On the morning of 17 May 1814 C.E., 112 representatives gathered at Eidsvoll Manor, north of Christiania, and signed a document that would outlast empires, survive occupation, and still govern a nation more than two centuries later. Written in just five weeks during a spring of political crisis, the Norway constitution 1814 became one of the most durable acts of popular sovereignty in human history.
Key facts
- Norway constitution 1814: Adopted on 16 May and signed on 17 May 1814 C.E. by the Norwegian Constituent Assembly at Eidsvoll Manor, it remains the second oldest working national constitution in the world, after that of the United States.
- Constituent assembly: Representatives were elected through state church congregations and military units across Norway — an unusual democratic mechanism for its time — giving the founding document a broad, if still limited, popular mandate.
- Separation of powers: The constitution established a clear division between executive, legislative, and judicial branches, directly modeled on ideas from the American and French revolutions, while retaining a constitutional monarchy with a severely curtailed royal veto.
A constitution born in five weeks of crisis
Norway had spent centuries as part of the Kingdom of Denmark–Norway. That changed abruptly when the Treaty of Kiel of January 1814 C.E. ceded Norway to Sweden following Napoleon’s defeat at the Battle of Leipzig. Rather than accept the transfer, Crown Prince Christian Frederik launched a Norwegian independence movement and called a national assembly.
What followed was one of history’s more compressed acts of nation-building. Between 10 April and 16 May 1814 C.E., the assembled representatives drafted, debated, and ratified an entire constitutional framework. The principal authors were Christian Magnus Falsen and Johan Gunder Adler, but a crucial behind-the-scenes figure was Christian Adolph Diriks, the assembly’s legal secretary and resident expert on foreign constitutions. Diriks is credited with drafting Section 100, on freedom of speech, and Section 102, protecting against unreasonable searches and seizures — provisions that read as remarkably modern.
The document drew on the U.S. Declaration of Independence, the French Constitution of 1791, and the Spanish Constitution of 1812. It established separation of powers, extended suffrage to a meaningful portion of the male population — roughly 40 to 45 percent of men over 25 — and gave parliament real authority over the king. By the standards of 1814 C.E., this was a radical act.
A curious mix of the radical and the traditional
The Eidsvoll assembly did not simply import Enlightenment ideals wholesale. The framers kept a monarchy, established an official Lutheran church, and — in one of the constitution’s darkest provisions — explicitly banned Jews from entering Norway. The coexistence of progressive political structures and discriminatory exclusions was not incidental. It reflected the limits of who counted as “the people” in early nineteenth-century European political thought.
Even so, the structural achievement was real. The king retained only a suspensive veto — the power to delay legislation, not block it permanently. Power was anchored in an elected Storting, not a throne. That balance would prove resilient in ways the framers could not have anticipated.
Surviving union, occupation, and a world war
The constitution’s first test came within months. Norway’s bid for full independence failed militarily. Sweden’s campaign was short and decisive, though Norwegian forces fought well enough to avoid unconditional surrender. The resulting Convention of Moss allowed Norway to keep its constitution, with amendments, as it entered a personal union with Sweden. The framers’ document survived — amended, but intact in its essentials.
It survived again in 1905 C.E., when that union dissolved peacefully and Norway chose its own king by referendum, with 78.9 percent voting for monarchy. And it survived its most severe test: the Nazi occupation of 1940–1945 C.E. When the collaborationist government of Vidkun Quisling reintroduced the Jewish exclusion clause in 1942 C.E., the change was a violation of the constitution’s spirit — and it was reversed after the war. The document itself had not broken.
In May 2014 C.E., the Storting passed the most substantial revisions since 1814 C.E., embedding an extensive catalogue of human rights — including rights to education, a healthy environment, and adequate living standards — directly into constitutional text.
Lasting impact
The Norway constitution 1814 helped establish that a small, peripheral nation could sustain democratic self-governance across centuries of pressure, occupation, and geopolitical reshuffling. Its longevity is not merely symbolic. The constitutional framework underpins Norway’s current model of governance — one that combines strong parliamentary authority, an independent judiciary, and a welfare state that consistently ranks among the world’s most robust.
The 17 May signing date became Norway’s National Day, observed each year with children’s parades rather than military displays — a deliberate civic choice that says something about how the country chose to frame its own founding story.
The constitution’s influence also reached beyond Norway’s borders. Its combination of popular sovereignty, limited monarchy, and separation of powers offered a template that other constitutional designers in Europe studied throughout the nineteenth century.
Blindspots and limits
The original document excluded Jews, Jesuits, and monastic orders by name — exclusions that reveal how narrowly “the people” was defined in 1814 C.E. Suffrage, though broader than in most contemporary systems, still left the majority of the population — all women, many working-class men, and Sámi and other minority communities — without a political voice. The Sámi people, Indigenous to the Scandinavian and Kola peninsulas, had no representation at Eidsvoll and would not gain meaningful constitutional recognition until the 1980s C.E. These were not oversights; they were choices, and they shaped Norway’s political development for generations.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Constitution of Norway — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights: 160 million hectares secured ahead of COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Norway
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