
Vidkun Abraham Lauritz Jonssøn Quisling (July 18, 1887 - October
24, 1945) was a Norwegian politician and officer. He was Prime Minister of
Norway during the second world war, and was tried for treason and executed by
firing squad after World War
Referred to as the Norwegian Führer, Quisling lived in a mansion on Bygdøy in
Oslo which he called Gimle after Norse mythology.
Quisling had a mixed and relatively successful background, having achieved the
rank of major in the Norwegian army, and worked with Fridtjof Nansen in the
Soviet Union during the famine in the 1930s, as well as having served as defense
minister in the agrarian government 1931-1933. He was son of the Lutheran priest
and well-known genealogist Jon Lauritz Qvisling.
On May 17 1933, the Norwegian national day, Quisling and state attorney Johan
Bernhard Hjort formed Nasjonal Samling (National Unity), the Norwegian
national-socialist party. Nasjonal Samling had an anti-democratic,
"leader"-oriented political structure, and Quisling was to be that leader, much
like Adolf Hitler was for the NSDAP in Germany. The party went on to have modest
successes, in the election of 1933, four months after the party was formed, it
garnered 27850 votes, following support from the Norwegian Farmer's Aid
Association, with which Quisling had connections from his time as a member of
the Agrarian government. However, as the party line changed from a religiously
rooted one to a more pro-German and anti-Semitic hardline policy from 1935
onwards, the support from the Church waned, and in the 1936 elections, the party
got ca.50 000 votes. The party became increasingly extremist, and party
membership dwindled to an estimated 2000 members after the German invasion.
When Germany invaded Norway on April 9 1940, Quisling became the first person in
history to announce a coup during a news broadcast, declaring an ad-hoc
government during the confusion of the invasion, hoping that the Germans would
support it. Quisling had visited Adolf Hitler in Germany the year before, and
was liked by Hitler, so Quisling's belief that the Germans would back his
government were not entirely unfounded. However, the Germans desired more direct
control over occupied Norway, and the Quisling government lasted only five days,
after which Josef Terboven was installed as Reichskommissar, the highest
authority in Norway, answering directly to Hitler. The relationship between
Quisling and Terboven was tense, although Terboven, presumably seeing an
advantage in having a Norwegian in a position of power to reduce resentment in
the population, named Quisling to the post of Minister President (Prime
Minister) in 1942 and he assumed that position on February 1, 1943.
Quisling, along with two other NS leaders, Albert Viljam Hagelin and Ragnar
Skancke, were convicted and executed by firing squad. In later days these
sentences have been controversial, as Quisling's participation was completely
insignificant to the situation of Norway in WW2.
After World War II, the term "quisling" became a synonym in many European
languages for traitor.
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