WWII Decisions Online · Christian X — Amalienborg, 1 September
Filter by theme: 18
Filter by location 958
Filter by location:
View full list
Europe🇩🇰 DKPoliticsPeople

Christian X — Amalienborg, 1 September

Christian X, King of Denmark and Iceland

, 68, has been King of Denmark since 1912 — 27 years on the throne. A forceful public personality, he favours an active symbolic role for the monarch. Denmark is a small country of 3.8 million inhabitants, sharing 68 kilometres of land frontier with Germany (Jutland). The German-Danish Non-Aggression Pact signed on 31 May 1939 nominally binds the 2 countries — a step imposed by Berlin which Copenhagen accepted reluctantly.

The Danish army has been deliberately reduced to the strict minimum: only 14,000 men serve under arms, in 2 territorial divisions, supplemented by a coastal navy and a skeletal air force of some 50 aircraft. No one imagines that the country can defend itself by force of arms; its protection can rest only on diplomatic choices.

On 1 September 1939, at the invasion of Poland, the Social-Democrat Prime Minister (62, in power since 1924 with one interruption) and Foreign Minister (a radical-liberal) must decide on the official stance. 3 options lie on the table: a rapprochement with Berlin to ward off invasion; strict neutrality, declared in concert with Norway and Sweden; or discreet moral support for the Allies, without diplomatic commitment. is constitutionally consultative, but his word carries weight: his sympathies are with the Allies, yet he fears an immediate occupation of Jutland. Which attitude will he publicly support?

Copenhagen, 1 September 1939, you are King Christian X: what attitude to back as war breaks out?

View full list

Learn more about this event

📄 Articles Google search 🖼 Images Google Images Videos Google Videos 📍 Map Google Maps
T01-050

Report an error

Saw something wrong on this page? Tell us — we will fix it.

Page reference: