The Norwegian monarchy is facing its gravest crisis in decades. Marius Borg Høiby, the 27-year-old son of Crown Princess Mette-Marit, has been convicted of raping two women in separate attacks. The verdict landed like a bomb in the Oslo Palace this afternoon.
Sources close to the royal household describe a state of 'controlled panic.' The king is said to be 'devastated.' The crown prince, Haakon, has cancelled all public engagements. His wife, the crown princess, has not been seen since the verdict was read.
Høiby has no official royal status. He is the crown princess's son from a previous relationship. But he has been raised within the palace walls. He has attended state banquets. He has walked the red carpets. This is not a distant scandal. This is family.
The trial was brutal. The prosecution painted a picture of a privileged young man who believed himself untouchable. The victims gave harrowing testimony. One described being 'treated like an object.' The other said she had 'given up screaming.'
Høiby claimed the encounters were consensual. The court disagreed. He faces eight years in prison. He will appeal.
But the political damage is already done. The Norwegian monarchy rests on a fragile public mandate. It is a constitutional monarchy, yes. But the royals are expected to be beyond reproach. This verdict shatters that illusion.
Veteran palace watchers tell me this is worse than the 2001 scandal when the crown princess admitted to a drug-fuelled past. 'That was old news. This is a living nightmare,' one said. The couple's marriage has been strained. This will test it to breaking point.
The prime minister has offered 'sympathy to all involved.' A phrase designed to say nothing. The opposition is circling. There are quiet calls for the crown princess to step back from public duties. Some suggest Haakon should abdicate in favour of his daughter, Ingrid Alexandra. She is 18. She is popular. She is untouched.
But that is fantasy. For now. The royal family will hunker down. They will release a statement. They will talk of 'privacy for a family matter.' They will hope the storm passes.
It won't. Not until someone falls on their sword. And in this family, that sword might be real.
This is not a tempest in a teacup. This is a tsunami. And the Norwegian monarchy is clinging to a raft made of broken traditions and tarnished crown jewels.









