Norwegian Names
Norske navn
Norwegian names carry the imprint of Old Norse, the language of the Vikings and the Eddic poets, filtered through Lutheran Christianity, a century of Danish administrative dominance, and two waves of national romantic revival. A Norwegian name follows the Western convention: one or more given names followed by a hereditary surname. Statistics Norway (Statistisk sentralbyrå, SSB) maintains name frequency data from 1880 onward, providing one of the oldest continuous Nordic naming datasets and capturing the full arc from patronymic tradition to modern hereditary surnames. The defining feature of Norwegian surnames is the -sen ending (equivalent to the English -son): Hansen, Johansen, Olsen, Andersen, Larsen, Eriksen. These names originated as living patronymics—Hans’s son, Johan’s son, Olaf’s son—that were passed from father to child anew each generation. Under the patronymic system in use across rural Norway through the 19th century, a man named Lars Olsen would name his son Petter Larsen and his daughter Brita Larsdotter. The 1923 Norwegian Names Act (navneloven) mandated that all Norwegians adopt a fixed hereditary family name transmitted unchanged across generations, ending the living patronymic system and crystallising the -sen names already accumulated in the preceding century of partial urbanisation and civil registration. Norwegian given names reflect three main strata. First, Old Norse names of pre-Christian origin, preserved or revived by the national romantic movement: Sigrid (victory + beautiful), Åse (goddess), Gunnar (battle warrior), Bjørn (bear), Astrid (divine beauty), Leif (heir, descendant), Ragnhild (battle counsel), and Eirik. Second, Christian names introduced after the conversion of Norway around 1000 CE: Olav (patron saint of Norway), Johannes, Maria, Kristin, Anders, and Magnus became enduringly popular through the medieval and Reformation periods. Third, international contemporary names that have entered Norwegian usage since the late 20th century: Emil, Liam, Emma, Nora, and Olivia now appear at the top of SSB annual rankings. Norwegian name elements derived from Old Norse remain productive and recognisable: -borg (fortress: Åborg), -stein (stone: Bernstein, Hallstein), -bjørn (bear: Hallbjørn), -ulf (wolf: Arnulf), -hildr (battle: Ragnhild, Brynhild), -leiv (heir: Olleiv), and -vald (power: Harald). These elements appear in both ancient saga names and modern given names, creating a visible linguistic continuity between the naming culture of the Viking Age and contemporary Norwegians.
Popular Given Names
En Popüler Soyadları
| # | Soyad | Yerli | Nüfus |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Hansen | Hansen | 55.000 |
| 2 | Johansen | Johansen | 50.000 |
| 3 | Olsen | Olsen | 48.000 |
| 4 | Larsen | Larsen | 46.000 |
| 5 | Andersen | Andersen | 44.000 |
| 6 | Pedersen | Pedersen | 42.000 |
| 7 | Nilsen | Nilsen | 40.000 |
| 8 | Kristiansen | Kristiansen | 38.000 |
| 9 | Jensen | Jensen | 36.000 |
| 10 | Karlsen | Karlsen | 33.000 |
| 11 | Johnsen | Johnsen | 31.000 |
| 12 | Pettersen | Pettersen | 30.000 |
| 13 | Eriksen | Eriksen | 28.000 |
| 14 | Berg | Berg | 27.000 |
| 15 | Haugen | Haugen | 26.000 |
| 16 | Hagen | Hagen | 25.000 |
| 17 | Johannessen | Johannessen | 23.000 |
| 18 | Andreassen | Andreassen | 21.000 |
| 19 | Jacobsen | Jacobsen | 20.000 |
| 20 | Dahl | Dahl | 19.500 |
| 21 | Jorgensen | Jørgensen | 19.000 |
| 22 | Henriksen | Henriksen | 18.500 |
| 23 | Lund | Lund | 18.000 |
| 24 | Halvorsen | Halvorsen | 17.500 |
| 25 | Sorensen | Sørensen | 17.000 |
| 26 | Jakobsen | Jakobsen | 16.500 |
| 27 | Moen | Moen | 15.500 |
| 28 | Gundersen | Gundersen | 15.000 |
| 29 | Iversen | Iversen | 14.500 |
| 30 | Strand | Strand | 14.000 |
Compare Norwegian Names With Other Cultures
See how Norwegian Names naming traditions compare to other cultures worldwide.