National Legion
Den Nationale Legion |
|
---|---|
Leader | Karl Meyer |
Founded | 1927 |
Dissolved | 1928 |
Newspaper | Nationalfascisten |
Ideology | Fascism |
Political position | Far-right |
The National Legion (Norwegian: Den nasjonale legion, archaic Norwegian: Den Nationale Legion) was a short-lived fascistpolitical party in Norway led by Karl Meyer, in existence from 1927–28.
The party, Norway's first fascist party, was founded at a public meeting at a circus, Cirkus Verdensteatret, in Oslo in May 1927. The event was hosted by Karl Norbeck, "Norway's strongest man". The party was led by Karl Meyer, a businessman and stock trader with a history of fraud cases. Author and social commentator Erling Winsnes was another leading figure.
Influenced by Italian Fascism, Meyer sought a "March on Oslo", with a parade of "100.000 farmers" that would make "the walls of Jericho crumble". The party however failed to mobilise much beyond Oslo's bourgeois West End. It ran a list in Oslo for the 1927 parliamentary election, but did not win any representation with 1,210 votes, about 1% of the vote in Oslo and 0.1% nationwide. Besides meetings at the circus, the party had little impact, and was dissolved in early 1928 amid internal conflicts and public brawls.