Norway Under Denmark: The Four Hundred Year Night by Adrian E. Markham examines the long period from the late Middle Ages to 1814, when Norway existed as a subordinate land within the Danish crown. Moving from the aftermath of the Black Death to the political reforms of the eighteenth century, Markham reveals how a once-independent kingdom became a managed province ruled from afar.
The book traces the decline of Norway's medieval institutions, the consolidation of royal authority in Copenhagen, and the slow erosion of native leadership. It explores the Reformation's impact on church and community, the transfer of monastic lands to the crown, and the rise of a centralized bureaucracy that governed through appointed officials rather than kings. Across these centuries, Norway's people endured taxation, famine, and poverty, yet preserved a quiet sense of cultural continuity through language, custom, and faith.
Drawing on legal records, church archives, and economic data, Markham reconstructs the lived realities of farmers, fishers, priests, and traders who sustained a society without sovereignty. He examines the influence of the Hanseatic merchants in Bergen, the extraction of timber and silver for Danish markets, and the gradual reawakening of Norwegian thought during the Enlightenment. By the end of the Napoleonic Wars, when Denmark's defeat transferred Norway to Sweden, the foundations of modern Norwegian identity had already taken shape.
Measured, detailed, and vividly grounded in material evidence, Norway Under Denmark offers a rare portrait of endurance through subjugation and the subtle resilience that defined a nation long before independence.