British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940

During the interwar period, as a typical maritime country with a tonnage of 4.8 million GRT, Norway was under the influence of Great Britain, both in terms of politics and economics. The location of Norway was complicated after World War II when the country proclaiming its neutrality was subjected t...

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Main Author: Siemianowski, Jordan
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Polish
Published: Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007
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spelling ftapczojs:oai:apcz.umk.pl:article/1307 2023-05-15T16:52:50+02:00 British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940 Polityka Wielkiej Brytanii wobec Norwegii w okresie od 1 września 1939 r. do 9 kwietnia 1940 r. Siemianowski, Jordan 2012-03-01 application/pdf https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007 pol pol Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007/1246 https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007 Klio. CPDPiP; Vol. 20 No. 1 (2012); 201-234 Klio - Czasopismo Poświęcone Dziejom Polski i Powszechnym; Tom 20 Nr 1 (2012); 201-234 2719-7476 1643-8191 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2012 ftapczojs 2022-08-13T05:13:46Z During the interwar period, as a typical maritime country with a tonnage of 4.8 million GRT, Norway was under the influence of Great Britain, both in terms of politics and economics. The location of Norway was complicated after World War II when the country proclaiming its neutrality was subjected to the British pressure. London demanded from the neighbor overseas the tonnage of merchant fleet, especially oil tankers, as well as a favorable trade agreement. In addition, it had been trying to dominate the Norwegian foreign trade through the use of blockade. Norway, being subject to the British pressure, decided to supply London with a large part of its merchant fleet under the agreement signed on November 11, 1939. Although the agreement signed by the Norwegian Shipowners Association having a private nature, it contributed to accusations of Oslo by the Third Reich on breaking with the status of neutrality. Then, on March 11, 1940 Norway concluded another agreement with Great Britain, this time strictly commercial, in which it committed not to import a number of goods needed to be at war. Th is commitment concerned all the countries except Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Sweden. Apart from the policy, having a purely economic dimension, since November 1939 London and Paris had been making a military plan against Norway, Sweden and Finland. Under the pretext of military assistance for the Finns fighting with the Red Army, the allies saw gaining the non-freezing port in Narvik, from where throughout the whole year the Swedish iron ore was being transported to Germany, as their aim. The lack of one common view in the camp of allied caused that the British only managed to mine a small part of the Norwegian territorial waters. The allied had further plans but the Third Reich beat them to it and on April 9,1940 it started the invasion of Norway and Denmark. During the interwar period, as a typical maritime country with a tonnage of 4.8 million GRT, Norway was under the influence of Great Britain, both in terms of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Narvik Narvik Akademicka Platforma Czasopism Narvik ENVELOPE(17.427,17.427,68.438,68.438) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Akademicka Platforma Czasopism
op_collection_id ftapczojs
language Polish
description During the interwar period, as a typical maritime country with a tonnage of 4.8 million GRT, Norway was under the influence of Great Britain, both in terms of politics and economics. The location of Norway was complicated after World War II when the country proclaiming its neutrality was subjected to the British pressure. London demanded from the neighbor overseas the tonnage of merchant fleet, especially oil tankers, as well as a favorable trade agreement. In addition, it had been trying to dominate the Norwegian foreign trade through the use of blockade. Norway, being subject to the British pressure, decided to supply London with a large part of its merchant fleet under the agreement signed on November 11, 1939. Although the agreement signed by the Norwegian Shipowners Association having a private nature, it contributed to accusations of Oslo by the Third Reich on breaking with the status of neutrality. Then, on March 11, 1940 Norway concluded another agreement with Great Britain, this time strictly commercial, in which it committed not to import a number of goods needed to be at war. Th is commitment concerned all the countries except Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Sweden. Apart from the policy, having a purely economic dimension, since November 1939 London and Paris had been making a military plan against Norway, Sweden and Finland. Under the pretext of military assistance for the Finns fighting with the Red Army, the allies saw gaining the non-freezing port in Narvik, from where throughout the whole year the Swedish iron ore was being transported to Germany, as their aim. The lack of one common view in the camp of allied caused that the British only managed to mine a small part of the Norwegian territorial waters. The allied had further plans but the Third Reich beat them to it and on April 9,1940 it started the invasion of Norway and Denmark. During the interwar period, as a typical maritime country with a tonnage of 4.8 million GRT, Norway was under the influence of Great Britain, both in terms of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Siemianowski, Jordan
spellingShingle Siemianowski, Jordan
British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
author_facet Siemianowski, Jordan
author_sort Siemianowski, Jordan
title British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
title_short British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
title_full British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
title_fullStr British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
title_full_unstemmed British politics towards Norway from 1st September, 1939 to 9th April, 1940
title_sort british politics towards norway from 1st september, 1939 to 9th april, 1940
publisher Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu
publishDate 2012
url https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007
long_lat ENVELOPE(17.427,17.427,68.438,68.438)
geographic Narvik
Norway
geographic_facet Narvik
Norway
genre Iceland
Narvik
Narvik
genre_facet Iceland
Narvik
Narvik
op_source Klio. CPDPiP; Vol. 20 No. 1 (2012); 201-234
Klio - Czasopismo Poświęcone Dziejom Polski i Powszechnym; Tom 20 Nr 1 (2012); 201-234
2719-7476
1643-8191
op_relation https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007/1246
https://apcz.umk.pl/KLIO/article/view/KLIO.2012.007
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