Nils Olav

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Colonel-in-Chief Nils Olav inspects the Royal Norwegian Guard.
Nils Olav.

Sir Nils Olav is a King Penguin living in Edinburgh Zoo, Scotland. He is the mascot and Colonel-in-Chief of the Norwegian King's Guard. Nils was visited by the Norwegian King's Guard on the 15 August 2008 and awarded a knighthood. The honour was approved by the king of Norway, King Harald V. During the ceremony a crowd of several hundred people joined the 130 guardsmen at the zoo to hear a citation from King Harald the Fifth of Norway read out, which described Nils as a penguin "in every way qualified to receive the honour and dignity of knighthood".[1]

Role in the military

When the Norwegian King's Guard visited Edinburgh Military Tattoo of 1961 for a Drill Display,[2] a lieutenant called Nils Egelien became interested in Edinburgh Zoo's penguin colony. When the Guards once again returned to Edinburgh in 1972, he arranged for the unit to adopt a penguin. This penguin was named Nils Olav in honour of Nils Egelien, and King Olav V of Norway.

Nils Olav was given the rank of visekorporal (lance corporal) and has been promoted each time the King's Guard has returned to the Tattoo. In 1982 he was made corporal, and promoted to sergeant in 1987. Nils Olav died shortly after his promotion to sergeant, and his place of honour was taken by Nils Olav II, his two-year-old near-double. He was promoted in 1993 to the rank of regimental sergeant major. On August 18, 2005, he was promoted to Colonel-in-Chief.[3] He is the first penguin to hold this rank in the Norwegian army. At the same time a four foot high bronze statue of Nils Olav was presented to Edinburgh Zoo. The statue's inscription recognises the King's Guard and the Military Tattoo. A statue also stands at the Royal Norwegian Guard compound at Huseby, Oslo.

The bronze statue of Nils Olav

Norway presented the zoo with its first king penguin in 1913, the year of its opening. [4]

In Norwegian he is consistently referred to only as the mascot of the King's Guard[citation needed], although both the plaque on his statue, and the website of the Norwegian Government's Consulate in Edinburgh, refer to his promotion to Colonel-in-Chief.

External links

References

  1. ^ "Military penguin becomes a 'Sir'". BBC News Website. Retrieved on 2008-08-14.
  2. ^ The Edinburgh Military Tattoo Programme 1961
  3. ^ Website of the Norwegian Consulate in Edinburgh.
  4. ^ [1]
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