of the line numbered about 30,000 men, with 900 officers. The number of troops of the line actually under arms can never exceed, even in war, 18,000 men without the consent of the Storthing. The King has permission to transfer, for the purpose of common military exercises, a number of men not exceeding 3.000, from Norway to Sweden and from Sweden to Norway, but only for (at most) six weeks annually.
The infantry consists of 5 brigades of 4 battalions of Line, Landvaern, and Landstorm, of 4 companies. For each brigade there is a school of sub-officers. His Majesty's guard consists of 2 companies of riflemen.
Cavalry.—3 corps of Line, Landvaern and Landstorm, each consisting of 3 (1 corps 2) squadrons of mounted riflemen.
In addition, 1 orderly-squadron of Line, Landvaern and Landstorm. Besides there is a school of sub-officers, "The school-squadron."
Artillery.—3 battalions of Line, Landvaern, and Landstorm, of 3 batteries of 6 pieces, and 1 company of equipage field artillery per battalion; 1 battalion of Line, Landvaern, and Landstorm, of 2 companies of fortress artillery and two batteries of 6 pieces mountain artillery. There are 2 schools of sub-officers, one for the field artillery and one for the fortress artillery.
Engineers.—1 battalion of Line, Landvaern, and Landstorm, of 2 companies of sappers, 1 company of pontooneers, 1 company of telegraphists, and 1 company of equipage. Besides there is a school of sub-officers.
Like the Swedish navy, that of Norway is maintained solely for coast defence. It consists of 2 modern armourclads built at Elswick; 4 ironclad monitors; 1 wooden corvette launched in 1862; 4 unarmoured gun-vessels of 640, 1,000 and 1,113, and 1,371 tons, built 1877-96; 1 of 1,371 tons (Frithjof); 4 older gunboats between 190 and 280 tons, 8 between 230 and 390 tons, and 16 smaller (60 tons), besides a small torpedo flotilla (26 torpedo boats and 1 torpedo division boat).
These ships call for little description. The monitors, Skorpionen, Thrudvang, and Mjölner (1,447 and 1,515 tons) were built in 1866-68. They have 5-inch armour-belts, and l2-inch plating on their turrets, which carry severally two 4.7-in. Q.F., and four 2.4-in. Q.F. The Thor, launched in 1872, is a little larger (2,003 tons), has 141⁄2-inch turret-plating, and carries two 4.7-in. Q.F., and four 2.4-in. Q.F. guns. Of unarmoured ships the deck-protected gun-vessel Viking (1,113 tons) is steel-built, with a cellulose belt, is 203 ft. 6 in. in length, and has 30 ft. beam, engines of 2,000 I.H.P., and steamed 15 knots at her trials. Her armament consists of two 5.9-in. guns, and four 2.4-in. and four smaller quick-firers. A new vessel of the Viking type is the Frithjof (1,371 tons), armed with two 4.7-in. Q.F., 4.3-in. Q.F., and four smaller quick-firers, and having a speed of 15 knots. The torpedo division boat Valkyrien (385 tons), armed with two 3-in. Q.F., and four smaller quick-firers, steamed 23 knots at her trials.
The turret ships Harold Haarfagre and Tordenskjold have lately been built on the Tyne. They displace 3,500 tons, and are protected by a belt of armour on the side, and by an armoured deck curved down to the lower edge of the belt. The thickness of the belt is 7 in. and of the armour in the barbettes, 7.9-in. (Harveyed steel). The armament consists of two 8.2-in. Q.F., in barbettes, six 4.7-in. Q.F., six 3-in. Q.F., and six smaller quick-firers. The speed is 161⁄2 knots. They are remarkably powerful vessels for their size, and two others of the class have been ordered at Elswick.
The despatch-vessel, Heimdal (630 tons), armed with four 2.4-in. quick-firing guns, steamed 12 knots at her trials. The gunboat Ægir (400 tons), is armed with one 82 in. gun, one 27 in. Q.F., two l.9 in. Q.F., and two smaller Q.F.
The navy numbers 96 officers on active service and 65 in the reserve and abont 700 petty officers and seamen on permanent engagement. All seafaring men between the ages of twenty-two and thirty-five are enrolled on the lists of the active fleet, and are liable to the maritime conscription. By a law passed in 1892, they all go through a first training of at least 70 days.
Production and Industry.
I. Agriculture.
Of the total area, 75 per cent. is unproductive, 22 per cent. forest, and 3 per cent. under cultivation. At the end of 1890 there were 146,355 real estates separately registered (not including Finmarken), and the number of farms was 236,286. The 146,355 real estates were classified as follows according to the official valuation in cadaster-marks (each representing an average purchase value of about £100 sterling):—
Up to 0.50 | mark | 27,549 | estates | or | 18.8 | per cent. | of the whole. |
0.51—1.0 | ,, | 20,524 | ,, | ,, | 14.0 | ,, | ,, |
1.01—3.00 | ,, | 50,956 | ,, | ,, | 34.8 | ,, | ,, |
3.01—5.00 | ,, | 21,691 | ,, | ,, | 14.8 | ,, | ,, |
5.01—10.00 | ,, | 16,954 | ,, | ,, | 11.6 | ,, | ,, |
10.01—20.00 | ,, | 6,441 | ,, | ,, | 4.4 | ,, | ,, |
20.01—50.00 | ,, | 2,022 | ,, | ,, | 1.4 | ,, | ,, |
50.01—100.00 | ,, | 183 | ,, | ,, | 0.1 | ,, | ,, |
101 or more | ,, | 35 | ,, | ,, | 0.02 | ,, | ,, |
As to the classification of the estates according to their area, no returns have been collected since 1865. (See Statesman's Year Book for 1896, p. 987.)
The latest agricultural statistics are for 1890, when the area under cereals was 185,605 hectares, potatoes 39,122 hectares. The estimated yield of cereals was 5,962,353 hectolitres, of potatoes 8,441,403 hectolitres. The total value of the produce was for cereals 38,262,761 kroner, for potatoes 24,807,136 kroner. The average annual produce in hectolitres per 10 acres for 1886-90 was: wheat, 2.12; rye, 2.43; barley, 2.87; mixed corn, 3.57; oats, 3.53; peas, 2.18; potatoes, 21.56 hectolitres.
On January 1, 1891, there were:—Horses, 150,898; cattle, 1,006,499; sheep, 1,417,524; goats, 272,458; swine, 121,057; reindeer, 170,134.
The value of cereals imported (including flour) was 37,792,700 kroner in 1897; the principal article being rye, 17,029,600 kroner. The import of butter amounted to 1,132,000 kroner, and of bacon and meat to 5,477,900 kroner. The export of agricultural produce is insignificant.
II. Forestry.
The total area covered with forests is estimated at 26,320 square miles, of which 73 per cent. is under pine trees. The State forests occupy 3,870 square miles, administered by a forest staff under the supervision of the Ministry of the Interior. The value of unwrought or partly wrought timber exported from Norway in 1897 was 42,212,400 kroner, and of wrought timber 19,461,900 kroner.
III. Mines and Minerals.
The mining and metal industry of Norway is unimportant. The total value of mineral products in 1896 was 2,887,600 kroner (4,013,300 in 1890); of furnace products, 1,264,000 (1,315,400 in 1890) kroner; of bar iron and steel, 78,000 kroner. The chief mineral products are silver, 400,000 kroner in 1896 (621,000 in 1890); copper ore, 1,136,100 kroner, pyrites, 970,000 kroner; nickel, 20,000 kroner (1,565,000 in 1876); apatite, 640,000 kroner (1,000,700 in 1890); felspar, 202,000 kroner (213,300 in 1890). Of the smelting products in 1896 silver was valued at 377,000 kroner; copper, 843,000 kroner; nickel, 30,000 kroner. At the end of 1896 there existed 27 mining establishments; employing 1,987 workpeople, and 5 smelting furnaces with 251 workpeople.
IV. Fisheries.
The number of persons in 1896 engaged in cod fishery was 93,277; in herring fishery, 17,606; and in mackerel fishery 2,344.
The value of the fisheries in kroner in 1896 was cod, 14,332,606; herring, 2,648,514; mackerel, 194,453; salmon and sea trout, 801,300; other fisheries, 3,333,742; lobster, 397,710; oysters, 5,928; total, 21,714,253. The total value was in 1895, 22,210,157 kroner; in 1894, 22,900,229 kroner; in 1893, 23,616,945 kroner; in 1892, 24,793,715 kroner; in 1891, 25,966,599.
Other fisheries are the mackerel fisheries in the North Sea, the bank fisheries off the coast, and the whale, walrus, seal, and shark fisheries in the northern seas, which in 1896 produced a total of about 4,000,000 kroner.
Commerce.
The following table shows the value of the trade of Norway with different countries in 1897:—
Country | Imports | Exports |
---|---|---|
Kroner | Kroner | |
Sweden | 42,277,800 | 25,724,300 |
Denmark, Iceland, and Faeroe | 14,429,000 | 7,935,700 |
Russia and Finland | 24,079,200 | 4,461,400 |
Germany . | 71,348,300 | 21,918,500 |
Switzerland | 390,000 | — |
Netherlands | 9,624,400 | 8,934,100 |
Belgium | 11,790,700 | 6,527,100 |
Great Britain and Ireland | 67,560,400 | 65,387,000 |
France | 4,057,500 | 7,358,500 |
Portugal and Madeira | 836,100 | 717,700 |
Spain | 1,685,100 | 9,602,100 |
Italy | 2,001,300 | 2,789,800 |
Austria and Hungary | 49,500 | 212,800 |
Turkey, and Roumania | 18,300 | — |
Africa | 700 | 2,737,200 |
Asia | 24,300 | 362,700 |
Australia | 100 | 1,908,900 |
America | 11,988,700 | 853,300 |
Not stated | 1,556,600 | 265,600 |
Total | 263,718,200 | 167,696,700 |
The total amount of the import duties collected in 1897 was about 28 millions of kroner (about one-tenth in value of the total imports), divided among the principal articles as follows:—Breadstuffs, 3,423,000 kroner; coffee, 2,924,000 kroner; tea, 220,000 kroner; sugar, 5,345,000 kroner;
The recorded values are calculated according to information supplied by Exchange Committees and merchants. Those of imports include the invoice price, freight, packing, and insurance, but not duty; those of exports give the price free on board in Norwegian port, excluding freight and insurance, but including packing and Norwegian commercial profit. The returns of quantities are compiled from the officially controlled declarations of importers and exporters. These declarations state the countries from which the articles are directly imported and to which they are directly exported. An article coming, for example, from the East Indies via London is recorded as coming from England. The recorded imports include all articles imported, whether for consumption inland or for re-exportation. The exports are divided into exports of Norwegian articles (special trade) and exports of foreign articles (transit, warehousing on credit, duty-paid and duty-free articles). A considerable part of the export and also of the import (mostly duty-free) trade over the land frontier between Norway and Sweden escapes the control of the Customs' authorities. COMMERCE
tobacco, 3,299,000 kroner ; spirits and wines, 2,084,000 kroner ; mannfactured goods, 3,376,000 kroner. The value of imports subject to duty (1897) was 162,675,200 kroner, and of duty-free 101,043,000 kroner. Total imports and exports of Norwegian and foreign goods in the last five years : —
Kroner Imports (foreign) . . 204,568,000 Exports (Norwegian) . 126,718,800 „ (foreign) . 9,367,800
Kroner 205,989,800 124,031,500 ,963,600
Kroner Kroner
,310,200 240,217,500
,408,400 137,755,700
,871,700 10,015,500
Kroner 263,718,200 159,678,700 ,018,000 Values of imports and e xports, divided into classes, for 1895-1897 : — Classes of Goods
Imports Exports Imports Exports Imports Exports of Foreign Norwegian of Foreign Norwegian of Foreign Norwegian Goods Goods Goods Goods Goods Goods Kroner Kroner Kroner Kroner Kroner Kroner Animals, living . ,083,000 ,700 ,484,300 ,000 ,009,100 ,700 Animal prodnce (inaltv food) . ,922,500 ,854,500 ,043,500 ,309,000 ,367,300 ,831,600 Breadstuff's . ,194,700 ,800 ,743,300 ,100 ,265,300 ,600 Groceries . ,047,200 ,900 ,415,700 ,700 ,175,200 ,700 Fruits, plants, <fcc. ,321,200 ,800 ,780,200 ,100 ,943,100 ,400 Spirits, (fee. . ,721,400 ,300 ,155,200 ,100 ,705,400 ,300 Yarn, rope, &c. . ,332,900 ,100 ,005,700 ,300 ,056,200 ,200 Textile manufac- tures, (fee. ,.S65,600 ,643,100 ,282,900 ,688,200 ,576,700 ,272,100 Hair, skins, &c. . ,510,000 ,638,300 ,955,700 ,581,000 ,723,700 ,742,300 Tallow, oils, tar. &c. . ,085,700 ,513,200 ,669,300 ,981,200 ,169,200 ,606,500 Timber & wooden goods ,875,000 ,610,800 ,189,100 ,055,000 ,525,000 ,674,300 Dye stuff's . ,137,400 ,400 ,098,400 ,100 ,205,000 ,700 Diff'erent vege- table produce . ,759,000 ,099,200 ,706,200 ,505,200 ,696,300 ,487,900 Paper and paper manufactures . ,018,600 ,961,000 ,317,700 ,199,900 ,942,500 ,699,400 Minerals, un- wrought . ,200,600 ,643,300 ,888,600 ,993,400 ,307,300 ,517,400 Minerals, manu- factured . ,012,000 ,774,200 ,447,700 ,290,700 ,532,800 ,402,400 Metals, un- wrouglit or partly wrought ,979,600 ,404,400 ,522,700 ,154,600 ,383,800 ,099,600 Metals, manu- factured . ,447,100 ,203,500 ,621,200 ,361,800 ,372,500 ,780,100 Vessels, carriages, machinery, (Sic. Total . ,296,700 ,769,300 ,290,100 ,891,300 ,701,800 ,622,500 ,310,200 ,408,400 ,217,500 ,755,700 ,718,200 ,678,700 Re-exports . Grand total . ,871,700 ,015 500 ,0]8,000t ,280,100
147,771,200 ,696,700 The values of imports and exports to and from the principal Norwegian ports in the last three years were:—
— | Imports | Exports | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1895 | 1896 | 1897 | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 | |
Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | Kroner | |
Kristiania | 117,448,800 | 132,432,700 | 144,231,100 | 31,713,600 | 33,935,500 | 33,655,100 |
Bergen | 37,725,400 | 36,509,300 | 40,015,700 | 23,656,700 | 20,364,100 | 24,707,200 |
Trondhjem | 16,017,300 | 17,887,500 | 18,378,400 | 8,658,100 | 9,423,900 | 10,840,000 |
The commercial intercourse between Norway and the United Kingdom, according to the Board of Trade Returns, is shown in the subjoined table, for each of the last five years:—
— | 1893 | 1894 | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
£ | £ | £ | £ | £ | |
Imports into U.K. from Norway | 3,570,592 | 3,657,595 | 3,831,727 | 4,312,106 | 4,995,461 |
Exports of British prodnce to Norway | 1,756,813 | 1,916,566 | 1,895,889 | 1,988,554 | 2,250,734 |
In 1897 the imports of timber from Norway into the United Kingdom amounted to 1,866,550 £.; fish, 612,622 £.; paper-making materials, 988,371 £.; paper, &c., 443,123 £.; ice, 248,671 £.; butter, 138,199 £. The minor imports into Great Britain comprise train oil, matches, and small quantities of iron manufactures. The chief British exports to Norway in the year 1897 were iron, wrought and unwronght, 371,800 £.; cotton manufactures and yarns 323,966 £.; coals, 497,994 £.; and woollens and worsteds and yarn, 168,172 £.; machinery, 128,142 £.
Shipping and Navigation.
The total Norwegian mercantile marine on January 1, 1898, was as follows:—
— | Sailing | Steam | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Tons | No. | Tons | No. | Tons | |
4—100 tons | 4,096 | 118,404 | 389 | 11,850 | 4,485 | 130,254 |
100—500 tons | 1,226 | 363,078 | 349 | 98,994 | 1,575 | 462,072 |
500—1,000 ,, | 610 | 423,990 | 160 | 115,298 | 770 | 539,288 |
1,000—2,000 tons | 206 | 252,237 | 93 | 128,939 | 299 | 381,173 |
Above 2,000 ,, | 5 | 11,373 | 13 | 28,039 | 18 | 39,412 |
Total | 6,143 | 1,169,079 | 1,004 | 383,120 | 7,147 | 1,552,199 |
In Foreign Trade | 3,109 | 1,090,100 | 591 | 361,653 | 3,700 | 1,451,753 |
The vessels entered and cleared at Norwegian ports in 1896 were as follows:—
— | With Cargoes | In Ballast | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | No. | Tonnage | |
Entered | ||||||
Norwegian | 4,189 | 1,190,673 | 2,653 | 747,281 | 6,842 | 1,937,954 |
Foreign | 2,394 | 700,443 | 3,965 | 270,549 | 6,359 | 970,992 |
Total entered | 6,583 | 1,891,116 | 6,618 | 1,017,830 | 13,201 | 2,908,946 |
Cleared | ||||||
Norwegian | 6,138 | 1,666,590 | 677 | 308,777 | 6,815 | 1,975,367 |
Foreign | 5,608 | 707,805 | 729 | 258,669 | 6,337 | 966,474 |
Total cleared | 11,746 | 2,374,395 | 1,406 | 567,446 | 13,152 | 2,941,841 |
Total entered and cleared 1896 | 18,329 | 4,265,511 | 8,024 | 1,585,276 | 26,353 | 5,850,787 |
,, ,, ,, ,, 1895 | 16,608 | 3,921,089 | 7,158 | 1,418,161 | 23,766 | 5,339,250 |
,, ,, ,, ,, 1894 | 16,430 | 3,866,501 | 7,504 | 1,612,511 | 23,934 | 5,479,012 |
Vessels entered and cleared in 1896 at the following ports:—
— | Number | Tonnage | |
---|---|---|---|
Kristiania | Entered | 2,403 | 920,080 |
Cleared | 1,532 | 610,912 | |
Bergen | Entered | 638 | 323,486 |
Cleared | 677 | 333,882 | |
Trondhjem | Entered | 360 | 190,621 |
Cleared | 355 | 181,568 | |
Frederiksstad | Entered | 1,767 | 188,368 |
Cleared | 3,521 | 258,471 |
Internal Communications.
The total length of State Railways in 1897 was 1,120 miles, and a length of 93 miles worked by five companies; total 1,213 miles.
Total receipts 1896-97, State railways, 9,542,058 kroner; companies, 2,154,590 kroner. Total expenses 1896-97, State railways, 7,159,992 kroner; companies, 1,167,676 kroner. Goods carried 1896-97, State railways, 1,451,773 tons (of 1,000 kilogs.); companies, 728,575. Passengers carried 1896-97 (including season-ticket holders). State railways, 6,796,515; companies, 777,371. The State railways have been constructed partly by subscription in the districts interested and partly at the expense of Government.
The following are the postal statistics:—
— | 1895 | 1896 | 1897 |
---|---|---|---|
Letters | 35,852,500 | 38,630,800 | 41,496,300 |
Post-cards | 3,268,300 | 3,493,300 | 3,916,000 |
Registered letters | 658,000 | 714,900 | 790,300 |
Journals | 37,539,700 | 38,889,100 | 43,165,900 |
Other printed matter | 6,107,300 | 5,285,700 | 5,771,900 |
Samples and parcels | 690,900 | 773,500 | 856,900 |
Length of telegraph lines and wires in 1897:—
Belonging to | the | State | 5,474 | miles | of line, | 15,009 | miles of | wires. |
,, | ,, | railways | 1,172 | ,, | ,, | 2,172 | ,, | ,, |
Total | 6,646 | ,, | ,, | 17,181 | ,, | ,, |
The number of paid messages in the year 1897 was on the State lines 1,940,840, on the railway lines 71,254, total, 2,012,094, of which 1,221,934 (on the lines of the railways, 71,254) were internal, 332,350 sent abroad, and 386,556 received from abroad. Number of telephone conversations on trunk lines, 361,760. The number of telegraph offices in 1897 was:—244 belonging to the State, 239 to the railways, total 483. Receipts: State telegraphs 1,650,599 kroner, railways 54,680 kroner, total 1,705,279 kroner. Expenses:—State telegraphs 1,454,587 kroner, railways 213,902 kroner, total 1,668,489 kroner.
Money and Credit.
On December 31, 1897, the Norwegian coins in circulation (the coinage after the monetary reform deducting the coins melted down) were:—
Gold coin | 15,858,490 | kroner |
Silver coin | 8,215,842 | ,, |
Bronze coin | 629,218 | ,, |
Total | 24,703,550 | ,, |
There exists no Government paper money.
The value of income and property assessed for taxes in 1897 was:—
Income. | Property. | |||||
The towns | 179.2 | millions of | kroner | 658.3 | millions of | kroner |
The rural districts | 206.4 | ,, | ,, | 1,069.8 | ,, | ,, |
The whole kingdom | 385.6 | ,, | ,, | 1,755.1 | ,, | ,, |
There are two State banks, the 'Norges Bank' (Bank of Norway) and the 'Kongeriget Norges Hypothekbank.'
The 'Norges Bank' is a joint-stock bank, of which, however, a considerable part is owned by the State. The bank is, besides, governed by laws enacted by the State, and its directors are elected by the Storthing, except the president of the head office, who is nominated by the King. There is a head office at Kristiania, and 12 branch offices. It is the only bank in Norway that is authorised to issue bank notes for circulation. The balance-sheets of the bank for 1897 show the following figures:—Assets at the end of the year—bullion, 47,607,599 kroner; outstanding capital, mortgaged estates, foreign bills, &c., 40,703,170 kroner; total, 88,310,769 kroner. Liabilities—notes in circulation, 59,311,592; the issue of notes allowed was 71,607,599 kroner; deposits, cheques, unclaimed dividends, unsettled losses, &c., 9,482,203 kroner (of which the deposits amounted to 8,893,226 kroner); dividends payable for the year, 1,590,820 kroner; total, 70,384,615; balance, 17,926,154.
The 'Kongeriget Norges Hypothekbank' was established in 1852 by the State to meet the demand for loans on mortgage. The capital of the bank is furnished by the State, and amounted to 15,000,000 kroner in 1897. The bank has besides a reserve fund amounting in 1897 to 1,000,000 kroner. At the end of 1897 the total amount of bonds issued was 110,180,000 kroner. The loans on mortgage amounted to 117,210,739 kroner.
There were, at the end of 1896, 38 private joint-stock banks, with a collective subscribed capital of 44,430,260 kroner, and a paid-up capital of 17,940,287. The reserve fund amounted to 9,397,784. The deposits and withdrawals in the course of the year amounted to 506,962,481 kroner and 501,079,770 kroner respectively. Deposits at the end of the year 153,428,547 kroner, of which 10,345,713 kroner deposits on demand, and 143,082,834 kroner on other accounts.
All savings-banks must be chartered by royal permission. Their operations are regulated, to a considerable extent, by the law, and controlled by the Ministry of Finance. In 1897 their number was 394; depositors 586,606, with 251,614,947 kroner to their credit at the end of the year. In 1896 the banks numbered 380; depositors 561,257 with 234,690,760 kroner to their credit at end of year.
Sweden and Norway.
Money, Weights, and Measures.
By a treaty signed May 27, 1873, with additional treaty of October 16, 1875, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark adopted the same monetary system.
The Swedish Krona and the Norwegian Krone, each of 100 öre, is of the value of 1 s. 11⁄2 d., or about 18 kronor to the pound sterling.
The gold 20-kronor piece weighs 8.960572 grammes, .900 fine containing 8.0645 grammes of fine gold, and the silver krona weighs 7.5 grammes, .800 fine, containing 6 grammes of fine silver.
The standard of value is gold. In Sweden National Bank notes for 5, 10, 50, 100, and 1000 kronor are legal means of payment, and the Bank is bound to exchange them for gold on presentation. The case is the same in Norway, where there are also notes for 500 kroner.
The | Swedish | Skålpund | = | 100 | ort | = | 0.937 | lb. avoirdupois. |
,, | ,, | Fot | = | 10 | tum | = | 11.7 | English inches. |
,, | ,, | Kanna | = | 140 | kubiktum | = | 4.6 | imperial pints. |
,, | ,, | Mil | = | 360 | ref | = | 6.64 | English miles. |
The metric system of weights and measures (see France) was introduced in 1879, and became obligatory in Sweden in 1889, in Norway on July 1, 1882.
Diplomatic Representatives.
1. Of Sweden and Norway in Great Britain.
Envoy and Minister.—Count C. Lewenhaupt.
Secretary.—G. de Stråde.
Attaché.—Count von Rosen.
Consul-General in London.—Carl Juhlin Dannfelt.
There are Consular representatives at the following places:—Belfast, Birmingham, Bradford, Bristol, Cardiff, Cork, Dublin, Dundee, Glasgow, Hartlepool, Hull, Leith, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Southampton, and many other places.
2. Of Great Britain in Sweden and Norway.
Envoy and Minister.—Hon. Francis J. Pakenham, appointed Envoy Extra-ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Sweden and Norway, February 1, 1896.
Secretary.—Arthur Herbert.
Consul at Stockholm.—
Consul-General at Christiania.—Hon. C. S. Dundas.
There are also Consular representatives at Gothenburg, Christiansand
Bergen, Tromsö, Trondhjem, Hammerfest, Vardö, &c. References concerning Sweden and Norway.
1. Official Publications.
Bidrag till Sveriges officiela statistik: A. Befolknings-statistik. B. Rättsväsendet. C. Bergshandtering. D. Fabriker och manufakturer. E. Sjöfart. F. Handel. G. Fångvården. H. K. Majestäts befallningshafvandes femårsberättelser. I. Telegrafväsendet. K. Helso- och sjukvården. L. Statens jernvägstrafik. M. Postverket. N. Jordbruk och boskapsskötsel. O. Landtmäteriet. P. Undervisningsväsendet. Q. Statens domäner. R. Valstatistik. S. Allmänna arbeten. T. Lots- och fyrinrättningen samt lifräddningsanstalterna å rikets kuster. U. Kommunernas fattigvård och finanser. V. Bränvins tillverkning och försäljning samt hvitbetssockertillverkningen. X. Aflönings- och pensionsstatistik. Y. Sparbanksstatistik. 4. Stockholm, 1857-98.
Norges officielle Statistik: Arbeidslönninger; Bergværksdrift; Den almindelige Brandforsikringsindretning; Civilretsstatistik; Distriktsfængsler; Fabrikanlæg; Faste Eiendomme; Fattigstatistik; Femaarsberetninger om Amternes ökonomiske Tilstand; Statskassens Finantser; Fiskerier; Folkemængdens Bevægelse, Folketælling; Handel; De offentlige Jernbaner; Jordbrug; Kommunale Finantser; Kriminalstatistik; Sundhedstilstanden og Medicinalforholdene; Postvæsen; Rekruteringsstatistik; Rigstelegraf; Sindssygeasylerne; Skibsfart; Skiftevæsen; Skolevæsen; Socialstatistik; Sparebanker; Spedalske; Strafarbeidsanstalter; Valgstatistik; Veterinærvæsen. 4. Fra 1881-8. Kristiania, 1870-98.
Sveriges statskalender för år 1898. Utgifven efter Kongl. Majestats nådigste förordnande af dess Vetenskaps-Akademi. 8. Stockholm, 1898.
Sveriges officiela statistik i sammandrag, 1898. Stockholm, 1898.
Statistisk Aarbog for Kongeriget Norge. (Annuaire statistique de la Norvège.) 17de Aargang, 1897. Udgivet af det Statistiske Centralbureau. Kristiania, 1897.
Norges Statskalender for Aaret 1898. Efter offentlig Foranstaltning redigeret af N. R. Bull. 8. Kristiania, 1897.
Statistisk tidskrift, utgifven af Kongl. Statistiska Central-Byrån. Stockholm, 1862-98.
Oversigt over Kongeriget Norges civile, geistlige og judicielle Inddeling. Udgiven af det Statistiske Centralbureau. 8. Kristiania, 1893.
Meddelelser fra det Statistiske Centralbureau. I.—XV. 8. Kristiania, 1883-98.
Norges Land og Folk. I. Smaalenenes Amt. II. Akershus Amt. V. Buskeruds Amt. XI. Stavanger Amt. XII. Söndre Bergenhus Amt. Kristiania, 1885-97.
Reports on Sweden, Foreign Office Reports, Annual Series. London, 1894.
The 'Gothenburg' Licensing System in Sweden, No. 274, and in Norway, No. 279, Foreign Office Reports, Miscellaneous Series. London, 1893.
Annual Statement of the Trade of the United Kingdom with Foreign Countries and British Possessions. Imp. 4. London.
2. Non-Official Publications.
Baedeker's Norway, Sweden and Denmark. 6th ed. London, 1895.
Bain (R. N.), Gustavus III. and his Contemporaries. 2 vols. London, 1894.
Charles XII. and the Collapse of the Swedish Empire in "Heroes of the Nations" series. London, 1895.
Bennett (T.), Handbook for Travellers in Norway. 8. Christiania, 1896.
Bradshaw (J.), Norway, its Fjords, Fjelds, and Fosses. London, 1896.
Cook (T.), Guide to Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. London, 1893.
Carlson (F. F.), Geschichte Schweden's. 8 vols. Gotha, 1832-75.
Chapman (A.) Wild Norway. London, 1897.
Du Chaillu (P. B.), The Land of the Midnight Sun. 2 vols. London, 1881.
Dyring (Joh.), Kongeriget Norge, dets Geografi, Samfundsindretninger og Næringsveie, Anden Udgave. 8. Porsgrund, 1891.
Hammar (A.), Historiskt, geografiskt och statistiskt lexicon öfver Sverige. 8 vols. 8. Stockholm, 1859-70.
Höjer (M.), Konungariket Sverige, en topografisk-statistisk beskrifning med historiska anmärkningar. 8. Stockholm, 1875-83.
Hyne (C. J. C), Through Artic Lapland. London, 1898.
Keary (C. F.), Norway and the Norwegians. 8. London, 1892.
Kiær (A. N.), Indtægts og formuesforhold i Norge. 8. Kristiania, 1892-1893.
Löfström (S. A.), Sweden, Statistics. (World's Columbian Exposition 1893, Chicago). 8. Stockhobn, 1893.
Murray's Handbook for Norway. 9th ed. London, 1897.
Nielsen (Dr. Yngvar), Reisehaandbog over Norge. Ottende Oplag. Kristiania, 1896.
Nielsen (Dr. Yngvar), Handbook for Travellers in Norway. With Maps. Kristiania, 1893.
Otté (E. C), Scandinavian History. 8. London.
Rosenberg (C. M.), Ny resehandbok öfver Sverige. 8. Stockholm, 1887.
Rudbeck (J. G.), Försök till beskrifning öfver Sveriges städer i historiskt, topographiskt och statistiskt hänseende. 3 vols. 8. Stockholm, 1855-61.
Rydfors (A.), Konung Oskar II. och Sweriges Folk. Stockholm, 1897.
Sedgwick (C. S.), The Story of Norway. London, 1885.
Willson (T. B.), Guide to Norway. 4th ed, London, 1898.